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tv   Headliners  GB News  January 27, 2024 5:00am-6:01am GMT

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party chairman has conservative party chairman has suggested that there could be more tax cutting announcements to before a general to come before a general election in the autumn. it follows this month's reduction in national insurance contributions. richard holden told gb news earlier the 2% cut was just the beginning of a series of possible tax cuts. we're coming out of that very tough period and we're able to outline our plans for the future i >>i -- >> i think hm >> i think the actual tax cut, you mentioned the national insurance cut for working people is the start of that. we'll see more of that in march and more of it later in the year as well. but we that new direction but we have that new direction of clear of travel, which is clear elsewhere. >> houthi rebels have stepped up their attacks on ships in the red sea including red sea tonight, including a missile strike on a british oil tanker, maritime security officials say there is a fire on board that vessel, but the crew on the ship are safe. it follows reports this morning of another missile strike and explosions near a separate oil tanker in the red sea. prime minister rishi sunak has warned this week of more strikes against the
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rebels if attacks on commercial ships don't come to an end in the us, donald trump has tonight been ordered to pay more than $83 million. that's around £65 million in damages to former female journalist e jean carroll pictures here of carol leaving court in just the last hour or so after the jury reached that verdict , taking less than three verdict, taking less than three hours to deliberate. but it's the conclusion of a defamation case that she brought against trump, accusing him of destroying her reputation as a trusted journalist by denying that he raped her nearly three decades ago . well, in response decades ago. well, in response to that ruling, trump has taken to that ruling, trump has taken to his own social media platform truth social, saying that he fully disagrees with those verdicts. he says he will be appealing them, and he's called it a biden directed witch hunt . it a biden directed witch hunt. in sport, jurgen klopp has today promised he will never manage another english club after announcing he's stepping down as liverpool's manager at the end
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of liverpool was of this season. liverpool was transformed under his leadership , winning six trophies including the premier league in 2020 and the premier league in 2020 and the champions league a year before. speaking to the media this afternoon, he said there'll be plenty of time for a transition with all the responsibility you have in this job and these kind of things, you have to be absolutely on top of your own game. >> that's is. and i am, >> that's how it is. and i am, um, i'm doing for 24 um, but i'm doing this for 24 years now. i realised, um, that this is that my, my resources are not endless . barons michelle are not endless. barons michelle mone and her husband have had their assets frozen today following an application by the crown prosecution service. >> the financial times is reporting that it amounts to around £75 million. it comes as the couple are being investigated for their involvement in supplying ppe dunng involvement in supplying ppe during the pandemic. she has previously admitted that she lied when denying connections to medpro , which made profits of medpro, which made profits of £60 million during the pandemic.
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the crown prosecution service has said today that harmful myths about rape and consent continue impact survivors and continue to impact survivors and justice in the largest survey of its kind in five years. it found that i in 12 people believe being in a relationship means there's automatic consent to sex. it also revealed that more than half of 18 to 24 year olds were unsure if it's still a rape, if a victim doesn't resist or fight back, the cps has said it will use the findings to update its training and guidance . for prosecutors, aiming to stop false beliefs and finally , stop false beliefs and finally, new figures have revealed that there is a clear geographical divide in life expectancy across the country . the south of the country. the south of england has the highest life expectancy, while the north lags behind the for office national statistics data shows a gap of over a decade for men and more than seven years for women. hampshire tops the list for men at 83.7 years, while blackpool has the lowest at 73.4 years.
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campaigners say they're calling for more targeted interventions from the government to help bndge from the government to help bridge that gap . that's the bridge that gap. that's the latest from the gb newsroom for now. for more. we're on tv, on digital radio and of course, on your smart. speaker two now, though, it's time for headliners . hello and welcome to headliners your first look at saturday's top stories. >> i'm your host simon evans, joining me this evening. we have comedian and bffs louis shaffer and nick dixon. >> that's best friends forever. >> that's best friends forever. >> i think, rather than some sort of sexual i don't know, i don't keep up with the acronyms , don't keep up with the acronyms, but on safe but i think you're on safe ground right. yeah ground there. you're right. yeah >> first bit of >> that's the first bit of misinformation you've put out tonight already. >> i'm feeling good tonight, to be . be honest. >> years age and i have >> 58 years of age and i have learned more learned today i've got more staying you can klopp
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yeah. >> so that's all right isn't it. is mere 56 and he's had is a mere 56 and he's had enough. he hasn't up yet. enough. he hasn't given up yet. >> he says he's going to give up. he's well never up. he's well he's never going to club again. to manage an england club again. >> so can't imagine what you >> so i can't imagine what you could after can i just could do after that. can i just can i'm leaving can i announce i'm leaving headunes end can i announce i'm leaving headlines end the headlines at the end of the season? just now. season? yeah, not just now. >> energy. >> i've run out of energy. >> i've run out of energy. >> whatever our copy equivalent is, running with is, is going to be running with tears. nick. but we'll you tears. nick. but we'll talk. you back anyway. let's have back into it anyway. let's have a pages. a look at those front pages. the times kicks off tonight with a story we covered last night as well. the nottingham mother calling for inquiry into killings. that is not her picture. that is camilla. there telegraph us to move nuclear weapons back to the united kingdom. i know who i idea who that pre—raphaelite beauty is that pre—raphaelite beauty is thatis that pre—raphaelite beauty is that is illustrating that story. the guardian israel ordered by court to prevent genocide in gaza. that's one way of describing their verdict. the express king chose kate's hospital to save taxpayers money, and the i news uk's golden age with china harmed
