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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  December 4, 2023 2:00am-3:01am GMT

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gb news. very good evening. >> i'm ray addison in the newsroom. headliners is just moments away. but first, our top stories tonight, 1500 properties in cumbria are still without electricity after heavy snow caused power cuts. electricity north—west repairs are north—west says that repairs are continuing following significant damage with damage to the network with engineers battling treacherous conditions. weather warnings for snow place
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snow and ice remain in place for many parts earlier many parts of the uk. earlier police confirmed the body many parts of the uk. earlier poa:e confirmed the body many parts of the uk. earlier poa man1firmed the body many parts of the uk. earlier poa man hadied the body many parts of the uk. earlier poa man had been the body many parts of the uk. earlier poa man had been found body many parts of the uk. earlier poa man had been found in dy many parts of the uk. earlier poa man had been found in a! many parts of the uk. earlier poa man had been found in a car of a man had been found in a car in nottingham. well it's been announced that the foreign secretary the secretary will travel to the united week to meet united states next week to meet secretary state antony secretary of state antony blinken. cameron will to blinken. lord cameron will to travel washington on december 6th to 6th as part of efforts to de—escalate tensions in the middle also meet middle east. he'll also meet with democrat with republican and democrat members congress. a us members of congress. a us warship has shot down a drone launched houthi controlled launched from houthi controlled areas yemen . the american areas in yemen. the american military saying that there were four against three four attacks against three commercial vessels in the southern red sea today. it's believed that one of those ships that was was a british owned that was hit was a british owned cargo vessel . yemeni houthis cargo vessel. yemeni houthis claimed that they struck israeli targets. israel's military says the ships had no connection to them . commuters have faced a them. commuters have faced a second day of travel chaos as train drivers continued seven days of strikes. aslef union members have launched a series of walkouts in their dispute over pay . great northern over pay. great northern thameslink and avanti west coast trains have seen cancellations. chiltern railways and west
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midlands railway services have also been affected . the suspect also been affected. the suspect in the killing of a german tourist in central paris has pledged allegiance to islamic state before attacking tourists . state before attacking tourists. the french prosecutor says the 26 year old made the comment in a video posted on social media. two other people, including a british tourist, were injured when they were attacked with a knife and a hammer near the eiffel tower. previously the suspect was sentenced to four years in prison for planning an attack in 2016. this is gb news across the uk on tv , in your across the uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news now. it's those headliners . headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners . headliners. >> i'm nic dixon, back from a very rare break. hope you're well. i'll be taking you through
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tomorrow's top stories for the next hour. with the help of paul cox and the hindrance of louis shaffer. there he is . i've used shaffer. there he is. i've used that before, but it's so good. had to use it again. how are you both doing? >> all the better for seeing you, nick. >> it feels like i've been off. i've been off. i've missed you. what's. what's been happening since here? louis since i've not been here? louis has become more has become much more professional. really me? no, no, not bothered me. >> when you say a hindrance, i'm trying my best out here. >> yeah. yeah i looked at camera like this. >> there's some empathetic and sympathetic . sympathetic. >> yeah. the banter bit has got no less awkward in the time i've been off. and there's something mad happening in my ears, so let's. shall we crack on and have a look at monday's front pages, then? so the daily mail has warns bbc over biggest licence fee increase for 40 years. the i has tories losing voters to farage amid anger over high immigration. the guardian
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has starmer labour will not turn on spending taps if it wins election. no one believes that the mirror thatcher backlash hits starmer . the metro shows hits starmer. the metro shows the money and the daily star skate britain, which is about the snow. those are your headunes. the snow. those are your headlines . all right, paul, what headlines. all right, paul, what is on the cover of the daily mail? so, nick, daily mail, pm warns bbc over biggest licence fee increase in 40 years. >> so rishi sunak has told the bbc to cut costs amid amid warnings ministers could intervene to limit this year's licence fee hike. now it's been fixed for nearly four years at 159 or let's call it £160. and that's because of all the things that's because of all the things that have gone on in the world in that time. so and basically the government have imposed that freeze on the bbc. but now because of inflation, they're going to be rising year , going to be rising next year, i'm say to £173 or £51
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i'm afraid to say to £173 or £51 a month, which will be political kryptonite for some people because there is a lot of questions over the value of the bbc, particularly now in amongst the culture war, where we're seeing the bbc quite divisive, not as neutral as they'd like us to believe. and they seem to be coming down on some sides of the argument or not committing to other sides of the argument, which is putting a question in some fee payers minds , i would say. >> nick yeah, i feel bad for the bbc in some ways. it's a very difficult in these incredibly polarised you have polarised times you almost have two cultures, but they two parallel cultures, but they have failed. i mean they've have also failed. i mean they've been anti—israel, been so obviously anti—israel, they've woke in their been so obviously anti—israel, theyprogrammingoke in their been so obviously anti—israel, theyprogramming and n their been so obviously anti—israel, theyprogramming and they've arts programming and they've just, you know, they've failed to be neutral. it would be hard to be neutral. it would be hard to be neutral right now, but they've not a job. they've not done a great job. and now see newsnight getting and now we see newsnight getting cut funding. because cut its funding. that's because headliners is destroying it. that's fact in industry. >> we know it in industry and there's massive noise in industry about headliners industry about what headliners has newsnight.
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industry about what headliners has i newsnight. industry about what headliners has i wasiewsnight. industry about what headliners has i was joking. ht. industry about what headliners has i was joking. that's not >> but i was joking. that's not really it's not the real reason, but i wanted to create. you went with it? >> yeah, i wanted to create it. >> yeah, i wanted to create it. >> had to clarify. so we don't get sued. louis, is it the centralisation everything centralisation of everything and the something? the death of something? yeah. >> well, it is the same. >> well, it is the same. >> it's what happens when was >> it's what happens when it was centralised at one time, and it's decentre closed. it's becoming decentre closed. and is what's happened and this is what's happened is that used have to that people used to have to watch there was one watch the bbc. there was one channel set up to be channel and it was set up to be to balanced, be whatever to be balanced, to be whatever those words that they use. when there are two political parties. but it's not that there are two political parties now. there are people support britain and people who support britain and then team world and bbc people who support britain and therbeen team world and bbc people who support britain and therbeen co—opted d and bbc people who support britain and therbeen co—opted by|nd bbc people who support britain and therbeen co—opted by|nd world has been co—opted by team world and the gb news people. they don't want to pay for it. they don't want to pay for it. they don't want to for the bbc, don't want to pay for the bbc, which is just state propaganda. and so eventually something's got to give there. i don't know what's got to give. it's either us or them. there was a time, of course, nick and i would remember this before you to remember this before you came to this fabulous when the this fabulous country when the bbc the place for bbc was was the place for children to go. >> know, you you were
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>> you know, you you were defined by you watched as a kid. >> jemmy before we find out about samuel yeah, it was a place for children to go. >> it was a safe place. but you know, would define yourself. know, you would define yourself. but you watch you watch but do you watch do you watch bbc or do you watch itv? of course. was course. you know, i was a council estate. i aspired to watch the bbc. >> were posh you >> you were posh because you watched bbc. watched the bbc. >> is exactly it. >> this is exactly it. >> this is exactly it. >> just don't know what >> now you just don't know what you are. >> is sad. it's a sad >> it is sad. it's a sad decline. and is it sort of an easy win for sunak then to sort of say a vaguely anti? >> yeah, this is what i meant about being politically about it being politically divisive and kryptonite because it's for someone in it's very easy for someone in rishi sunak position to say to the support the electorate, we don't support this. full well this. now he knows full well that going to have that he's going to have to support it some degree. support it to some degree. >> okay. well, shall we have a look at the i then, well, look at the i then, lewis well, the the is like a the i the i this is like a non—story, not a nine story. >> but it's like really not merely a major story. tories losing farage losing voters to farage amid anger migration and anger over high migration and first farage isn't first of all, farage isn't running. no he's not running. there's no he's not doing anything, not doing anything, so he's not losing vote. doing anything, so he's not losithat's vote. doing anything, so he's not losithat's howz. doing anything, so he's not losithat's how powerful he is.
