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tv   Neil Oliver - Live  GB News  January 20, 2024 6:00pm-7:01pm GMT

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i'll then be joined by pundit and commentator james melville, who says the situation in scotland , as i well know, is scotland, as i well know, is little better and that something needs to be done before it's too late . and finally i'll be joined late. and finally i'll be joined by the author, laura aberley. i've listened to a few of laura's talks and i find her
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utterly inspiring. she says we have to take control of our world now to stop the big organisations from taking over once and for all. all of that and lots of chat with my panellist for this evening. my friend ralph schollhammer. but first let's go to aaron for the latest news headlines . latest news headlines. >> very good evening to you. i'm aaron armstrong, norfolk police has referred itself to the independent watchdog in relation to the deaths of four members of the same family on friday. the force says it didn't respond to an emergency call made about an hour before the bodies of a 45 year old man, a 36 year old woman and two girls were discovered at a house near norwich. all four were found with injuries. the force had already referred itself to the watchdog after officers were called same house last called to the same house last month as part of a missing person inquiry. police say that will re—examined and will now be re—examined and speech by the shadow foreign secretary calling for a ceasefire in gaza has been
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interrupted by pro—palestinian protesters. david lammy had to make a quick exit when a woman jumped on stage and called for him to condemn genocide in gaza, shouting how many more children need to die.7 after the activist from the free palestine coalition were escorted away, more people in the audience stood up to launch a verbal attacks on labour's stance on the middle east conflict. mr lammy went on to express support for palestinian state when the for a palestinian state when the war ends. he says, everyone wants see a sustainable wants to see a sustainable ceasefire situation in gaza is intolerable and unbearable to many children. >> women , an old people have >> women, an old people have lost their lives. we need a truth now so that humanitarian aid can get in. we need a sustainable ceasefire. i'm hugely worried about what i'm heanng hugely worried about what i'm hearing from uk aid agencies and from the united nations, and the medical attention that over 60,000 people who are now wounded or maimed need. we must
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get urgent aid in. >> meanwhile, the us president has suggested a two state solution to the crisis in the middle east may still be a possibility. joe biden spoke to israel's prime minister on friday, a day after benjamin netanyahu rejected us calls for the establishment of a palestinian state. once the war is over . however, following is over. however, following their conversation , president their conversation, president biden now says mr netanyahu is not opposed to all versions of the proposal , suggesting one the proposal, suggesting one path could involve a non—militarized government . two non—militarized government. two british royal navy ships have been involved in a collision in a port in bahrain, and no one was injured in the accident as one backed into another and an investigation into it has been opened.the investigation into it has been opened. the royal navy is working with the us navy in the gulf region to protect shipping in the red sea from increased attacks by houthi rebels based in yemen . mail deliveries on in yemen. mail deliveries on saturdays could become a thing of the past, as ofcom looks into ways of reforming the postal
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service. a spokesperson for the regulator told gb news they will pubush regulator told gb news they will publish a document next week on how royal mail can evolve to meet changing consumer needs. it comes as the company faces losses of £319 million for the first half of this financial year. first half of this financial year . ofcom, though, says it's year. ofcom, though, says it's ultimately up the government ultimately up to the government to any changes to the to decide if any changes to the service will be implemented . service will be implemented. tata steel's pledged a £130 million support package to help workers retrain or find new jobs, as it plans to close furnaces at its port talbot site . up to 2800 jobs will be affected over the next 18 months as the company transitions to what they say is a greener way of working. however, unions are warning the move will be devastating for the economy and the steel industry . if you the steel industry. if you thought your shopping bags were feeling a little lighter, it could be because more and more products are getting smaller. mouthwash teabags and sausages are among the supermarket staples that have been downsize sized thanks to so—called
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shrinkflation. as a manufacturer . has looked to cut costs. that's according to the consumer watchdog, which. they found listerine's fresh burst mouthwash shrunk by 100ml despite its price on tesco shelves going up by 52. and that means shoppers paid 21% more for 71% less. some varieties of pg tips also used to contain 180 teabags. now it managed supermarkets. you will just get 140 and railway lines across scotland will close early tomorrow as storm isha brings severe conditions . network rail severe conditions. network rail says several lines will be out of use from 7 pm. on sunday. the rain warning extends across the whole of scotland , with the whole of scotland, with a wind warning remaining in place until monday morning. storm ayesha is expected to bring winds of up to 80 miles an hour in some places. coastal areas particularly at risk . this in some places. coastal areas particularly at risk. this is gb news. we're on tv , on digital news. we're on tv, on digital radio and on your smart . speaker radio and on your smart. speaker two now it's over to . neil
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two now it's over to. neil >> the last of the flock of private jets will be departing davos now. flying rats of the fourth industrial revolution , fourth industrial revolution, pumping out their tonnes of co2 . pumping out their tonnes of co2. that don't matter because they're rich and above the law. carrying self—anointed world leaders and ceos, mostly travelling solo. one private jet each. travelling solo. one private jet each . high above the common herd each. high above the common herd and oblivious to our cares . it's and oblivious to our cares. it's and oblivious to our cares. it's a fitting image. hypocrisy with wings. do as i say and not as i do them up there and us down here like self—styled gods , here like self—styled gods, inhabitants of a new olympus built for black rock. raytheon google and the like. there lethally curious about what we get up to , but utterly casual in get up to, but utterly casual in their approach to our lives. indeed, whether or not we have lives, we're being dictated to having our futures planned for us without our consent by a
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protected parasite class that regards the mass of the world's population with out and out contempt dots on spreadsheets . contempt dots on spreadsheets. beware of false prophets , for beware of false prophets, for they shall make money in our name . where before there might name. where before there might have been a pretence that our opinions mattered, that the will of the people was sovereign, now we are shown that the powerful will do as they please while we pay will do as they please while we pay for it, and keep our mouths shut. the powerful declare never ending wars and vast sums of our money, our money to others of their kind, to do with as they please . they tax us only to please. they tax us only to impoverish us, malign ghosts of the past . impoverish us, malign ghosts of the past. ex—prime minister tony blair and the like plot with ghouls of the present in the world economic forum and elsewhere to watch us around the clock, and so have the final say on everything we do. and for all time. as it turns out, last week both prime minister rishi sunak and defence secretary grant shapps spoke about how britain was committed to supporting ukraine in its war against