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british intelligence says former mi6 spy spy chief the daily mail camilla smile that says the king's fine and those were your front pages as. so king's fine and those were your front pages as . so lewis, we're front pages as. so lewis, we're going to start with saturday's guardian. i don't actually have a copy of this. i'm going to have to trust you. you've got to trust me. >> israel ordered by court to prevent . and prevent genocide in gaza. and this is why americans hate the world. and this is why i grew up having no trust for the world, because international law not it's not it's a national law because this is, first of all, what south africa brought, the brought these charges, what the south africa that's called standing right. they've got nothing involved. no stake nothing involved. no, no stake in the game. no. and they brought it. and but the ruling came back and it came back and said, um, and said they that the international court of justice
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in the hague, uh, said basically said israel can carry on even though they said no , they said though they said no, they said please don't commit genocide. >> it's i mean, it's the thing about genocide as it as it's discussed in a court, is it has to have a number of factors. it's not just an overwhelming case of state sanctioned mass murder, argue murder, which you could argue that this isn't, but that that this is or isn't, but that isn't the point, is it? genocide has to the intent has to have the intent to eliminate an entire people. and i don't think they found that that was present. well how could they do that? >> do know something? you >> do you know something? you know, the palestinian in the population, gaza has population, in the gaza has almost doubled 15 years. population, in the gaza has alryou doubled 15 years. population, in the gaza has alryou hardlyed 15 years. population, in the gaza has alryou hardly can 15 years. population, in the gaza has alryou hardly can call 15 years. population, in the gaza has alryou hardly can call thatears. so you hardly can call that anyway . anyway. >> well, i think the point is, if i'm not saying it has been, but the what is contested is that genocide began quite that the genocide began quite recently been recently. not that it's been a sustained policy genocide. sustained policy of genocide. >> it was if the >> if, if, if it was if the court whether it has or it hasn't, the court has not said that it has. no. because if the courts if the if it's been genocide, the court have said, stop this genocide. but the court didn't say that . court didn't say that. >> no. you have a view on this.
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well obviously had well the un has obviously had a number of outstanding allegations against israel for some time anyway, which it's just so yeah. just brushed off. so yeah. >> lewis in >> well, similar to lewis in that south africa can get lost. i mean there's something more akin genocide going on akin to a genocide going on against white farms in south against the white farms in south africa, which is controversial. but know, musk but that's, you know, elon musk is they sing a song to that effect. >> yeah, yeah, yeah, i know, so they can shut up so that annoys me. >> i do understand that netanyahu has alienated of netanyahu has alienated a lot of people of people with his kind of bombastic and bombastic rhetoric. and obviously . but obviously the war itself. but yeah, but like lewis says, what does achieve does it actually achieve this ruling? really. ruling? it doesn't really. it just virtue signalling just becomes virtue signalling really, oh really, because it just says, oh yeah, don't yeah, please don't do a genocide, everyone would genocide, which everyone would say. doesn't really say. so it doesn't really achieve what's the point? >> i suppose eventually, arguably, enough verdicts arguably, if enough verdicts of this gradually this kind were to gradually accrue, might it might accrue, then it might it might give some government or other the confidence in order the confidence it needs in order to withdraw its support, to , to to withdraw its support, to, to put sanctions. i mean, but obviously america is the big deal obviously america is the big deal, isn't it? without america , deal, isn't it? without america, but with trump it would be very different with trump won it. >> i mean, moved the embassy
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>> i mean, he moved the embassy to jerusalem. he has very to jerusalem. he has a very close ties with jared kushner. you with you sort of imagine with trump it'd pro—israel it'd be a lot more pro—israel vibe in the world. >> imagine. i mean, this is one issue i can't think issue on which i can't think he's to more he's going to be any more decisive biden been. decisive than biden has been. extraordinarily as decisive than biden has been. extra think think >> i don't think so. no, i think he hasn't said, some he hasn't been, he said, some less supportive things he's hinted and don't less supportive things he's hinte the truth is, is that this is the i feel bad for the palestinians is that they're basically screwed and they have no support from egypt. they've got no support from saudi arabia. they've got no support from jordan. they're surrounded by people who don't who don't like them. and then this court ruling, this makes them happy ruling, if this makes them happy to know what, maybe to think, you know what, maybe that's something . that's something. >> uh, yeah. the next paper we have, what do you call it? nick. >> yeah . yeah. well the >> yeah. yeah. well the telegraph. yeah. telegraph and we as well just note that we may as well just note that rishi sunak nick is on the front