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>> that's how powerful he is. he's winning from the jungle. he's winning from the jungle. he's kangaroo's and he's a kangaroo's testicles and still destroying in the election. >> this story does make you wonder thinks that he's wonder if he thinks that he's competing jungle. competing with the jungle. >> competing? because >> what is he competing? because it's the only you vote it's the only place you can vote for on itv. for farage is on itv. >> oh, okay. >> oh, okay. >> so maybe that's what they mean. >> rishi needs to get in the jungle or one of these things, but what this is saying, they had a poll as research. had a poll as bmg research. >> of voters of all >> it said 63% of voters of all parties thinks net migration is currently high. and people currently too high. and people are the tories are unhappy with the tories because a basic because the tories is a basic see, those people they're on team world. they're no different than really. the than labour really. and the people there know it. they people out there know it. they know that they want that at least some of the people want to be able to vote for a party that stands for britain, stands up for britain, that cares i don't even know why cares for. i don't even know why i care. i don't even like this guy because you love this country huge trend country and it's a huge trend across world. across the world. >> i mean, we've had javier milei milli in argentina. we've had wilders the had hit wilders in the netherlands. we've sweden netherlands. we've got sweden and france being and denmark and france being talking on talking very tough on immigration. like immigration. it looks like europe going go either europe is going to go either quite to the right or at
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quite far to the right or at least very polarised to left and right. bit behind right. we're a little bit behind because we don't have proportional and because we don't have pro various|l and because we don't have pro various reasons. and because we don't have provarious reasons. but and because we don't have pro various reasons. but we've1d for various reasons. but we've got this kind of thing where farage can put pressure, as you say, upon say, even from the jungle upon the tories. >> as i say, these two words for a i'm to say a few weeks, i'm going to say them to my window. and them over to my window. and that's moved. we talk about the far and we'll talk far right now and we'll talk about probably the rest about it probably for the rest of career at gb news. but it of our career at gb news. but it isn't where it was and the and populism been smeared in populism is now been smeared in some way. so populism in the sense it's now far right to sense that it's now far right to be popular in way because sense that it's now far right to be |things' in way because sense that it's now far right to be |things that way because sense that it's now far right to be |things that are way because sense that it's now far right to be |things that are popular:ause the things that are popular happen sovereignty happen to be sovereignty and a level of nationalism , not level of nationalism, not nationalism they'd have you nationalism as they'd have you believe in the guardian, but a level of nationalism where you are proud like we would have been as late as the 1990s. remember those? nick you definitely remember them. that we been proud to be we would have been proud to be part of britain , whereas now part of britain, whereas now that's populism and racist. >> yes, i know it is a bit silly, but where does farage come in? is it going to be just putting pressure on the tories or is it going to be what i've
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said? he comes in, becomes tory leader wins in 2029, wins the whole starmer whole election, wins starmer destroys well, destroys the country. well, i would be worried if i was rishi sunak not worried because he can he beat. he can beat. >> by mean farage can beat >> by he i mean farage can beat sunak next election. but sunak in the next election. but what he can do after the next election is entirely destroy the remnants parliamentary remnants of the parliamentary tory which power tory party, which is in power now, which of people who now, which a lot of people who would vote would normally vote conservative, conservative, do not any shape not agree with in any way, shape or form. and it opens the door. it vacuum. guess it creates a vacuum. and guess who's to fill who's going to fill it? >> well, speaking of that, >> yeah, well, speaking of that, what is the front cover of what is on the front cover of the poll? the guardian poll? starmer labour turn spending labour will not turn on spending tapsif labour will not turn on spending taps if it wins the election. >> so, mean, not sure i >> so, i mean, i'm not sure i believe this . however, what it believe this. however, what it does mean there are fears now does mean is there are fears now within labour party that within the labour party that starmer won't spending and starmer won't start spending and the spending is the opposite to spending is austerity what it's austerity. so what they're it's almost as if , austerity. so what they're it's almost as if, if not, spending isn't just a tory thing. it's a thing that has to be done because of the economic situation. we all find ourselves in. and it's almost as if the economic situation isn't just central to britain, it's central
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to the entire world. so therefore, keir starmer is now and i'm going to leave louis to talk about this. but keir starmer is now prepared thing. he's preparing himself for something, isn't he? >> louis he's preparing >> louis yeah, he's preparing himself victory and that's himself for victory and that's what thinking. what he's thinking. he's thinking to win. thinking i'm going to win. definitely going to win. and i'm going to say whatever i need to say to get every possible vote, even i to say multiple even if i have to say multiple things multiple times. he things and multiple times. he wants he thinks he's wants to win. he thinks he's going to win. but he also it's not enough win by a little. not enough to win by a little. he i tell you something, i love keir starmer. i've changed my mind. it must be hair. mind. say it must be his hair. no, he looks great. he's a very handsome man. he's a very. he's a manly man. i mean. no. >> do you see him punch that box in when he was in that punch bag when he was boxing? so now, was boxing? it was so bad. now, was it it was terrible. i don't it bad? it was terrible. i don't watch it in combat to me on that. >> okay. we'll take a break while i watch the but while i watch the thing. but he's he's he is handsome . he's he's he's a he is handsome. he's handsome, but he's preparing himself leadership. handsome, but he's preparing hindeath leadership. handsome, but he's preparing hindeath llove.ship. handsome, but he's preparing hin death llove. yeah. >> death of love. yeah. >> death of love. yeah. >> he's prepared himself for
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leadership and. and that means, you know what? he's going to be like a margaret, we're going to talk later, i guess, talk about this later, i guess, with thatcher. he's with margaret thatcher. he's going of those going to be one of those characters who just who just says this is the rules, this is what doing. don't what we're doing. i don't care if you mean, that's crazy. if you i mean, that's crazy. >> nothing like thatcher. >> he's nothing like thatcher. he's wishy bland he's the most wishy washy, bland quy- yo” he's the most wishy washy, bland guy. you said, he'll guy. he'll like you said, he'll say he'll likes say anything. he'll say he likes thatcher said it'll be no spending. then there'll be loads of it's all nonsense. of spending. it's all nonsense. >> the thing about >> so the great thing about thatcher a sentence that gets thatcher is a sentence that gets said on this said quite a lot on this channel, but said really, i guessis channel, but said really, i guess is that you could go back over years and years and years and years and see that she she said it said something then and it didn't she didn't change then and she didn't. it didn't change and didn't. and it didn't change and it didn't change. whereas with keir starmer, something keir starmer, he said something last he will differ last week which he will differ on this week. i mean, he supported he supported a famously, he supported a famously, he supported have supported corbyn and would have happily and 2019 happily had him in 2017 and 2019 as leader. and now he as our leader. and now he denounces anything corbyn's ever done thatcherite. done and now he's a thatcherite. >> peter hitchens said >> i mean, peter hitchens said he's trying to not drop the he's just trying to not drop the ming that's whole ming vase. that's his whole job before the election. but he is giving good go. let's have
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giving it a good go. let's have a look. >> i just can i just agree with you and change my mind? i was. >> was braun. thank you, >> braun was braun. thank you, louis. first time louis has agreed have a quick louis. first time louis has agre> you've been lying. >> you've been lying. >> stones. >> you've been lying. >> hang nes. >> you've been lying. >> hang on. i'm a regular gym goen >> paul's been lying to himself about that your position? >> because that's what british people do. they that people do. they think that they're obsessed with people do. they think that thejweather. obsessed with people do. they think that thejweather. obsdon't with people do. they think that thejweather. obsdon't even the weather. they don't even know jet streams. they know about jet streams. they don't know how the distance you know this is a long, large know what this is a long, large country there's peaks country and there's snow peaks where gets cold. where it gets cold. >> well, cumbria's been >> well, look, cumbria's been stuck people in cumbria,
