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It's really, really complicated.

But what I found out that disappointed me the most is things that I'd imagine if I told

you or told the audience that were… weren't happening // There's not much collaboration

at all, with knowing that the more collaboration we get to cures much more quickly.

// For example, when my son had his cancer genome // a lot of things that I learned that

were impediments that existed; silos had been built up of information and data that were

not accessible.

Whereas if they were put together, we'd move a lot more quickly to finding answers on how

to deal with these cancers.

I think what they can do and should be doing is moving as strongly as they can to put pressure

on their elected representatives and on companies to begin to move more systematically and rapidly

toward dealing with cures to cancer that are available to us now, and making them affordable

and accessible to people.

// I was, vice president of the United States.

I literally had an entire Air Force available to me to get me anywhere I needed to get,

to get my son to the right doctors, hospitals, et cetera, and I thought to myself, what would,

how would people I grew up in my neighborhood in Claymont, Delaware, how do they do it?

How do they-- just practical things, like if you have a neighbor who is going through

chemotherapy, // If they are going through a particularly difficult time, offer to watch

their home for them.

Offer to drive them.

// and make a world of difference.

I know that sounds so overly simplistic, but it can change people's lives.

There are so many things to look forward to, it's the things we can do to prevent cancer

in the first place, diagnose it when it occurs, to get it early, be in a position once it's

diagnosed to be able to get treatment, and turn some cancers into chronic diseases instead

of death sentences, and absolute outright cures.

And so we should all be putting 100% of our effort behind dealing with a disease that

affects almost every family.

For more infomation >> Joe Biden: Healthcare in the US | In-Person | J.P. Morgan - Duration: 2:30.

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PIERS MORGAN: My encounter with notorious female murderer - Duration: 23:42.

Two heavily armed guards opened the door of our interview room at the high-security Florida prison and Bernard Giles walked slowly inside and shook my hand

 He was 5ft 11in, balding, bespectacled, unshaven and in regulation blue jail uniform

We exchanged small talk for several minutes and he seemed, on the face of it, to be a softly spoken, articulate, intelligent and rational man

If I didn't know any different, I'd say Bernard Giles was just an average, harmless kind of guy

But I did know different.In fact, I knew that he is about as far from 'average' and 'harmless' as any man could possibly be

RELATED ARTICLES Previous 1 Next 'Bomb! Get out!': The terrifying moment an armed

'Baby girl, I'm broken without you': Mother of missing. Share this article Share For Giles is one of America's worst and most notorious serial killers, and without doubt the most dangerous human being I have ever interviewed

As we sat down just 2ft from each other, our eyes locked for a few seconds. His intense gaze never averted, and I suddenly felt a cold, dark shudder down my spine

I imagined him staring in the same ruthless, emotion-devoid way at his terrified young female victims just before he killed them

Over a frenzied three-month period in the early 1970s, Giles embarked on a killing spree of unimaginable horror

His victims were all hitchhikers whom he picked up and drove at gunpoint to remote orange groves where he sexually abused and shot them

They were Paula Hamric, a 22-year-old mother-of-two, Nancy Gerry, 18, Carolyn Bennett, 17, Sharon Wimer and Krista Melton, both just 14

Giles showed none of them a shred of mercy, delighting in snuffing out their innocent young lives in the most despicably violent and depraved manner

Now here he was, 45 years later. Much older of, course, and without the long dark hair and thick moustache that he had back then

But the eyes remained the same.As one of his former neighbours told me: 'He had the darkest eyes I had ever seen

'My chilling encounter with Giles will be screened on ITV on Thursday. It's the fourth of my Serial Killer documentaries and by far the most unnerving

Unlike the first three mass murderers I met, Giles didn't spend hours trying to persuade me of his innocence

'You are serving five life sentences for killing five young women,' I began. 'So my first question is, did you kill those women?'That deathly stare bore into me again

'Yes sir, I did.'The big question that has remained unanswered for 45 years is why did Giles kill those women?It's a question I was hoping to get answered, not least for the poor families of his victims who have never had any kind of explanation from him, or closure

The extraordinary thing about Bernard Giles is just how ordinary his background was before he began killing

He was one of four children from a stable family who enjoyed a perfectly happy, loving childhood with no abuse

(His siblings have all gone on to be successful, well-adjusted people.) A high-school friend told me that Giles was 'the nicest guy you'd ever want to meet' back then