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page stories here. number 10 attacks. of israel attacks. irony of israel genocide sunak has genocide ruling and sunak has come out pretty strong. he says, um, or any organisation um, anyone or any organisation that unequivocally that cannot unequivocally condemn hamas did condemn the evil that hamas did has no conscience, no morality, no and deserves no no decency, and deserves no respect. calls this respect. and he calls this a horrific irony of israel being accused of genocide of all countries and sort of countries. and so he sort of strongly standing behind israel there. >> and he i don't think that's an that's lost the an irony that's lost on the people who make these allegations . it there's allegations. is it there's always raised if how always sort of raised as if how can you possibly accuse i mean, people sort of that's why people are sort of that's why they're observe they're doing it and observe that. yeah. yeah. >> well, know something ? >> well, do you know something? >> well, do you know something? >> back to that >> but let's not go back to that story. they story. what else have they got on the television? >> so they've got to >> yeah. so they've got us to move to uk. move nuclear weapons back to uk. this one. i mean, this is a big one. i mean, warheads are going to housed warheads are going to be housed at first at raf lakenheath for the first time so he took at raf lakenheath for the first time away so he took at raf lakenheath for the first time away in so he took at raf lakenheath for the first time away in 2008, he took at raf lakenheath for the first time away in 2008, thinking that them away in 2008, thinking that the cold war threat has diminished. back, diminished. now it's back, everyone. it's pretty everyone. so it's pretty frightening. i mean, it says is a threat from russia increases and lot of russia threat and a lot of russia threat stories say so. either we're in a perilous situation the a very perilous situation or the papers think we are papers want us to think we are both. scare me, frankly. papers want us to think we are bot do scare me, frankly. papers want us to think we are bot do you scare me, frankly. papers want us to think we are bot do you think me, frankly. papers want us to think we are bot do you think the frankly. papers want us to think we are bot do you think the papers. or
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papers want us to think we are botyou you think the papers. or papers want us to think we are botyou think? nk the papers. or papers want us to think we are botyou think? nimean, apers. or papers want us to think we are botyou think? nimean, there. or papers want us to think we are botyou think? nimean, there is or do you think? i mean, there is certainly obvious, uh, certainly one obvious, uh, explanation would be that the ministry of is using ministry of defence is using this as an opportunity to just, you to you know, rattle their tin to elevate their own budget. you know, rattle their tin to ele'there's ir own budget. you know, rattle their tin to ele'there's definitelyiget. you know, rattle their tin to ele'there's definitely been an >> there's definitely been an element of hasn't there? element of that, hasn't there? and we're gonna and they're saying we're gonna have to conscript and so have to conscript people and so on. another story have to conscript people and so on.that another story have to conscript people and so on.that but another story have to conscript people and so on.that but anotithistory on that later. but yeah, this is quite and of course quite worrying. and of course russia has said this be russia has said this will be viewed as an escalation and would compensating would be met with compensating countermeasures, is never good. i ii good. i i!!! good. i i do think america's , >> i mean, i do think america's, uh, you know, coming century uh, you know, the coming century , the great, great fear is , the great, the great fear is china. obviously, i don't think russia is a bigger threat, but obviously lakenheath is not. thatis obviously lakenheath is not. that is a that is a russia . that is a that is a russia. >> is that a big threat? it's like i mean , that's a, you know, like i mean, that's a, you know, putting, putting american nukes and, and bombers and so on on british soil. >> that is in order to confront a russia threat. right? there's nothing in between here and russia. >> there's nowhere you would use that. use that. where are you going to it? i think i think going to use it? i think i think number one, number one, i think these militaries and i heard john bolton speak in person.
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right. and he ruled the day that russia gives up fighting , they russia gives up fighting, they want these, they want the war with russia. they love it. they remember it. people of a certain age like myself, we remember the cold war. listen, think cold war. hey, listen, i think the world made a lot more sense under the cold war. >> we all peace >> and we all had the peace dividend, the 90s. but that's when apart . if when everything fell apart. if you need to who you don't, you need to know who your schmitt. your enemy is. carl schmitt. yeah, your enemy is. carl schmitt. yeaand about the >> and the thing about the russians don't know russians is people don't know this about russians. they russians is people don't know this abinch russians. they russians is people don't know this abinch away ssians. they russians is people don't know this abinch away from ;. they russians is people don't know this abinch away from totaly are an inch away from total collapse as as an empire. >> well, i have this conversation all the time. they're winding down, i think. but, yeah, i'm just going to add that the warheads three that the warheads are three times of hiroshima, times the strength of hiroshima, so job done. so they should get the job done. >> three >> you know? i mean, it's three times didn't didn't even times you didn't didn't even need be any stronger. need them to be any stronger. >> still pitifully small. need them to be any stronger. >mean still pitifully small. need them to be any stronger. >mean , still pitifully small. need them to be any stronger. >mean , theyl pitifully small. need them to be any stronger. >mean , they have.1lly small. need them to be any stronger. >mean , they have.1lljit?nall. need them to be any stronger. >mean , they have.1lljit? oh,. yeah. >> hiroshima are pretty bad. >> hiroshima are pretty bad. >> 5000. uh, the, uh, >> like 5000. uh, the, uh, russia tested in the 50s was, uh . yeah, 5000. hiroshima was finally the daily mail. lewis. very quickly, very lewis the daily, daily mail . who is daily, the daily mail. who is that redhead on the front of the telegraph, though?