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>> well, look, cumbria's been stuck people )eople in cumbria, >> well, look, cumbria's been stuck people )eople irelectricity. 2500 people without electricity. my 2500 people without electricity. my not been my mum and dad have not been there. roads it's been massive in cumbria. so i feel like you're insulted my you're vaguely insulted my people way. people in some way. >> that's the >> whether that's the incompetence of the government. >> whether that's the incordareznce of the government. >> whether that's the incordare you?>f the government. >> whether that's the incordare you? thee government. >> whether that's the incordare you? the thing. rnment. >> whether that's the incordare you? the thing. wellnt. how dare you? the thing. well you actually. >> i agree with that >> no, i agree with that last bit. switched at bit. you suddenly switched at the i thought the end. i thought you were going attack people, but going to attack my people, but you attack technique isn't it? i think we've got go. think we've got to go. unfortunately. you have unfortunately. do you have anything that? no. anything brilliant on that? no. >> two years is not >> i mean, two years is not a long time, but it is in climate alarm. >> alarm. autism alarm. autism. there you go. i don't know what that is. >> i've been trying to figure out pun in ice rink monday, out the pun in ice rink monday, but think
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radio. >> welcome back to the headlines. i'm nick dixon, still here with paul cox and lewis schaefer. cox and schaefer sounds like the dodgiest legal firm ever. i've just realised. yeah, wouldn't them . yeah, i wouldn't go to them. >> it sounds like a painful procedure. >> yeah, good point . should we >> yeah, good point. should we do the telegraph and this keir
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starmer keir starmer? why not? yeah, been that kind of yeah, it's been that kind of show. i've just been called nick dixon h. that's dixon with an h. that's my german ego apparently german alter ego apparently popped german alter ego apparently popped so why popped up on the screen. so why not talk about keir starmer and his unlikely new hero? lewis? >> well, did praise her. >> well, he did praise her. starmer backlash starmer hit by labour backlash after praising he said after praising thatcher. he said that meaningful that she affected meaningful change loose our change and setting loose our natural entrepreneurism. this is what he said about baroness thatcher. which you're not allowed to. you're not allowed to say anything good about thatcher. if you're left. it's like things about like saying nice things about hitler. you can't say he was well dressed and smelled right. it matter. just it doesn't matter. you just kidding, it doesn't matter. you just kid�*just smelled right. it doesn't matter. you just kid�*just smelled right . and he >> just smelled right. and he loved dogs. >> you can't say. >> and he said something nice. and that's why i think the guy , and that's why i think the guy, he's getting cocky. he thinks he's getting cocky. he thinks he's going to be he thinks he's going to win and he wants to win so big. so he's willing to say anything to anybody . and he's anything to anybody. and he's the he is the most important salient point about this dude is that the reason he likes margaret thatcher, because among a select group of people who've
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been prime minister, he is the dream person to be prime minister. he would like to be like margaret thatcher, who could do what she wanted to, didn't care about the backbench or the 219 21 committee, whatever those people are . whatever those people are. >> 1922, 1922 surprised me. i'm just here for basic fact checking now. that's all i do. well, that's an occasional fact. this is my point and you can argue i didn't get the point. he wants to be seen in the echelon of great leaders who could do what they wanted. >> no, he thinks himself as prime minister already. prime minister already. already. and to be and if you were going to be prime who would you prime minister who would you want to would you want to be want to be? would you want to be liz truss, prime minister? right. would you want to be? right. or would you want to be? >> because actually >> yes, because he did actually play >> yes, because he did actually play well. i mean, he play blair as well. i mean, he said thatcher drag said thatcher sought to drag britain out of its stupor by setting unnatural setting loose, unnatural entrepreneurialism. fair enough. tony stale tony blair reimagined the stale outdated labour party into one that seize the optimism of that could seize the optimism of the 90s. not quite the late 90s. so it's not quite as see as sensationalist when you see that praising a series that he's just praising a series of people. and blair himself praised thatcher in 2013. so maybe it's that radical, but
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maybe it's not that radical, but i'm paul, what i'm wondering, paul, what the tactic presumably tactic is because he presumably sees the tory party sees the rift in the tory party between the thatcherite side and what's sometimes the what's sometimes called the natcon more natcon side, who are more economic they're economic nationalists, they're less want more less libertarian, they want more state they're state intervention and they're more but more socially conservative. but presumably lib presumably the red wall, the lib dems, dems versus dems, yeah, the lib dems versus the cons. but but presumably the nat cons. but but presumably the nat cons. but but presumably the is not going to be the red wall is not going to be thrilled with and rosie thrilled with this. and rosie duffield was sort of confirming that today on gb. they're not going but is he going to like this, but is he just that can just gauging that that he can gain the lib dem side gain more from the lib dem side of the tories than he can from the wall? or does he think the red wall? or does he think he's the red wall the he's got the red wall in the back? so i thought it was quite astute of starmer. >> then i thought, well, >> and then i thought, well, crikey, know, he's thinking crikey, you know, he's thinking of know. of himself. i don't know. of course thinking for course he's not thinking for himself. his mentor is tony blair. what i thought. so blair. that's what i thought. so straight from praise straight away from the praise for blair, he, you know. yeah straight away from the praise for iyou�*, he, you know. yeah straight away from the praise for iyou know,ou know. yeah straight away from the praise for iyou know, what's/v. yeah straight away from the praise for iyou know, what's the aah straight away from the praise for iyou know, what's the what's no, you know, what's the what's the chancellor? the opposition chancellor? what's her name? >> it rachel. yeah, >> oh, what's it rachel. yeah, it should be affecting some sort of gordon mouth movement of gordon brown mouth movement before we know it. >> we've blair and gordon >> so we've got blair and gordon brown remanifest in the 21st century. this , of century. this this, of course. i mean, of we should be
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mean, of course we should be able to mention matter what able to mention no matter what colour you are, you should be able mention thatcher. able to mention thatcher. thatcher wasn't just i mean, she's voldemort for start. she's not voldemort for a start. so and wasn't just a so she so and she wasn't just a leader leaders within great leader for leaders within great britain. she was a leader for leaders across the world, irrespective local policies. irrespective of local policies. she the first woman leader she was the first woman leader to really women win a war since some roman empress and he is right to lean on that because of the reasons that you said, because it will be divisive within the tory party. i don't think the red wall are going to worry too much about this because margaret thatcher would have voted for brexit. the red wall voted for brexit. the reason wall turned blue reason the red wall turned blue is of brexit. he has to is because of brexit. he has to play is because of brexit. he has to play right. and i think play the line right. and i think in evoking thatcher is probably a good thing for him to do. >> well, you say he's probably checked it with blair, but i find a bit but he also find it a bit odd. but he also says he's going to be tough on immigration, which i don't believe. mean, he says if you believe. i mean, he says if you believe. i mean, he says if you believe that needs believe that britain needs stability, security, then believe that britain needs stabilit is security, then believe that britain needs stabilitis party|rity, then believe that britain needs stabilitis party for, then believe that britain needs stabilitis party for you. n labour is the party for you. really anyone that? really does anyone believe that?