'A sweet, young, artistic, gifted, nice guy.'At the time he began his murderous rampage aged 20, Giles was working as an electrician and did not have a criminal record

His domestic life was settled, too. He lived in Titusville, a small town on Florida's east coast that sits in the shadow of the Kennedy Space Center, with his 18-year-old wife Leslie and their five-month-old daughter, Heather

Nobody around him had any idea that he was a time-bomb of such horrifying proportions

Nobody, that is, except Giles himself.For since the age of six, he had known that he harboured a sinister craving for sexual violence against women

It first manifested itself during a game of witch-hunt with a young girl neighbour of similar age, when he caught up with her in a back bedroom of her house and pinned her down

'I remember straddling her and strangling her,' he told me. 'Playing… but that was my initial sexual imprint

From that point on, anything that I saw or read that had anything to do with sexual violence against a woman was a sexual impulse

As a child growing up, I became obsessed with this.'Over the next decade, the obsession grew more intense until finally, at the age of 16, having failed at school and dropped out, it reached fever pitch

Giles was walking down a street when he saw a young woman and felt a sudden urge to kill her

'It was an opportunity that had presented itself to me,' he said, in a calm, matter-of-fact manner, as if he was a businessman discussing a potential new deal

'This woman was getting into a VW and I had a knife, and I went past the car and fortunately I kept going

'What was he feeling?'Extraordinarily hyped.'If he hadn't kept going?'She'd have been murdered

'That woman had no idea how lucky she was. 'She never even glanced back at me,' he said

But Giles was in no doubt that he would one day act on his urges. 'It was my life's passion,' he said, simply

'To murder… to murder women.' The moment finally came three years later when he picked up a young bar singer named Nancy Gerry

He doesn't remember her name, but 45 years on, he remembers exactly what she looked like: 'A little shorter than me, fairly well built, pretty but not particularly pretty, brown hair

'Giles drove her to woodland, ordered her to get out of the car, walked her over to a tree, and shot her dead

He sighed as he relived his emotions after that first killing: 'Very stimulated, very provoked

I mean, what is your passion in life?'What is the thing you like to do more than anything else?'And you're doing it and you are so there you can almost see the atoms vibrating

'I felt utterly sickened by these words. Until that point, Giles had been no different to most of the myriad people I interview every day on Good Morning Britain

Yet now, as his eyes lit up with excitement when he relived the 'atom-vibrating' thrill he got from executing an innocent woman, I suddenly saw the full horror of the man sitting in front of me expose itself with evil, shuddering reality

Giles spent the next 12 weeks hunting for more prey, and killing more and more women

Did it matter what they looked like?'Generally speaking, no,' he replied.So what was his criterion for selection?'Access

'One simple but utterly devastating word, delivered as if he was a petty thief pondering what kind of house he liked to rob

'To any woman?' I asked.'Yes, sir.''That made you an unbelievably dangerous man for any young woman

''Yes, sir. I'm not defending my position – I'm describing the position. It was what it was and where I was at

'At this point, I realised I was talking to a real-life Hannibal Lecter – a highly intelligent, articulate, self-aware man with a forensic memory for his victims and the way he murdered them, and a horrifying ability to talk about them in a detached, almost casual manner

He insisted that he wished he hadn't killed any of his victims but I don't think that is true

I think he relished killing them, and to this day, he relishes the memories of killing them

When I asked if he felt any remorse after killing Nancy, he shook his head. 'No, sir

Nothing.'In the 1970s, there was a spate of horrendous serial killers in America, yet the term wasn't widely used

They were different, more innocent times.Young women regularly hitch-hiked on their own all over the country without worrying that anything bad may happen to them

That allowed Giles to hunt and catch them with ease. He remembers the appearance of all his victims but not their names

'You don't remember any of their names at all?' I asked. 'No, sir. Why would someone embrace the names of their victims? I saw these women as objects

'He revealed that he decided not to kill at least another three young women he held at gunpoint because they talked to him, thus 'humanising' themselves to him

'Some women actually spared their lives by engaging me in conversations,' he said

Did he ever get an urge to kill his wife? 'No, I knew her. I never killed anyone I knew

The objectification of the victims, for me, was an important element.'He said he had strong feelings for his young wife Leslie but they were overridden by stronger feelings to kill other women

'I did love her, but I was completely obsessed with this other thing. I didn't realise how much I did love my wife until the last time I ever saw her through half an inch of bullet-proof glass