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>> who. it's >> just tell me who. it's probably you're probably a man. simon you're gonna gonna gonna be. you're gonna be in some trouble. >> just a bit blurry. i can't see it. >> okay, i'll find. >> okay, fine. i'll find. >> okay, fine. i'll find. >> it? well, >> who is it? well, well, you find was find out, maybe. nick, i was trying. >> w— >> look, it was too small. i think it's a man. >> this camilla. >> this is camilla. >> this is camilla. >> the death and >> this is the death and unhealthy. issue. camilla's unhealthy. uh issue. camilla's smile says king's smile that says the king's fine because the king's and the king's hospital king's in the hospital and, uh, he's, prostate he's, uh, he had his prostate operated on. because he's operated on. yeah, because he's probably an alcoholic on on, i don't know, it was taken out. i think they cut a little bit of it to move the thing, the truth is, the truth is, is that this is, the truth is, is that this is, is that the royal family is suffering from these diseases because they're probably vegans. they they're big drinkers. they're on plant based diets. >> everyone gets prostate trouble in their 70s. >> no, no, they not everybody does. they do only because they're on plant based diets . they're on plant based diets. and if you. yeah and if you get faux pas once in a shortly for part two, we'll be looking at judicial reviews, social housing and kemi badenoch landing one on justin trudeau's snout. >> we'll see you
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>> your listening to gb news radio . radio. >> and welcome back to headliners your first look at saturday's top stories with me, simon evans . with comedians simon evans. with comedians lewis schaefer and nick dixon. so lewis, we will start this section with the familiar phenomenon of a grieving mother unpersuaded by judicial process. well you know what? >> as a parent, you know, when your kid dies, you get upset about something like this. and this is happening up there in nottingham, basically nottingham, which is a basically a he killed three a crazy guy. and he killed three people in a very short thing. and he was . sentenced. he struck and he was. sentenced. he struck a plea deal and the parents are upset that he struck a plea deal upset that he struck a plea deal, which is manslaughter, when it should have been. you know, doesn't really know, that doesn't sound really like it like murder, even though it was murder. going to be in like murder, even though it was mu|for. going to be in like murder, even though it was mu|for a going to be in like murder, even though it was mu|for a relatively oing to be in like murder, even though it was mu|for a relatively short:o be in jail for a relatively short time, but probably not because the guy was sectioned many times. i don't think they're going to release him.
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>> no, exactly. i think i think there's a misunderstanding here that it's that he's got away with it. it's the nature restraint . the nature of the restraint. he's going to put into a he's going to be put into a secure hospital rather than a prison. i don't prison. but i don't think there's question that he's there's any question that he's going his. i mean, going to be using his. i mean, there some talk there was there's some talk about sentence about a certain kind of sentence whereby if he gets better, he's transferred to prison, which, to be honest, sounds kind of worse to me in a way. >> but i've heard there's some loophole whereby he starts loophole whereby if he starts taking and taking his medication again and gets be able to gets better, he might be able to just released . is that just be released. is that not true is it goes back true or is it, is it goes back to prison? true or is it, is it goes back to jlfson? true or is it, is it goes back to [if he? true or is it, is it goes back to [if he gets better, then he is >> if he gets better, then he is transferred secure transferred to a secure but i mean, just weird. mean, that's just weird. but anyway , i'm sure. mean, anyway, i'm not sure. i mean, i you certainly pro you know, i'm certainly pro strong sentences for murder and very against any kind very much against any kind of leniency shown knife leniency shown to knife crime. but just like another but this isn't just like another kind of drug. drug you know, crime killing this is this crime lord killing this is this is a guy is paranoid schizophrenic. >> no, but here's where you're all wrong. because we become these strange philosophers when it insanity and it comes to insanity and temporary insanity. right? this guy was a psychotic okay, temporary insanity. right? this guy he s a psychotic okay, temporary insanity. right? this guy he killedychotic okay, temporary insanity. right? this guy he killed other: okay, temporary insanity. right? this guy he killed other people. (ay, temporary insanity. right? this guy he killed other people. he but he killed other people. he planned okay? he planned it
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planned it, okay? he planned it very carefully. stockpile very carefully. he stockpile knives kills . knives and so on. then he kills. them. in the past, he's committed assault and bashed down people's doors and stuff. so, yeah . so i didn't he so, yeah. so i didn't think he was be normal when i was going to be normal when i heard he'd killed of heard he'd killed a lot of people. psychotic. people. so he's also psychotic. why off? why does that get him off? people say, wasn't in his people say, oh, it wasn't in his right or it wasn't him who right mind or it wasn't him who was never understood was it? i've never understood the question of compartmentalising the question of cojudge nentalising the question of cojudge nentmoral] the question of cojudge nentmoral rectitude of the question of cojbehaviour,1oral rectitude of the question of cojbehaviour, to al rectitude of the question of cojbehaviour, to planningie of the question of cojbehaviour, to planning how his behaviour, to planning how to