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there isn't? >> isn't a party available >> there isn't a party available for a successful britain? >> the last the last person for a successful britain? >>wine last the last person for a successful britain? >>win a.ast the last person for a successful britain? >>win a warthe last person for a successful britain? >>win a war was ast person for a successful britain? >>win a war was queen person to win a war was queen elizabeth, the first well, she will fact check that in the break. >> i always believe whatever louis says. >> let's the independent >> yes. let's do the independent and sunakis >> yes. let's do the independent and sunak is set to give and rishi sunak is set to give rwanda 15 million to take some migrants hands. paul, migrants off our hands. paul, this me of when louis this reminds me of when louis was staying on my couch and i gave £150 to take him away. gave you £150 to take him away. >> true. >> that's not true. >> that's not true. >> no, no way would move >> no, he's no way he would move anywhere £150. rishi sunak anywhere for £150. rishi sunak to give rwanda £15 million in bid to seal new asylum deal. wow. let's lift the cover slightly on this. but before we do so, let's let's give this some context and the money will be on top of 140 million. that's already been given away to the to this rwanda project. and it's going to be used this £15 million, according to the sunday times, which which is what the independent quote here will be used to pay for extra personnel to improve and expand the rwandan asylum process process system. so first things first. this is, of course , a failed
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this is, of course, a failed project at the moment. failed because it's illegal, not failed because it's illegal, not failed because as of any other reason . because as of any other reason. but i also don't believe the tory party as it stands under rishi sunak right now a want to deliver this and b can deliver this. this is the sort of thing that maybe nigel farage could deliver if he had a party in power. but it's not the sort of thing rishi sunak could thing that rishi sunak could deliver. the sort of thing deliver. it is the sort of thing that suella braverman could deliver. of course, deliver. but now, of course, she's to go back to fareham she's had to go back to fareham and lick wounds and wait and lick her wounds and wait to see the future holds for see what the future holds for her. shouldn't be spending see what the future holds for her. we shouldn't be spending see what the future holds for her. we might n't be spending see what the future holds for her. we might n't well)ending see what the future holds for her. we might n't well justing see what the future holds for her. we might n't well just say this. we might as well just say at point. well, there at this point. well, there shouldn't telling that's shouldn't be telling us that's what they're going to do. this whole thing is bad optics. it might say we've might as well just say we've burnt 50, £15 million in the garden what do you garden of number 10. what do you think that? because that's think of that? because that's essentially happened essentially what's happened here, because way of here, because i see no way of rishi sunak able rishi sunak being able to deliver think third deliver this now. i think third party asylum whatsits is a good deliver this now. i think third party butlum whatsits is a good deliver this now. i think third party but iim whatsits is a good deliver this now. i think third party but i just hatsits is a good deliver this now. i think third party but i just don'ts is a good deliver this now. i think third party but i just don't seea good deliver this now. i think third party but i just don't see him 3d idea, but i just don't see him to do it. >> so yeah, and a lot of people aren't convinced by this. sounds like i mean you'll like paul's not. i mean you'll stop. apparently people. stop. apparently 4000 people. people not
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people are saying that's not a deterrent. it's not worth it. some people want it, but some people want to do it, but i don't know. what do you think, louis? a gimmick? louis? is it a gimmick? >> it's a gimmick. >> i think it's a gimmick. i think the whole thing is a gimmick. i don't think that we are. we sorry. britain as a country is prepared do the country is prepared to do the dirty to prevent people dirty work to prevent people from into the country. from coming into the country. and you're if you're not and if you're not if you're not going if you don't have going to if you don't have a border force, which does bad things people, 60 odd percent things to people, 60 odd percent of who would vote believe of people who would vote believe that a migration that we've got a net migration waythis solves that problem. >> this solves that problem. >> this solves that problem. >> love you just sort of >> i love how you just sort of instinctively just finished lewis's as you were lewis's sentence as if you were like married couple. it seemed like a married couple. it seemed like a married couple. it seemed like instructing, like you were instructing, but he seem that bothered he didn't seem that bothered ehhen he didn't seem that bothered either. was just either. he wasn't. i was just stopped mid—sentence you stopped mid—sentence and you just came. just naturally came. >> i was happy because. because of so wrong of what i'm thinking is so wrong and bad so bad, is so and so, so bad is so bad, is so undoable that people out there know to be done. it's know what needs to be done. it's not going to be done if you can't it, you can't defend can't do it, if you can't defend your house, somebody is not your own house, somebody is not coming your against coming into your house against your should be able your thing. you should be able to do something to maybe on them or have your or burp on them or have your wife them.
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wife talk to them. >> just do you see this is what america. it's simple short sentences. america, it's sentences. in america, it's simple. someone comes into simple. as someone comes into your have huge your house, you have a huge array firearms to deal with array of firearms to deal with them. and that's that's how it works. this country, you works. and in this country, you go prison you you have to go to prison if you you have to keep a shotgun in a shed two miles away. >> whilst were burgling >> if whilst they were burgling your they tripped your house, they tripped over a loose cable, you would go to prison sued. prison and be sued. >> so it's american attitude >> so it's an american attitude anyway. should we do the guardian and the president of cop 28 there's science cop 28 says there's no science behind the demand to phase out fossil i mean, it's hard fossil fuels. i mean, it's hard not somewhat not to find that somewhat amusing. he's the head of amusing. lewis he's the head of the cop 28 this year, and he's just now. is. the cop 28 this year, and he's just it now. is. the cop 28 this year, and he's just it is. now. is. the cop 28 this year, and he's justit is. it's)w. is. the cop 28 this year, and he's justit is. it's a. is. the cop 28 this year, and he's just it is. it's a cop.;. the cop 28 this year, and he's just it is. it's a cop. 22 >> it is. it's a cop. 22 president says there's no science, but did you read the story have to? i guess. story or do i have to? i guess. i guess. i guess you're doing the stories for me, which is good. this is the guy, sultan al—jaber or algebra. algebra algebra. >> maybe there's a pun joke in there. >> yeah, pun joke. he's. >> yeah, it is a pun joke. he's. he's good at math, whatever. and he says the climate thing is because he works, he's at the united emirates united arab arab emirates and centre this is the new centre. >> remember when you're
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struggling a week. >> remember when you're strlyeah|g a week. >> remember when you're strlyeah yeah a week. >> remember when you're strlyeah yeah united a week. >> remember when you're strlyeah yeah united arab week. oh yeah yeah united arab emirates united arab aramis and their job emirates united arab aramis and theirjob is to emirates united arab aramis and their job is to they emirates united arab aramis and theirjob is to they make money emirates united arab aramis and thedigging to they make money emirates united arab aramis and thedigging to the oil.ake money by digging up for oil. >> sure they got dubai, but basically they're oil producer and don't give up and they don't want to give up the and i don't them the oil. and i don't want them to give the oil. oil is what to give up the oil. oil is what makes louis schaefer warm in his ex—council flat in peckham . ex—council flat in peckham. nunhead slash nunhead and that's what most people are worried about being doxed. >> but louis invites them all over. >> oven >> people don't think that's one of the main uses of oil is to keep louis schaefer warm. no one talks about that. >> is. you know, we've had >> it is. you know, we've had a huge growth of population and people and healthier people are happier and healthier and they look great because and they they look great because of it's not. of petrochemicals. and it's not. and nick, not fuels and nick, it's not fossil fuels is okay. the fuels , the whole is okay. the fuels, the whole universe is filled with petrochemicals . okay? the petrochemicals. okay? the planet, the moon of saturn, velikovsky velikovsky , the moon velikovsky velikovsky, the moon of titan , the moon of titan, of titan, the moon of titan, a tiny little moon which surrounds saturn, has more petrochemicals, more hydrocarbon carbons than all of the earth does .