'After an hour of the interview, this was the first moment of any real emotion that Giles had displayed

(Later, I asked him when he last cried and he replied: 'When I saw the movie Braveheart in 1998-99

Hollywood presents this really pristine picture of a human being, what you wish you could be, a perfect human being, and I was crying because I was mourning my life

')I decided to try to provoke more emotion out of him by showing him a photograph of his daughter as an adult

He had never seen or heard from her – or his wife – again after he was jailed.Giles stared intently at the photograph

And smiled. 'When you look at your own daughter at that age,' I asked, 'smiling, innocent, and happy, what do you feel about the young women you killed?''I don't put those together

''What would you feel about a man who snatched your daughter and terrorised, raped and killed her?''I certainly wouldn't appreciate it

' It was an extraordinary thing to say, but entirely in keeping with Giles's matter-of-fact demeanour

He was finally caught because, in his own words, he became 'off the chain' in his crazed lust for murder

A serial-killer profiler told me: 'We see this with so many serial killers. After each killing, the need to feel that again is there and it's urgent but it's bigger

'They have to come with some new angle to make it more violent, more horrific.'They have to try new angles to keep that thrill alive but, of course, this isn't sustainable

At some point they become so frenetic they have no choice but to screw up and the police find them

'Twelve weeks after starting his murderous spree, Giles slipped up. He picked up two girls at the same time, and when he took them into woodland and tried to shoot one of them, his gun jammed and the terrified girls fled

Crucially, they had seen an electrician's manual in the back of his car that had his name on it: Bernard Giles

The girls passed the name to police who quickly found his address and arrested him

Giles eventually avoided the death penalty by admitting to all five murders. But he will never come out of prison

He has never apologised to the families of his victims. I suggested he look down the camera and finally do so

He shrugged. 'What do you say to somebody that you murdered a member of their family? I don't know…'He couldn't do it

'Of course, I'm sorry,' he eventually said – but he said that to me, not to the families

'The fact we're having this conversation in this way, yes, I'm sorry.'I don't think he's sorry at all

I'm sure that if he were released tomorrow, he'd kill again.I've interviewed a lot of very dangerous, nasty people for my crime series Killer Women and Serial Killer

But none has ever left me feeling quite so repulsed as Giles.Outwardly, when he's not talking about his crimes, he exudes an air of banal normality

Yet on the inside, it's hard to imagine a darker, more dangerous soul.His eyes tell the real story

At the end of the interview, I asked him how he felt about it.'It unsettles me that you have such a monstrous view of me,' he replied

I have a monstrous view of Bernard Giles because he's a monster.Yet the true reason for his monstrosity remains a mystery

When I asked him why he did it, he half-smirked and said: 'If you like chocolate, you like chocolate

You cannot eat chocolate, but you can't deny that you like chocolate.' Confessions Of A Serial Killer With Piers Morgan will be shown on ITV on Thursday at 9pm

 

For more infomation >> PIERS MORGAN: My encounter with notorious female murderer - Duration: 23:42.

-------------------------------------------

PIERS MORGAN: My encounter with notorious female murderer - Duration: 23:42.

Two heavily armed guards opened the door of our interview room at the high-security Florida prison and Bernard Giles walked slowly inside and shook my hand

 He was 5ft 11in, balding, bespectacled, unshaven and in regulation blue jail uniform

We exchanged small talk for several minutes and he seemed, on the face of it, to be a softly spoken, articulate, intelligent and rational man

If I didn't know any different, I'd say Bernard Giles was just an average, harmless kind of guy

But I did know different.In fact, I knew that he is about as far from 'average' and 'harmless' as any man could possibly be

RELATED ARTICLES Previous 1 Next 'Bomb! Get out!': The terrifying moment an armed

'Baby girl, I'm broken without you': Mother of missing. Share this article Share For Giles is one of America's worst and most notorious serial killers, and without doubt the most dangerous human being I have ever interviewed

As we sat down just 2ft from each other, our eyes locked for a few seconds. His intense gaze never averted, and I suddenly felt a cold, dark shudder down my spine

I imagined him staring in the same ruthless, emotion-devoid way at his terrified young female victims just before he killed them

Over a frenzied three-month period in the early 1970s, Giles embarked on a killing spree of unimaginable horror

His victims were all hitchhikers whom he picked up and drove at gunpoint to remote orange groves where he sexually abused and shot them

They were Paula Hamric, a 22-year-old mother-of-two, Nancy Gerry, 18, Carolyn Bennett, 17, Sharon Wimer and Krista Melton, both just 14