it, isn't it? to get away with it, isn't it? >> how the crimes. >> or how to commit the crimes. right. saying right. but i'm not saying to me it's person. it's the same person. >> like, oh, he's >> it's like, oh, but he's psychotic. he psychotic. yes. and he is. >> he killed some people. if you drill into drill down into it philosophically, there's an argument just argument that we're all just a product brain chemistry argument that we're all just a prodour brain chemistry argument that we're all just a prodour background chemistry argument that we're all just a prodour background and nistry argument that we're all just a prodour background and oury and our background and our upbringing so on. you know, upbringing and so on. you know, the of idea. upbringing and so on. you know, the but of idea. upbringing and so on. you know, the but but of idea. upbringing and so on. you know, the but but this of idea. upbringing and so on. you know, the but but this guy, iea. upbringing and so on. you know, the but but this guy, the >> but this but this guy, the most factor here is most important factor here is that plea deal and that he copped a plea deal and that's the way that's the way these things work. >> work and they it >> it's work and they don't it doesn't please parents. sorry. do want do you want to. >> no, just with >> no, no, i just disagree with that. never that. but i just never understood about. oh, understood this thing about. oh, you yourself. just you weren't yourself. it's just a strange, philosophical get out clause, extent, clause, to some extent, an arbitrary very interesting clause, to some extent, an arithe ry very interesting clause, to some extent, an arithe telegraph:eresting clause, to some extent, an arithe telegraph about1g gets in the telegraph about who gets to story
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to decide what kind of story should telegraph . should be in the telegraph. >> point. yeah, it's >> oh good point. yeah, it's two thirds want on thirds of public want ban on foreign british foreign states owning british newspapers. a survey of more newspapers. so a survey of more than 2000 people found 69% think that overseas governments should be law owning be prevented by law from owning media newspapers media outlets such as newspapers . this sheikh . and, of course, this sheikh mansour wants to own. he has this red bird , i am i and he this red bird, i am i and he wants to own 75, 75% funded by this sheikh in the uae . this sheikh in the uae. >> vice president wants to buy the telegraph, wants to buy the telegraph. >> and there's quite a lot of funny here. i mean, one funny things here. i mean, one thing they're saying thing is that they're saying that you shouldn't you shouldn't be able to have them in countries have free countries that don't have free elections a free press. elections and a free press. and it's ofcom that are investigating of investigating this, which of course as lewis out, course, as lewis will point out, renders press not free. so renders our press not free. so that's a kind of strange irony, but in general, it's obviously a badidea but in general, it's obviously a bad idea have people in uae bad idea to have people in uae owning the telegraph. like bad idea to have people in uae orfootball.e telegraph. like bad idea to have people in uae orfootball. andzgraph. like bad idea to have people in uae orfootball. andzgraph. one a football. and then once one person have to have person does it, you have to have all them owned by the saudis all of them owned by the saudis or uae something, you or uae or something, because you can't afford that has been extraordinarily can't compete the country, the football in this country, isn't the football in this country, isn'in the last few years, >> in the last few years, everyone just seems to be quite comfortable can't comfortable with it. but i can't say be absolutely
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say that i am to be absolutely honest, pretty much every top flight football club in this country of country now is owned by sort of major, money major, you know, foreign money and dirty money. >> but it's and as in this situation, you like it, situation, if you don't like it, you it. who's you don't don't watch it. who's who's the question who's this is the question who's going is an going to decide what is an important newspaper here that needs the interference of the state to tell them what's there? >> if, let's say, well, it's the interference of the state to prevent another state appearing, interference of the state to preveit? another state appearing, isn't it? >> w- e“- >> yeah, but it's not interfering because say, interfering because let's say, let's horrible country, let's say some horrible country, like, whatever that is. abu dhabi this, this dhabi buys this, buys this telegraph . all we have to do is telegraph. all we have to do is not is know they can influence the national conversation though. >> they can. of course you can't say i'm not going to read it. and the conservative party obviously is. yeah. because stirred by it. >> no because what that's >> no because that's what that's you very old attitude you have a very old attitude towards this. it's the same attitude ofcom we attitude that ofcom has is we have generate balance. we have to generate balance. we can't people can't let the people decide themselves . themselves. >> well, they're not the people, are if if are they? this is the if you if you states owning like and you have states owning like and the is historically the telegraph is historically i mean i these are mean i know these are diminishing legacy media and what still a what have you, but it's still a significant what have you, but it's still a
