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tv   Headliners  GB News  December 22, 2023 5:00am-6:01am GMT

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a submachine gun outside a pub on christmas eve of last year. in july, chapman was found guilty of murder and was sentenced to a life in prison with a minimum terms of 48 years. a murder investigation has been launched after a four year old boy died following a knife attack in east london. the metropolitan police said that they received a call just before 11:00 last night, raising concerns for the welfare of a child at a property in hackney. inside officers found the boy with knife injuries . he was with knife injuries. he was taken to hospital where he later died. a 41 year old woman who we understand was known to be known to the boy rather has been arrested on suspicion of murder . arrested on suspicion of murder. ministers have rolled back their plans to increase earning requirements needed to bring family to live in the uk. the home secretary had told the commons earlier this month that the income threshold would rise to £38,700 by next spring. that was in a bid to tackle rising
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net migration, but instead of immediately increasing the government's confirmed it will now rise in stages . government's confirmed it will now rise in stages. his first to the lower figure of £29,000 next yeah the lower figure of £29,000 next year. james cleverly says the plans will, though still bring net migration down by 300,000 people a year. and thousands of travellers christmas plans are now back on track after an unexpected rail strike in france has come to an end. the disruption caused cross—channel journeys to and from london to be suspend earlier, with at least 30 eurostar trains cancelled and services aren't due to start until tomorrow morning . but vehicles are morning. but vehicles are starting to board the eurotunnel's trains again this evening . that's the latest from evening. that's the latest from the gb newsroom. for more, we're on tv , on digital radio and on tv, on digital radio and visit our website gb news.com . visit our website gb news.com. this is gb news.
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>> hello and welcome to headliners i'm josh howie and joining me to give friday's newspapers a good working over a left hook. lewis schaefer and pretty boy paul cox. >> that's never been said before. >> it's very good. hey guys. what do you think of some of sam francis there? >> sam francis. yeah. new, new news presenter. sam. >> great job. bit of eye >> yeah. great job. bit of eye candy. do feel threatened, candy. do you feel threatened, louis. >> uh, didn't feel threatened. >> uh, i didn't feel threatened. and i feel threatened i'm and i feel threatened that i'm about really about to say that he's really good looking. okay >> comfortable >> because you are comfortable with looks. with your own looks. >> i'm not, i'm not, i'm not >> no, i'm not, i'm not, i'm not comfortable swanning around here like because. because now like i am because. because now i'm looking in my i'm really good looking in my age . but. but that's age category. but. but that's guy age category. but. but that's guy is like he's attractive guy sam is like he's attractive now and he's going to be even more later. don't more attractive later. we don't know. could know. he could gain he could gain lot of weight. that's gain a lot of weight. that's what i point out to the what i should point out to the female viewers that i knew. what i should point out to the fenlewisewers that i knew. what i should point out to the fen lewis eweyears t i knew. what i should point out to the fenlewiseweyears ago.1ew. what i should point out to the fenlewiseweyears ago. he. what i should point out to the fenlewiseweyears ago. he was >> lewis 20 years ago. he was rough , whereas i was a real rough, whereas i was a real pretty boy myself . right. let's pretty boy myself. right. let's have a quick blast through
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friday's front pages. we have the daily mail assisted dying is the daily mail assisted dying is the tide turning. the guardian revealed huge rise in hospital admissions with malnutrition . admissions with malnutrition. telegraph royal family persuaded queen to end her days at balmoral daily express. dame esther plea this cruelty must stop i news christmas travel chaos as storm and strike hit. rail, roads, air and sea and the daily star. my willie's got diddy sausages and those were your front pages . your front pages. >> okay , starting with friday's >> okay, starting with friday's daily telegraph, lewis . daily telegraph, lewis. >> yes. good news. oh no not really. no no no i know , i know, really. no no no i know, i know, it was a joke. >> oh it was a really funny good one. i was making a joke. oh, yeah. gunman kills 15 in prague rampage. >> and, uh, you know , it's just >> and, uh, you know, it's just whenever i read this, i'm, like, happy. i'm, like, happy. it's not. no, i'm not happy. it's horrible. but not happy. not. no, i'm not happy. it's hor|not. but not happy. not. no, i'm not happy. it's hor|not america not happy. not. no, i'm not happy. it's hor|not america because py. not. no, i'm not happy. it's hor|not america because as or
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it's not america because as or i can make a joke, say only in america. >> well done for making this all about you. >> somehow it is because it is. >> somehow it is because it is. >> it is about because it's >> it is about me. because it's about always about like everyone's always talking about like everyone's always talki|g about like everyone's always talki think human nature to but i think it's human nature to do things. not do horrible things. i'm not going going going to i'm not going to mention the guy's name. 14 people are dead. >> really big of you. >> that's really big of you. >> that's really big of you. >> after like walking . >> after just like walking. what? big of me? what? how was that big of me? terrible you're, terrible story. and you're, like, out like you're mr moral. >> yeah, it's a terrible story, but that's this terrible things happen. got of happen. it's got pictures of guys out of students , uh, hiding guys out of students, uh, hiding from this. this gunman. so i've never seen anything like it. what can be learned from this? you tell me why. why? >> what be learned is to not >> what can be learned is to not put you on the first paper. >> wow that's what i've >> that's. wow that's what i've learned. thank you so much. we'll about other we'll talk about this other thing. persuaded thing. royal family persuaded the queen to end days. the queen to end her days. >> yeah, another thing. >> yeah, this is another thing. try no, this is another try to. not no, this is another thing. mess this up. >> don't get me fired. >> don't get me fired. >> i'm to >> i'm going to. i'm going to mess up. royal family mess it up. royal family persuaded queen to her persuaded queen to end her days at balmoral. big, at balmoral. there's a big, great puff on bbc. great big puff piece on bbc. this an ad for the this is basically an ad for the bbc an iplayer. they're
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bbc and an iplayer. they're going to do a thing about the king charles. i know english people like the king, they love the maybe it the royal family and maybe it works. maybe it's the best thing for works for this country. maybe it works and maybe it works. maybe it works this country. >> many thousand of her? >> and it's no. but back in the day when the when the royal family for england, when family fought for england, when queen elizabeth the first won, when she fought for britain, she says, i regret i've only gotten one life to give to my country . one life to give to my country. or was that, was that an american? have you been watching that film? >> you've been watching elizabeth part one? >> i can, i can imagine. >> no, but i can, i can imagine. >> no, but i can, i can imagine. >> you to say? >> what are you trying to say? that's do that's got nothing to do with this . this story. >> it something to do with >> it has something to do with the story. it says. and i remember what they they remember what what they they basically queen. basically forced the queen. she's saying they forced the queen stay in scotland and queen to stay in scotland and not to travel. yeah. >> she didn't want to make a fuss and she. and they said no, you this is where you you know what this is where you have memories. have got fond memories. stay here. they asked her and she here. and they asked her and she asked them, well, why do you insist that i stay here? >> and they said to her, because