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russia for 100 years or more . or russia for 100 years or more. or do you think so, lads .7 did you do you think so, lads? did you get that 100 years or more of having our pockets picked by the state and the cash invested in the military industrial complex on and on into the lifetimes of our great great grandchildren and beyond, without so much as a by your leave, since when did prime ministers, especially unelected and unwanted prime ministers of no demonstrable ability , entitle themselves to ability, entitle themselves to committing taxpaying citizens of the future poor people as yet unborn to the enabling of corrupt and spurious enterprises that might as well be promised to last forever . for, as i say, to last forever. for, as i say, the regardless , with utter the regardless, with utter contempt and no longer even bother to conceal the fact we've apparently arrived at the point in time where those we did not vote for simply decide among themselves what forever will look like, and then get about the business of making it so at our expense . and don't for a our expense. and don't for a moment think the so—called opposition would do any
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different, that a change of government means no change at all. self—appointed all. those self—appointed overlords feel no more obliged to seek our permission than to seek the go ahead of the cattle and the fields, or the stray dogsin and the fields, or the stray dogs in the street. human life has got that cheap. they give away our money for the slaughter of generations of people. we will never know. the parasite class and their puppets care for us, not a jot. but they fear us. we've learned by now that we're supposed to welcome a zero trust society in which we are presumed guilty of something or other until able to prove otherwise were to be imprisoned in a cage made by made possible by digital ids. that, together with round the clock surveillance, enabled by the sort of tech rishi sunak billionaire father law, billionaire father in law, provides the keeping of social credit scores and the programming of central bank digital currencies that will place submissive and the place the submissive and the unwitting into one big world enclosing rabbit hutch . many enclosing rabbit hutch. many will have heard of the panopticon, the prison art
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architecture designed by 18th century english philosopher jeremy bentham. that leaves inmates no option but to assume they're being watched at all times by guards they can't see. george orwell had the panopticon in mind when he wrote in 1984 of an entire world turned into one dystopian hellscape of surveillance and its attendant paranoia. quote, there was, of course, no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment. you had to live in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard , and except in overheard, and except in darkness , every movement darkness, every movement scrutinised less well known. perhaps is that before finishing his design for the ultimate prison, bentham travelled aboard a slave ship so that slavery has always been in the deepest foundations of totalitarian dreams, of keeping watch over untrustworthy human kind in an increasingly frenzied bid to have us look the other way. their would be dictators are throwing everything they've got at us. disease x is among their
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latest fear porn anonib was this time a to whom it may concern virus and also more mrna that gift that keeps on giving ready to be injected into livestock and the rest of our food so there can be no avoiding it and bombs dropped on yemen, one of the poorest countries in the world and under attack from us and uk backed saudi arabia for nearly a decade, hundreds of thousands of civilians are dead. there by war, disease and starvation . when are we all to starvation. when are we all to be herded like cattle? and towards what exactly? towards the end times certainly feels like it. which is to be the final straw. where is the tipping point that will have enough of us cry enough when the warmongers launch world war iii? war with iran, which has had the hawks of washington salivating for yet more decades. or will it be open war with russia, with china ? forever wars always china? forever wars always confidently predicted in the same way another pandemic is apparent a dead cert, a person
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must wonder where all that certainty comes from. it's insane. they're insane . and we insane. they're insane. and we insane. they're insane. and we in turn must be mad if we continue to listen to them, even the weathers against them exposing more of their nonsense. northern europe shivered in a biting cold. the climate alarmists didn't dare contemplate. it takes enough effort as it is to hoax the entire world about global boiling. without the challenge of persuading the billions to look away from claims by some that the ice in the arctic sea is at its greatest extent in 21 years. and when the only record temperatures in prospect are those colder than a well digger's ass . fortunately, there digger's ass. fortunately, there are plenty of newspapers filled with desperate declarations that the cold doesn't matter. pay no attention to the snow and ice. the planet is still about to spontaneously combust as soon as it thaws out. the deepest cold snap for years doesn't mean anything. newspapers that are fit only for lighting cosy fires with is the truth . now only what
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with is the truth. now only what those with the most money say it is now more than ever. we must be on guard , because what's at be on guard, because what's at stake is life itself among us. now riding shotgun with the rest of those committed to the anti—human agenda are the transhumanists. anti—human agenda are the transhumanists . for them, transhumanists. for them, humankind itself has come to the end of the road, or at least to a fork in the road down one path lies the continuation of the species. that's the greatest miracle we know of in the universe. us fragile, right? enough as all miracles are . as enough as all miracles are. as others have pointed out, we have neither claws, nor fangs, nor of fur or fleece hearts and lungs cradled only by elegant baskets of ribs, but blessed beneath thin caps of bone , with brains thin caps of bone, with brains that comprehend time itself, and that comprehend time itself, and that have vouchsafed the universe the opportunity to contemplate itself for perhaps the first time in 14 billion years, we're already capable of anything and everything . and yet anything and everything. and yet the tech gurus with their soldering irons and circuit boards, think they can do better
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. down the other fork, then lies the future envisioned by those who see only imperfect, incomplete , soulless labrats incomplete, soulless labrats available for fixing a tinkering made possible by their patented profit able technology . those profit able technology. those with that augmentation in mind have already started slipping silicon chips beneath the skins of wide eyed early adopters . of wide eyed early adopters. life has been made disposable , life has been made disposable, expendable, all in pursuit of the greater good. only psychopaths talk about the greater good, what they mean and what they want is what's good for them at the expense of others. if other lives , millions others. if other lives, millions and billions of lives must be set aside for the good of those with money and power, then so be it. i ask again, why would it. so i ask again, why would anyone still listen to the nonsense davos man and woman nonsense of davos man and woman and their bought and paid for stooges governments around stooges in governments around the you remember the world? do you remember knowingly surrendering to a carcase autocracy, which is to say government by the very worst in society? i don't we've been mugged for our energy, for our
