'Just stay out of it': Prince Harry hits out at Joe Rogan over vaccine remarks



Prince Harry has weighed in on podcasting king Joe Rogan's comments regarding COVID-19 vaccinations for young people, saying Rogan should "just stay out of it" while warning, "you've got to be careful about what comes out of your mouth."

What are the details?

Last month, Rogan suggested on "The Joe Rogan Experience" that he would not recommend a healthy 21-year-old get vaccinated against the coronavirus, but said he believes vulnerable people should get the shot.

The podcaster was blasted over the remarks, and he later clarified his statements while adding, "I at least try to be honest about what I'm saying."

But the "Armchair Expert" podcast wanted to get Prince Harry's thoughts on Rogan's comments, according to Page Six.

The U.K. royal — who moved to the U.S. last year — told "Armchair" hosts Dax Shepard and Monica Padman that the right thing for Rogan to do would have been "just stay out of it."

"This issue is in today's world with misinformation endemic," the prince said. "You've got to be careful about what comes out of your mouth."

He also scolded Rogan, adding that "with a platform comes responsibility."

The New York Post noted that Page Six "exclusively reported that Rogan's comments would not sit well with Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, who have been huge supporters of COVID-19 vaccinations," pointing out that "the couple served as campaign chairs of Global Citizen's VAX Live: The Concert to Reunite the World, which served to increase donations and sharing of vaccine doses around the world."

Anything else?

Harry himself has refused to "just stay out of" American politics.

During the 2020 election cycle, he and wife Meghan Markle issued a video widely interpreted as an effort to sway voters to pull the lever for then-candidate Joe Biden.

When asked for his reaction to the couple weighing in the race at the time, then-President Donald Trump said, "I'm not a fan of hers, and I would say this — and she probably has heard that — but I wish a lot of luck to Harry, 'cause he's gonna need it."

Since then, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle sat down for a tell-all interview with Oprah Winfrey seen worldwide, wherein they criticized the royal family and alleged that there are racists in their ranks.

Elon Musk scoffs at number of MBAs running corporate America: 'Get out there on the g**damn front line' and 'show employees that you care'



Elon Musk, Tesla and SpaceX CEO, said recently that there are too many business school grads — and not enough innovative entrepreneurs — who are running American companies.

The billionaire also said that far too many number-crunchers run American companies and are more concerned about their bottom lines rather than focusing on what really matters: their product and, as a result, the satisfaction of their customers.

What are the details?

During last week's Wall Street Journal CEO summit, Musk — who recently moved from California to Texassaid, "I think there might be too many MBAs running companies. There's the MBA-ization of America, which I think is maybe not that great. ... There should be more focus on the product itself, less time on board meetings, less time on financials."

He added, "A company has no value in itself. It only has value to the degree that it is [an] effective allocator of resources to create business services that are of a greater value than the costs of the inputs."

Musk explained that he, too, understands how stifling the board room can be and said that he feels a far greater benefit when he's connecting on the factory floor or engaging in the creative process in mulling over his designs.

"When I have spent too much time in a conference room, that's when things have gone awry, and when I go spend time on the factory floor or really using the cars, thinking about the rockets, that's where things have gone better," he reasoned.

In his stirring remarks, Musk also urged business CEOs to "get out there on the goddamn front line and show them that you care, and that you're not just in some plush office somewhere."

The 49-year-old billionaire — and one of the world's five richest men — doesn't have a graduate degree.