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you're to and she you're going to die. and she said , i'm not saying to the said, i'm not saying to the crown is it right? >> thank you so much for that insight. there let's move on to friday's guardian. paul, what are leading are they leading with? >> was brilliant. >> wow, that was brilliant. lewis revealed huge rise lewis top tv revealed huge rise in hospital admission with malnutrition . uh, so more than malnutrition. uh, so more than 800,000 patients were admitted to hospital with malnutrition and nutritional deficiencies last year , so hospital data from last year, so hospital data from england and wales, obtained by the guardian . those caring the guardian. those caring people at the guardian reveals a startling rise , a startling rise startling rise, a startling rise in diagnose is linked to poor diet over the past decade, with nearly half a million admissions of patients with iron deficiencies, hundreds of thousands suffering from vitamin deficiency and more than 10,000 cases of malnourished attrition. so, of course, this is a by—product of a poor economy. and what we've seen over the last ten years, and also , uh, last ten years, and also, uh, these two things can be conflated . i believe there's
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conflated. i believe there's been a huge increase in population , and there hasn't population, and there hasn't been a huge growth in, in societal resources . societal resources. >> so we are in a very difficult position now where we have got more poorer people because very little of our immigration is wealthy people . wealthy people. >> and as a result, we have not got the system in place to deal with it. and the product of that is seeing children in greater numbers , finding their way into numbers, finding their way into hospital, being managed . hospital, being managed. >> well. i'm going to have to disagree there, but disagree with you there, but i'll lewis answer first. i'll let lewis answer first. >> first. is >> i'll disagree first. that is thatis >> i'll disagree first. that is that is that. hit him, get him, get is is that 98% of get him. is that is that 98% of people who are in the hospital are suffering from malnutrition ? are suffering from malnutrition? in every single case of diabetes to ofcom, that that is not a provable figure. okay well, you're going to have to step in because it's totally true, because it's totally true, because 98. where did you read that? i made it up. i made it up . i, i know i made it up, but probably 95% definitely above 90. every case of diabetes,
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every case. >> that's the best science i've ever heard . yeah, definitely ever heard. yeah, definitely above 90. >> every case of diabetes is malnutrition . it's malnutrition. it's hypoglycaemia. too much sugar. every case of cancer comes from malnutrition. every single case of gout or arthritis comes from malnutrition . a bad diet. and malnutrition. a bad diet. and you go to the hospital every single day and you see how sick the people are in the hospital and how sick the nurses and the doctors are in taking care of. >> all right, look, i'm going to say be living say this. we shouldn't be living in an era where things like scurvy, rickets coming back. in an era where things like scunisn'tzkets coming back. in an era where things like scunisn't the; coming back. in an era where things like scunisn't the victoria ning back. in an era where things like scunisn't the victoria era back. this isn't the victoria era anymore . um, i personally don't anymore. um, i personally don't think the problem is economics in the sense that you're talking about paul. you people can about paul. uh, you people can buy carrots , vegetables. they buy carrots, vegetables. they are not expensive of things. they're literally being sold for a penny in some supermarket at the moment. that's because of christmas classes christmas deals, cookery classes , i believe that's people , i believe that's it. people are . they're time poor are poor. they're time poor because they are doing. some people are doing jobs people are doing multiple jobs and it takes to cook. you and it takes time to cook. you are what i believe the issue. >> you are part of the problem.
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are what i believe the issue. >> yyounre part of the problem. are what i believe the issue. >> yyounre pa no »f the problem. are what i believe the issue. >> yyounre pa no josh. problem. are what i believe the issue. >> yyounre pa no josh. josh lem. um, you have no josh. josh you're part of the problem because because you're sitting you're sitting saying you're sitting there saying the standard carrots standard line, which is carrots are for good you. they're not good they don't good for you. they they don't have you. have the right for you. >> right? i'm being paid by big carrots. yes. okay what's on the l, carrots. yes. okay what's on the i, louis. >> p f- p- >> that's what's on the i. what's on is on the i is what's on the i is on the i is thatis what's on the i is on the i is that is that the problem with our society is, is that people are being fed diet crushed are being fed a diet of crushed grains, toxic seed oil, are being fed a diet of crushed grains, toxic seed oil , phoney grains, toxic seed oil, phoney vegetables like carrots and broccoli. okay louis, can we please just get on with this ? please just get on with this? >> i the i go , i know you look >> i the i go, i know you look at you all passionate . at you all passionate. >> no. >> no. >> because what do you like in bed ? because what i want to know. >> this gets me so angry because the people. the people are listening they're the people. the people are listenin let they're the people. the people are listeninlet louis they're the people. the people are listenin let louis just1ey're the people. the people are listenin let louis just finish saying, let louis just finish his that's all. don't his sentence. that's all. don't want about your dietary want to hear about your dietary things. they do want to hear about because know about it because they know that they about it because they know that th> move on to the >> can we please move on to the next story? >> christmas travel chaos as storm strike hit rail storm and strike strike hit rail roads, air sea ? uh, i think
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roads, air and sea? uh, i think every year they have the exact same story because it is christmas. >> people want to use public transport and then the public transport and then the public transport decides not to work. exactly every single year. >> and every country, every part of the world, it's always jammed on christmas. this is a complete non—story . non—story. >> wow. okay, i guess you guys don't have any way to pull. are you going anywhere for christmas? yeah here. >> be here. >> i should be here. >> i should be here. >> christmas hope, >> christmas day. well, i hope, uh, roads are nice and clear uh, the roads are nice and clear for you. >> who are you working with? i'm working oh, working with louis schaefer. oh, it's amazing it's going to be an amazing andrew doyle hour all about carrots. >> finally, the daily star. paul just like to say , uh, to my just like to say, uh, to my parents, this is my job, and i have to read this out. uh, my willy's got diddy sausages, so royal watchers are hanging out the bunting after king charles the bunting after king charles the third. >> it says that in here, king charles the third, suspecting proclaimed named his son will's not to have ginormous sausage