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money, and for our food. who on earth surrenders the food supply to who never got to people who never once got their hands dirty ? sowing seeds, their hands dirty? sowing seeds, caring livestock ? those caring for livestock? those people with a penchant for private jets are farmers in private jets are not farmers in the same way that bill gates is not a virologist or any kind of expert in the immune system. i'm among the many things bill gates is not farmer either is not. he's not a farmer either . and yet he's also made himself the biggest private landowner in the biggest private landowner in the because the united states. is it because he to control the use of he wants to control the use of all those fertile acres? and so what people might eat? here's the thing . it should be obvious the thing. it should be obvious to anyone with their eyes open that don't care that the powerful don't care about about our lives about life, about our lives right now, with half a million or more already dead and cold in ukrainian clay, the governments of the west have more recently been their shoulders of the west have more recently bethe their shoulders of the west have more recently bethe deaths their shoulders of the west have more recently bethe deaths oftheir shoulders of the west have more recently bethe deaths of tens shoulders of the west have more recently bethe deaths of tens ofoulders at the deaths of tens of thousands the middle east. thousands in the middle east. it's that falls from it's not manna that falls from heaven onto babies in gaza, but white phosphorus that burns them to . and so pause for to dust. and so pause for a moment wonder who will be moment and wonder who will be the soldiers and the casualties of war. me, you or my
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of the next war. me, you or my children? your children on the fork in the road. we must choose the road down which we must walk is one where we respect at all times the unique and irreplaceable value of human life itself . if . life itself. if. joining me tonight is commentator , podcaster and commentator, podcaster and lecturer at webster university vienna , ralph shellhammer. vienna, ralph shellhammer. greetings, ralph . how are you? greetings, ralph. how are you? good to be with you, neal. >> fantastic to be here. >> fantastic to be here. >> always good to have you. where on earth are our so—called leaders leading us? >> well, you mentioned one terme in about davos. in your monologue about davos. man i recall correctly, man and if i recall correctly, this time was coined by this this time was coined by samuel huntington. now almost 20 years ago. and he describes davos man as kind of a representation of this detached elite like for them, their own countries too small for them. so, so their designs are not for the countries or for the electorate put them into electorate that put them into power, the entire
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power, but for the entire planet, which you saw in davos. i mean, sometimes, and i'm sure that many of viewers , that many of your viewers, hopefully they avoided to have to this, this is why they to do this, this is why they have asked talk to them about have asked to talk to them about it. and if you watch some of those panels, they think they say really dystopian, say it really is dystopian, but it's the world. it's always about the world. it's these universal it's all these universal approaches. it's not about taking of the individual or taking care of the individual or the it's about the smaller issues. it's about everything or nothing. and i think is very worrisome think this is very worrisome because broader because if we take the broader historical comparison, you historical comparison, if you think when did we have think about it, when did we have this when the this in history? when the individual really matter individual didn't really matter anymore, it was anymore, right. when it was about grand design and the about the grand design and the individual ui, others , we are individual ui, others, we are just kind of little bricks in this grander we are this grander designed. we are expendable for the for the larger goal. this is many larger goal. this is in many ways resembling totalitarian ideology is to ideology because the goal is to true the means justify the ends and the ends. is this quote unquote utopia that they envision. and if it costs, you know, high sacrifice by you, by me, by others, i think they're willing to accept that. >> why ? >> why? >> why? >> from where has come this contempt with which they clearly
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regard the mass of the population ? how did they get population? how did they get there ? there? >> well, i think the answer to this question is, if you look at what we have been teaching in the so—called quote unquote elite institutions in the universities , in higher universities, in higher education, you have created an entire class that was marinated in the idea that the nation state is something of the past, that loyalty to the area we were born with. right. the sense of belonging that this is something of yesteryear, that this is something that only, you know, proto fascist or reactionary would, would cling to. so they have almost a desire to detach themselves from where they come from. so how in world can from. so how in the world can they policy for those they make policy for those right? whom are they right? for whom are they supposed to make those policies? because in many ways i wouldn't say despised, but they feel no connection them that connection to them because that already partially already is seen as partially a problem always remembers problem. we'd always remembers me clinton was me of when hillary clinton was talking about the deplorables. right? this kind of right? and this kind of language, more language, i think, is much more common they believe common now that they believe there a significant of there is a significant part of
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there is a significant part of the doesn't even the population that doesn't even deserve attention it deserve their attention. it doesn't them, you doesn't even deserve them, you know, care of if know, kind of taking care of if you want. >> they certainly don't trust us, do they? or or they they demonstrably distrust us. no >> i think we have a very good evidence for this. >> to give you one example, um, look at the average law. like the law texts are getting longer and longer and longer. more and more pages. i recently looked at, for example, an environmental impact study, uh, for wind farm of, of for an offshore wind farm of, of norfolk. it had 14,000 pages. that's longer than all the works of leo tolstoy taken together. now compare this to the governance of india act of 1935, which was 325 pages, because back then the idea of the government was that we have competent people, that we can trust, so we just have to give them the broad outlines, what is supposed to be done. there supposed to be done. and there can be to do it. can be trusted to do it. nowadays if i cannot trust you, neal nowadays if i cannot trust you, neal, and we enter into negotiations, right, we will have contract that will try to have a contract that will try to address every possibility, because do because i cannot trust you to do what my interest. and you
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what is in my interest. and you cannot me do what's in cannot trust me to do what's in your interest. and that's a clear sign government clear sign that the government is increasingly losing trust in the why get the people. this is why we get more and more and more regulations from health and safety to hate speech to misinformation. what can you watch can you eat? watch on tv? what can you eat? what can you allow people to say? and mean, we said this say? and i mean, we said this before show, the more before the show, right? the more you regulate those whom you only regulate those whom you don't you only regulate those whom you dont and you only regulate those whom you don't and we don't trust and what we experience is a government that doesn't its own people. doesn't trust its own people. >> only regulate you >> you only regulate those you don't that speaks a don't trust that that speaks a thousand words to me. a thousand pages words . first break, pages of words. first break, after which i'll be joined by farmer gareth wynne—jones to talk about what's actually happening with the german farmers protests and big question of similar demonstrations could, should or will happen here. don't go away
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thought no, in hospital. >> yeah. so, um, but i mean, the show did really well .
