
×
Please verify
Each day we overwhelm your brains with the content you've come to love from the Louder with Crowder Dot Com website.
But Facebook is...you know, Facebook. Their algorithm hides our ranting and raving as best it can. The best way to stick it to Zuckerface?
Sign up for the LWC News Blast! Get your favorite right-wing commentary delivered directly to your inbox!
ShowMay 21, 2025
Watch: Why Piers Morgan Censored Crowder's Interview Over The N-Word
Steven Crowder went on Piers Morgan Uncensored to debate the use of the *N-Word, and the show couldn’t live up to the name.
"We are not talking about wanting to go out and denigrate Black people with the N-word. What we are discussing right now in this country is people being silenced and terrified of losing everything, even if they say the wrong word in the right context where they are condemning prejudice," Crowder said. "It's a political weapon and it's used selectively."
Per the censored quote that was aired:
“When we're talking about this new song — and as a comedian and as a linguist — I'm going to say the word here so that everybody knows. And that’s what you’re going to clip.
We’re looking at words that are offensive — a song that is offensive — but one is a boogeyman word. We have one noun, a verb, and a noun.
Okay, we have a noun by itself. Contextually, that’s bad. Shouldn’t say it. But it’s not imbued with any power outside of historical context.
The last noun — Hitler — is imbued with the power of the verb that precedes it: hail, to praise, to venerate.
That’ll get clipped — even though I’m condemning the song as anti-Semitic. And not one person here who would be the victim of a more severe call to action is going to say it’s anti-Semitic.
I think we’re in a silly point in this country when we’re pulling this clip to condemn the anti-Semitism here at the studio — and people going, “Hey, can I get a second cut of that N-Word? Hail Hitler — that’s the point.”
However, in the actual clip, Crowder said:
“We’re looking at words that are offensive — a song that is offensive — but one is a boogeyman word. We have one noun, a verb, and a noun.
Okay, we have a noun by itself. Contextually, N---A, that’s bad. Shouldn’t say it. But it’s not imbued with any power outside of historical context.
“This is not about drama, this is about something that affects all of our lives,” Crowder said. “It’s not just people bitching about political correctness or cancel culture, it’s people now frustrated that they can’t have an honest dialogue and partially white men being painted in.”
Morgan censored Crowder, claiming, “It’s not about censorship but about respect for black people.”
“There is no winning, and so the only way is to not play, and now we are not having these conversations,” Crowder said.
Morgan previously brought on a "self-avowed racist" and challenged her to say the n-word in front of two Black men, but she refused. However, when Crowder used it in a certain context and point, it was subsequently censored.
“That to me is disingenuous,” Crowder said. “It’s a challenge for clips. You are not actually trying to have a conversation.”
It’s only inevitable that this will cause backlash in the opposite direction.
"There are real consequences to this, and that is what we are discussing," Crowder said. "You are going to see a backlash and the pendulum will swing in the other way."
Policing language has consequences, and it’s evident in the culture.
“People are afraid of losing everything for saying the wrong word, even if in context where they are condemning prejudice,” Crowder said.
- YouTubewww.youtube.com
Latest
Don't Miss