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fingers. >> well , this i mean, i don't >> well, this i mean, i don't know why we didn't read this story first. josh, they have a photograph of will's fingers. they as big as charles. >> and, uh , for me, this is good news. >> this is big. yeah. there is a story up top, though. it's black eye friday, so this sounds like a domestic violence thing, which, well , i don't know, but which, well, i don't know, but it could. is it is this the worst friday for the. you know , worst friday for the. you know, the gigs. there's that one gig friday year, which is the friday of the year, which is the what called, black friday what is it called, black friday where dies. what is it called, black friday whebasically dies. what is it called, black friday whebasically everybody dies. what is it called, black friday whebasically everybody like , >> basically everybody is like, well, gigging tomorrow, so well, i'm gigging tomorrow, so i look forward i wanted to add look forward to i wanted to add in. wanted add in that king in. i wanted to add in that king charles his fat fingers, charles is his fat fingers, because got fatty charles is his fat fingers, becaidisease got fatty charles is his fat fingers, becaidisease liking»t fatty liver disease from liking the dnnk. liver disease from liking the drink . wow. you really am drink. wow. you really am i allowed to in this country? allowed to stay in this country? >> do you? >> do you? >> love country . yeah, >> i love this country. yeah, the royal family. i'm not such a big you. the royal family. i'm not such a big give you. the royal family. i'm not such a big give it you.. the royal family. i'm not such a big give it you. you know, he >> give it you. you know, he might sort of might take you on as sort of a personal whatever you. >> could save his life. >> i could save his life. >> i could save his life. >> mental enough. >> i could save his life. >> look al enough. >> i could save his life. >> look at enough. >> i could save his life. >> look at how gh. look. i'm >> look at how great i look. i'm 66 years old, almost that's 66 years old, almost 67. that's yes, i was almost. i see those fingers. >> wow. those are thin, thin
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fingers . there we go. right. fingers. there we go. right. that's the front pages . battered that's the front pages. battered to a pulp. join us in a few minutes for soccer super league , minutes for soccer super league, eu impotence and palestine . ian, eu impotence and palestine. ian, i can't even say palestinian protesters closing schools . it's protesters closing schools. it's going to be fun. i love the
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> welcome back to headliners. i'm josh howie, and i'm joined by american gigolo, louis shaffer and his booking agent paul cox . time to earn your paul cox. time to earn your dosh, louis, with this guardian story about american football. >> it's not about american football, though. americans own a lot of football teams in this country , including my team, country, including my team, which is crystal palace . but which is crystal palace. but european league project european super league project gets a huge after court of gets a huge boost after court of justice ruling. and the story is, is they've been trying to get super league, which is get this super league, which is basically take the not even basically to take the not even the best teams , the most money the best teams, the most money making country and making teams in this country and get all around get them playing all around europe. it's going to destroy
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the champions league. it's going to going eviscerate uefa to it's going to eviscerate uefa and fifa . to it's going to eviscerate uefa and fifa. it's going just and fifa. it's going to just change everything . and i'm change everything. and i'm against the best thing about against it. the best thing about this country is relegation and promotion of sporting teams. okay. >> but this but this plan does allow paul for relegation right. that's the whole point of it. yeah. >> well it does i mean it's a slightly misleading story. >> well it does i mean it's a slightly misleading story . first slightly misleading story. first of all. i mean it's not . news to of all. i mean it's not. news to say that uefa and fifa are clandestine. fine untransparent and have a monopoly over football around the world. the story that this story tries to tell us that this is a huge boost for a potential super league. however, as part of the ruling, the judgement said within the decision that it does not mean that a competition such as a super league project must approved . must necessarily be approved. and i guess what louis is saying is that the super league is always going to be a select bunch of elite teams, and that in its very essence, it's quite unsporty ing to some degree. the great thing about the champions league is you can be leicester
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city. you can surprisingly win the premier league in 2016 and make your way into champions make your way into the champions league. super league, the league. this super league, the problem in the past has been that it's just these very select teams from across europe, and therefore it's a monopolisation well, however, but it hasn't existed right? well, however, but it hasn't exislt's right? well, however, but it hasn't exislt's never right? well, however, but it hasn't exi: it's never existed.’ well, however, but it hasn't exislt's never existed. it's >> it's never existed. it's tried exist about two years tried to exist about two years ago, just after the pandemic. >> and basically english football went, we don't football fans went, we don't want this, especially . um, want this, especially. um, people who support the teams that would have been part of the super league, like liverpool. that would have been part of the sufwell,ague, like liverpool. that would have been part of the sufwell, it'se, like liverpool. that would have been part of the sufwell, it's interestingoool. >> well, it's interesting because this, this story actually complicated actually seems more complicated to a to me than brexit. like it's a nightmare repeat nightmare trying to repeat it. yeah, like um yeah, there's lots of like eu um , but , rulings and whatnot. but they're they're going to they're saying they're going to be teams in their league, be 64 teams in their league, which massively which doesn't seem massively exclusive. no uh, it does seem that they, you know , it's going that they, you know, it's going to about goes in who to be fair about who goes in who goes i can't actually tell goes out. i can't actually tell the the the difference between the champions and the super league. >> but here's the problem. the problem in a world problem is we live in a world where this climate change, which i don't believe but there's i don't believe in, but there's like people shouldn't be flying all world. what all around the world. and what makes premier league
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makes the british premier league so good is that teams are so so good is that the teams are so local they're not wasting local that they're not wasting your driving to the next team. portsmouth is playing southampton, crystal palace is playing, uh, fulham . um, but playing, uh, fulham. um, but this is means they're going to be having genuinely managed to pull four teams out. >> you're they're. yeah >> you're but they're. yeah i actually i actually know a lot about football. >> does he does considering. >> he does he does considering. >> he does he does considering. >> they're going to be >> but they're going to be having these these games . having these these games. >> going be flying >> they're going to be flying all to marseille. every all the way to marseille. every single you know it's talking about 14 extra games a season. >> there's two stories and that's the start thing. that's the start of the thing. >> there's stories one >> there's two stories here. one is ambition a super is the ambition for a super league, for some league, which um, for some reason people are steadfast on trying crowbar into the trying to crowbar into the wonderful sport of football and there is this ruling that might open a gate towards that. however the two things aren't mutually exclusive at the moment. >> well, i'd like to thank both of you, because now i understand what offside is. friday's telegraph next, and for a story about impotence , who better to about impotence, who better to explain it? the mr cocks . thank