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all of the earth does. >> well, i think this story just circles saturn. but let me just bnng circles saturn. but let me just bring it back for a second, because he makes a little bit of a point. this guy, and it's a strange thing to be saying in a way. but, you know, like the pro the saudi arabia. but he does say, look, fossil fuels have allowed sustainable economic development. he's saying, i'm not into anything not going to get into anything that's whereas they're that's alarmist, whereas they're saying, oh, he's a climate denier. not very denier. they're not using very temperate language. and he actually relatively actually sounds relatively sensible. is also sensible. that said, he is also chief adnoc oil chief executive of adnoc oil company. know, and it's a company. you know, and it's a bit conflict of interest. bit of a conflict of interest. >> but those two things can be right at the same time. i mean, i zero is a bit of i think net zero is a bit of a fallacy. quite clearly it's a suicide mission. if you if you were to actually achieve net zero the frame that they zero in the time frame that they wanted to, us at least two of us wouldn't here because it wouldn't be here because it wouldn't be here because it would about two thirds would kill off about two thirds of on of the human population on earth. would argue that earth. and some would argue that that's the idea. that's perhaps the idea. but i don't believe that. i just think it's i just think it's stupid. and there's a bunch of useful idiots are jumping board idiots that are jumping on board with used to scare with it and it's used to scare the vulnerable. to the vulnerable. it's used to scare the people that worry
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scare the people that will worry about and it keeps the about this. and it keeps the middle, the middle class kids in england it? england busy, doesn't it? >> well bang >> all right. well let's bang another before the another story out before the break, the telegraph and harry and of and meghan could be stripped of their titles. i'll be their royal titles. i'll be honest, of they honest, i sort of thought they already bought. already had been bought. i wasn't really following. i'm like, does anyone care anymore? >> well clearly, not >> no. well clearly, we're not watching enough watching this channel enough dunng watching this channel enough during duke and during the day. but duke and duchess sussex could duchess of sussex sussex could easy for me to say, could be stripped of royal titles under mps bill. so i'm not sure this is going to happen at all. but bob seely, the famous bob seely, the conservative mp, has said the conservative mp, has said the house of commons should strip and or consider the nuclear option of denying the couple their duke and duchess, standing amid royal racism row. and that's what this story is about. this story is about the racism row and the fact that they've remained silent on it. they've quite happily allowed this rumour permeate and have this rumour to permeate and have their under the their family chucked under the bus because don't care. bus because they don't care. okay. bus because they don't care. okevery lewis, anything >> very briefly, lewis, anything on a on it. number one >> yeah, a lot on it. number one is no time for love. but the
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royal family is not racist. they don't care about the colour of somebody's they care somebody's skin. they just care about don't care about about it. they don't care about they care about going they just care about who's going to provide the strawberries and the scones their afternoon to provide the strawberries and the �*theys their afternoon to provide the strawberries and the �*they don't heir afternoon to provide the strawberries and the �*they don't care afternoon to provide the strawberries and the �*they don't care whatioon tea. they don't care what people look finally or look like. stone gate finally or scone , as we say, where i'm from. >> okay. interesting i didn't see that point coming. that is part smashed. coming part two smashed. but coming up, liz truss is back. andrew tate is in trouble yet again. and white on white that last white on white racism. that last one a story. it's how one isn't a story. it's just how i'll be
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world by photographers. i think elements of their life will be very difficult. earlier on, gb news radio . news radio. >> welcome back to headliners. >> welcome back to headliners. >> let's get back into it with the metro. and we've been told constantly that racism against white people isn't really racism, but turns out it is if it's done by white people. it's done by other white people. louis that's ridiculous. louis yeah, that's ridiculous. >> is another one of those >> this is another one of those most it's the most ridiculous things. it's the metro, really not metro, so that's really not really newspaper anyway. and really a newspaper anyway. and so, white racism really a newspaper anyway. and so, race white racism really a newspaper anyway. and so, race is white racism really a newspaper anyway. and so, race is a white racism really a newspaper anyway. and so, race is a unique racism really a newspaper anyway. and so, race is a unique toism exists. race is a unique to colour. what is it then, if it's not that's supposed to be colour. it's not supposed to be.
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if it's religion, it's something else. if bio, it's else. if it's bio, it's something else. anyway okay. they say basically it's based possible hate somebody of possible to hate somebody of your own kind who looks just like you and that be racism . and like you and that be racism. and that's of course, 100, you know , that's of course, 100, you know, i thought that and firstly, it comes from a reader from the metro. >> so not only is it the metro, which is a joke paper, it's come from one of their readers. it's just ridiculous that from their comment mental comment section, it's mental that we're covering it up, but let's go for it anyway. i mean, the one i thought this point would nonsense, right? would be nonsense, right? but actually he's saying that eastern have told him eastern europeans have told him they hate irish and they eastern europeans have told him they travel irish and they eastern europeans have told him they travel andish and they eastern europeans have told him they travel andish an so 1ey eastern europeans have told him they travel andish an so there hate travel and stuff. so there is there that you can is a point there that you can that that actually is true, that one it. what do you one part of it. what do you think? yeah it feels like we've been snookered in way been snookered in some way because you guys, like you and i have that you can have been arguing that you can be whitest, whitest. >> whitest, whitest. >> whitest, whitest. >> oh, my god. what's happening to not had a drink. >> i've not had a drink. i promise you. no, you can't. there can be white racism and you towards white you can be racist towards white
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people. and of course, you know, because of somebody with a username within the comments section story has section of a metro story has started with it's started to agree with us. it's kind used against us in kind of being used against us in some way. it's this for me is like some sort of 3d chess where the race baiters now to the race baiters are now able to say, course you racist say, of course you can be racist against white if you're against white people if you're white. it white. and therefore it basically just perpetuates this whole racism debate, which, by the way, i'm a free speech advocate, not absolutist, but advocate, not an absolutist, but i'm willing give it up if i'm willing to give it up if theyif ban i'm willing to give it up if they if ban the word racism they if they ban the word racism and word and racialism in and the word and racialism in total, if they if you can't use that anymore, we are going to have have proper debate that anymore, we are going to have no e proper debate that anymore, we are going to have no longerer debate that anymore, we are going to have no longer do ebate that anymore, we are going to have no longer do eba have because no longer do we have proper debates, because as soon as someone gets to a point where they're making a good point, someone you're someone just shout you're racist. goes, oh, racist. and everyone goes, oh, he might be. >> that's true. and the >> yeah, that's true. and the other i've noticed, other thing i've noticed, it's not related this story. not quite related to this story. it's semi—related people are actually getting sick of the anti—white elon has anti—white racism. elon musk has spoken it. tucker spoken out against it. tucker carlson out against carlson has spoken out against it. strongly, actually, that it. so strongly, actually, that steve was trying to tone steve bannon was trying to tone him other day in the him down the other day in the interview and people are interview and so people are actually sick it. actually getting sick of it. and the that happening
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the things that are happening across europe and in ireland and so people are getting a bit so on, people are getting a bit sick this demonising of white sick of this demonising of white people. are people. i think people are finally having enough. but that's a slightly different point to this story, which is kind bit a bit of a yeah, kind of a bit a bit of a yeah, but we have to give this story a point. yes. and i think we've covered it now let's do the express liz truss is setting express and liz truss is setting out anti—woke bill to out a new anti—woke bill to challenge sunak. now, challenge rishi sunak. now, i don't want to speak too soon, but think has real but i think she has real leadership but i think she has real leadersh yeah, one of my >> paul yeah, one of my favourite prime ministers actually. she is going to be a great pub quiz question for the people truss to people of 2137. liz truss to challenge with challenge rishi sunak with anti—woke unite anti—woke bill in bid to unite the right. this is the tory. right. so this is former minister have the tory. right. so this is forput' minister have the tory. right. so this is forput that minister have the tory. right. so this is forput that in minister have the tory. right. so this is forput that in theister have the tory. right. so this is forput that in the story have the tory. right. so this is forput that in the story in have the tory. right. so this is forput that in the story in case re to put that in the story in case we forget is to table a private member's which member's bill this week which would protect women spaces would protect women only spaces by law and prevent people born as males from as biological males from entering i mean, entering them. wow. i mean, imagine i welcome imagine that. i welcome this. i think it's gamesmanship or games. woman ship from liz truss because i think you know she's using this as a way to attack rishi because she's knows it's going to make him uncomfortable in some however, rishi in some way. however, rishi could just checkmate her straight away going, yeah,
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straight away by going, yeah, this is a great idea, let's put it into action. if this sort it into action. and if this sort of to into action, of thing was to put into action, we would start of the we would see the start of the end of culture because end of the culture wan because as start to agree on as soon as you start to agree on this stuff, it unravels absolutely everything else. this stuff, it unravels abstwoaly everything else. this stuff, it unravels abstwo points. ything else. this stuff, it unravels abstwo points. ything > two points. one, it sounded like rishi sunak and like you said rishi sunak and i think he would consider changing. i might changing. he might i might have done would consider changing done he would consider changing his he's his name to get elected. he's tried and tried everything else. and secondly, has been seen as secondly, this has been seen as an the an attempt to unite the right against unite truss. she against unite by truss. and she certainly motivation. certainly has the motivation. lewis scorned and lewis she's been scorned and beaten of in quite beaten and sort of in quite a slimy by sunak. so now she's slimy way by sunak. so now she's trying but trying to take him out, but whatever the reason somebody whatever the reason is, somebody needs stand needs to stand up. >> issue is >> i mean, the trans issue is basically a home team issue. i don't know why it's included in the team. basically because the home team. basically because it's self identity, which it's about self identity, which the team world is saying you can be whatever you want to be, just don't english, just be british. >> make sure you say it's a home team issue. but starmer is now having to deal with it as well, isn't he? i mean, isn't he to win votes? don't have to win votes? don't labour have to at what a woman is win votes? don't labour have to at well? what a woman is as well? >> yes, they do. and the problem is you by home