Giles showed none of them a shred of mercy, delighting in snuffing out their innocent young lives in the most despicably violent and depraved manner

Now here he was, 45 years later. Much older of, course, and without the long dark hair and thick moustache that he had back then

But the eyes remained the same.As one of his former neighbours told me: 'He had the darkest eyes I had ever seen

'My chilling encounter with Giles will be screened on ITV on Thursday. It's the fourth of my Serial Killer documentaries and by far the most unnerving

Unlike the first three mass murderers I met, Giles didn't spend hours trying to persuade me of his innocence

'You are serving five life sentences for killing five young women,' I began. 'So my first question is, did you kill those women?'That deathly stare bore into me again

'Yes sir, I did.'The big question that has remained unanswered for 45 years is why did Giles kill those women?It's a question I was hoping to get answered, not least for the poor families of his victims who have never had any kind of explanation from him, or closure

The extraordinary thing about Bernard Giles is just how ordinary his background was before he began killing

He was one of four children from a stable family who enjoyed a perfectly happy, loving childhood with no abuse

(His siblings have all gone on to be successful, well-adjusted people.) A high-school friend told me that Giles was 'the nicest guy you'd ever want to meet' back then

'A sweet, young, artistic, gifted, nice guy.'At the time he began his murderous rampage aged 20, Giles was working as an electrician and did not have a criminal record

His domestic life was settled, too. He lived in Titusville, a small town on Florida's east coast that sits in the shadow of the Kennedy Space Center, with his 18-year-old wife Leslie and their five-month-old daughter, Heather

Nobody around him had any idea that he was a time-bomb of such horrifying proportions

Nobody, that is, except Giles himself.For since the age of six, he had known that he harboured a sinister craving for sexual violence against women

It first manifested itself during a game of witch-hunt with a young girl neighbour of similar age, when he caught up with her in a back bedroom of her house and pinned her down

'I remember straddling her and strangling her,' he told me. 'Playing… but that was my initial sexual imprint

From that point on, anything that I saw or read that had anything to do with sexual violence against a woman was a sexual impulse

As a child growing up, I became obsessed with this.'Over the next decade, the obsession grew more intense until finally, at the age of 16, having failed at school and dropped out, it reached fever pitch

Giles was walking down a street when he saw a young woman and felt a sudden urge to kill her

'It was an opportunity that had presented itself to me,' he said, in a calm, matter-of-fact manner, as if he was a businessman discussing a potential new deal

'This woman was getting into a VW and I had a knife, and I went past the car and fortunately I kept going

'What was he feeling?'Extraordinarily hyped.'If he hadn't kept going?'She'd have been murdered

'That woman had no idea how lucky she was. 'She never even glanced back at me,' he said

But Giles was in no doubt that he would one day act on his urges. 'It was my life's passion,' he said, simply

'To murder… to murder women.' The moment finally came three years later when he picked up a young bar singer named Nancy Gerry

He doesn't remember her name, but 45 years on, he remembers exactly what she looked like: 'A little shorter than me, fairly well built, pretty but not particularly pretty, brown hair

'Giles drove her to woodland, ordered her to get out of the car, walked her over to a tree, and shot her dead

He sighed as he relived his emotions after that first killing: 'Very stimulated, very provoked

I mean, what is your passion in life?'What is the thing you like to do more than anything else?'And you're doing it and you are so there you can almost see the atoms vibrating

'I felt utterly sickened by these words. Until that point, Giles had been no different to most of the myriad people I interview every day on Good Morning Britain

Yet now, as his eyes lit up with excitement when he relived the 'atom-vibrating' thrill he got from executing an innocent woman, I suddenly saw the full horror of the man sitting in front of me expose itself with evil, shuddering reality

Giles spent the next 12 weeks hunting for more prey, and killing more and more women

Did it matter what they looked like?'Generally speaking, no,' he replied.So what was his criterion for selection?'Access

'One simple but utterly devastating word, delivered as if he was a petty thief pondering what kind of house he liked to rob

'To any woman?' I asked.'Yes, sir.''That made you an unbelievably dangerous man for any young woman

''Yes, sir. I'm not defending my position – I'm describing the position. It was what it was and where I was at

'At this point, I realised I was talking to a real-life Hannibal Lecter – a highly intelligent, articulate, self-aware man with a forensic memory for his victims and the way he murdered them, and a horrifying ability to talk about them in a detached, almost casual manner