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explain it? the mr cocks. thank you . you. >> he said constantly, but he didn't mention me. >> that's what i was thinking. he was going to mention me, which was probably more a more appropriate. >> uh, lewis talked about himself there for minute. himself there for a minute. eu is on the migration is impotent on the migration crisis . crisis. >> he robert jenrick so in >> he says robert jenrick so in an exclusive article for the telegraph, robert jenrick criticises the european commission and member states for failing to come up with a credible plan to intercept, turn back repatriate migrants and back and repatriate migrants and of course it does, because the eu itself is funded on a principle of sort of no borders, one community less sovereignty. >> and it's that's within the borders, that's that's a different okay. >> but my point is that this what's occurred is within the wet dream that is that was set out by the eu in the first place. is that you've got lots and lots of migration into the into the continent. that's europe. and we all get on fantastically . it's turned out fantastically. it's turned out to be quite the crisis. and as a result, i think the eu are going
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to be impotent on this because they are partly responsible for they are partly responsible for the crisis and therefore i think they unable to deal with the they are unable to deal with the crisis. >> i have disagree with you >> i have to disagree with you in that the eu project was not founded on immigration into europe. it was found on integration the integration between the countries . there's countries of europe. there's nothing to do with getting more people in now. there's a separate economic argument for immigrants and whatnot, but we are seeing a real problem here of people coming in. illegal immigrants , economic immigrants immigrants, economic immigrants are mostly , uh, from various are mostly, uh, from various countries across northern africa , tunisia and whatnot. countries across northern africa , tunisia and whatnot . and there , tunisia and whatnot. and there is an issue in that they aren't. this is what our former immigration minister is saying, is that the eu are not tackling the issue. and in his, um , in the issue. and in his, um, in his article, what he argues is, is you are going to see more right wing and less countries start grappling with this. seriously. now we are going to see more right wing politicians get in because people don't want this. just right. well
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immigration going, let's go. >> let's get . to the essence of >> let's get. to the essence of it. it's a team world issue is that europe is a is when i say team world, it's not the entire world, it's just the european world. brex it was caused because migrant crisis, if because of a migrant crisis, if you correctly, you remember correctly, when there syrians there were millions of syrians came in. the fact is, is that europe cannot control its outer borders. according . to english borders. according. to english people. and well , some they're people. and well, some they're saying in this article it says some can say poland is able to. but you know what it's like. it's like live in a house, it's like you live in a house, it's got bedrooms and, and it's got five bedrooms and, and exactly trust. you exactly what you trust. you trust conway. >> sorry . >> sorry. >> sorry. >> you trust the five people, four other people who are living in your house to leave their doors locked out at night time. but if one of them leaves their door open, that means you are flat. your room in the house is now vulnerable . and that's what now vulnerable. and that's what the problem is. we don't trust
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the problem is. we don't trust the europeans to lock their doors. didn't we move out ? we doors. didn't we move out? we can't move out. this is our home. all right. >> sticking with the telegraph. and do you love a man in uniform? lewis? >> was that a good example? well, it was, it was all right. >> it was good. okay >> it was good. okay >> yeah. like is >> yeah. do i like this is keir starmer he team starmer and this guy, he team world. team world. he's. he's calling russia a shot at home. he's yes, he's calling russia a real and constant threat to europe. and it's only someone who believes in europe, believes that actually russia is a constant threat. is that europe russia is a constant threat to the only in europe. >> it's a to know that the continent of europe exists. yeah. >> no, but he's not thinking about the continent and he's thinking about the nato world. he's thinking the eu, nato he's thinking about the eu, nato is than europe. yes, but is bigger than europe. yes, but he's that world. he's thinking about that world. nato is there to stop russia . nato is there to stop russia. the eu is actually got a picture of him. >> oh, hello . >> oh, hello. >> oh, hello. >> hello. what a mess. >> hello. what a mess. >> he's looking very handsome there. yeah. what do you think? do like it? come on lewis, do you like it? come on lewis, what think? just look at
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what do you think? just look at the you so the man. why? you are so threatened physicality? threatened by his physicality? you cannot even look at the photo. >> i didn't even realise we had. we britain had troops in estonia . what is britain doing with troops? >> part of nato. >> part of nato. >> exactly. that's the point. the point is, is that we're moving all the way out there. we should mind our own business and just. barely . we britain just. we can barely. we britain can barely defend itself. so you want to get out of nato? >> old jeremy corbyn to my left. here. yes. wow crazy. all right. what do you think, paul i agree. >> i mean, i agree with starmer on point here. and anyone on his point here. and anyone who's i'm who's anti—corbyn is i'm probably pro them anyway. it's interesting that starmer has taken this stance. it's only interesting in the sense that of course is taking this stance. course he is taking this stance. he's going this is the way he's going this is the only way you government in, in, you can win government in, in, in, in great britain , as corbyn in, in great britain, as corbyn has proven on two occasions, jones and somebody asked me a question actually on twitter, somebody well why somebody i know quite well why i would vote corbyn. and would never vote for corbyn. and it's nothing to with his it's got nothing to do with his anti—semitism, because that doesn't the same way. doesn't impact me the same way. >> because i am also
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>> it's fine because i am also anti—semitic . um, but clippered anti—semitic. um, but clippered up. but it's because but it's because of these particular policies. >> he became this student politic policies that say we don't need to defend our country, and we don't need to be another 100% agree with you. >> and for me, i don't think that anti—semites ism what that anti—semites ism is what lost election . no, it lost him. the election. no, it was the salisbury poisonings. the that he said, we need the moment that he said, we need to these to to send these tests off to russia to confirm whether or not he lost the election right there. we could see he was on patriotic. could see that he there. we could see he was on patratic. could see that he there. we could see he was on patra crank could see that he there. we could see he was on patra crank .could see that he there. we could see he was on patra crank . andi see that he there. we could see he was on patra crank . and everyone he there. we could see he was on patra crank . and everyone went, was a crank. and everyone went, we cannot have this person. so of course, what starmer of course, this is what starmer is doing. the only thing i'm going going going to say is him going into estonia like, have estonia is like, he could have gone actually to ukraine and it's a weird situation. >> isn't it weird how the opposition leader , who has very opposition leader, who has very little power in this country, can then just wander around like they are charge the they are in charge of the country , making all these kind country, making all these kind of pseudo promises? >> oh, he will be he will be. yes, of course. >> but isn't it weird moving on
