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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  December 6, 2023 5:00am-6:01am GMT

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>> good evening. i'm polly middlehurst and it's 11:00. some breaking middlehurst and it's11:00. some breaking news to start this bulletin. a 42 year old woman has died and two others have been injured after a shooting in east london this news coming to us in the last half an hour. three people, we understand, were found with gunshot wounds after police were called to the incident in hackney. this evening. the woman died at the scene. two other people, a 20 year old man and a 16 year old boy, were taken to hospital. no arrests far . well, the other arrests so far. well, the other main today is that a 28 main news today is that a 28 year old man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder following the stabbing of a 29
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year woman in aberfan in year old woman in aberfan in south wales. a pregnant woman was subjected to a knife attack. there this morning. the victim was taken to hospital and is believed to be stable. her wounds thought to be life wounds not thought to be life threatening. chief inspector rob miles south wales police miles from south wales police gave update earlier and is gave this update earlier and is known to the victim is known to the victim and is currently in police custody . currently in police custody. >> i appreciate there will be a real sense of shock when the local community with the attack having in broad having happened in broad daylight schools daylight, local schools activated their lockdown protocols to keep people safe . protocols to keep people safe. safe neighbourhood officers have beenin safe neighbourhood officers have been in the area ensure been in the area to ensure ensure pupils have been able to leave school safely at the leave the school safely at the normal . this was done as normal time. this was done as a precaution and schools will reopen tomorrow as normal , the reopen tomorrow as normal, the home secretary said. >> today he's uncomfortable with some of the criticism directed at rwanda as he unveiled a new asylum treaty in kigali. it's understood new british laws are to be expedited through parliament, declaring rwanda a safe country for the processing
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of asylum seekers arriving in the uk . james cleverly praised the uk. james cleverly praised rwanda for being part of the british solution . but the shadow british solution. but the shadow home secretary, yvette cooper, cast doubt on his plans as more home secretaries than they have asylum seekers to rwanda. >> and this scheme is badly failing. they still won't tell us how much it will cost, even though we've already know that we've spent £140 million and more on this scheme and what they could be doing is putting that money into going after the criminal smuggler gangs and taking action there instead . taking action there instead. >> yvette cooper now , the royal >> yvette cooper now, the royal family were seen out in public for the first time tonight since the publication of omid scobie's controversial book about the family . the monarch was joined family. the monarch was joined by the queen, prince william and kate at a dazzling reception at buckingham palace, which traditionally heralds the start of the festive season for the royal family aides stressed it was business as usual at the white tie and tiaras event, the
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annual gathering welcomes over 500 members of the diplomat corps in the state rooms at buckingham palace . peace and buckingham palace. peace and support . mccartney has led support. mccartney has led tributes for wings and moody blues musician denny laine, who has died at the age of 79. >> since you got a go, are you better go now .7 better go now.7 >> i better go now? >> i his wife said he died after a long battle with lung disease . a long battle with lung disease. >> denny laine sang on the moody blues, multi—million selling go now, as you just heard and co—wrote the wings hit mull of kintyre, which was topping the uk charts for nine weeks in a row . paul mccartney described row. paul mccartney described him as an outstanding vocalist and guitar player, saying it had been a pleasure to know him and mickey dolenz of the monkees said he was a wonderful person and that his music would be sorely missed . denny laine, who sorely missed. denny laine, who died today, you're you're with gb news across the uk on tv, in
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your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news channel . news channel. >> hello and welcome to headliners . you'll look through headliners. you'll look through the next day's papers with three so—called comedians. i'm stephen allen. and with me, it's a man who spends all day fighting onune who spends all day fighting online hatred .josh howie online hatred. josh howie dephen online hatred. josh howie depher. man who keeps josh depher. but a man who keeps josh busy. it's leo kearse . you're busy. it's leo kearse. you're all gentlemen . yep. all doing well, gentlemen. yep. we've gone smart again. you can tell we're getting near christmas. we're getting that kind always dress kind of vibe. we always dress like or maybe like this nowadays. or maybe you're this you're just talking about this velvet jacket here. it's just the tree in the presence of the tree in the background. we've got a tree. background. oh we've got a tree. >> oh, hello. >> oh, hello. >> well , this good >> well, this is quite a good tree. we'll able >> well, this is quite a good tretake we'll able >> well, this is quite a good tretake this we'll able >> well, this is quite a good tretake this home? ne'll able >> well, this is quite a good tretake this home? ia'll able >> well, this is quite a good tretake this home? i i've. able >> well, this is quite a good tretake this home? i i've. i've le to take this home? i i've. i've sneaked three baubles out and got some. impressive. did you hide them. yeah oh yeah. and they're great. they're baubles as well . oh yeah. it's very
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as well. oh yeah. it's very impressive isn't it. you notice so much. it sounds like an album that coming out, that should be coming out, right. look at right. let's take a look at wednesday's front pages . the wednesday's front pages. the times middle way on times has sunak middle way on rwanda . the guardian goes with rwanda. the guardian goes with apocalypse conditions in gaza, blocking aid, warns un official the daily mail. the cruellest and most indefensible doctors strike. yet the mirror goes with christmas cosmetic surgery fear the telegraph ministers threaten to quit over rwanda flights law and the daily star. you big babies. and those are your front pages. babies. and those are your front pages . for babies. and those are your front pages. for first up then josh the telegraph . the big one is the telegraph. the big one is ministers threatened quit over rwanda flights law. but which ministers which side are we talking about here? we're talking about here? we're talking about here? we're talking about the leftie ministers . essentially, if sunak ministers. essentially, if sunak goes and says, hey, echr , blah, goes and says, hey, echr, blah, blah, whatever, whoever you are,
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we're not going to listen to you anymore, then there are about ten, including some front benchers, who are going to step up and be like, no, no, no, mate, no. he did say he wouldn't let any foreign court overrule this government when no foreign courts were actually overruling this government. talking this government. so he's talking tough not in the tough even when he's not in the fight. do mean? fight. what do you mean? >> the echr >> what's the echr then? >> what's the echr then? >> but it the uk. it was >> what's the echr then? >> uk but it the uk. it was >> what's the echr then? >> uk government�*ne uk. it was >> what's the echr then? >> uk government that(. it was >> what's the echr then? >> uk government that overruled the uk government that overruled the uk government that overruled the also, but also the supreme court also, but also the supreme court also, but also the has also stepped in and the echr has also stepped in and said no you can't that. said no, you can't do that. >> you do what >> you can't you can't do what you want in your own country to secure your borders. >> somebody if all >> like somebody i wonder if all these work for the these people who work for the echr for the supreme echr and work for the supreme court, wonder they court, i wonder if they leave their doors open at night. yeah. >> though, is >> the supreme court, though, is our institution. it's our country. not saying country. yeah. i'm not saying they're well, but country. yeah. i'm not saying thwase well, but country. yeah. i'm not saying thwas the well, but country. yeah. i'm not saying thwas the echr. well, but it was the echr. >> whatever it stands for. i know there's two things. it stands for. yeah, but there's also pressure the i also pressure from the right. i think what what student actually do, they're looking at it the wrong way. they need to disincentivize the of disincentivize all the sort of the uk who are the people in the uk who are like, my god, we need open like, oh my god, we need open borders say that borders because they say that