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is what did you mean by home team home team issue is team issue? home team issue is things britain in things that affect britain in and english people and white and the english people and white people people are living people and people who are living in who about in ireland or who care about ireland. and same thing with ireland. and the same thing with margaret thatcher. she she ireland. and the same thing with marggungthatchen she she ireland. and the same thing with marggungtha home she she ireland. and the same thing with marggungtha home team she ireland. and the same thing with marggungtha home team . she ireland. and the same thing with marggungtha home team . shea was gung ho home team. she wasn't none of this world, team, world stuff. like you said, she'd vote for brexit. and that's where that's the that's where the battle line you're talking about a culture like it's kind of a culture war like it's kind of airy it's not fairy. airy fairy. it's not airy fairy. it's a it's where the it's a it's a war where the people, all of who believe in england the family and the england and the family and the home of england are fighting the globalist. >> if that's true . but but the >> if that's true. but but the trans issue is global. >> the trans issue is a global issue. and the reason it is, is because it's saying you can be whatever you want to be. >> i don't think it is global. i don't think it's a big problem. >> the us has had massive i mean, is western global? >> oh yeah. >> oh yeah. >> western then. >> western then. >> i mean i don't saudi >> i mean i don't think saudi arabia is a big. >> yeah don't, you don't mean. >> i've never corrected nick dixon i didn't dixon in my life and i didn't mean to. >> i mean. i mean it just. it's across the western world. yeah it's domestic
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it's not a domestic issue. >> it's a world >> it's the world. it's a world economic forum issue. that's that's what i by that's what i mean by team world. it affects world. i'm not saying it affects it's divisive or or egypt. it it's divisive or or or egypt. it it's divisive or or or egypt. it it's just it's part this it's just it's part of this agenda, which is to break down families is to stop people families which is to stop people from having children , which is from having children, which is to provide sort of a happiness that comes outside of love of country . country. >> okay. well, that last part is actually true . so let's do the actually true. so let's do the times. and apparently the far right are the biggest threat to ireland. and if you haven't heard right now, heard far right now, means you're to people . you're opposed to being people. stabbing children, essentially. you're opposed to being people. stabbing yeahren, essentially. you're opposed to being people. stabbing yeah exactly.entially. you're opposed to being people. stabbing yeah exactly. well, y. >> yeah. yeah exactly. well, this is another one. every one of hate to say it, of these, you hate to say it, every these stories are every one of these stories are this way far right now are a bigger to dissidents. bigger threat to dissidents. gardai say gardai is made gardai say gardai is the made up word irish people have word that the irish people have for is ironic for police, which is ironic because because what the irish people are saying is they're saying is anybody who disagrees with the state, anybody who disagrees with multiculturalism is an enemy of the state and of the people. and they're being lumped once upon a time , those lumped once upon a time, those people in ireland were called
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irish. people in ireland were called insh.then people in ireland were called irish. then they became , um, irish. then they became, um, white people . right now, they're white people. right now, they're called far right people. can you see how they're losing their next? >> lewis what's next? >> lewis what's next? >> what's next? is there going to be called nazis ? this is how to be called nazis? this is how these people go. yeah >> i it has been shocking . >> i mean, it has been shocking. i mean, we saw this person who was they tried to was basically they tried to deport them years ago, this deport them 20 years ago, this algerian person. there algerian person. then there was on benefits essentially two on benefits essentially for two decades. they stabbed decades. and then they stabbed some wouldn't some children. you wouldn't think there would be something which but which would really defend. but sky out blaming the sky news came out blaming the far like far right people like john simpson were sort of simpson at the bbc were sort of worried them. far more worried about them. far more seemed far worried about worried about them. far more seeiresponse worried about worried about them. far more seeiresponse to worried about worried about them. far more seeiresponse to itnorried about worried about them. far more seeiresponse to it thaned about worried about them. far more seeiresponse to it than the )0ul the response to it than the actual stabbing. then what actual stabbing. and then what we attempting to we saw was them attempting to censor and to censor people and to investigate. conor for investigate. conor mcgregor for hate complaining hate speech, for complaining about is so insane . about it, which is so insane. and you just wonder, what are they? what are they trying to achieve now this achieve with this? and now this claim the far right are the claim that the far right are the biggest threat. i find it ludicrous. what they ludicrous. but what are they trying must believe so trying to they must believe so much their world much in their team world project. lewis in the project. to quote lewis in the utopian idea of the sort of liberal of globalism. liberal vision of globalism. because , paul, it
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because why else, paul, would it be children to be be worth allowing children to be stabbed your own stabbed and demonising your own people, calling far right people, calling them far right and what is the people, calling them far right and behind what is the people, calling them far right and behind all what is the people, calling them far right and behind all this? what is the people, calling them far right and behind all this? well, is the people, calling them far right and behind all this? well, yowe goal behind all this? well, you said a rusty ally. said you were a rusty ally. >> you not rusty. was >> you are not rusty. that was a brilliant point. nick and i agree totally with it. i mean, for a group people, the for a group of people, the reason they've snookered themselves paint themselves, they paint themselves, they paint themselves with themselves into a corner with these things these type of things because they the real they can't talk about the real issue. can't about issue. they can't talk about muslims they issue. they can't talk about muzunable they issue. they can't talk about muzunable talk they issue. they can't talk about muzunable talk about they issue. they can't talk about muzunable talk about that. ey are unable to talk about that. mr simpson is unable to talk about that. would be his about that. it would be in his contract he can't contract that he can't talk about doesn't personally about that he doesn't personally know about that. so know how to talk about that. so he focus on the other he has to focus on the other thing argument, which thing in the argument, which just be a of just happens to be a bunch of very angry people who are angry because there was a muslim person . and person stabbing children. and this it's come down to this is what it's come down to now of people who now for a bunch of people who are obsessed with gender are so obsessed with gender fluidity, all their fluidity, they boil all their arguments binary arguments down to binary choices. and the here is , choices. and the choice here is, do we support people who are angry or object to religious terrorism or do we support the religious terrorists? and if that's the choice, i'm going for the former because i'm not happy about the latter . about the latter. >> yeah, i should probably say
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we don't actually know what's in john simpson's contract, but i know what mean. it's the bbc know what you mean. it's the bbc taking stance it. taking a strange stance on it. and wrinkle and last little wrinkle i noficed and last little wrinkle i noticed on is that the noticed on this is that the irish are a distinct group, a distinct people, and they're an oppressed pitted oppressed people when pitted against but notice against the english. but notice when they're in turmoil because someone's come and stabbed someone's come in and stabbed their suddenly they're their children, suddenly they're lumped. not lumped. yeah, they're not a people can't be oppressed. >> they're nazis. they're white people.appalling. all right, we >> it's appalling. all right, we agree. and it agree. let's do the eye. and it seems saudi arabia a seems saudi arabia isn't a feminist i to feminist paradise. i was led to believe. can you imagine? >> nick? can imagine in >> nick? can you imagine in constant , in inverted constant danger, in inverted commas, the women fleeing oppression in saudi arabia for the west, obviously , with saudi the west, obviously, with saudi arabia set to host the 2034 world cup, which is the context for this, women reveal the reality of living under the guardianship system. now, the guardianship system. now, the guardianship system. now, the guardianship system takes itself from the quran and the quran states that under guardianship, men are the protectors and maintainers of women because women are weaker than men. so
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far , we're all in agreement. but far, we're all in agreement. but what it does do is it creates we don't we don't all agree on that. but one thing it does do is create this system in which women are oppressed in these countries, and therefore , countries, and therefore, they're they because they are they're they because they are they have now got access to western media. and you know what? in times gone by when they're able to see how free women were in the west, and that wasn't true in iran, of course, because pre 1979, women lived like like women do in the west. now some degree. and they're now to some degree. and they're able to see this now. they're seeing they have a better seeing they can have a better life under western values. >> i mean, >> yeah, well, i mean, patriarchy just literally means rule by fathers. pretty much. but can go too far sometimes. but it can go too far sometimes. louis, what do you think? >> mean, don't to >> well, i mean, i don't want to admit but i'm living under admit this, but i'm living under the guardianship of paul. >> he is he >> right? right. and he is he quite oppressive. i know . >> right? right. and he is he quite oppressive. i know. is >> right? right. and he is he quite oppressive. i know . is he? quite oppressive. i know. is he? >> look at this under the table. >> look at this under the table. >> this saudi arabia of >> is he this saudi arabia of guardians? >> is he this saudi arabia of guardia is? >> is he this saudi arabia of guardiai need protection. okay >> no, i need protection. okay so maybe there's a maybe there's. >> okay. what louis means is.