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to friday's daily mail, where palestinian activists have won a great victory for gaza, shutting down a british primary school. paul headteacher slams malicious lies on social media claiming palestine student, eight, was bullied by teachers . bullied by teachers. >> so this is berkeley primary school in leyton , which is in school in leyton, which is in waltham forest, a borough of london, and has been engulfed in a row after a tiktok video alleging that an eight year old pupil was bullied by teachers for being palestinian and viewed by over a quarter of a million people. that's not strictly true. the kid was not bullied at all. >> he wasn't bullied , according >> he wasn't bullied, according to the school. they put out a thing saying there was an external investigation. there was . was no bullying. >> so there is a little bit more context this. started on context to this. it started on on mufti day, which was the children in need day, where some of the children brought in palestinian flags as their way of celebrating a children eve, which is, think , um, a which is, i think, um, a misguided at best. and the school have tried to be apolitical on this. and the reason the school has found it
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very difficult to be able article on this in in this first instance is because they've taken a they're taking no side in this war, but they immediately took the side of ukraine ukrainian ukraine and the ukrainian russian anybody the russian war. so anybody on the opposite of the argument opposite side of the argument can on minute. can say, well hang on a minute. we never taught kids we never taught our kids anything russia or anything about russia or ukraine, they came home with ukraine, but they came home with a ukrainian flag tied to their back. know , celebrating all back. you know, celebrating all things ukrainian. i things ukrainian. so whilst i believe that there is no evidence that there was any anti—polish sentiment at all within the school , i anti—polish sentiment at all within the school, i can understand why they feel like they've got some sort of moral victory. >> well, this is it. because they this is all from a tiktok that was like you say, has got sort of , uh, that was like you say, has got sort of, uh, tens of thousands of views , which turns out to be of views, which turns out to be essentially lies by someone also , by the way, who's posted homophobic content in the past. but of course, let's overlook the left's inability to, uh, to the left's inability to, uh, to the inconvenient, inconvenient, inconvenient truth there. but actually , i've read a few actually, i've read a few different reports on this. supposedly, it's not really
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anything to do with this flag at all. reason why letters were all. the reason why letters were initially sent home to these eight families. of these 1200 students, there is because of stuff that being said by the stuff that was being said by the students, and there wasn't even an case where the mother an earlier case where the mother was posting inappropriate stuff on parent whatsapp groups. and that's what started it. and they had to sort of warn, look, if you're going to go down this line if kids going line and if the kids are going to talk about this to come in and talk about this stuff, whatnot, stuff, genocide and whatnot, then we have a legal obligation which they do bring in, uh, which they do to bring in, uh, prevent it. so this idea that's been all made about this flag and whatnot is, is misleading . and whatnot is, is misleading. and let's move forward now to the protests in front of school. we have a school that is being closed down two days early before christmas it's 1200 students out. lewis. i mean, this is not right to kowtow to the mob, right? >> yeah, well, you've left out the most important element which is this is what happens when you have multiculturalism in and not the melting pot . as if we
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the melting pot. as if we haven't in america with the idea. you've got little groups of people all melting together in a stew. you have an area where there's a lot of people who believe in the same thing. it's almost their own independent, little independent country. feel emboldened country. so they feel emboldened and empowered , and it can cause and empowered, and it can cause dissent with other groups of people. well okay, the point we've not necessarily had issues with multicultural ism like this before . when i was when i was before. when i was when i was when i first moved to this country , and i learned that country, and i learned that there were certain places in this country which were vile towns when the vikings invaded, there were towns . anything there were towns. anything begins with a b. it ended with a b was a viking town, and so you had towns with viking people right next door to english people , to british people, people, to british people, different living, totally separate lives and that's what we're having here. okay >> thank you so much for wasting two minutes of our life there,
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lewis. we're now at the half way point, and we are limber and loose for the next section, which includes eurovision, euro, smidgen, harvard, plagiarism and white men get to go to uni. see
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to gb news radio show . to gb news radio show. >> i'm not blaming you whining. >> i'm not blaming you whining. >> okay. welcome back to headunes. >> okay. welcome back to headlines. stop the >> okay. welcome back to headlines . stop the people headlines. stop the people straight into friday's telegraph where, paul, i'm guessing israel is going to give the uk nil point nil pro indeed. >> so, uh, singer olly alexander has been accused of grabbing dating from middle eastern school of tiktok, which is basically, uh, some what skewed view of the world. but after after signing a letter criticising the apartheid regime, he says in israel. so israel has accused the bbc of shirking its moral responsibility. after the telegraph revealed that its choice of eurovision entrant had called the country an apartheid
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regime . now i'm loathe to regime. now i'm loathe to criticise olly alexander here because i believe he is a product of his time. he is someone whose young progressive and gay, and they are told if you are any one of those things, particularly if you're all three of those things, you must support palestine. there's like a rule book, isn't there? so anyone who sits on the progressive side things, progressive side of things, which got which is why tiktok got got mentioned because i use tiktok and weari mentioned because i use tiktok and wear i could be this could and i wear i could be this could be a conspiracy , but tiktok be a conspiracy, but tiktok does.i be a conspiracy, but tiktok does. i never see any pro—jewish stuff on tiktok. i only see pro—palestine because you're an anti—semite. >> because i because of all the i get, i get sent tons of it. >> josh. he gets sent . >> josh. he gets sent. >> josh. he gets sent. >> but he's a he is a product of a time. i mean, there could be another option here. uh, olly could stupid and he could be could be stupid and he could be stupid, but also , let's just say stupid, but also, let's just say he stupid. he is stupid. >> say he's saying, >> let's just say he's saying, let's say anti—semitic. he should allowed to say what should be allowed to say what he's going say. what he he's going to say. what he should off program should be kicked off the program because he's because he said this thing i don't think he should you know should be, you know what? >> be kicked off
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should be, you know what? >> program. be kicked off should be, you know what? >> program. i be kicked off should be, you know what? >> program. i thinkkicked off should be, you know what? >> program. i thinkkici> well, here's the deal. here's the problem. the problem is there are two sides. there's team world side, which is which is stop it shot, it. and is stop it shot, stop it. and the choice, the choice that gay people have is you can be gay or you can hate the jews . okay, you can hate the jews. okay, okay. you can't. no, not a choice at all. >> no. there are teams, though. i will say there are. can't be. right. there are two sides. there are team facts and team words matter. no. and there are team lies, which is the fact that it team lies, which is the fact thatitis team lies, which is the fact that it is not an apartheid state. and genocide is not the. that's another question. >> the question is this can this guy believe what he believes?