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knowing get from knowing that all they get from it, to any it, they're not going to get any of you know, the negative of the, you know, the negative effects . they're just going to effects. they're just going to get sort cheaper nannies, get the sort of cheaper nannies, the conversions and the cheaper loft conversions and stuff like that. you know, all the are going the guardian readers are going to news pundits, good to tv news pundits, the good things, like, if if things, whereas like, if we if we stuck just get shipping containers full of illegal migrants and convert them into housing and put them slap bang in the middle of islington and all these places where the guardian that's guardian readers live, that's what america, wasn't it? >> they sent up all people >> they sent up all the people from down south and it's totally working. >> totally >> it's totally working. all these oh these places that were like, oh yeah, sanctuary yeah, we're we're sanctuary cities. we never get cities. i mean, we never get anybody because we're miles away from we're from the border, but we're sanctuary cities. they're now getting it's getting loads of people and it's costing and costing them loads of money and they're about it. costing them loads of money and the i re about it. costing them loads of money and the i re if about it. costing them loads of money and the i re if actuallyabout it. costing them loads of money and the i re if actually the |t it. >> i wonder if actually the paradigm about immigration paradigm shift about immigration charleton illegal charleton or certainly illegal immigration to country. immigration to this country. i think becoming think that it's becoming a bigger issue on the left as well . and the difference is . and i think the difference is about dealt about how it's dealt with. and i think maybe the left, the difference they don't difference is that they don't want baby out with want to chop the baby out with the bathwater, and baby want to chop the baby out with timean hwater, and baby want to chop the baby out with timean our:er, and baby want to chop the baby out with timean our rights and baby want to chop the baby out with timean our rights in and baby want to chop the baby out with timean our rights in this baby i mean our rights in this country, which could be used against us. >> i think as long as, you know,
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if british, as as if you're british, as long as you renounce your you don't renounce your citizenship then to citizenship and then try to enter you enter the country illegally, you should no , but should be fine. under no, but there are other human rights that the as well. >> it's the slippery slope argument well, can argument of, well, if you can get human rights get rid of people's human rights for only for this, then it's only a little different this for this, then it's only a littl is pretty unique >> but britain is pretty unique amongst european countries in rigidly to echr rigidly sticking to echr whatever diktats are passed to down italy, i think only sticks about half of them. so other leo leo wants to be italy . and that leo wants to be italy. and that was before. that was before george maloney got was to be italy . italy. >> but you know actually what what the story is also saying is that that's actually what they're thinking about doing is essentially they're going to sort of pass legislation that says we're going to it says we're going to do it anyway, but if you if the echr rules against us, then we'll we're going to do it anyway. so whatever. yeah it's a great idea. yeah. well, we'll see how it there's two other it works. there's two other stories here. johnson
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stories here. one is johnson today or tomorrow , whichever day today or tomorrow, whichever day you're listening or watching the show , i think yesterday, show, i think yesterday, yesterday, thursday , whatever it yesterday, thursday, whatever it is, wednesday, thursday , he said is, wednesday, thursday, he said it. johnson's finally appearing before the covid inquiry and he's some brilliant sort he's doing some brilliant sort of muckraking or muddying the water before he's like, you know what, guys? should talk about what, guys? we should talk about whether a manmade virus whether it was a manmade virus or not, and we should talk about the lockdown. let's the effects of lockdown. let's not what did. that's not look at what did. that's essentially what doing. essentially what he's doing. and there's also a thing here about labour vapes on labour may put vapes on prescription seems prescription only, which seems somewhat ridiculous because they've already passed this in australia. this law, you have to get note or something get a doctor's note or something to get a vape, which is ridiculous. i'm addicted. you also for crack and but also need it for crack and but the whole point about vapes, i think is that they're meant to be not healthy but healthier than cigarettes. so even though this goes on about how this article goes on about how many under eighteens are actually point is actually smoking, the point is how of them are not smoking how many of them are not smoking cigarettes. better i >>i -- >> i think because vapes are like they're little and they've got lights on them and you know,
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they look like a fish well, and they look like a fish well, and they like watermelon and they taste like watermelon and bubble gum. they're really aimed at kids , a lot of them, you at kids, a lot of them, you know, a super king just doesn't have that sort of, you know, even though we did it when we were you know, were kids, it just, you know, you it through you were doing it through gritted teeth. yeah. >> alcopops made >> it's like alcopops made drinking my day, you drinking easy. in my day, you had through had to struggle through a pint of that would find of bitter that no one would find a a quarter of vodka a bit of a quarter of vodka is that have different that we have different backgrounds, the backgrounds, don't we? on to the daily mail. leo what are they going with? so they've got a nice picture of the royal family. >> laughing. >> they're laughing. another accusation of racism, no doubt. but the big headline is the cruellest and most indefensible doctor strike yet. so junior doctors have announced the longest walkout in nhs history. i think they're walking out for three days in december before christmas . just when you know, christmas. just when you know, right middle of christmas right in the middle of christmas is is the busy time for is the is the busy time for hospitals. it's not just, you know, christmas parties and people falling over. it's what it says in the article, though. it's called really? right. it's cold. so people are getting their respiratory infections and
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all sort of stuff. and then all that sort of stuff. and then they're going to do days they're going to do six days in january, is i mean, that's january, which is i mean, that's an insane amount of time to basically down, know, basically shut down, you know, a huge chunk of the national health is health service. this is over a pay - health service. this is over a pay . want money. pay. they want more money. obviously, don't realise obviously, they don't realise that get more money. that they get more money. if we didn't a national didn't have a national health service the market in service and the free market in america, paid america, doctors get paid like a million times more than over here. mind to let them here. never mind to let them work time, work that out in their own time, but like but they've already had like a 9% and they want 9% pay increase and they want more. on top of that, they want another 3% and i don't know. it just seems like, you know, you've signed hippocratic you've signed your hippocratic oath. you know, you oath. i think, you know, you can't just hold the country to hostage , hold the country hostage, hold the country to ransom . ransom. >> they sign hippocratic oath. >> they sign a hippocratic oath. do they just it out do they not just say it out loud? what however they it, loud? what however they do it, it's very hypocritical. >> it for . >> they do it for. >> they do it for. >> but it is bad pr at the very least, isn't it? it is. if they have a really good. they are holding us to ransom a little bit. they're holding obviously sunak. of his five sunak. that's one of his five pledges. going pledges. this is not going to help waiting list . help with the waiting time list. at time, they're real at the same time, they're real income dropped 20. so yes,