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sig|iticant what have you, but it's still a sig|it isint what have you, but it's still a sig|it is it is saying it's not. >> it is it is saying it's not. >> it is it is saying it's not. >> it's not the free market that lewis is claiming. it's not the free market, it's the free. sometimes have regulate sometimes you have to regulate monopolies, sometimes you have to regulate m4regulate, sometimes you have to regulate m> the press, murdoch has >> in the press, murdoch has owned for the last. owned most of it for the last. for life. that's for my adult life. well, that's extraordinarily disproportionate i >> -- >> that's 5mm >> that's that's something else . >> that's that's something else. >> that's that's something else. >> and they're getting by it with management structure. >> even something >> it's not even something else. let there's enough there's enough for everybody. >> no, i'm just going to say they're getting round. it's quite round they're getting round. it's qlwith round they're getting round. it's qlwith the round they're getting round. it's qlwith the an»und it with this. the having an extra tier the proposed chain extra tier in the proposed chain of ownership. so you have this limited have limited partnership. you have this we've this passive partner. we've all probably those. probably had one of those. we can't how can't do anything. so that's how they they're they yeah that's how they're getting away with but it's getting away with it. but it's just of trickery just all sort of trickery really. shouldn't be allowed really. it shouldn't be allowed to cloak of mirrors. absolutely. >> cloak of mirrors. absolutely. or is smoke mirrors. or is it smoke and mirrors. cloak or is it smoke and mirrors. clo cloak dagger. and >> cloak and dagger. smoke and mirrors. >> b have smoke >> but you could have smoke and smoke fake now, smoke and fake guardian. now, lewis apparently deserve lewis, apparently we all deserve safe housing. but do we all deserve free housing? that's the question, isn't it? >> i tell you what's >> well, i tell you what's what's is this what's behind this. this is this is plans give uk citizens is plans to give uk citizens prime rmt for social housing. would quote unquote, increase
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homelessness . yes. and this is homelessness. yes. and this is from a letter that that 10 or 12, uh , organisations who are 12, uh, organisations who are all leftwing, they're all association, they're all councils who want to build councils who want to build council houses . they're council houses. they're basically they basically what they're saying is we want to have free rein to build as much as we can and give it to whoever we want to have. and if and if you're and if you live in this country , you shouldn't expect to country, you shouldn't expect to get . something country, you shouldn't expect to get. something on your. >> i mean, their point is that i think across the whole country, it's still the majority of social held significant, like about 90% of social housing is occupied yeah, occupied by uh, like, yeah, you know, although they occupied by uh, like, yeah, you know, course although they occupied by uh, like, yeah, you know, course seconngh they occupied by uh, like, yeah, you know, course second on they occupied by uh, like, yeah, you know, course second or third may of course be second or third generation immigrants. in generation immigrants. but in central it's slightly central london it's a slightly different right . and central london it's a slightly diffeisnt right . and central london it's a slightly diffeisnt world'sight . and central london it's a slightly diffeisnt world's mostand this is the world's most valuable estate. valuable real estate. >> i because i, >> and these and i because i, because i am totally involved in this i know exactly what's this and i know exactly what's going the going on. and i have fought the council building . council from building. everywhere and destroying civic is that is that they want to be able to build wherever they want
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to build. they want to be able to build. they want to be able to it to whoever they want to give it to whoever they want to give it to whoever they want to don't even to build it. they don't even care like everybody. >> they want power. nick, everybody. >> 'must want power. nick, everybody. >> 'must havevant power. nick, everybody. >> 'must havevaistronger. nick, you must have a strong view about this. you must have a strong view abowell, s. mean, i have strong >> well, i mean, i have a strong views social these views on social housing. these strange where strange allocations where we have to have a certain percentage housing, percentage of social housing, everything percentage of social housing, eve really] percentage of social housing, eve really in favour of. it not really in favour of. it sounds tory, but if we are sounds very tory, but if we are going it, every going to have it, yes, every ointment a handful ointment must have a handful of flies. go. ointment must have a handful of flieyou go. ointment must have a handful of flieyou can't go. ointment must have a handful of flieyou can't sello. ointment must have a handful of flieyou can't sell an appointment >> you can't sell an appointment without >> you can't sell an appointment witithat's whenever i said. >> you can't sell an appointment witi'but's whenever i said. >> you can't sell an appointment witi'but every. whenever i said. >> you can't sell an appointment witi'but every. butanever i said. >> you can't sell an appointment witi'but every. but ifever i said. >> you can't sell an appointment witi'but every. but if we' i said. >> you can't sell an appointment witi'but every. but if we are aid. but but every. but if we are going to have it of course. yeah. should yeah. british people should have priority. why not? i mean, it says prompted says here it's prompted anger from government from some in the government who say it could fuel further support right. great >> i'll be honest with if >> i'll be honest with you. if you had a handful of silver bullets, would the, bullets, that would help the, uh, particular uh, the nation and in particular municipal organisations to rebalance their budgets. the first and foremost would be first and foremost one would be no zone 1 or 2 no social housing in zone 1 or 2 in london. yeah. get them all out. people out. make the most make people pay out. make the most make people pay in the like most pay for living in the like most desirable territory in desirable commuter territory in the entire, you know, most of the entire, you know, most of the europe, let alone i would go a step further, you know, social housing. >> the government should not be in the estate business. in the real estate business. they're competent landlords, they're in competent landlords,