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which is about israel being bad ? which is about israel being bad? and we support the muslims and still be gay and the answer is he's going to die . he's going to he's going to die. he's going to be thrown fundamentalist islam, which is different . which is different. >> the point is the bbc have come here. they've come up with a pathetic excuse, say, oh, well, before he was well, he signed it before he was announced anyway. and i'll say also on top of this, this came out, they it two weeks after out, they did it two weeks after the october 7th. uh, travel party tragedy. yeah. and where even there wasn't a ground war at the time. so the fact that he was coming out and saying this stuff at that point is just absolute. you asked him absolute. and if you asked him to decision to explain his decision making process , he couldn't. well, process, he couldn't. well, there we go . guardian next. and there we go. guardian next. and louis like schools are louis sounds like schools are damned if they do, damned if they don't. >> this is an odd one. uh, >> yeah, this is an odd one. uh, gillian keegan and kemi badenoch >> yeah, this is an odd one. uh, gillinvolvedan and kemi badenoch >> yeah, this is an odd one. uh, gillinvolved in and kemi badenoch >> yeah, this is an odd one. uh, gillinvolved in this. (emi badenoch >> yeah, this is an odd one. uh, gillinvolved in this. schoolsjenoch >> yeah, this is an odd one. uh, gillinvolved in this. schools inioch are involved in this. schools in england face quote unquote legal risks if they follow a new trans, if they follow the new transgender guidance and that's the schools people who are saying you can't do certain things to trans people that you
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used to do, you got to tell your parents, the parents stuff. you can't be calling them names. >> aims socially transitioning socially traumatically. >> can't do but the >> you can't do it, but the schools themselves are saying we are afraid to follow this guidance because it might be illegal under the equalities act. so the essence of this story is , is that the schools story is, is that the schools themselves , selves fear themselves, selves fear following the government. they can't trust the government and that's very scary . the that's very scary. the government is telling them whatever it is, the state guidance, the guidance the government is saying, don't do this and the schools are going , this and the schools are going, we can't believe that this is means anything, right? this is what we've seen with the police following like the hate following things like the hate speech whatnot . speech laws and whatnot. >> paul, i think there are two stories here would do you would you agree with that? because there's one story about what lewis and lewis is talking about, and there's of the there's also the story of the leak government's own leak from the government's own lawyers to the school week that is now coming out, uh, in the guardian. conveniently leak.
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>> yes. and you just happened to be the guy. it's just it happens to be the guardian. it happens to be the guardian. it happens to very liberal, to be, uh, very liberal, left leaning, civil servants, lawyers within with, in the government that are leaking these things . that are leaking these things. and, you know, it's not ridiculous to say that that's exactly . and the exactly what happens. and the reason it happens is they're trying to expose the government's policy and weaken it at every turn . now, the it at every turn. now, the problem i have is that the reason the police and teachers are to pay heed to any are able to not pay heed to any of the government advice is because they will lean back on the laws and the laws protect them in our cases. so, them in our in many cases. so, for equalities act for instance, the equalities act probably protect a teacher probably would protect a teacher if that teacher promised to lie to a, to a, to a parent to protect the child, which to me is a massive breach . is a massive breach. >> i don't know if that's necessary, because that's exactly what would happen . exactly what would happen. >> what i'm saying is, if the child said , please don't tell my child said, please don't tell my mum, but i want to be i want to be to as this. and the be referred to as this. and the teacher then said, okay, no
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problem. they could probably teacher then said, okay, no probon n. they could probably teacher then said, okay, no probon n. tquualities)robably teacher then said, okay, no probon n. tquualities actably teacher then said, okay, no probon n. tquualities act to .y rely on the equalities act to back them up. now, i don't know if they couldn't, but they would feel it . and i feel emboldened by it. and i think biggest problem. >> think lawyers, >> i think the lawyers, the problem they're using problem is that they're using this stuff that leaked this. the stuff that was leaked was partial was actually a partial assessment. they assessment. and when they had the advice, actually the full lawyer advice, actually they wouldn't away it. they wouldn't get away with it. but leaked only but the fact they leaked only this of what's this tiny part of it is what's muddying the water, which serves their anyway . express their cases anyway. express connects with school trans development on from the other side pond. paul side of the pond. paul >> michigan school >> yeah, michigan public school district is being sued by two seething parents after allegedly referring to their autistic daughter in eighth grade using male pronouns. so the daughter, who has autism, had been seeing a school counsellor and the parents claimed that the counsellor never informed them that their child requested to identify as a different gender at school and very much leading on from the previous story as if by magic. the thing that many people say is very unlikely to happen happens and this happens
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time and time again. it happened with isla bryson and general and the gender recognition act . it's the gender recognition act. it's happening with this stuff now with with this social, um , with with this social, um, business. and i do worry. i do worry because as children need to be left out of the culture war, and every time we keep and i believe in the culture war, i believe it is raging away . and a believe it is raging away. and a lot of people don't. but trust me, i firmly believe it is. and it's these types of stories where it involves kids within the trans debate, within safety debates that really worry me the most. if we can use emotion and children to bolster our side of the argument, our argument is not worth having. whether that's on our side, their side , on our side, their side, whatever. i'd just like to think we could leave children out and they be out. they should be left out. >> unfortunately, they they're the who been bought the ones who have been bought in. safeguarding in. lewis is a safeguarding issue . it's interesting that issue. it's interesting that they're actually having to resort to sort resort to the courts to sort out. is that where this is finally actually going to resolved? >> no, it's going resolved >> no, it's going to be resolved in combat with guns ,
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in man to man combat with guns, as in america . and that's where as in america. and that's where it's going to be. it's we're heading towards civil war. is this there's a there's a war between parents who want to control over their kids . and the control over their kids. and the this takes place in america . but this takes place in america. but it could happen, you know, happens too , here is that happens too, here is that parents want control parents who want control over their on one and their children on one hand and their children on one hand and the thing other side, the other thing the other side, which they want the state, which is they want the state, the actual government, the, the school to control these kids. and that's where there will be a war won't be in court. it will be deaf. thank you so much for that. >> the time is now and paul looks like you can finally go to university. >> yes, universal t of bradford offers scholarship for white working class men. finally a story about my people. yeah. so what? we've got here is the university of bradford has announced a scholarship scheme to help get more white working class men into higher education. the will be paid for the bursary will be paid for students to receive £400 per month towards living costs. >> now they're going to find for white students.