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income has dropped 20. so yes, the welcome, but at the the 9% is welcome, but at the same time, it's still not back to what it was about ten years ago. so i don't think this is the right way to go about it. but they should be paid fairly. i think we should open the borders and replace all the nhs doctors and nurses with people from overseas. yeah but i do like how they genuinely in like how they did genuinely in the article go. yeah, it's the type christmas and type of christmas parties and we're all going to get drunk and no going to look after us. no one's going to look after us. yeah. let's to the times yeah. let's move on to the times now. what do they got? now. josh what do they got? well, a good well, this is a this is a good one. efforts stop one. kfc thwarts efforts to stop fast food outlets near schools. so this is when we found out that obesity is costing this country about £100 billion a year than they ever year more than they ever thought. the effects on all the not just the nhs , but our not just the nhs, but our productivity and whatever and it's all down to kfc because it's all down to kfc because it's so delicious. it's yum, yum, yum and it is good. i mean, 11 secret herbs is really good. so they keep on trying to open them near schools . i'll get in them near schools. i'll get in there early and then you've got a customer for life, a little fatty life, big fatty for life, then a big
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fatty. no but yeah. and then get them on the vapes it turns them on the vapes and it turns out yes. 17 i think are the 43 cases where they managed to actually overturn the councils and then another eight cases they managed to like get them to water it down and you know what? as some as a parent of children who are, you know, near , you who are, you know, near, you know, of that age in the schools going off to buy stuff, i think that i'm not i don't mind because then i don't have to pay for dinner . because then i don't have to pay for dinner. i'm, like totally happy with this . it's a cheap happy with this. it's a cheap meal. leo, the colonel, he's he's a bit legal on these things. swooping as things. he's swooping in. as soon any kind soon as there's any kind of rules and getting rules coming in and getting some legal defence. yeah. >> mean guess their >> i mean i guess it's their business is their money, you know purdue of fried know the purdue of fried chicken, it's not even, it's chicken, but it's not even, it's not even that delicious . i'll not even that delicious. i'll tell you what's more delicious. popeyes chicken popeyes. popeyes chicken from popeyes. i reckon the pies. >> where do you get it ? >> where do you get it? >> where do you get it? >> get it. the rapidly >> you get it. the rapidly expanding. i'm not sponsored by them just find it them or anything. i just find it much than you them or anything. i just find it much have than you them or anything. i just find it much have sent than you them or anything. i just find it much have sent somehan you them or anything. i just find it much have sent somehan 3stuff. might have sent some free stuff. >> though, freshly don't >> now, though, freshly don't even >> now, though, freshly don't eve it's cheap. you don't even
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>> it's so cheap. you don't even need to get it free. >> i challenge popeyes . >> i challenge you, popeyes. send bunch of kfc versus send in a bunch of kfc versus popeyes. a taste test popeyes. we can do a taste test live on the show. yeah fair enough. we can. then move on to the mirror. finally leo, what they got? >> so they've done an investing station the christmas cosmic station on the christmas cosmic surgery. fear. so apparently turkish. this turkish company is selling cheap festive deals at events in britain. they've got risky bum lifts that seems like you know you can come here for a cheeky pint. no, i'm having a risky bum lift. >> well, they could have just had tandoori something, so. had a tandoori or something, so. >> yeah, think that's what >> yeah, i think that's what matt did to woman matt hancock did to that woman who with who was having an affair with a risky did indeed. so risky bum. we did indeed. so risky bum. we did indeed. so risky are offered, risky bum lifts are offered, but. no danger but. but no danger warnings despite deaths . funnily enough, despite deaths. funnily enough, turkey , in my experience, is turkey, in my experience, is a much better. i got my hair done in turkey and it was great. i mean, it was in portacabin mean, it was in a portacabin next airport. there's next to the airport. there's chickens across the chickens running across the floor the surgeon was floor and stuff. the surgeon was wearing was, you know, wearing crocs. it was, you know, it was anything, was below it was if anything, it was below the the nhs. but, the standards of the nhs. but, you still did great you know, it still did a great job. the surgery that's done in the quite often subpar.
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the uk is quite often subpar. rory o'hanlon got his hair done and had to he had to get it and he had to he had to get it redone twice spent way more redone twice and spent way more money than if he'd gone to turkey. >> and how is your bum lift? >> and how is your bum lift? >> well, you can check it out after the show. >> thing to the >> that's one thing to do in the interval, that's it interval, isn't it? that's it for part one. coming up in part two, students bad two, british students are bad at maths, khan i >> -- >> when it comes to knife crime stats,
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> welcome back to headliners. >> welcome back to headliners. >> i'm stephen allen. still here with newspaper whisperers josh howie and leo kearse. wednesday's telegraph, josh and new immigration rules could see people getting married. haven't they suffered enough ? if i know they suffered enough? if i know new migration rules could lead to big increase in rush marriages , labour warns. so this marriages, labour warns. so this is one of the new policies that basically that essentially it used to be that you could be earning 18 grand and now you have to earn 38 grand before you're allowed to bring over any
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spouses and whatnot. so they . do spouses and whatnot. so they. do you remember the movie green card with gerard depardieu and they're thinking essentially, that's . that lots of people that's. that lots of people going to get married before this comes into law so that they can stay. but i think that's a good thing. we people to in thing. we want people to be, in fact, tricking fact, let's keep on tricking people like we're going to bring in law we'll wait in the law now. we'll wait another months. in the law now. we'll wait anoyeah. months. in the law now. we'll wait anoyeah. montiof knife >> yeah. instead of a knife amnesty, can keep amnesty, say like you can keep your you married. your knives if you get married. who wants to marry someone on 18 grand, though? who wants to marry someone on 18 grand, tho going be who wants to marry someone on 18 grand, thogoing be difficult, >> that's going to be difficult, isn't howie . isn't it? hello, mrs. howie. >> is that not going to be. >> is that not going to be. >> no. would you actually think people are going to bother to do this? yeah. to stay in this wonderful what are you wonderful country. what are you saying britain? saying about great britain? i think be lot think there's going to be a lot of carve certain of carve outs for certain industries because of industries because a lot of people nhs actually don't people in the nhs actually don't earn earn . £30,700 and the nhs earn earn. £30,700 and the nhs is still dependent on, you know, we've got to harvest, we've got to steel the, the sort of doctors and nurses from, from overseas because we're not growing enough here. >> and apparently they don't
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need in nigeria. apparently need them in nigeria. apparently nigeria many doctors and nigeria has so many doctors and nurses, can just give them nurses, they can just give them all uk and they don't all to the uk and they don't they don't have lack of care or they don't have lack of care or they don't have lack of care or they don't i know how they don't i don't know how nigeria does it. we should point out being sarcastic out that leo is being sarcastic and solve and that would solve two problems though, problems at once though, wouldn'tthey've doctors >> that they've got doctors going get going on strike wanting to get paid more and only way to paid more and the only way to get in the country to get doctors in the country is to pay get doctors in the country is to pay maybe they should pay them more. maybe they should get married. is that what you're trying the doctors get married. is that what you're trying marry the doctors get married. is that what you're trying marry other. octors should marry each other. >> what they're to >> i think what they're going to do certain industries, do is certain industries, they'll don't they'll say like, no, you don't have reach also certain have to reach and also certain parts country because parts of the country because i mean, below medium mean, the it's below the medium median in london, but median salary in london, but it's median salary up it's above the median salary up north as i zone to . north as i zone to. >> but so this is labour saying essentially, oh, we don't like this idea because look at what could happen. people might have to get really married. they're sort grasping straws here. sort of grasping at straws here. at same time, labour very at the same time, labour is very at to also want to at pains to go. we also want to cut migration as well . we cut down migration as well. we just want to have a look at this a little bit more. she does give a little bit more. she does give a good like this yvette cooper gave here. gave a really good line here. she said they've now sent more