He insisted that he wished he hadn't killed any of his victims but I don't think that is true

I think he relished killing them, and to this day, he relishes the memories of killing them

When I asked if he felt any remorse after killing Nancy, he shook his head. 'No, sir

Nothing.'In the 1970s, there was a spate of horrendous serial killers in America, yet the term wasn't widely used

They were different, more innocent times.Young women regularly hitch-hiked on their own all over the country without worrying that anything bad may happen to them

That allowed Giles to hunt and catch them with ease. He remembers the appearance of all his victims but not their names

'You don't remember any of their names at all?' I asked. 'No, sir. Why would someone embrace the names of their victims? I saw these women as objects

'He revealed that he decided not to kill at least another three young women he held at gunpoint because they talked to him, thus 'humanising' themselves to him

'Some women actually spared their lives by engaging me in conversations,' he said

Did he ever get an urge to kill his wife? 'No, I knew her. I never killed anyone I knew

The objectification of the victims, for me, was an important element.'He said he had strong feelings for his young wife Leslie but they were overridden by stronger feelings to kill other women

'I did love her, but I was completely obsessed with this other thing. I didn't realise how much I did love my wife until the last time I ever saw her through half an inch of bullet-proof glass

'After an hour of the interview, this was the first moment of any real emotion that Giles had displayed

(Later, I asked him when he last cried and he replied: 'When I saw the movie Braveheart in 1998-99

Hollywood presents this really pristine picture of a human being, what you wish you could be, a perfect human being, and I was crying because I was mourning my life

')I decided to try to provoke more emotion out of him by showing him a photograph of his daughter as an adult

He had never seen or heard from her – or his wife – again after he was jailed.Giles stared intently at the photograph

And smiled. 'When you look at your own daughter at that age,' I asked, 'smiling, innocent, and happy, what do you feel about the young women you killed?''I don't put those together

''What would you feel about a man who snatched your daughter and terrorised, raped and killed her?''I certainly wouldn't appreciate it

' It was an extraordinary thing to say, but entirely in keeping with Giles's matter-of-fact demeanour

He was finally caught because, in his own words, he became 'off the chain' in his crazed lust for murder

A serial-killer profiler told me: 'We see this with so many serial killers. After each killing, the need to feel that again is there and it's urgent but it's bigger

'They have to come with some new angle to make it more violent, more horrific.'They have to try new angles to keep that thrill alive but, of course, this isn't sustainable

At some point they become so frenetic they have no choice but to screw up and the police find them

'Twelve weeks after starting his murderous spree, Giles slipped up. He picked up two girls at the same time, and when he took them into woodland and tried to shoot one of them, his gun jammed and the terrified girls fled

Crucially, they had seen an electrician's manual in the back of his car that had his name on it: Bernard Giles

The girls passed the name to police who quickly found his address and arrested him

Giles eventually avoided the death penalty by admitting to all five murders. But he will never come out of prison

He has never apologised to the families of his victims. I suggested he look down the camera and finally do so

He shrugged. 'What do you say to somebody that you murdered a member of their family? I don't know…'He couldn't do it

'Of course, I'm sorry,' he eventually said – but he said that to me, not to the families

'The fact we're having this conversation in this way, yes, I'm sorry.'I don't think he's sorry at all

I'm sure that if he were released tomorrow, he'd kill again.I've interviewed a lot of very dangerous, nasty people for my crime series Killer Women and Serial Killer

But none has ever left me feeling quite so repulsed as Giles.Outwardly, when he's not talking about his crimes, he exudes an air of banal normality

Yet on the inside, it's hard to imagine a darker, more dangerous soul.His eyes tell the real story

At the end of the interview, I asked him how he felt about it.'It unsettles me that you have such a monstrous view of me,' he replied

I have a monstrous view of Bernard Giles because he's a monster.Yet the true reason for his monstrosity remains a mystery

When I asked him why he did it, he half-smirked and said: 'If you like chocolate, you like chocolate

You cannot eat chocolate, but you can't deny that you like chocolate.' Confessions Of A Serial Killer With Piers Morgan will be shown on ITV on Thursday at 9pm

 

For more infomation >> PIERS MORGAN: My encounter with notorious female murderer - Duration: 23:42.

-------------------------------------------

Serial killer tells Piers Morgan that murdering is his 'life's passion' in chilling new series - Duration: 3:14.