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they're landlords. you can they're slum landlords. you can use this. and i live and i live in social housing and it's not bad. but but you don't trust you. >> technically, it's a hostel. >> technically, it's a hostel. >> it's not ideal, you >> it's not ideal, but you should to up. you should use it to level up. you should use it to level up. you should make people go and live. no, the government. >> the actual mates >> what about the actual mates part? meat part? what about the meat of this? agree uk this? do we agree that uk citizens have priority? citizens should have priority? i mean, who else in london? >> going to have >> yeah. if you're going to have social they absolutely social housing, they absolutely should um should be. yeah, yeah. and um telegraph nick, the un telegraph again now nick, the un agency palestinian refugees agency for palestinian refugees seems to have a few bad apples . seems to have a few bad apples. >> yeah, you could say that. so un employees sacked for alleged involvement attack involvement in hamas attack on israel. the un has israel. so now the un has basically failed to condemn to the point, i believe, where the uk that uk voted against that un ceasefire resolution because we felt that hadn't adequately felt that it hadn't adequately made that point. so they've been very much the palestine side. very much on the palestine side. i believe seems that to i believe. it seems like that to me. and now there's some grim me. and so now there's some grim irony the fact that there, as me. and so now there's some grim iron'say, the fact that there, as me. and so now there's some grim iron'say, agency that there, as me. and so now there's some grim iron'say, agency for|t there, as me. and so now there's some grim iron'say, agency for palestinian you say, agency for palestinian refugees, has had these 12 refugees, unrwa has had these 12 employees who were found in on telegram chats to be wishing for victory for the hamas heroes , as
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victory for the hamas heroes, as they call them, and martyrs . so they call them, and martyrs. so it's absolutely shocking. now, to be fair, they have sacked them. but i mean , that's the them. but i mean, that's the least you could do, really. so the is that the is the suspicion is that the un is kind of, uh, a little bit tilted in that direction, isn't it? >> whole, you say, >> on the whole, would you say, luis, it's not that even they've co—opted the un, whatever co—opted it is the un, whatever it's the unrwa that is, it's called, the unrwa that is, is geared into entirely from what i know for the palestinian situation, which has been horrible, but it's not like it's like they handle refugees anywhere else. >> it's only they only do it there. so they didn't handle refugees from syria or. no, refugees for from syria or. no, no, handled palestinians no, they handled palestinians who are having problems there. and far as i you could, and as far as i know, you could, you could, you go you could, you could go on twitter you could tell me twitter and you could tell me whether wrong. but truth whether i'm wrong. but the truth is the truth. is here is here is the truth. the truth is this, that they that they're fully owned up organisation . organisation. >> louis the express now kemi badenoch versus just in trudeau. hard to imagine any counter better suited to a gb news pay per view bout .
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per view bout. >> yeah well, because , uh, >> yeah well, because, uh, because what's team world team? well it is, it is the britain trying to, uh, trying to claw back a little bit of tray that they lost with europe and canada is a major trading partner, right. they they trade right. it is. they they trade like they trade like like 21. i think they trade like $20 billion, £20 billion a year. there's a lot of stuff. yeah, yeah, it's a lot of stuff. and it's mostly cars and cheese and beef and uh , they're negotiating i >>i -- >> i like, i emma >> i like, i like buying, um, cheese in canada. do you know why i've been i've been to montreal. i've been to vancouver and toronto. do why? and toronto. do you know why? why? because can order the why? because you can order the cheese and ounces in cheese in pounds and ounces in french , which means we won. french, which means we won. >> exactly. >> exactly. >> the french forced to adopt in quebec . but you. they are forced quebec. but you. they are forced to adopt the imperial scheme. >> but that's if you consider those people french . those people french. >> well disagreement. >> well disagreement. >> close your eyes and fantasise. >> there's a disagreement over meat and cheese. doesn't it sound like an argument with lewis schaffer? is what we lewis schaffer? this is what we disagree it is, isn't it hard to
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>> well, it is, isn't it hard to the last point on this isn't it hard trade with communist hard to trade with communist countries? good question. >> that is certainly the angle that she should be pushing. i'm sure these talks will resume at some point, but no hormones in beef >> so i'm with the i'm with the british on this. cool. >> that's it for part two and part three. we have botched executions. portland dials back the woke and the bbc loses the heavenly warrant. we'll see you in a couple