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show did really well. >> now, my first guest tonight is farmer gareth wyn jones. i've spoken to him several times already on this show. he's warning now that protests witnessed across germany could soon be here on the streets and in the fields and byways and highways of britain. farmers in germany are blockading roads in protest against subsidy cuts with more than 500 tractors and trucks parked up by berlin's brandenburg gate. gareth is here with us now, i hope. gareth. good evening. to good see your face again. >> evening. how are things, gareth? >> what? uh what are you keeping tabs on? what's happening in germany, you know. are you across that? are you in touch with any of them? yeah yeah. >> so we're talking with a few, um, the people that are involved in it , you know, um, the people that are involved in it, you know, it's um, the people that are involved in it , you know, it's not um, the people that are involved in it, you know, it's not just the farming protest. i think we have to understand that it's a lot bigger. there's massive pubuc lot bigger. there's massive public support out there for them. um, you know , the firemen ,
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them. um, you know, the firemen, them. um, you know, the firemen, the police, um, you know, a lot of small businesses. it's about taxation and it's about bringing, you know , the public bringing, you know, the public down onto their knees. it's killing it . down onto their knees. it's killing it. it's killing our society . t across the world society. t across the world because , you know, we've seen it because, you know, we've seen it in the netherlands. we've seen it in sri lanka, we've seen it in canada. you know, we're now beginning to see it in france. this is repetitive. it seems to be just going from one country to another. it's government policy like the netherlands was. it was a nitrate levels out there in germany. now, you know , there in germany. now, you know, they're taking the subsidy off they're taking the subsidy off the red diesel. now what people don't understand is if you take the subsidy away from the farmer to produce that food, they have to produce that food, they have to add that onto that product , to add that onto that product, which is going to cost the general public more money. and what's really annoying, neil, is that we're not seeing this in mainstream media. we're seeing tiny little bits, you know, gb news has been really good. they've covered quite a lot of it. but you know, this is a
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massive protest. it's one of the biggest protests we've had in europe for a long time. and as a farmer, i will tell you honestly, farmers do not go out to protest unless unless it's the last resort because they've got animals , they have got crops got animals, they have got crops , they have got a business to run unless their whole business is , you know, on a life, on a is, you know, on a life, on a knife edge. they do not go out and protest and they are desperate. that's why we're seeing these protests across europe . europe. >> yes. gareth, ralph , i feel it >> yes. gareth, ralph, i feel it in my in the marrow of my bones that the people, i mean, the farmers are angry because they understand the predicament into which they've been put by all of this. the people know that this. but the people know that when messing with the when you start messing with the farmers, something farmers, that something fundamental don't you fundamental is adrift. don't you think? i agree, and i think think? no i agree, and i think gareth a fantastic point gareth made a fantastic point when he said that farmers would only really it's the only protest if really it's the last think this goes double >> and i think this goes double for there is this for germany. um, there is this anecdote. think that kind of anecdote. i think that kind of highlights this very nicely. in 1944, end of the war,
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1944, during the end of the war, um, german propaganda 1944, during the end of the war, um, had 1an propaganda 1944, during the end of the war, um, had 1an propyan nda 1944, during the end of the war, um, had 1an propyan order ministry had to issue an order that the germans who were standing at stations standing at train stations or train platforms, if the sirens were going off because british bombers were coming they can bombers were coming in, they can leave and seek leave the platform and seek shelter don't have to wait shelter and don't have to wait for somebody to validate their ticket. of ticket. this is kind of the german so once german mindset, right? so once you rules, don't want you have rules, you don't want to break those rules. so if you have german farmers and gareth is this has is absolutely right, this has spread and spread to truckers and other areas. out on the areas. if they go out on the streets protest, that is the streets and protest, that is the beginning of something larger. and you describe, and i think what you describe, nealis and i think what you describe, neal, is there is a sense we want to tie together the truckers canada, the farmers truckers in canada, the farmers in the netherlands, farmers in the netherlands, the farmers in the netherlands, the farmers in is a sense in germany is there is a sense that governments starting that governments are starting to declare very element declare war on the very element of economy that keeps of the economy that keeps everything against everything going. we're against mining, energy. mining, we are against energy. we and more we are against farming. and more and people realise, but and more people realise, but wait moment, that that wait a moment, isn't that that keeps going? not all keeps everything going? not all of become, you know, of us can become, you know, political and, political commentators and, uh, instagram influencers we instagram influencers because we can only what we do because can only do what we do because these gareth, are these farmers, like gareth, are so productive . so incredibly productive. >> you feel that do >> gareth, do you feel that do you though you're at