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home they have home secretary than they have asylum rwanda to asylum seekers to rwanda to boom. good boom. that's some good politicking there. the least they could have done is just pop one the plane. yeah time they one on the plane. yeah time they sent like save some sent over. yeah, like save some fuel. yeah. put greta on to the daily mail. leo and china is better at maths than the uk. but to be fair , they did kill off a to be fair, they did kill off a lot of their girl babies, so. to be fair, they did kill off a lot yes,|eir girl babies, so. to be fair, they did kill off a lot yes, so girl babies, so. to be fair, they did kill off a lot yes, so british bies, so. to be fair, they did kill off a lot yes, so british students are >> yes, so british students are still lagging behind rival countries like singapore, japan and estonia. i don't think any of them are rival countries for the uk . like of them are rival countries for the uk. like on what of them are rival countries for the uk . like on what metric are the uk. like on what metric are we rivalled with their singapore , japan and estonia in the same league table? that's just that's just weird. unless it's, i don't know, sumo wrestling or something. no it's maths reading and science . yes. and is and science. yes. and this is after lockdown wrecked wrecked our it didn't wreck the our scores. it didn't wreck the scores for kids in other countries. so yeah, we're , we're countries. so yeah, we're, we're still outside the top ten. they've got the programme for international student assessment , which is how they measure it. and we are we're well, i don't know if this is because other
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countries because obviously, you know, of these lot countries because obviously, you knthese of these lot countries because obviously, you knthese countries of these lot countries because obviously, you knthese countries are :hese lot countries because obviously, you knthese countries are :hese lor of these countries are china or chinese, chinese ish, like, you know, singapore, macau , hong know, singapore, macau, hong kong and they've got, you know, they've sort of get the kids to work the kids aren't fat and lazy and stupid . they've got lazy and stupid. they've got this. yeah. they've yeah. they really start to crack the whip over them probably, probably literally in some cases in some parts of china . parts of china. >> but america is better at >> but even america is better at reading than we are. those youths are slowing us down. oh, indeed. article indeed. well, this article actually is actually what it's saying is that have recovered a little that we have recovered a little bit better . like, it's a that we have recovered a little bit better. like, it's a shame because since they started doing it, like when they really look into it's about ten years ago they make improvements they did make real improvements over decade and then over the last decade and then they've which are the they've gone down, which are the same. what they're saying is they've gone down, which are the san decline vhat they're saying is they've gone down, which are the sandecline vhioutcomessaying is they've gone down, which are the san decline vhioutcomessayirbeen the decline in outcomes has been slower on average across slower than on average across the country. in that the other country. in that sense, been relatively sense, uk has been relatively more successful. so we haven't we're not as pathetic as as one, but also so this is 15 year olds that they've tested and that is not going to show anything . you not going to show anything. you wait six years when they're
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wait six years time when they're testing my nine year which testing my nine year old, which is my personal theory about who was the worst affected . it was was the worst affected. it was the were about 5 or 6 the kids who were about 5 or 6 dunng the kids who were about 5 or 6 during lot. was when during that lot. that was when those get locked those core subjects get locked in reading the cause of maths, those two three years absolutely mess them up for life and we are going to see like precipitous falling off in about six years time. >> and we're also seeing a lot of kids coming into the country from from overseas of from from overseas as part of this huge influx of immigration. from from overseas as part of thwasrge influx of immigration. from from overseas as part of thwas like nflux of immigration. from from overseas as part of thwas like nearlyf immigration. from from overseas as part of thwas like nearly 1.3nmigration. from from overseas as part of thwas like nearly 1.3 million on. it was like nearly 1.3 million people entered the entered the country last year. so if you've got people who don't speak engush got people who don't speak english as a first language, they're obviously not they're obviously going to not do well reading maths do as well at reading and maths and in education. you know, the first first here. and in education. you know, the first it's first here. and in education. you know, the first it's also first here. and in education. you know, the first it's also , first here. and in education. you know, the first it's also , you;t here. and in education. you know, the first it's also , you know, 1ere. and it's also, you know, possibly going to slow down the class because, you know, they need you there's a need, you know, there's a drinking game where if you bring in immigration story that in immigration to a story that doesn't well, maybe the people maybe could maybe bring do maybe we could maybe bring do shots, bring down shots, maybe we could bring down immigration and it wouldn't get mentioned. how about that? >> ability >> my fault. our maths ability wouldn't be as good without immigration i was
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immigration because i was watching doctor and sir watching doctor who and sir isaac to isaac newton. i was surprised to find . yeah, man. asian man. find. yeah, man. asian man. yeah. i think is actually yeah. which i think is actually more racist to cast like that just because good just because he's good at calculus doesn't he calculus doesn't mean he actually anyway , let's actually is in anyway, let's move the mail. josh move on to the daily mail. josh the national the office for national statistics called left statistics often called left wing anti—growth. you can't trust anything what's trust anything it says. what's that? being told they're that? i'm being told they're having at khan. having a go at sadiq khan. we like yeah. suddenly like them. yeah. suddenly everything place. everything falls into place. sadiq is ticked off by the sadiq khan is ticked off by the ons for falsely claiming that knife crime had fallen in london. so there was a press release in july. i've i think i saw a clip based where they were like, knife and gun crime. it's all gone down. i've been a great leader to your city and everybody was like, no, mate, it's gone, man. it's gone way up now. so the ons have stepped in and not only is it it's not even like it's not, it's gone up 40% since sadiq khan has gone. so that's a huge thing. and now his, his the mayor office, a spokesperson said , no, no, no. spokesperson said, no, no, no. what we meant was people from
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knife offences with injuries affecting people under 25, those go down. so basically knife crime by left handed people on a sunday with people wearing waistcoats that are red. those have gone down. >> yeah, i think he's got the gist of it. he's got diane abbott doing his stats. i think this is just cherry picking the data. as josh said, i used to i used to work in criminal intelligence. probably intelligence. there's probably a drinking know, drinking game where, you know, you i you have a drink every time i mentioned but yeah, mentioned that. but but yeah, you you can cherry pick you can just you can cherry pick the data. can pick different the data. you can pick different time measure from and time periods to measure from and they're just trying to, trying to look to make themselves look good when has been when in fact sadiq khan has been an mayor. certainly on an abysmal mayor. certainly on the metric of knife crime. >> and also, you know, i don't care about the people getting injured under 25. there's some people over 25 being injured that i'm worried about. and those ones are the ones that that i'm worried about. and thosegone are the ones that that i'm worried about. and thosegone arebyle ones that that i'm worried about. and those gone are by the 1es that that i'm worried about. and those gone are by the way,1at that i'm worried about. and those gone are by the way,1a do have gone up by the way, i do care and care about people under 25 and saying that. we saying things like that. we understand gone up as understand why it's gone up as well. wednesdays well. yeah. yeah wednesdays guardian leo and you are guardian leo and if you are depressed might need depressed you might not need antidepressants. just