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>> well, it's very interesting. i mean, first of all, we should provide the context. and i know we do this a lot and it is gb news, is 82% news, but this country is 82% white, of which about 50% of that working people . that are working class people. so the fact this story so the fact that this story exists me is a little bit of exists to me is a little bit of a tragedy , but i'd love for us a tragedy, but i'd love for us for just one minute going for just one minute or going forward to leave identity out of this . and i don't care what this. and i don't care what colour they are, what colour people as we should be people identify as we should be helping the working classes in this this country. what this in this country. what happened about 30 years ago is there's called tony blair happened about 30 years ago is theremade called tony blair happened about 30 years ago is theremade it. called tony blair happened about 30 years ago is theremade it. everybody's' blair who made it. everybody's aspiration or told everyone there aspiration should to go there aspiration should be to go to university . and that is not to university. and that is not true people of all different true of people of all different classes. there are vocational things that could do and things that they could do and probably should do, and what and when you combine that with the ideological, uh, um, identification russian war that's gone on across the western world in that time, since what you've ended up with is white working class men in particular, that have just been left out , and now we're having
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left out, and now we're having to get bursaries to help out the majority group within this country. >> you know, you said that you found this depressing article. i think it's actually well, it is it is. lewis, do you think it's a good like finally this issue is as being is being addressed as being recognised that people are doing something about it. >> i think they're >> no, no, i think they're trying to sucker white people to go to university studies. i think people are people are becoming going to becoming done with going to university , they that university, and they know that it's a waste of money. most people know today there's a few few people can go to school and they can benefit from but they can benefit from it. but like blair, he wanted like tony blair, he wanted everybody to go school. it everybody to go to school. it basically just giveaway basically it's just a giveaway program middle class, program to middle class, i totally agree. program to middle class, i totilly agree. program to middle class, i lolii mean,a. program to middle class, i lolii mean, all you have to do >> i mean, all you have to do really just there really is just sit there and talk world you've really is just sit there and talkit world you've really is just sit there and talkit made. world you've really is just sit there and talkit made. right.)rld you've got it made. right. >> that's that's no, but >> that's that's all. no, but that's question go that's one more question to go and corkers and we've got some corkers pubescent dart champions, separate bedrooms . separate bedrooms. >> and precisely when is lewis going to die
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i >> -- >> and i -_ >> and i do no exercise. could you just leave your nose hairs alone? >> right. welcome back to headliners let's kick off with the telegraph story, where lewis is going to try and hit a bullseye. yeah >> okay. well, uh, well , this is >> okay. well, uh, well, this is the telegraph. you've got school in the morning, 16 year old lights up, work . world darts lights up, work. world darts championship . and this is about championship. and this is about luke the nuke . littler, who's luke the nuke. littler, who's the youngest? he's 16 years old, still in school . littler. you still in school. littler. you said whatever it is . and so i'm said whatever it is. and so i'm reading. he's the youngest start. uh, dart guy. reading. he's the youngest start. uh, dart guy . and at that start. uh, dart guy. and at that point, and that was at the point that i fell asleep reading this. wow. because because you're not a fan. because not a fan of darts at all. british soccer. best sport . well, anywhere. best sport. well, anywhere. >> okay, paul , you're best sport. well, anywhere. >> okay, paul, you're built for darts. yeah . what do you think ?
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darts. yeah. what do you think? that's a bit. it's do you think that, uh, i mean, is this guy. did you. have you seen any of his? >> i've actually watched this guy play- >> i have genuinely think if he puts on a couple more stone around got what it around his gut, he's got what it takes sportsman . takes to be a fine sportsman. yeah, we haven't got a picture of we haven't. but urge >> i know we haven't. but i urge all and all of our watchers and listeners look when listeners to look him up when you this is 16. he you can. this guy is 16. he looks than me. he looks older than me. he genuinely he's got genuinely does. he's got a receding hairline. he's got the gut. nothing. he's got that weary look in his eye that says, i can't believe i've got to go home to the wife kids. but home to the wife and kids. but he's player he's a fantastic darts player and, prodigy . and, you know, he's a prodigy. and in this, this country, and in this, in this country, you know, drinking and throwing sharp is national sharp things is a national pastime and something we want to be very good at. and guy be very good at. and this guy looks like got of course, looks like he's got of course, because put the because he's 16. we've put the weight the world on his weight of the world on his shoulders and so around his gut as well, around his gut. we've said, holds all our said, this guy holds all our hopes. definitely for hopes. he's definitely built for darts. you know, he's he's definitely for darts. but definitely built for darts. but i mean, watch him i don't know,
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you guys definitely don't watch darts darts. darts every i've watched darts. >> fun . i ali harbi darts every i've watched darts. >> as fun . i ali harbi darts every i've watched darts. >> as well. fun . i ali harbi darts every i've watched darts. >> as well. yeah. i ali harbi ali as well. yeah >> so okay. smashing. i'm glad that you have sort some that you have sort of some sort of cultural out for you and of cultural day out for you and the rest of the houses. uh, just to see how the other half live, i'm is great i'm sure. but it is great fun. >> i that half. yeah >> i am that other half. yeah yeah. man. three yeah. sorry, man. my three bedroom . um, yeah. bedroom council flat. um, yeah. look, good luck to and uh, look, good luck to him. and uh, i just hope that the fame doesn't to him, and i just doesn't go to him, and i just don't want him od on kebabs. doesn't go to him, and i just don couples|im od on kebabs. doesn't go to him, and i just don couples advice )d on kebabs. doesn't go to him, and i just don couples advice from kebabs. doesn't go to him, and i just don couples advice from cameron uh, couples advice from cameron diaz next. paul. uh, couples advice from cameron diazessentially, next. paul. uh, couples advice from cameron diazessentially, you xt. paul. uh, couples advice from cameron diazessentially, you xt. pdo. but essentially, you just do whatever right ? whatever she wanted, right? >> yeah. if cameron diaz >> yeah. i mean, if cameron diaz was offering advice get was offering me advice to get with then this would be with her, then this would be a different uh sadly, it's different story. uh sadly, it's not that anymore . uh, not about that anymore. uh, cameron diaz says let couples sleep in different rooms. so cameron diaz wants to normalise married couples not only sleeping separate beds , but sleeping in separate beds, but living in separate houses. yes that's not really being together, is it? well she's saying got three houses. >> it seems to imply here there's like a house in between their they. that's their houses that they. that's where they she's describing the life of a rich, beautiful woman. >> she's saying, well , you know,
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>> she's saying, well, you know, of course i want to, i want to get married because that helps me. i don't him to me. but then i don't want him to be and she said, well, be there. and she said, well, gwyneth paltrow that gwyneth paltrow does that as well. gwyneth paltrow is well. like, gwyneth paltrow is sort he's paradigm by sort of he's the paradigm by which we should measure ourselves. >> but they've also got divorced. yeah, yeah. >> and then got remarried and doesn't with the man she doesn't live with the man she married. >> so is that the secret, lewis? i mean, you don't live your ex. >> know ex. >> uh, you know what i support having, , having separate having, uh, having separate wives , maybe 2 or 3 wives. just wives, maybe 2 or 3 wives. just 2 or 3 houses. this is. this is a lie. really because women love cuddung. a lie. really because women love cuddling . they love having a guy cuddling. they love having a guy next to them because they're so scared all the time . they need scared all the time. they need they need to be protected. they so it's the men. men don't care. i could sleep by myself, but women need a guy. right? next to them. don't. don't get mad at me . it's the truth. i've been watching a lot of youtube videos about this. >> okay, well, our viewership just doubled. they're lewis is talking about getting intimate. uh, now we've got a metro story now predicting when you die. uh,