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you feel as though you're at war? a war? the vast majority of the population are not being kept up with? the population are not being kepyeah,/ith? the population are not being kepyeah, let? the population are not being kepyeah, let me tell you, my >> yeah, let me tell you, my family's this land family's been farming this land for 375 years. you know , i want for 375 years. you know, i want a future for my children on this land. doing what i think is right, you know? yeah there's a few problems within the industry that we need tweaking. i'm not going away from that. going to hide away from that. you know, we need start to you know, we need to start to look at solutions for more regenerative and more sustainable ways of producing food. but don't bite the hand that feeds you. don't ever forget that. and i'll tell you something. when you look, you , something. when you look, you, you are going to need maybe an accountant once a year, a dentist , a doctor. you're going dentist, a doctor. you're going to need a farmer. every single day of your life. and that's across the world. and the majority of farms across the world are family farms. these are people that are working seven days a week, 365 days a year to produce food, to feed people affordably, you know, and healthily . and that's the scary
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healthily. and that's the scary bit . i see these, you know, bit. i see these, you know, listening to your speech earlier, mate, and i see these multinational corporations flying in and out of davos looking at us, thinking , who are looking at us, thinking, who are these? do they want us eating bugs and processed rubbish? you know , let's build a better know, let's build a better britain on our bellies. let's look for a farming food revolution worldwide . let's come revolution worldwide. let's come together as people because this is bigger than just the farmers. this is more. and if we don't support each other going forward, we're in deep trouble and for me, you know, i'm never going to go hungry. i'm never going to go hungry. i'm never going to go cold. you know, today i was out shooting, harvesting my own food. i brought the birds back. i'll process them tomorrow. they'll be in my freezer. they'll be feeding my family. be in my freezer. they'll be feeding my family . and i want feeding my family. and i want to. i want to bring something else into this as well. neil, we. we're working on farming britain, a new youtube channel, to share these stories . you to share these stories. you know, not country lies, but the
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true voice of rural people . true voice of rural people. what's going on in the countryside . this is really countryside. this is really important. so if people have the opportunity, follow some of my social media pages from facebook to youtube, because these are important, because we're not having a voice in other mainstream media, we need that voice so people can understand what's happening. wake up and smell the coffee before it's too late. >> gareth, do you do you see the farmers and the people around and in the in the community rising in the way that they have in the netherlands, that they have in germany and elsewhere? do you see the same thing maybe manifesting in weeks ahead? >> it's not quite it's not quite. at that point in this country, i think. yet, neil, i don't think it's there. but government policies in wales , government policies in wales, you know, because we're devolved out here, there's a lot of problems. there's a lot of family farms that are struggling and they're not going to make it through 2024. and i think this is across great britain. so i
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think we have to start pushing our agenda into these policy makers , into the politicians . makers, into the politicians. our mps, our ams . they need to our mps, our ams. they need to listen to the farmers. they need to listen to rural voices because we're not being heard. and 84% of people living in the cities , but they'll walk into cities, but they'll walk into a supermarket and there'll be food on the shelves. we remembered what happened when the ukraine war went . there was starving war went. there was starving people thinking, oh my god, we need food security in this country . and what are they country. and what are they doing? solar panels , solar farms doing? solar panels, solar farms going up. you know, we're losing land to building . and i'm not land to building. and i'm not against that. everybody needs a new house, but we have to start to watch after our own country and our own farmers, because if something happens globally , we something happens globally, we are going to be in trouble where we have a big population on a small island and if you're going to try and feed them sustainably , affordably, that's going to be
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a bloody hard job. i'll tell you that. >> a bloody hard job, gareth. keep doing it. keep fighting the good fight and i'll speak to you as soon as again as i possibly can. thanks so much forjoining us this evening. cut with another break after which i'll be joined by melville , who be joined by james melville, who himself from a farming himself comes from a farming background and feels that it's an uprising . by people who feel an uprising. by people who feel forgotten and ignored. that's coming or required. don't go anywhere . on mark dolan tonight . anywhere. on mark dolan tonight. >> in a world exclusive, my mark meets guest is one of the survivors of the 1972 uruguay plane crash in the andes, where they resorted to cannibalism to stay it's now a hit stay alive. it's now a hit netflix movie. we're live at nine.
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am i right? am i wrong? i'm not exactly sure what steel's they are making .