Serial killer tells Piers Morgan that murdering is his 'life's passion'  (Picture: ITV, Rex/Shutterstock A serial killer has confessed that murdering young women is his life's passion

 Bernard Giles talked with Good Morning Britain host Piers Morgan bluntly in a 'calm and matter-of-fact' manner about how the killings made him feel 'extraordinarily hyped'

 Piers paid a visit to the man – who is one of America's most notorious serial killers after going on a killing spree during a three-month period in the early 1970s – to tape Confessions Of A Serial Killer With Piers Morgan which will be aired on ITV next week

Giles is serving five life sentences (Picture:  Florida State Prison) Giles, who is in a prison in Florida, killed victims who were all hitchhikers

After picking them up he would drive them at gunpoint to remote orange groves where he sexually abused and shot them, reports the Mail On Sunday

Advertisement Advertisement  Piers said, in a personal account for the publication, that Giles was the first killer he interviewed that did not try to prove his innocence

 At the start of the episode, Piers said: 'You are serving five life sentences for killing five young women

So my first question is, did you kill those women?'  Giles simply answered: 'Yes sir, I did.' Piers called the interview repulsive (Picture: Plum Pictures) Later in the interview, Giles told Piers that acting on his urges to be sexually violent towards women was a barely controllable emotion

 It was my life's passion,' he said, simply. 'To murder… to murder women.'  After reliving his first killing Giles explained how he felt

 'Very stimulated, very provoked. I mean, what is your passion in life?' he asked

''What is the thing you like to do more than anything else?  'And you're doing it and you are so there you can almost see the atoms vibrating.' More: Piers Morgan Piers Morgan brands Will Young 'repulsive' for his Grand Tour 'homophobic' rant Charlotte Hawkins livid with Piers Morgan as she swears at him mid-news bulletin Piers Morgan rips into 'hopeless' Ellen DeGeneres as he backs Ricky Gervais to host Oscars Piers shared that he 'felt utterly sickened by these words' as he watched his eyes light up 'with excitement.'  The journalist added: 'I suddenly saw the full horror of the man sitting in front of me expose itself with evil, shuddering reality.'  Piers concluded: 'I've interviewed a lot of very dangerous, nasty people for my crime series Killer Women and Serial Killer

But none has ever left me feeling quite so repulsed as Giles.' Advertisement Advertisement  Confessions Of A Serial Killer With Piers Morgan will be shown on ITV on Thursday at 9pm

Got a showbiz story?  If you've got a story, video or pictures get in touch with the Metro.co.uk Entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@metro.co.uk, calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page - we'd love to hear from you

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For more infomation >> Serial killer tells Piers Morgan that murdering is his 'life's passion' in chilling new series - Duration: 3:14.

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Morgan Classic tournament celebrates volleyball's local history - Duration: 0:50.

For more infomation >> Morgan Classic tournament celebrates volleyball's local history - Duration: 0:50.

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Meghan Markle fans attack Piers Morgan for ridiculing banana messages to sex workers - Duration: 2:49.

 Pregnant Meghan penned messages of support to sex workers on the pieces of fruit as she helped prepare food parcels for the women when she made an unannounced trip to charity One25 with Prince Harry

The 37-year-old drew hearts on bananas and wrote "You are strong", "You are special", "You are brave" and "You are loved" on the fruit

 But Mr Morgan branded the move "one of the weirdest, most ridiculous things" he has seen a royal do

 Writing on Twitter, the Good Morning Britain host said: "Why is Meghan Markle signing bananas for sex workers to 'empower them'? "This is one of the weirdest, most ridiculous things I have ever seen a member of the Royal Family do…" However, the tweet prompted an angry response from some of Mr Morgan's followers who rushed to defend the duchess

 One said: "Because she has a good heart, she clearly sees sex workers as human beings and there is nothing wrong with reminding someone who needs such words of encouragement, she might just change someone's life with such a small gesture

Being nice is free." Another wrote: "Let it go. This is really sad if she is all you can talk about to be relevant

" A third said: "Yet if she'd given you time of day and invited you to wedding, you'd be saying how amazing she is for doing this

" One even told Mr Morgan to "get over being ghosted" by Meghan, writing: "I don't understand your desperate need to put her down

At least she's not judging these women. Get over being Ghosted by her !" But a number of others agreed with the outspoken breakfast host, with one saying: "I have to agree it's somewhat 'odd' - not within Royal protocol