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they printing your upcoming gigs, lewis? yeah well, this is this is this is unbelievable . this is this is unbelievable. >> story calculator predicts when you'll die and it's scarily accurate. they did . they did accurate. they did. they did a test where they took a group of people. i don't know how many they took maybe 100 people. and they took maybe 100 people. and they think they chose thousands, i think thousands. they had thousands. and they they had half the people , 6 million half of the people, 6 million people, and people, 6 million people. and they the people who died . right. >> um, basically they put all the information in about those people . yeah. and then and, but, people. yeah. and then and, but, but those people had already died. right. and then the and then the, the ai algorithm predicted when they died to a 78, 78% greater than the other kind . kind. >> but they were also wrong about the other kind. and if you put in, if you put in what their life is that they were, that they like the skydiver or that they like the skydiver or that they took drugs without a parachute, whatever, you know what i mean? of course they're going they're going what i mean? of course they're goia] they're going what i mean? of course they're goia greater they're going what i mean? of course they're goia greater percentageing what i mean? of course they're goia greater percentage of be a greater percentage of people this is another one people dying this is another one of those. >> well, thing about this >> well, the thing about this
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story sort of flies in the story is it sort of flies in the face of the schaefer philosophy, which meat, don't brush which is eat meat, don't brush your talk about your teeth. uh, talk badly about women tv . and if you do, women on the tv. and if you do, you know, the three you know, that's the three bastions theory . bastions of the schaefer theory. obviously. what you're right, in one sense here is they've put in the information of people that have already lived or died, and it come 78% accurate, have already lived or died, and it ylet's 78% accurate, have already lived or died, and it ylet's face 78% accurate, have already lived or died, and it ylet's face it,%> accurate, have already lived or died, and it ylet's face it, isiccurate, have already lived or died, and it ylet's face it, is prettye, which, let's face it, is pretty good. but think what you're good. but i think what you're saying is they put there, saying is they put in there, let's data, their let's say nhs data, their medical records, and it showed the people most likely to die had already died . and that's had already died. and that's because they, you know, and they were maybe smoking. >> one final quick story, >> one final very quick story, according china's according to the mail, china's developed a weapon that will send is it nick send you to sleep. is it nick talking podcast talking about his podcast figures? paul >> two podcast figures. uh, china is working advanced china is working on advanced brain technology, brain warfare technology, including devices that send enemies to sleep and thought controlled weapons. it's called tiktok, isn't it? well, that works for me. researchers have found two recent studies by china's people's liberation army , which obviously is for very terrifying words that show the
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military is increasing its hard power weapons with new technology to win wars without conventional weapons. >> okay, they invented covid. let's move on. the show is nearly over, so let's take another quick look at front days. fridays front pages. we have the daily mail. assisted dying turning. dying is the tide turning. guardian revealed huge rise in hostel admissions with malnutrition. telegraph royal family persuaded queen to end her days at balmoral . the daily her days at balmoral. the daily express dame esther's plea this cruelty must stop i news christmas travel chaos, a storm and strike hit rail, roads, air and strike hit rail, roads, air and sea and the daily star. my willie's got dodi sausages and those were your front pages that is all we have time for. thank you to my guest, lewis schaffer and paul cox . there's his and paul cox. there's his calendar right there. we're going to be back tomorrow with andrew 11 pm. with andrew doyle at 11 pm. with nick dixon and stephen allen. if you're p.m, stay you're watching at 5 pm, stay tuned for breakfast. >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers sponsor of up. boxt boilers sponsor of weather on gb news is .
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weather on gb news is. >> hello. very good evening to you. i'm alex burkill here with your latest gb news weather forecast. whilst there may be a bit of hill snow across northern parts through the next 24 hours or it's milder story or so, it's a milder story elsewhere have elsewhere and we do still have some winds and some rain some strong winds and some rain around, even though the deep area pressure we saw area of low pressure we saw earlier has now cleared earlier today has now cleared away east. a away towards the east. so a blustery picture as we go through this evening and overnight some outbreaks overnight, some outbreaks of rain likely . overnight, some outbreaks of rain likely. hill overnight, some outbreaks of rain likely . hill snow overnight, some outbreaks of rain likely. hill snow is rain quite likely. hill snow is a issue across some northern parts, particularly shetland parts, particularly for shetland . here we could something of . here we could see something of an through the an ice risk as we go through the night morning . and night into friday morning. and for increasingly for many, turning increasingly cloudy overnight. and those cloudy overnight. and with those blustery , temperatures not blustery winds, temperatures not dropping places in dropping much, some places in the south staying in double figures, chillier further north across parts of scotland could be frost here first be a touch of frost here first thing on friday morning. otherwise the otherwise though, through the day to be largely day it is going to be largely cloudy many us. there cloudy for many of us. there will further outbreaks of will be further outbreaks of rain. going to be blustery will be further outbreaks of raitimes going to be blustery will be further outbreaks of raitimes and ng to be blustery will be further outbreaks of raitimes and some be blustery will be further outbreaks of raitimes and some be bllsnow, at times and some more snow, perhaps is likely perhaps some ice is likely across parts of scotland too . across parts of scotland too. some developing
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some brighter breaks developing in the southwest. and here it's still going to be relatively mild, albeit temperatures a little down compared to little bit down compared to today. look towards today. as we look towards saturday. and it's a wet picture across many northern areas, particularly scotland west and parts some heavy parts likely to see some heavy rainfall totals building up a bit snow around again , bit more snow around again, bringing some icy bringing the risk of some icy patches a drier picture patches to a drier picture further south, but quite a cloudy one with a few spots of rain possible. that rain then does gradually make its way southwards we go through southwards as we go through christmas eventually christmas eve, eventually clearing as we go into clearing through as we go into christmas by a brighter christmas day. by a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsor. >> ease of weather on .
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she said she wouldn't say that . she said she wouldn't say that. uh, these are today's top stories . stories. >> the czech republic will hold a day of mourning after 14 people were killed and 25 people were injured in a mass shooting at the university in prague. it's the worst fatal shooting since czech independence. 30 years ago. but it's not being treated as a terrorist incident. >> the nightmare before christmas the uk is braced for the annual travel chaos, but it's set to be even worse in the aftermath of storm pier. our west midlands reporter jack carson is at birmingham's new street station with the latest . street station with the latest. >> yeah, well, a storm pier continues to batter parts of the uk. millions are set to hit the railways and the roads as well. i'll have the latest on people trying to get home for christmas here from birmingham. >> government rows back on >> the government rows back on their legal migration plan . the their legal migration plan. the earnings threshold to bring foreign family members to the uk will be £29,000, and not

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