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are making. >> well , come are making. >> well, come back are making. >> well , come back now. >> well, come back now. >> well, come back now. >> my next guest. this evening, james melville, says that all of this is nothing to do with a far right agenda. quite the opposite . that what is required is to see the farmers travails as a catalyst for change. and james joins me now. good evening, james. good to see you there. good evening neil. >> how are you? good, good, good to see you. you you've come from you're from a farming background. >> um , you live in cornwall, but >> um, you live in cornwall, but you, you know, you come back and forth to scotland . and what are forth to scotland. and what are the scottish farmers saying? what are you hearing from that community of which you are part? >> i think it's the same issues over and over again. if forgotten, community. um, you know, these are blue collar workers, effectively some of the most multi—skilled workers on the face of the planet. and the bedrock of an economy. and they feel forgotten about . um, you feel forgotten about. um, you know, many industries have been
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torn apart and disenfranchised over the last 40 years, but farming consistently has now. we've got the additional aspect of the net zero agenda, and farmers are concerned that this is going to affect their yields, their livelihoods, and the government are completely out of touch with what the farmers needs are, what we're experiencing in europe, which has gone one stage further, is effectively a blue collar rising, a blue collar spring, because enough is enough of governments who are failing to take care of business, of a primary source of the economy, namely farmers. going back to answer your question , in answer your question, in scotland, there's certainly not at the stage of what the german farmers or the french farmers are doing , but farmers or the french farmers are doing, but i think farmers or the french farmers are doing , but i think there farmers or the french farmers are doing, but i think there is the same mood, the same feeling that they're being neglected by the government. when you're getting severe pressure in terms of brokerage agreements with supermarkets, where farmers are getting pennies for pennies for their crops and their products, and at the same time, governments are implementing
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draconian net zero measures. it's almost impossible for farmers to make some sort of profit and what's happening beyond that is then , because beyond that is then, because farmers are under so much pressure , major corporations are pressure, major corporations are coming in and plundering the land and taking the land as an asset grab and then paradoxically, quite often producing more net zero solutions such as destroying the landscapes and the environments with mass production solar panels, gyms . panels, gyms. >> bear with me. ralph is arrogance on the part of, you know, the decision makers . i know, the decision makers. i mean, do they have a sense of how angry not just the farmers are, but the wider population ? are, but the wider population? and do they care? >> i think arrogance is a huge part of this, and i think james made a good point. let me tell you a quick anecdote that i had with a dutch farmer when they when the dutch government was trying to implement their nitrogen restrictions and they said, less said, you know, 30% less nitrogen and the farmers nitrogen by 2050 and the farmers correctly what do they correctly said, what do they think we doing? like think we are doing? like fertiliser it's
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fertiliser is expensive. it's not they just spread it, not that they just spread it, you know, hither and yon because they it for so they they have it for free. so they try reduce fertiliser use try to reduce fertiliser use anyways something anyways because it is something that expenses on. that they have high expenses on. but have some bureaucrats but you have some bureaucrats sitting in a windowless office, you know, kind of looks at sitting in a windowless office, you and v, kind of looks at sitting in a windowless office, you and says, kind of looks at sitting in a windowless office, you and says, 30%i of looks at sitting in a windowless office, you and says, 30% looks oks at sitting in a windowless office, you and says, 30% looks like at this and says, 30% looks like a good let's do it. but good number, let's do it. but i think there's a second factor that also alluded to is, that james also alluded to is, which is when we say forgotten communities. i mean, there's this , out of sight, this old saying, out of sight, out of mind we don't give out of mind and we don't give the areas of the economy , the the areas of the economy, the key areas farming, mining, energy, the attention it deserves. may be i'm being facetious here, but i mean, it. we have debates about quote unquote drag queen story hour, but should have but maybe we should have something farmers story something like farmers story houn something like farmers story hour, miners story hour, like coal miners story houn hour, like coal miners story hour. kind of hour. maybe we should kind of imbue people with a imbue young people with a certain respect from these certain respect from where these things make things come from, that make modern life possible , because i modern life possible, because i think maybe we have think then maybe we would have much understanding and much more understanding and respect farmers and others. >> james, you're saying and gareth said the same that, that in wales people aren't quite ready to rise. and you're saying in scotland you don't think that
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people quite stage. but people are quite that stage. but as says , wouldn't it be as ralph says, wouldn't it be almost beneficial if the if the if the if the farmers rose because the old media are not covering this , they're not covering this, they're not drawing attention to it quite the opposite. they're mis the opposite. and they're mis portraying . don't people portraying it. don't the people need confront by the need to be confront by the everyday reality of the farmers so that they remember that even there , and what is that they there, and what it is that they do ? do? >> i with that. and on >> i agree with that. and on previous comments, i agree with all i think there needs all of it. i think there needs to be. said before, blue to be. as i said before, a blue collar you we've collar rising. you know, we've got a channel in this country. so our poll, our poll tax spirits , remember the poll tax. spirits, remember the poll tax. what happened there. if people rise up in a peaceful way in mass mobilisation, numbers change can happen. and it comes back to the point that was mentioned before. we've got to start raising awareness about the bedrock and foundations of our economy, and that is the producers . the farmers are the producers. the farmers are the kind of root and branch effectively of that, and they need to be heard in westminster. but the only way i think we can
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do that is to take a leaf out of the book the dutch and also the book of the dutch and also the book of the dutch and also the germans and the french and also going back to the canadian truckers . and we need truckers. and i think we need to support it our job to support it. it is our job to raise awareness for this because, as you said, it's not getting coverage and the getting enough coverage and the last i would is, last thing i would say is, ironically, this is the sort of campaign that the left used to be behind. where are large parts of the left? right now , this is of the left? right now, this is not some sort of far right protest. this is nuts and bolts of the survival of our country and many other countries. our food production and the workers that go with it. and it's not just the farmers, it's the circular economy around farming. you know, it's the shops , it's you know, it's the shops, it's the deliveries. all of that has to be taken account. i remember the country alliance march we had, what, 20, 30 years ago? there was about half a million people descended on london. maybe it's the time now to coordinate and galvanise our rural communities and our farmers to do something about this and vote with their feet