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>> okay. what louis means is. >> no, i didn't see that point coming, but it did allow him to sidestep the issue and not get in all well, in trouble. so all right. well, we sort of. we nailed that story. sort of. that three in bag. that is part three in the bag. but coming up in the final section, and section, deepfake porn and unexploded
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hello and welcome to headliners. let's kick off with this story
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about deepfake porn. paul, what is it? and more importantly, how do you delete it ? do you delete it? >> i don't know. i don't know. maybe louis can help us. the unstoppable rise of deepfake porn experts reveal explosion . porn experts reveal explosion. but interesting choice of words in i sites and apps that stitch faces on anyone with photos onune faces on anyone with photos online onto naked bodies as victims tell of their horror after police say there is nothing they can do. so of course, this is harrowing stuff, particularly for the young women involved . however, it was me involved. however, if it was me involved. however, if it was me involved , i'd i'd be double involved, i'd i'd be double pleased. extra lad points involved in this if you if you if you want to out there put my face well—hung gentleman face onto a well—hung gentleman on surrounded absolutely on surrounded by absolutely beautiful naked women. i'm all for it . what do you make of for it. what do you make of this, louis? >> well, when i make up. >> well, when i make up. >> hang on. are you the host? let's all calm down. let's talk. let's all calm down. let's talk. let's again. wait, let's do that again. wait, wait, wait, . wait, wait. >> i'm sorry. >> i'm sorry. >> wait, wait. what do you make of this? >> thank you. thank you, paul, for asking question . people for asking that question. people don't don't know . they're don't people don't know. they're thinking they make paul
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>> @ wants fl-m e!“ @ be hostand >> paul wants to be host and he's now . he's starting now. >> the final >> what happened in the final section? gone crazy. he section? he's gone crazy. he doesn't. a coup. an doesn't. it's a coup. it's an attempt i've been attempt to unseat me. i've been off week. i've got sloppy off for a week. i've got sloppy and he's unseating me. you know what? >> you're not going to win any friends here? friends over here? >> exactly. >> no. no. exactly. >> no. no. exactly. >> do want against me? >> what do you want against me? >> what do you want against me? >> thing that concerned >> the thing that i'm concerned about basically makes about is it basically makes everybody distrust everything. so you don't know what to believe. like people actually think this think in my calendar that this image of is. i generated or image of me is. i generated or photoshopped. but that is you. >> i took yeah, that's by >> i took it. yeah, that's by the is the best link the way, that is the best link you've done the calendar you've ever done to the calendar that actually relevant. yeah that was actually relevant. yeah that's actually okay. >> first link you >> the first relevant link you can go you can to louis can go you can go to louis schaefer and the schaefer .co.uk and buy the calendar over the calendar that's over the top. >> dot co.uk sceptic >> schaefer dot co.uk sceptic live december 11th. >> carry on carry on. all right that's all you had was that's that's all you had was the thing. okay. all the calendar thing. okay. all right mean, could right. well, i mean, we could probably if you want. probably move on if you want. >> let's face it, it's so >> i let's face it, it's so boring. really? >> well, yeah, of >> well, yeah, some of those eyes, they do look disturbingly realistic. >> we should. because a >> we should. because i made a joke. we should. at this joke. but we should. at this point, this point, we should at this point point, we should at this point point the young point out that for the young women this is women involved in this, this is this it's horrible. the
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this could be it's horrible. the end their career their end of their career or their social life, family life social life, their family life until prove otherwise, until they can prove otherwise, because, course, people because, of course, most people haven't so haven't twigged. the ai is so impressively good that they'll believe what they see. >> yes, people are dumb, they'll believe it can be believe it, and it can be devastating for people. good believe it, and it can be devastlet's for people. good believe it, and it can be devastlet's for the ple. good believe it, and it can be devastlet's for the dailyiood believe it, and it can be devastlet's forthe daily mail point. let's do the daily mail now story about why now with another story about why everything in world everything bad in the world is due tate lewis yes, exactly. >> and that's what i'm saying. girl after girl pupils at risk after alarming rise in toxic masculinity in schools. and i've heard seriously because heard this seriously because i've got a person that i live with who happens to be a teacher. she is saying teacher. and so she is saying this, that the kids are constantly mentioning andrew tate . and this is an article tate. and this is an article about how bad andrew tate is. and i'm not saying whether andrew tate is good or bad, but i think basically this is what kids do. they know it irritates the hell out of the female teachers . it really gets under teachers. it really gets under their skin, which is why they say andrew tate and that's why they say it. >> yeah, but so foolish to blame. i mean, they say tate, who's hateful online rants have earned him millions of
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followers, especially among teenage boys. if it was all hateful, paul, why would have hateful, paul, why would he have this have this following? is it have all teenage boys suddenly become hateful? >> well, i think this is a serious weakness people serious weakness for the people on that of argument. on that side of the argument. they've plot on that side of the argument. they'iit plot on that side of the argument. they'iit comes plot on that side of the argument. they'iit comes to plot on that side of the argument. they'iit comes to andrew plot on that side of the argument. they'iit comes to andrew tate. ll when it comes to andrew tate. and it's a huge distraction. they've made this they've essentially made this story about andrew has story about andrew tate has invented some sort of troubled teenage syndrome that has teenage boy syndrome that has existed more time existed throughout more time immemorial, has existed. but what's happened in this particular time is that there's this huge vacuum because we've told young boys we've told them that they are bad . any form of that they are bad. any form of masculinity is bad, and therefore all of those head figures that would have would have filled that gap with goodness, like maybe jordan peterson . and i would argue that peterson. and i would argue that he is somebody who would fit well into that space. you've got andrew in now and andrew tate come in now and we've told we're going to continually tell boys, and i worry for this generation of boys they become men boys when they become men because they have had because they wouldn't have had the models . and the correct role models. and you as a young i'm not any as a young boy, as i'm not any longer was you do need
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longer but was once you do need strong masculine role models and it's not toxic to be masculine. >> and the whole culture has been so anti male, it was bound to happen. the backlash has begun, but got to move on begun, but we've got to move on and let's the now. and and let's do the son now. and a fertility who secretly fertility doctor who secretly used sperm to impregnate used his own sperm to impregnate clients now, for some purists, he ethical line. he crossed an ethical line. >> there are some purists and i'm so funny. >> he's called the sicko fertility doctor used his sperm to impregnate my mom . i've got to impregnate my mom. i've got 102 siblings. this should be quotation marks. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> you're not your mum. we have to clarify. >> you're mum. >> you're not my mum. >> you're not my mum. >> could be thousands >> but there could be thousands more. in this is in more. this is in this is in holland. but every year there's more. this is in this is in h storyi. but every year there's more. this is in this is in h story oqut every year there's more. this is in this is in h story of this very year there's more. this is in this is in h story of this inry year there's more. this is in this is in h story of this in somer there's a story of this in some someplace. there was one here where of our presenter where one of our presenter host's father was one of these kind of evil . the. okay, you kind of evil. the. okay, you know who i'm talking about ? know who i'm talking about? >> yeah. you call this father evil? this is a bit strange. yeah. yeah. >> no, they're going to work out from one of our hosts, and there's any. there's hardly any. >> can. >> so people can. >> so people can. >> sorry. >> sorry. >> me. it's not 5 me. it's not you. >> wasn't me. it's not you. >> wasn't me. it's not you. >> anyway. have done >> anyway. should i have done that? inappropriate? that? was that inappropriate? >> there. it's out