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antidepressants. you might just be right because if you've seen the world. yeah. the world. yeah, yeah. >> so medical experts and politicians have called for the amount of antidepressants being prescribed to people across the uk an open uk to be reduced in an open letter to the government . so letter to the government. so apparently a total of it's nearly 9 million patients in england were prescribed antidepressants in the last yeah antidepressants in the last year. that's almost doubled since 2011, according to the nhs. so i mean , it seems nhs. so i mean, it seems unlikely that the number of depressed people has doubled. so we've got a problem with overprescribing. we've got a prescription mentality. instead of looking at things that might be making people depressed, such as being a criminal intelligence analyst or immigration. oh, so they've got this parliamentary group called beyond pills, which sounds like an after party, but they're trying to stop the reliance on prescription an it's also not coincide with an improvement in our mental health. >> well that's the scary thing. yeah. that has declined. and even though, as you say the
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medications doubled. so and it's going obviously us a lot going to obviously save us a lot of money, that's one thing. and also so the overreliance on these things, they're not it's not like they don't have side effects to them. so yeah, this seems like a good thing . there seems like a good thing. there are two people that i'm groups i'm somewhat afraid of hamas and scientologists genuinely and i think scientologists would actually , if you say bad stuff actually, if you say bad stuff about them, they can mess up your life in a day to day. way worse than hamas just from previous. but the point is they're really against anti this kind of medication because they see it as like a fema to what they do, which is like a natural way of doing it. so they like they're really against like prozac and stuff. yeah. i've just got pro scientology tonight. this could tonight. no, i think this could be this could be big pill. instead being allied with instead of being allied with big pharma gone , the pharma have gone, the scientologists might be just saying and it's life in the we st. west. >> people are living these
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atomised lives, lives with no social we need we need social contact. we need we need to back to the family. to get back to the family. having a family. to get back to the family. having a family . people aren't having a family. people aren't having kids anymore. we're going to get to later on. but to get to it later on. but people have kids. they people should have kids. they make happy. we all know that make you happy. we all know that side effects. make you happy. we all know that side eff one of the side effects of antidepressants >> one of the side effects of anti(of»ressants >> one of the side effects of anti(of libido.:s >> one of the side effects of anti(of libido. yeah. so you're loss of libido. yeah. so you're not going to have kids either, if mean. you're if that's what i mean. you're not cheer yourself up not going to cheer yourself up doing the one thing you normally choose when you have kids, you don't to go don't get time to be able to go down to get the medication refills. it's strange place. all right. move on. the right. let's move on. the guardian, they say in guardian, josh, as they say in the guns don't kill people . the us, guns don't kill people. people do. but people with people do. but it's people with guns. can still see guns. so you can still see a link. i the link, yes. link. i do see the link, yes. us. oh, god. i want to be funny about this, but also really about this, but it's also really terrible. breaks record for terrible. us breaks record for the most mass shootings in a single year after weekend murders. so maybe i shouldn't be funny about this . maybe i don't funny about this. maybe i don't have the skills to be funny about this mass shooting. is four plus people not including the shooter . there have been , the shooter. there have been, but there's some interesting statistics that come across here
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that , first of all, 26 of the 38 that, first of all, 26 of the 38 that, first of all, 26 of the 38 that have happened have happened in private homes. so when we see stuff on the news, we sort of see things in parks or this and that, like, well, that, and it's like, oh, well, that's it's that good news that it's in private like it's in private homes. like if you're family are sounds you're if your family are sounds more people who know more like it's people who know the are known to the offenders. >> if you know well i'm guessing it's yeah. >> em- it's yeah. >> and you know yeah as >> families and you know yeah as you say someone they know so but this i mean this is the constant debate about guns is by the way last supposedly last weekend, last supposedly last weekend, last sunday there were like two horrible mass murders, but there was actually three because is another one just involved knives killing a bunch of people as well. so i don't know. it's what do you think? do you think everybody should have guns? no, it's but it's depressing statistics. but if khan to go if you ask sadiq khan to go through them, i he could make these good. yeah. there's these look good. yeah. there's been the last been a decrease in the last yeah been a decrease in the last year. also you got, i >> yeah. and also you got, i mean, are a few terrible mean, there are a few terrible tragedy years but i mean, you see these terrible see some of these terrible tragedies we wouldn't we ownership. we wouldn't we wouldn't give up travel. we
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wouldn't give up travel. we wouldn't give up flying on a plane driving car. but plane or driving in a car. but they do lead to two deaths and guns, guns are really cool. >> but the purpose of a car isn't to someone with it. isn't to hit someone with it. but a is to but the purpose of a gun is to shoot, i think. but the purpose of a gun is to shoyeah. hink. but the purpose of a gun is to shoyeah. which need >> yeah. which you need sometimes shoot sometimes you need to shoot people. got a gun? >> have you got a gun? >> have you got a gun? >> had. i used to have a >> well, i had. i used to have a gun. okay. i had a shotgun licence the of licence from like the age of 12. my licence from like the age of 12. my gunsmith. used to my dad's a gunsmith. you used to have of guns. have loads of guns. >> oh, there we go. some someone have loads of guns. >> gunthere we go. some someone have loads of guns. >> gun companygo. some someone have loads of guns. >> gun company overome someone have loads of guns. >> gun company over here. omeone have loads of guns. >> gun company over here. take»ne have loads of guns. >.shot,| company over here. take»ne have loads of guns. >.shot, everybody. )ver here. take»ne have loads of guns. >.shot, everybody. )ver let's take»ne a shot, everybody. but let's just think the just say i don't think the problem is. the problem problem is guns is. the problem is . that's it. problem is guns is. the problem is .that's it. for is americans. that's it. for part two. it's don lissack. coming up in part three, we'll talk about the latest on porn sites and women going into men's prisons. >> that's not the same story . >> that's not the same story. >> that's not the same story. >> we'll you
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radio. >> welcome back to headliners to the express, leo and porn sites will be scanning your face. why so they know when you're finished . finished. >> so. so there's a warning for users of uk porn sites or uk
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users of uk porn sites or uk users of uk porn sites or uk users of porn sites because some of them might be based over seas and some of the ones i access are. but your face may soon be scanned when you visit these porn sites. they need strict age verification technology . this is verification technology. this is ofcom . now that it's in control ofcom. now that it's in control of the internet as well. and one of the internet as well. and one of the internet as well. and one of the ways, you know, there's various ways they can do it. they can have you have to share your bank account details , photo your bank account details, photo id and credit card id checks and credit card checks. which don't checks. none of which i don't really send bank really want to send my bank account details to some dodgy site in romania. account details to some dodgy site in romania . so what they're site in romania. so what they're going to do instead , or what going to do instead, or what they're suggesting is facial age estimation scanning . so yeah, estimation scanning. so yeah, you better stop using that moisturiser on your face. >> the it's well, it's perfect. it's not going to work for me after their only loophole is that someone might look over age but they've just been on that site too much. no, no. the other loophole that say you're loophole is that say you're taking nap your taking a nap and then your teenage . would work with
