Bill Maher responded to Larry David’s criticisms of his recent meeting with President Trump at the White House, the “real-time” host saying that the OP-ED of the New York Times actor was “in a way insulting for 6 million dead Jews”.
Maher’s comment was shared by Piers Morgan Thursday on X, in a Teaser clip for an upcoming conversation on his YouTube program, “Piers Morgan Unnsored”.
His answer occurs a few days after David, without naming the actor specifically, scrambled Maher in a guest article entitled “My dinner with Adolf”, who actually compared Maher’s visit with the president to someone who met Hitler in 1939.
“I knew that I could not change his opinions, but we have to speak on the other side – even if he has invaded and annexed other countries and committed unspeakable crimes against humanity,” wrote David in his Monday play, mocking Maher’s summary of his meeting with Trump.

During Thursday’s overview, Maher told Morgan that he was a friend with the star of “Curb Your Enthusiasm” and did not want to discuss OP-ED too much and generally did not seem to be too worked on this subject. However, he was an exception by comparing the president’s meeting to meet Hitler on the eve of the Second World War and the Holocaust.
“I must say, you know, come on, guy – Hitler, Nazis? No one was more difficult – and more premonitory, I must say – about Donald Trump than me,” said Maher. “I do not need to give conferences to whom Donald Trump is. The fact that I met him in person has not changed this, and the fact that I pointed out honestly is not a sin either.”
He then said he was insulting for David or someone else to compare Trump to Hitler. “I just think it’s a bit insulting for 6 million dead Jews, you know,” said Maher. “It should be in its place in history.”
Maher then added that Hilter is the “goat” – or the biggest of all time – “evil” and that it is better not to raise it during the modern reference.
The long -standing host of the “real time” has collected a recent dinner he had with the president, Kid Rock and the boss of the UFC, Dana White, at the start of his April 11 show. The actor said President Trump was “graceful and measured” and did not look like the leader he often criticizes. However, his meeting with the president was criticized by many on the left before David’s withdrawal from Times, which you can read by clicking here.
