Tag Archives: Piers Morgan Tonight

The grassroots movement to get Piers Morgan deported: Could it actually work?

Piers Morgan on stage at a BritWeek 2012 event in Beverly Hills in May.

The batcrap-crazy crowd has found a new target to bully…

The Week

More than 60,000 people have signed a petition to get the CNN commentator kicked out of the country for his outspoken views on gun control

Can a foreign-born political commentator be deported for making political comments? That’s the question — and the goal — of more than 60,000 Americans who have signed a petition to deport British journalist Piers Morgan for his outspoken views on gun control. On a recent episode of his CNN series Piers Morgan Tonight, Morgan called guest Larry Pratt, the executive director of Guns Owners for America, “dangerous” and “an unbelievably stupid man” for arguing that the U.S. needs more guns to fight gun violence. Pratt responded by calling Morgan “morally obtuse.” (Watch a video of the heated exchange below.) The subsequent petition to get Morgan deported, which was started by “Kurt N” from Austin, Texas, argues that Morgan is “engaged in a hostile attack against the U.S. Constitution by targeting the Second Amendment” and “[demands] that Mr. Morgan be deported immediately.”

The irony, of course, is that deporting Morgan for his “hostile attack” on the Constitution would be a violation of the constitutional right to free speech. Even as a British national, Morgan is “afforded various rights under national security law and due process,” says immigration attorney Mark Schifanelli at ABC News. Morgan’s comments are protected unless they present “immediate danger” to the United States, and his opinion on gun control isn’t likely to meet that requirement.

So the government is very unlikely to take action against Morgan — but what about CNN, which airs Piers Morgan Tonight? “His bosses have every right to fire him if they want: That’s not a breach of First Amendment rights,” says Tim Worstall at Forbes. But there’s no indication that Morgan’s job is on the line, and given that he was hired as a political commentator, he’s not likely to land in hot water for making political comments. In fact, the controversy may end up proving to be a ratings boost, offering a life raft to the relatively low-rated show.

Getting past the fairly ludicrous question of deportation, there’s a much more serious issue at hand: Is Morgan doing damage to the gun control movement? ”He’s certainly given conservatives a gift by allowing them to portray gun control as the issue of choice of foreign liberals,” says Tim Stanley at The Telegraph. “And, frankly, asking an interviewee ‘You’re an incredibly stupid idiot, aren’t you?’ fosters the impression that liberals are engaging not in constructive debate but an assault on the character of their opponents.”

Morgan, for his part, remains unrepentant:

Piers Morgan

@piersmorgan

I don’t care about petition to deport me. I do care about poor NY firefighters murdered/injured with an assault weapon today.

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Filed under Gun Control Debate, Gun Violence

Christine O’Donnell Walks Out Of CNN Interview When Asked About Witchcraft, Gay Marriage

 

Oh, come on Piers, she said she’s not a witch!

Give the woman a break.  She’s just trying to sell her book. A book that some say is not very truthful, but hey, I haven’t read it and actually have no intention of reading it.

The Huffington Post

Delaware Republican Christine O’Donnell, who made an unsuccessful bid for U.S. Senate last year, walks out during an interview that airs on CNN’s “Piers Morgan Tonight” on Wednesday after being asked to weigh in on the issues of witchcraft and gay marriage.

Video of the segment released by CNN shows the exchange that went down on the latter subject.

During the 2010 election season, video surfaced of O’Donnell indicating she’s “dabbled into witchcraft.” In the clip from years earlier she said, “I hung around people who were doing these things. I’m not making this stuff up. I know what they told me they do.” The Tea Party favorite explained, “One of my first dates with a witch was on a satanic altar and I didn’t know it. I mean, there was a little blood there and stuff like that. … We went to a movie and then had a little picnic on a satanic altar.”

HuffPost’s Sam Stein reported at the time the remarks came to light:

O’Donnell immediately distanced herself from the quote, asking whether it was fair to hold candidates responsible for the “questionable folks” they hung out with in high school. The clarification may have been the only sane political move for O’Donnell to make. But it had the side effect of angering an already politically sensitive pagan community.”Yes, this was 11 years ago she said that,” said Reverend Selena Fox, the High Priestess & Senior Minister of the Circle Sanctuary a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting paganism and nature spirituality. “But the kinds of things she is saying now, saying ‘well in high school you are with despicable characters’ or some such thing, she is actually defaming Wiccans. Whether she intends to do that or not as a way to try and get herself out of this political problem she has created for herself, the fact is America really needs to be a place where you can celebrate diversity and practice your religion without getting ridiculed or defamed.”

During her campaign, O’Donnell made headlines with a political ad in which she states, “I’m not a witch.” Earlier this week, she said she never liked the spot and called its release her own “mistake.”

When asked about her views on gay marriage in Wednesday’s interview O’Donnell tells Morgan, “You’re borderline being a little bit rude.”

“I’m not talking about policies. I’m not running for office,” she says on the program. “Ask Michele Bachmann what she thinks. Ask the candidates running for office what they think.”

O’Donnell is out with a new book titledTroublemaker: Let’s Do What It Takes to Make America Great Again. The former candidate signaled that she only wanted to discuss the contents of her work on CNN. HuffPost’s Amanda Terkel reported earlier this week that in the introduction O’Donnell describes the book as “a political memoir slash campaign diary slash position paper slash rallying cry, with an emphasis on the slash.”

See video here…

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Filed under U.S. Politics