" And another added: "I can't see the point in it either agree with piers." Speaking during the visit to the charity, which helps sex workers break free from prostitution, Meghan revealed she was inspired to leave messages in the food bags after learning about a similar gesture made for school children

 She said: "I was thinking about this the other day. I saw this programme this woman had started in the States on a school lunch programme when on each of the bananas she wrote an affirmation or something to make the kids feel really empowered

 "I thought it was the most incredible idea - this small gesture." Mr Morgan's tweet comes months after he accused Meghan of ghosting him when she met Harry

  Mr Morgan insisted that he was "dumped like a sack of spuds" by Meghan in July 2016 when she met Harry, after becoming friends with her a year earlier when he followed her on Twitter

 Writing in his Daily Mail column, the 53-year-old added that he had been left feeling "suspicious and cynical" of Meghan following the incident

For more infomation >> Meghan Markle fans attack Piers Morgan for ridiculing banana messages to sex workers - Duration: 2:49.

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Ash Morgan The Voice U.k 2013 Semifinals sings Ex Factor by Lauryn Hill - Duration: 2:08.

It could all be so simple

But you'd rather make it hard

Loving you is like a battle

And we both end up with scars

Tell me, who I have to be

To get some reciprocity

See no one loves you more than me

And no one ever will

No matter how I think we grow

You always seem to let me know

It ain't workin'

It ain't workin'

And when I try to walk away

You'd hurt yourself to make me stay

This is crazy

This is crazy

Cry for me, care for me

You said, "You'd die for me"

"You'd be there for me"

Cry for me, cry for me

For more infomation >> Ash Morgan The Voice U.k 2013 Semifinals sings Ex Factor by Lauryn Hill - Duration: 2:08.

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Roxanne Pallett hails Piers Morgan as 'saviour' after suicidal thoughts - Duration: 4:46.

 Last summer, Roxanne Pallett became the self-confessed "most hated person" in the country after accusing Ryan Thomas of punching her on Celebrity Big Brother

 She had exaggerated a playful action from Ryan, which spiralled out of control and saw him break down in the CBB house

 Afterwards, Roxanne's former co-stars came out of the woodwork and accused her of similar behaviour years before

 She lost jobs and vanished from the public eye, though still appeared on TV in pre-filmed shows

Related Articles Roxanne Pallett comes out of hiding FIVE MONTHS after CBB Ryan Thomas shame Ryan Thomas and Lucy Meck put on loved-up display as Roxanne Pallett emerges from hiding Roxanne Pallett 'turning down paid work' after Celebrity Big Brother punch-gate  Last week, Roxanne reappeared after five months in hiding, and has now broken her silence following the punching scandal

 Shockingly, the 36-year-old admitted: "I sent a message to my mum, my auntie and my two friends

I was saying sorry and goodbye." Since then, she has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and received treatment in Scotland

 Surprisingly, one of her most vocal supporters has been Piers Morgan, who has urged the public to get over the scandal

   Speaking to The Sun Online, Roxanne revealed: "Piers Morgan has been a saviour

He has been a rock to me. He's been through a lot himself so I think he recognised the affect the hatred had on me

 "His compassion and support has kept me from going under. He's not been soft on me – he's told me some home truths – but he's been in touch with me weekly from the minute it happened, he's encouraged me to stay strong

" Roxanne said that, through therapy, she realised that her downward spiral began in her teens

 Her grandmother died, she lost everything in a house fire and was left "pretty much homeless" and sofa-surfing

Related Articles Roxanne Pallett and George Sampson ROW on Celebrity Coach Trip Roxanne Pallett halts bus to VOMIT in dramatic scenes on Celebrity Coach Trip 'Attention-seeking' Roxanne Pallett 'will always play victim' after CBB backlash  She accepts that she blew the Ryan situation out of proportion because that's "all [she's] ever known, for things to be bad"

 It was recently revealed that her fiancé Lee Walton had dumped her, but she confessed it happened months ago

 And her self-imposed exile came due to her not wanting to insult Ryan by "jumping into a project"

 Though it sounds like Roxanne hasn't necessarily stepped out of the spotlight, as she added: "I'm taking one day at a time now and making better choices

" Related articles Coronation Street's Adam Barlow makes exit for 'loads of sex with Italian women' Shipwrecked bombshells strip to coconut bras for booty-shaking twerkathon The Greatest Dancer's Cheryl BOOED after judging Ellie: 'Can you even dance?'

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