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effectively onto westminster to make our high polluting politicians listen to what is one of the primary industries and important industries in this country . country. >> thank you. james melville . >> thank you. james melville. thanks for that insight. it's always good to hear from somebody who's actually grown up in that, in that world, so to speak. thanks very much for your time. evening, ralph. do time. this evening, ralph. do you think that the ideal ag at the top, notwithstanding that , the top, notwithstanding that, that there must be many of the elected representatives and others who know that this is madness and are just are they just afraid to articulate what they must surely know ? they must surely know? >> i'm not so sure if they know you mentioned it before at once . you mentioned it before at once. you are trapped in a certain bubble. i think it's very, very hard to kind of to penetrate, to break that, that bubble. um, and what you would need. and that's so that so difficult. this is that i think continental europe has an advantage some areas with the advantage in some areas with the multi—party system. you need some even if some new movements, even if those new movements might not come power, they exactly come into power, they do exactly what described. they come into power, they do exactly what the described. they come into power, they do exactly what the existing cribed. they come into power, they do exactly what the existing onesi. they come into power, they do exactly what the existing ones inthey come into power, they do exactly what the existing ones in the push the existing ones in the best the right
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best case in the right direction, or they replace them. i one example. i mean, take one example. i think alluded this. you think james alluded to this. you have the social democrats in germany, the so—called party of the class, a single the working class, not a single member the democrats member of the social democrats or party from or the leading party is from a working background. so working class background. so people to another people turn to another party that more credible. that they find more credible. i mean, that call them the kind mean, that we call them the kind of the mainstream parties of the old mainstream parties they polling at of the old mainstream parties thethe polling at of the old mainstream parties thethe afd polling at of the old mainstream parties thethe afd is polling at of the old mainstream parties thethe afd is pollingling at of the old mainstream parties thethe afd is polling at; at of the old mainstream parties thethe afd is polling at 23. so 13. the afd is polling at 23. so kind of we know where this trend is going. and the frustrating thing is, is exactly as james said, these are not far right extreme positions . this is extreme positions. this is common sense. as we said , people common sense. as we said, people have a sense. they feel that infrastructure is crumbling. things are getting more expensive. they see that again, the basics of life seem to become and more become more and more unattainable for so many people, and they this to change. and they want this to change. i think people much think that the people are much smarter the media. you smarter than the media. you know, the dominant voices in culture give them credit for. and this is, i think, what you and to do to really give and i have to do to really give those voiceless people a voice because they are right in what they and what they they are saying and what they are demanding. >> defender and
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>> if being if defender and championing rights of championing the rights of farmers is right wing, i must be politically right attila the politically right of attila the hun. , i am so behind the hun. i mean, i am so behind the farmer . after this break, i'll farmer. after this break, i'll be joined by author and speaker laura abily, who in may of 2020 founded the united democrat international movement for awareness and freedom, dedicated to creating a better world through awareness, inspiration and the relentless pursuit of truth. don't go away .
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my my next guest . my last guest my next guest. my last guest this evening, laura abily. i encountered her some months ago now , if not utterly inspiring. now, if not utterly inspiring. when she spoke a message of reclaim our humanity. really, i suppose, is what it boils down to. laura is here in the studio with me now. good evening. laura. >> hi, neal. >> hi, neal. >> thank you. i'll ask you, first of all, when and why did
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you decide to put your head above the parapet? because i don't think you had. hadn't don't think you had. you hadn't spent lifetime being out spent a lifetime being out there. now, addressing the . pubuc >> yeah, no, i hadn't. and the when was definitely at the beginning of the pandemic and the why was my levels of frustration and anxiety and anger honestly about the things that i was witnessing , uh, that i was witnessing, uh, specifically the destruction of our civil rights and our freedom and our liberties was just getting me to get to that point of boiling, saying, i have to do something and what that was, i had no clue. but i started just writing. you know, to express what i was feeling and to really warn people as well, because my sort of , let's call it awakening sort of, let's call it awakening process started a few years ago, and so i could kind of sense where we were headed. i could envisage what these vaccines were really all about, and i really wanted to warn people. so that's when it all started for me, just out of sheer frustration that something needed to be done. and i'm that
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type of person that says, i'll do whatever i can, right? >> and where are you now? >> and where are you now? >> you know, when it comes to assess going after 3 or 4 years, however long it's been, the ideology that's out there, what do understand ? land is the do you understand? land is the end game. >> well, the end game, really. and it goes everything that you've been discussing today and your monologue, which was brilliant, by the way, really , brilliant, by the way, really, really spoke of a lot of the components that are happening at the moment , components that are happening at the moment, which really is about establishing a one world totalitarian technocracy. that's what we're seeing. the problem is people cannot connect the dots to form this picture and so we see seemingly unrelated events like the farmers protests or transgenderism or whatever the case may be, that we're massive illegal immigration, migration , and they actually all migration, and they actually all form part of the same plan. once you can identify that plan, it becomes really much more easy to
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say, oh, well, i can see why they're doing that. they want to control the food supply. all i can see why this whole gender ideology is being spread across the schools worldwide. and this is not one nation that is not just one nation that suddenly no , it's suddenly having no, it's worldwide and that is already raising of flags. and you raising a lot of flags. and you can to why that is can start to see why that is necessary in convincing us to become these semi—human and semi robotic people , all under this robotic people, all under this digitalised grid that they're building. and this is why this whole push towards digitalised nafion whole push towards digitalised nation is happening as we speak. digital ids, digital wallets , digital ids, digital wallets, you know, that will be linked to vaccination status. cbdcs. they are preparing the structure necessary for that total control i >> -- >> do you think that the part of the story is also when we look particularly among younger people, that there are mental health issues, what you just mentioned bit, that mentioned a little bit, that it's you break it's when you break down everything meaning to everything that gave meaning to people in the past, and you say everything that gave meaning in the worthless, it the past is worthless, like it has like things