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teenage son was. would work with the picture . the picture. >> because i've seen i've seen that been been done with mission impossible . yeah. mission impossible. yeah. mission impossible. and i'm sure mosque i'm sure there's a woman she was on a plane and she'd discovered her husband was having an affair by getting his face to unlock the phone. oh, really? >> yeah. sweet okay, so, yeah. have a pin code as well. this goes back if you're doing the drinking game. bring back drinking game. can i bring back my about bringing my whole idea about bringing pornography back to magazines? this is something i truly believe in. i think it will make our nation better and stronger. get back magazines that will bring, first of all, encourages reading and also imagination. you have to fill in the gaps yourself a little bit there a vector for covid are you believe in covid now to the guardian then josh and news from scotland that could save nicola sturgeon's career . and what's sturgeon's career. and what's that? i've been told campervan . that? i've been told campervan. all right, forget that . i was all right, forget that. i was going to say niche, but it feels like a long time since the whole campervan days. the good old
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days. yeah. trans. oh my god . days. yeah. trans. oh my god. you remember trans people . but you remember trans people. but they were, as before, hamas . they were, as before, hamas. like in earlier albums getting played again. yeah. all the hits . wow. trans inmates with history of violence against women to be mostly kept out of female scottish jails so that mostly is doing a lot of lifting there . where in scotland if there. where in scotland if people remember back in the day, isla bryson , who was a man isla bryson, who was a man called adam graham, who had raped two women, then when i'm a woman now myself and then got sent to a female jail until it caused a big hoo ha and then she resigned . not she, but, you resigned. not she, but, you know, whatever her name was . know, whatever her name was. what was the nicola sturgeon ? what was the nicola sturgeon? yes, but how soon we forget. how soon we forget. but what they're saying now is so they open a review into this and they're saying, look, if you are a trans woman and you okay, as you if you as long as you haven't a history of violence or women or you're not at risk of violence
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towards women, then you then you can still go to a female jail essentially. is what they're saying. they're saying in exceptional circumstances, you would. so really, it's just the problem here is if you're currently assessed as a risk to women, well , well, then it's subjective. >> i mean, surely the whole point, like you've been you've been convicted of a crime , um, been convicted of a crime, um, that's generally a risk factor. it's a red flag. and when you're. yeah, if you're, if you're. yeah, if you're, if you're going to commit other crimes. so yeah, the fact that it's a self—defining thing and it's a self—defining thing and it's not that different from what the rules were the time, what the rules were at the time, they've shifted much they've not really shifted much back. >> i remember talking about it sat to be sat here, it was meant to be done by case basis, sat here, it was meant to be don
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locked away. now, whether this man by logical man is an actual risk or not, that's still going to be affecting these people who are have no choice to be locked up with. >> yeah. what about their feelings? and also, like we know society about society doesn't care about working class people in the underclass. look underclass. i mean, look at rotherham and all the rest of it. so even this wrong it. so even when this goes wrong and there are attacks in prison, nobody's nobody's going to care. it's terrible thing you it's the terrible thing you guarding. it's me too. but guarding. it's all me too. but only for only posh women . only for only for posh women. >> well, the independent >> well, onto the independent leo and conor mcgregor has come out fighting, so conor mcgregor outlines plan to become president of ireland. >> is amazing. so after the dubun >> is amazing. so after the dublin riots of whenever it was ten days ago, he was attacked by the establishment. so he was he was tweeting. he was very critical of the government. >> wouldn't to >> wouldn't ireland need to leave britain it's leave great britain first? it's not i don't want a separate country. >> it's in the eu. that's very funny. email it funny. there's an email about it , was he was attacked , but sorry was he was attacked by the established and they're basically weaponized hate crime
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laws to uh to come after him. so because of his tweets they say, you know , basically persecuting you know, basically persecuting decent like like, you know , decent like like, you know, putin does with kasparov except even putin's a bit more subtle about it . so even putin's a bit more subtle about it. so an irish even putin's a bit more subtle about it . so an irish politics about it. so an irish politics is really anti—democratic at the moment. so it really needs an outsider , you know, a sort of outsider, you know, a sort of javier milei type, you know, a trump type person to come in and shake things up. at the moment, the irish government ngos the irish government pays ngos 8% the irish government's 8% of the irish government's budget goes to ngos, non—governmental organisation , non—governmental organisation, ones then feed lobby the ones that then feed lobby the government with its own ideas. so the government . can pretend, so the government. can pretend, oh, this is what the public want, no, it's literally buying . want, no, it's literally buying. it's buying organisations to pay , paying the organisations to send its own opinions, you know, preferred opinions back to it. so it needs conor mcgregor to get in there and shake things up. i mean, being president in ireland, it's not a particularly you don't have a lot of power. it's not like being president of america, , but i think the
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america, but, but i think the message it would say send to the establishment would would be just amazing . yeah. just amazing. yeah. >> the article points out quite meanly twice in the article that he lost his latest fight. yeah 121 2021 he lost the big loser . 121 2021 he lost the big loser. but but i don't know. do you think i don't know enough about local irish? irish politics to be able to say whether he how much he's revered or not. obviously, he's not a politician, but he's obviously massively famous over there and he's saying, look, i'm an outsider. i don't bias. outsider. i don't have any bias. and i'll give you all a vote every week . like a lot of work, every week. like a lot of work, that does sound like people don't do we want to vote every week? >> i mean, he's not talking about a referendum every week, but i think , know, irish but i think, you know, irish politics, governments politics, like most governments in drifted so far in the west, have drifted so far away the people away from what the people actually want, from what voters actually want. that. yeah, something this needs to something like this needs to needs we're seeing it needs to happen. we're seeing it happen, happen lot. happen, happen a lot. >> he's disrupter. >> he's a disrupter. >> he's a disrupter. >> he's a disrupter. >> he punch people . >> yeah. he can punch people. >> yeah. he can punch people. >> josh and >> the daily mail, josh and spending time alone can make you less stressed. >> but you to do it
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>> but you have to do it properly, which getting properly, which means getting your . your face scanned. >> a callback to anybody >> that's a callback to anybody tuning to in that particular story. or even if you've only just tuned in. but you know, that news story, i thought about it. should should i do it. i thought should should i do that a setup? that requires that as a setup? that requires an yeah. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> you know what? we've we've got people have people got people we don't have people dipping out of show. dipping in and out of the show. we people their we have people dedicating their time. 11:00 driving at home, getting ready for bed, whatever it is they got that reference. they known was going they must have known i was going to porn story more to mention a porn story more than in porn story. than just in the porn story. even didn't get the even if they didn't get the reference, still reference, they would still guess about porn. google guess it was about porn. google it. was porn. it. of course it was about porn. i it. spending time alone i did it. so spending time alone is you . scientists say is good for you. scientists say solitude relieve the solitude can help relieve the pressures of modern life. this is a very confusing article. you know, i'm not that bright and it seems to be saying if i've got the gist of it, that it's being alone is quite good as long as you like being alone. is that is that have i read the 4 or 5 pages? that seems to be the gist