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there. >> he's in film, so this is >> he's in a film, so this is calm. >> it's tv. >> it's live tv. >>— >> it's live tv. >> this common. but the story >> this is common. but the story is, does the guy it? why is, why does the guy do it? why does doctor do it? the does the doctor do it? the doctor does it because it's way cheaper for to do what he cheaper for him to do what he needs do in little cup needs to do in a little cup rather all the rather than spending all the money somebody to come rather than spending all the m>why? was it ask question dutch blonde people. >>why? was it because question dutch blonde people. >>why? was it because he stion dutch blonde people. >>why? was it because he wanted of why? was it because he wanted his own bloodline? was it just money? started off money? apparently it started off he was helping them out because there donor. the donor there wasn't a donor. the donor didn't show up. but then kind didn't show up. but then he kind of quickly became a monster because he there was because he realised there was money because he realised there was mo it's saving. >> it's saving. >> it's saving. >> what do you think, paul? yeah, greed. >> isn't it? it's >> it's greed, isn't it? it's not because you know, not healthy because you know, goodness who goodness only knows who you could marrying if could be marrying up with if there many half siblings there are so many half siblings out there, you could with out there, you could end up with someone like geert wilders. >> squeeze >> okay, well, let's squeeze in this guardian the this one in the guardian and the female crusade to destroy the last remaining male space pole. female crusade to destroy the lastyes,|aining male space pole. female crusade to destroy the lastyes, indeed.nale space pole. female crusade to destroy the lastyes, indeed.nale rgarrick)le. >> yes, indeed. most garrick club favour admitting club members favour admitting women poll reveals. i bet it's an anonymous poll, women poll reveals. i bet it's an anonymous poll , that's for an anonymous poll, that's for sure. because what's amazing
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about the last about this is it's the last standing of any male club's only clubs in london in particular. and of course, these are all male members who quite happy male members who are quite happy to knowing that. to join this club knowing that. and place for 100 and it's been in place for 100 years more now . what's years or more now. what's happenedis years or more now. what's happened is the only thing that's changed between, well , that's changed between, well, nothing has actually changed because 2015 they took vote because in 2015 they took a vote and 50.5% of the men of this all male club said they'd be in favour for women joining, which is a shocking statistic. and then what's happened eight years later is 51. so nought point 5. so just one of the naysayers has passed away and the statistics have gone up. of course, the only thing that's brought this aboutis only thing that's brought this about is because there's been a to change a law saying that if it happen now, you would it was to happen now, you would you able this. you wouldn't be able to do this. you would be able to exclude louis 20s this. you would be able to exclude louit 20s this. you would be able to exclude louit just 20s this. you would be able to exclude louit just shows 20s this. you would be able to exclude louit just shows how this. you would be able to exclude louit just shows how interesting >> it just shows how interesting men are women. it's been said men are to women. it's been said that are the most that women that men are the most interesting things in in a woman's life. >> wow. i was thinking, can louis make this story more misogynist ? and he managed it.
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misogynist? and he managed it. incredible. it was a great show. thank you very much. good to be back. the show pretty much back. the show is pretty much oven back. the show is pretty much over. let's have a quick look at oven let's have a quick look at monday's front pages. so the daily warned bbc over daily mail has warned bbc over biggest licence fee increase for 40 years. is there? it is . well, 40 years. is there? it is. well, that's not it, but that's one of them. the i has tories losing voters to farage amid anger over high immigration which is on the screen there. the guardian has starmer labour will not turn on spending taps if it wins election. the mirror has thatcher backlash hit starmer the metro. show us the money and the daily star has skate britain biggest snow bomb for two years. thatisit biggest snow bomb for two years. that is it for tonight show. thanks to paul and louis headliners is back tomorrow at 11 pm. with me and some other people and if you're watching at 5 then stay for 5 am, then stay tuned for breakfast. now, breakfast. but for now, it's good and bless. good night and god bless. >> good that warm feeling >> good night. that warm feeling inside boxt boilers inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news.
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sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> good evening. welcome to your latest weather update from gb news. i'm ellie glaisyer. it's been a very cloudy and damp day for much of england and wales today, and brighter today, but drier and brighter across of scotland and across much of scotland and northern pressure northern ireland. low pressure sits south—west, sits out towards the south—west, slowly moving its way towards us through evening and into through this evening and into the of new working the start of the new working week it some very week, bringing with it some very strong some heavy strong winds and some heavy rainfall overnight rainfall as well. overnight tonight this rainfall turning rainfall as well. overnight t0|snow this rainfall turning rainfall as well. overnight t0|snow acrossainfall turning rainfall as well. overnight t0|snow across the |ll turning rainfall as well. overnight t0|snow across the hills'ning rainfall as well. overnight t0|snow across the hills of1g to snow across the hills of wales. parts of northern england as well, some snowfall as well, seeing some snowfall building the hours building up into the early hours of morning. but a much of monday morning. but a much milder night across the southwest, colder across milder night across the south of st, colder across milder night across the south of northern colder across milder night across the south of northern ireland cross milder night across the south of northern ireland and; parts of northern ireland and scotland, perhaps as low as minus 6 into the start of minus 6 or —8 into the start of monday . so a dry, crisp but monday. so a dry, crisp but bright start across scotland and northern ireland. snow showers pushing in along those eastern coasts, perhaps bringing some icy monday icy stretches through monday morning . and rainfall totals morning. and rainfall totals across southwest , bringing across the southwest, bringing some during across the southwest, bringing sonmorning during across the southwest, bringing sonmorning rush during across the southwest, bringing sonmorning rush hounduring across the southwest, bringing sonmorning rush hour. raing the morning rush hour. rain continues across much of the southern half of the uk with some the highlands some snow across the highlands of and parts of of the pennines and parts of nonh of the pennines and parts of north wales as well. a mild day
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across the southwest, maybe 8 to 10 degrees, still feeling 10 degrees, but still feeling cold despite the sunshine across scotland northern scotland and northern ireland. tuesday starts another cloudy and damp day for much of england and damp day for much of england and wales. some snow showers across again, but across the pennines again, but rain, hill snow rain, sleet and hill snow gradually clearing its way towards south—east as go towards the south—east as we go into some into tuesday afternoon with some brighter spells developing in the west. northern ireland and scotland seeing the best the scotland seeing the best of the sunshine, to stay sunshine, but continuing to stay cold for all of us on cold and sunny for all of us on wednesday before further wet and windy thursday. >> looks things are heating >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boiler as sponsors of weather on .
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well . well. >> it's 9:00 on television, on radio and online in the united kingdom and across the world. this is mark dolan tonight. i'm leo kearse, in for marc, who's off with the family bereavement. unfortunately, all of us gb news are sending love and prayers to marc his family. comes up marc and his family. comes up this hour in a shocking new development. it's been reported that whitehall civil servants are trying to block the rwanda plan. when did policing our borders become so controversial? more on this national scandal shortly . our mark meets guest shortly. our mark meets guest savile served a harrowing hostage ordeal in 1976 after a plane he was travelling on was hijacked by palestinian terrorist s benny davidson joins
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