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has to be different, like things have to done in a different have to be done in a different shape everything. shape and everything. how what did right in the did we thought was right in the past is wrong now, so therefore do it differently. do you think this de anchoring, if this kind of de anchoring, if there english word, of there is an english word, um, of coming kind adds coming generations, kind of adds to their frustration, to their depression, their, their depression, to their, their mental and then there mental issues, and then there might susceptible mental issues, and then there might things susceptible mental issues, and then there might things you jsceptible mental issues, and then there might things you just )tible to the things that you just described. absolutely >> you actually >> you know, when you actually identify end goal, which is identify the end goal, which is this technocratic this totality in technocratic reality reality, reality or dystopian reality, where just one more thing where we are just one more thing in this internet things, how in this internet of things, how do get us there? you get us do you get us there? you get us by breaking us, by breaking every thing that gives us purpose, power and meaning. and that's the nuclear family that they've attacked . it's, it's they've attacked. it's, it's completely eradicating god or spirituality from education. it's flooding the streets with drugs, is giving the young generations no for hope a future. and so all of these things break us. you need to break the human being in order to come to that post—human reality that they're building. so there's so much that's going has happened already in the last
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50, 60 years to prepare us to that point . that point. >> um, do you feel , though, that >> um, do you feel, though, that ihave >> um, do you feel, though, that i have i have good days and bad days. >> do you feel mostly that the tide is turning in favour of humanity or not? >> it is. and i'll tell you why this agenda that i'm talking about, that we're all becoming increasingly aware of, is a very scary, very nefarious agenda. and they have worked at it for decades, and they're still going at it. and we're beginning to see that now. there has been this situation where people , for this situation where people, for whatever the reason and i don't really know what that reason is, perhaps because it's becoming more apparent people are waking up going on. i don't up to what's going on. i don't like that . i don't like this. like that. i don't like this. i don't like how my kids are being taught at school . i don't like taught at school. i don't like this illegal immigration. why is this illegal immigration. why is this allowed to be happening? why they the food why are they attacking the food supply? why is energy so expensive? these things expensive? all of these things are making people question why. where where are we
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where are we going? where are we heading now? i keep telling people we really only have two enemies and that is fear and lack of information, lack of knowledge and ignorance . this is knowledge and ignorance. this is why they're going at censorship such a big way right now. everything is all misinform , everything is all misinform, formation and disinformation and even mal information, whatever that is. so they really attack being the source of this awakening , which is people awakening, which is people becoming aware of things, people becoming aware of things, people becoming informed of things. and when you are informed , you make when you are informed, you make better choices and when we make better choices and when we make better choices, we stand a chance of saying two, one word with two two letter word. no. do you think sometimes i think we're lucky in a sense, because there's been generations who are not challenged and now our generation faces a challenge . generation faces a challenge. >> and maybe, you know , it's >> and maybe, you know, it's worth being here for the big one. >> well , you know, when you >> well, you know, when you actually step out of this fear
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paradigm that we are being fed 24 over seven and we saw how badly that was during the pandemic, i think people really became aware of this constant fear mongering from media, entertainment, you name it. once you actually step out of that fear paradigm because you become aware of that agenda and you start claiming your own sovereignty and your own power based on knowledge that you've attained , then things start to attained, then things start to change. and i think this is what is happening, and you become empowered and you think, you know what i think i was meant to be right here, right now, at this time, because i want to make a difference, because i believe we can you, you , all believe we can you, me, you, all of together, run a time , of us together, run at a time, though we in the right place though we are in the right place at right time. at the right time. >> definitely ralph. that's >> definitely you. ralph. that's it this week. thanks to it for me this week. thanks to all my guests. and jones, all my guests. gareth and jones, james melville, ralph schollhammer and laura abily. thank much. coming up thank you so much. coming up next, it's the saturday five. >> looks like things are heating up boilers is sponsors of up boxt boilers is sponsors of weather on gb news . hello there
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weather on gb news. hello there and greg dewhurst welcome to your latest gb news weather. >> it's turning stormy over the next 24 hours or so. storm is moving in from the atlantic, bringing some heavy rain and strong and damaging gusts of wind across the uk. we can see it there later sunday into monday. tight isobars across the whole of the uk . met office whole of the uk. met office warnings in force a wet and windy evening to come, as well as this band of rain slowly pushes its way eastwards, though starts to ease during the early hours. rainfall totals combined with some snow melt as temperatures rise across western areas could lead to some localised flooding issues. but generally for everyone in breezy conditions and the high temperatures means a frost free start to sunday. but generally fairly cloudy. there'll be some brighter sunny spells, typically across towards central, southern parts of the uk and perhaps northeast scotland, but then storm isa moves in outbreaks of heavy rain pushing in to the north and the west of the uk,
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winds picking up by the afternoon. gusts of 5060. locally, 70 miles. an hour could lead to some disruption and then through sunday evening, overnight into monday, the band of rain pushes eastwards, which will be heavy and then some really strong and gusty winds affects northern scotland. amber warnings out across many northern western parts of northern and western parts of the perhaps south—east northern and western parts of the jalsoips south—east northern and western parts of the jalso seeing:h—east northern and western parts of the jalso seeing some;t northern and western parts of the jalso seeing some very england. also seeing some very strong winds. it stays blustery into monday. heavy into monday. further heavy showers and then turning very wet and windy again as we move into you soon! into tuesday. see you soon! >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb solar sponsors of weather on. gb news 2024, a battle ground year the year the nation decides as the year the nation decides as the parties gear up their campaigns for the next general election, who will be left standing when the british people make one of the biggest decisions of their lives? >> who will rise and who will fall? >> let's find out together. >> let's find out together. >> for every moment, the highs ,
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>> for every moment, the highs, the lows, the twists and turns . the lows, the twists and turns. >> we'll be with you for every step of this journey. in 2024. >> gb news is britain's election
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channel >> it's saturday night and this is the saturday five. i'm darren grimes, along with albie amankona, belinda de lucy , amankona, belinda de lucy, benjamin butterworth and alex armstrong. tonight on the show , armstrong. tonight on the show, net zero begins. it's demise of britain british steel . it won't britain british steel. it won't be the first folks. >> it appears too many young black men are drawn to lives of crime. i'm asking why we need to let refugees work so that they're not costing us a fortune in hotel bills . in hotel bills. >> the health of our royals is none of our business. >> religious prayer should be banned at schools . banned at schools. >> it's 7 pm. and this is the saturday five.

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