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of it. if you like being alone . of it. if you like being alone. being alone is good. yeah, that's essentially what it's saying. and the opposite of that is if you don't like being alone, it's not good. and that checks out too. yeah. yeah. is that. checks out too. yeah. yeah. is that . am i right? i read that. am i right? did i read this correctly ? this correctly? >> yeah. it's just interesting that hear you that you never hear that. you hear you a lot of hear a lot. you read a lot of articles loneliness hear a lot. you read a lot of articla; loneliness hear a lot. you read a lot of articla you loneliness hear a lot. you read a lot of articla you know, loneliness hear a lot. you read a lot of articla you know, a.oneliness hear a lot. you read a lot of articla you know, a terrible;s such a you know, a terrible thing, written by some thing, always written by some lonely , you know, lonely journalist, you know, waiting for the £50 from the guardian. but lonely, apparently old people, especially me, suffer from loneliness a lot. but in my experience, that's because they're. they're boring and annoying. so maybe we could have training sessions for them or get the guardian writers with old people. >> yeah. yeah but also, you'll never do a survey that finds people who enjoy being on their own because they're nowhere near people with clipboards on the high street. people with clipboards on the hig yeah.et. wouldn't >> yeah. yeah. wouldn't talk. >> yeah. yeah. wouldn't talk. >> know about you >> yeah. yeah. wouldn't talk. >> but know about you >> yeah. yeah. wouldn't talk. >> but when know about you >> yeah. yeah. wouldn't talk. >> but when kn> yeah. yeah. wouldn't talk. >> but when kn
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i'll get four hours in the car by myself . i'll say, i've got an by myself. i'll say, i've got an operation on the weekend. i'm looking forward morning of looking forward to a morning of being under general anaesthetic because do because i can't be asked to do anything. calls. anything. no phone calls. oh, it's to be sweet. what a it's going to be sweet. what a prediction. i'm something prediction. i'm having something taken wins. taken out. let's see who wins. funny wins one of those bubbles to the telegraph. leo and kim jong un cried as he tried to talk women into making babies. >> it sounds like up >> it sounds like my chat up techniques . techniques at university. >> jong un has been >> so kim jong un has been filmed crying while appealing to nonh filmed crying while appealing to north korea's women to have more children and raise to love children and raise them to love the authoritarian state. he obviously fits that bit into obviously he fits that bit into every but yeah , every speech. but yeah, basically he said he was addressing thousands of women gathered a national mothers gathered at a national mothers meeting in pyongyang. he meeting in pyongyang. oh, he looks good. pronunciation. oh, there . oh, hello. there he there he is. oh, hello. there he is looking with his . is looking all cool with his. >> with his cool? is looking all cool with his. >> but with his cool? is looking all cool with his. >> but he's with his cool? is looking all cool with his. >> but he's also /ith his cool? is looking all cool with his. >> but he's also got his cool? is looking all cool with his. >> but he's also got the :ool? is looking all cool with his. >> but he's also got the bangs as well, doesn't he? other people, people in the audience also their eyes. that was also dabbed their eyes. that was also dabbed their eyes. that was a really because they a really odd because if they don't, don't dab don't, the people who don't dab their shot and fed to their eyes get shot and fed to really crying. >> or has he got fake? >> or has he got fake? >> yeah. look, dabbing his >> yeah. look, he's dabbing his eyes. he's not see
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eyes. i don't know. he's not see any real tears. says. he says any real tears. he says. he says stopping decline in birth stopping the decline in birth rates providing good rates and providing good childcare education childcare and education are all our family affairs that we should solve together our should solve together with our mothers . and yeah, i mean, maybe mothers. and yeah, i mean, maybe it lost something in the translation or gained something in the translation, but yeah, nonh in the translation, but yeah, north korea's fertility rate is dropped. it's down at like 1.79. it's not as bad as this is higher than the rest of the world. yeah i think the uk is like 1.5 and this is a this is a serious thing because economists are oh, well, we're are all saying, oh, well, we're going have massive going to have to have massive immigration replace immigration to replace the people, we're people, you know, the kids we're not it's like, well, not having. it's like, well, what's to do to the what's that going to do to the country completely replace country if we completely replace the it's, know, it's the people? it's, you know, it's not be britain anymore . not going to be britain anymore. basically. it's not going to be the we know. so, yeah, the britain we know. so, yeah, it's weird to see it happening in north korea as well because, i not much there in north korea as well because, i do not much there in north korea as well because, i do except not much there in north korea as well because, i do except fornot much there in north korea as well because, i do except for haveiuch there in north korea as well because, i do except for have kids. here to do except for have kids. >> fair enough. demographics is destiny . yeah. and their rate is destiny. yeah. and their rate is twice as high as south korea , twice as high as south korea, which is 0.78. so so eventually this is this is, this is the
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issue. and this communism works. this is the this is the issue of our times. that's it for part three. coming up, why young people are buying emergency food. but getting rid of their tonsils. little oil, little seasoning, birds, one stone seasoning, two birds, one stone on that one. details on the
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welcome back to headliners. the metro . josh grand theft auto, metro. josh grand theft auto, six is coming out in my day, if you wanted to steal a car and beat people up, you had to wait for your next night out. i am from mansfield. we should remember gta six remember that dude gta six trailer. if there would trailer. i wonder if there would be. is there a gta field edition? you'll get there eventually. yeah. that's what they're working their way down miami and whatnot. so gta six trailer has 50 million views but more . dislikes than gta five more. dislikes than gta five that the haters out there. essentially it's been a massive success.i essentially it's been a massive success. i mean they did here we go. look , that looks go. i mean, look, that looks real ish. oh god. hello if
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you're listening on the radio rather than the tv right now, good luck to you. we're seeing lots of beautiful women and parties and gangsters hanging out . and it's like an intro to a out. and it's like an intro to a csi miami. yeah, it looks oh, no, it's the female protagonist, apparently. >> lucia or lucia. >>— >> lucia or lucia. >> lucia. oh, someone's catching an alligator. oh, some twerking on top of a car. okay. it does look pretty badass. i might even, like, get a playstation. is that what it is? something something like that. it does look amazing . it's not coming look amazing. it's not coming out till 2025, but , you know, i out till 2025, but, you know, i mean, the big the big statistic that always bring out is the video games industry is worth more than television books and films altogether . yeah, it's films altogether. yeah, it's huge. billions, billions, billions , billions. billions, billions. >> it's dead big. the one thing that slightly worries me so rockstar games that it rockstar games that make it scottish think scottish company. i think they've been in this diversity hiring spree. so i'm worried that this is going to be like the sort of the disney fied version of grand auto
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version of grand theft auto because remember, it's famous for basically you can do you can be most horrible person in for basically you can do you can be worldyst horrible person in for basically you can do you can be world in horrible person in for basically you can do you can be world in it.rrible person in for basically you can do you can be world in it. youa person in for basically you can do you can be world in it. you knowon in for basically you can do you can be world in it. you know ,n in the world in it. you know, teenage boys going around teenage boys just going around beating beat up women and all beating up beat up women and all the rest of it. so yeah, it didn't look like there was someone twerking on top of a car. it could have lost that edge. >> yeah. tattoos on a bum to the daily mail . daily mail. >> leo young americans are prepping in case the next election breaks the fabric of their society. too. i've their society. and me too. i've got popcorn in. got the popcorn in. >> younger americans, when >> so, younger americans, when you you know, you think of preppers, you know, doomsday think of doomsday preppers, you think of sort , middle aged sort of boomers, middle aged people, know, prepping in people, you know, prepping in their in their bunkers out in their in their bunkers out in the . but no younger the midwest. but no younger americans are afraid of the americans that are afraid of the 2024 election that could spark a civil war are preparing for disaster. apparently 40% of gen z have spent money on doomsday preparations. however, when you then look at what these preparations , it's they preparations are, it's they bought water and 20% of bought food and water and 20% of them purchased toilet paper. oh, turns out i've been a doomsday prepper all this time. i thought i just wanted to wipe bum. i just wanted to wipe my bum. but i'm preparing i just wanted to wipe my bum. butthe i'm preparing i just wanted to wipe my bum. butthe end i'm preparing i just wanted to wipe my bum. butthe end of i'm preparing
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i just wanted to wipe my bum. butthe end of times.n preparing for the end of times. >> could have gone on uber >> i could have gone on uber eats yeah when they eats or whatever. yeah when they need what it really is about is that z was raised on the that gen z was raised on the last of us and the walking dead. it's not that they're just all a bunch of scaredy cats, but there's the political polarisation in america is insane. >> what's interesting, you've got left wing people who are worried going worried that trump is going to bnng bring in this sort of authoritarian, bring in this sort of authoritwhen actually, if you system when actually, if you look at politics, people like trudeau, jacinda ardern , it's trudeau, jacinda ardern, it's them. it's the left that bring in the authoritarianism. so they're wrong to the daily mail. >> josh kids who have had their tonsils out behave better, and i thought smacking them was bit thought smacking them was a bit harsh. >> f everyone e“— harsh. >> everyone at home just >> no. is everyone at home just finished in finished a shot from bringing in trump . experts call for more trump. experts call for more children to have the tonsils removed. a study shows that surgery reduces behavorial behavioural reading problems . behavioural reading problems. second one and even blood pressure. this is amazing. so because they're i guess if you've got issues with your tonsils , you're not sleeping as tonsils, you're not sleeping as well, you're not getting those 9 to 12 hours that you meant to get. and that affects your behaviour through day . so
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behaviour through the day. so there's now they're saying there's just now they're saying all should get their all kids should get their tonsils removed maybe because tonsils removed, maybe because it'll make them sleep better and they'll help their heart and various other things. it's just terrible. >> why would we evolve to have tonsils if they weren't performing sort of role? performing some sort of role? don't they filter the air it don't they filter the air as it goes something? they goes in or something? they definitely do. sumner we wouldn't have them. >> appendices? appendicitis appendix keep the >> appendix appendices. keep the biome gut healthy , right? >> i stand corrected. >> i stand corrected. >> they will try and do this in a minute if we the a minute if we can. the telegraph. josh and awoke african santa been african female santa has been cancelled we'll cancelled by belgium, but we'll probably a special on the probably get a special on the bbc day. probably get a special on the bb(indeed. y. the probably get a special on the bb(indeed.y. the african >> indeed. woke the woke african female cancelled by female santa clause cancelled by belgian city the tradition over there i think they have black pete he's a friend of santa but they had this this woman queen nicola that she's created by an artist and she's a reworked version of santa claus and she dresses in a palestinian flag . dresses in a palestinian flag. and i already hate her. not that i hate the palestinian flag. it's fine. yeah. i mean, you're
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biased coming to the surface just to just what it should be an israeli flag in peace together . together. >> yeah. good luck with that. >> yeah. good luck with that. >> merry , merry, happy hanukkah. >> merry, merry, happy hanukkah. christmas. it'sjust >> merry, merry, happy hanukkah. christmas. it's just the spirit of christmas for you, leah. >> not really. i mean, this >> no, not really. i mean, this is. is produced by the bbc. is. this is produced by the bbc. this ridiculous. this is. this is ridiculous. the doctor it's doctor who episode. yeah, it's a nonsense. fair enough. well the show is nearly over on that delightful image. >> so let's take one more look at wednesday's front pages . we at wednesday's front pages. we start times sunak start with the times sunak middle way on rwanda . the middle way on rwanda. the guardian goes with apocalypse conditions in gaza, blocking aid, warns un official the daily mail. the cruellest and most indefensible doctor's strike. yet the mirror goes with the story christmas cosmetic surgery fean story christmas cosmetic surgery fear, which includes a risky butt lift which seems like a typo on rishi sunak to the telegraph , ministers threaten to telegraph, ministers threaten to quit over rwanda flights law . quit over rwanda flights law. the daily star goes with you big babies . well, that's all we've babies. well, that's all we've got time for. thank you to my
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guests, josh howie and leo kearse , for tonight. we'll be kearse, for tonight. we'll be back tomorrow at 11:00 with nick dixon and carrie marks and me. i'll be back here. if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast until the next for breakfast and until the next one, myself one. one, have myself a good one. >> brighter outlook with boxt >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update from the met office . it will be from the met office. it will be a colder night tonight than last night because much of the country under clear country will be under clear spells. that's because rain spells. that's because the rain many seen through many of us have seen through today by this low today brought by this low pressure , pushing the pressure, is pushing off to the east and behind it, we've got a bit more of a settled interlude, at that will last at least at least that will last at least through wednesday. so plenty of clear this clear spells out there. this evening. and developing evening. and a frost developing quite quickly. so temperatures will off quite quickly will drop off quite quickly tonight. there's an ice warning in force across eastern areas of scotland. we'll some mist scotland. we'll see some mist and developing parts and fog developing across parts of and the south—west of wales and the south—west of england. it will be widely
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england. and it will be widely a frosty start to the day tomorrow. but there will be some sunshine around, particularly across northern and across northern areas and eastern where the sunshine eastern areas where the sunshine should for much of the day. eastern areas where the sunshine should west,yr much of the day. eastern areas where the sunshine should west, though, of the day. eastern areas where the sunshine should west, though, the re day. further west, though, the sunshine will hazier sunshine will turn hazier throughout day once any mist throughout the day once any mist and clears and you can see and fog clears and you can see across parts of northern ireland, rain ireland, there will be rain arriving lunchtime . that rain arriving by lunchtime. that rain will into parts of wales as will push into parts of wales as well cornwall. by the end of well as cornwall. by the end of the well, temperatures the day as well, temperatures will rise, though, in will start to rise, though, in the west with more of a southwesterly in the southwesterly breeze in the east, feeling east, however, still feeling quite with only highs quite chilly with only highs of around degrees. and then around 3 or 4 degrees. and then thursday be a widely thursday is going to be a widely more are warnings more wet day. there are warnings in force for heavy rain across many western areas as well as parts of scotland, too. there could be some difficult driving conditions because of the rain and the rain will last through the rest of the week, friday and into the weekend . but into the weekend. but temperatures will start to rise into double figures by looks like things are heating up. >> boxt boilers as sponsors of weather on .
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over the government's newly signed treaty with rwanda . signed treaty with rwanda. katherine forster has the latest . yes lots of arguments going on within the conservative party about the government's latest attempt to get people to rwanda . attempt to get people to rwanda. >> £140 million already gone to that country . will any migrants that country. will any migrants crossing the channel follow? i'll bring you more shortly. >> meanwhile, at the covid inquiry, the former prime minister, boris johnson , is set minister, boris johnson, is set to defend his handling of the

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