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> and welcome back to headliners so sweet home alabama. now, nick. no, not so sweet for convicted killers by the sound of it in the guardian. >> indeed, alabama condemned for nitrogen execution when they nitrogen gas execution when they intended to torture him is a quote there. so this is kenneth eugene smith. you've probably heard about this. they killed him nitrogen hypoxia. took him with nitrogen hypoxia. took about minutes. he was about 22 minutes. he was twitching. pretty twitching. it was pretty gruesome. called gruesome. it was called experimental. so on. and you
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experimental. and so on. and you think this is strange? the guardian is supporting a white man for once, and it's because he's murderer. can he's a murderer. and so they can get it get back on board because it takes three. the takes them until page three. the 18th paragraph, to point out that actually murder that he did actually murder a woman 1988. know, woman in 1988. so, you know, it's sympathetic woman in 1988. so, you know, it's but sympathetic woman in 1988. so, you know, it's but let'spathetic woman in 1988. so, you know, it's but let's just atic portrait, but let's just all keep that in mind. >> but question, though, >> but the question, though, of people and put people who are killed and put onto in america, onto death row in america, i mean , obviously spend mean, obviously they spend an awful death row awful long time on death row anyway. it seems to me anyway. and it seems to me a very inefficient very sort of inefficient system. and quite sure they have and i'm not quite sure they have the of they the confidence of it, but they usually like mass killers, horrific killers. this guy's a paid was paid a small paid assassin, was paid a small amount by a or amount of money by a judge or something . amount of money by a judge or son no,ing . paid amount of money by a judge or sonno,ing . paid a amount of money by a judge or son no,ing . paid a thousand. >> no, he's paid a thousand. yeah, $1,000. allegedly to yeah, paid $1,000. allegedly to kill guy's wife. yes it's a kill this guy's wife. yes it's a strange one. my problem with it is this . the jury voted 11 to is this. the jury voted 11 to 1 to give him life, not to give him death. but he was overruled. it's called judicial override. doesn't happen anymore. override by or overridden, by a judge or overridden, whatever. so that i don't like that. because i think a jury should i'm should decide in general, i'm pro—death because the pro—death penalty because the i defer to the wisdom of the british people in this country who want the death penalty for child serial murder,
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child murder, serial murder, terrorist this terrorist murder. however, this wasn't exactly. wasn't that so? exactly. >> conversation on >> it's a huge conversation on the penalty. but, i mean, the death penalty. but, i mean, i grant them you know, the i grant them the, you know, the right have that in there in right to have that in there in their legislature. what you their legislature. what do you think, have, think, louis, should they have, like, next like, introduced the next sperimentale method? it hardly seems it? sperimentale method? it hardly seewell, it? sperimentale method? it hardly seewell, i it? sperimentale method? it hardly seewell, i think it? sperimentale method? it hardly seewell, i think they it? sperimentale method? it hardly seewell, i think they need to >> well, i think they need to maybe on maybe take public votes on whether people, whether they should kill people, because, mean, i'm against because, i mean, i'm against state believe it not. state murder, believe it or not. you , i mean, do think you know, i mean, i do think people should be put to death. i am, you know , me. missed am, you know, me. i missed a kill, kill. but i think kill, kill, kill. but i think but not by the state, by you, not by the state, but i think if you're going to kill somebody, the alabama have you're going to kill somebody, tivote. alabama have you're going to kill somebody, tivote. maybe abama have you're going to kill somebody, tivote. maybe itiama have you're going to kill somebody, tivote. maybe it has) have you're going to kill somebody, tivote. maybe it has) be have you're going to kill somebody, tivote. maybe it has) be 66.ave a vote. maybe it has to be 66. well, all i think is if you're going to kill people, there are tried and. tried and tested and. >> well proven methods. >> well, well proven methods. i don't the what don't understand what the what the to introduce the motivation was to introduce 24 minutes of torturing the guy. >> big deal. >> big deal. >> there was they find it hard to get some of the ingredients. i think some of the supplies or something to do it other so something to do it other way. so they they also tried they tried to. they also tried to do a lethal injection in november didn't to do a lethal injection in noversozr didn't to do a lethal injection in noversozr couldn't didn't to do a lethal injection in noversozr couldn'tfind|'t work, so they couldn't find a vein. the vein. you know, by the guillotine good old
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guillotine and good old guillotine and good old guillotine the single guillotine is the single most effective doing, effective way of doing, you know, about a know, it works. what about a good fashioned english? >> is pretty good. >> hanging is pretty good. >> hanging is pretty good. >> joe off the >> pushing billy joe off the tallahatchie bridge. that wasn't that tallahatchie bridge. that wasn't tha that bag . i read the >> that was a bag. i read the guillotine is a bit french. >> is my only problem staying stateside. >> louis and encouraging developments from the west coast, of woke. this is coast, home of woke. this is portland, oregon. yes >> amazing. really. it's an oregon county. officials dismantle a $1 million a year diversity office and now say they want to focus on merit and not to radicalise the workplace. and this is in oregon, which is pronounced oregon , not oregon. pronounced oregon, not oregon. and there. it's and i've been there. it's a fantastic state. this is fantastic state. and this is clackamas county. and they've decided in this county, which is right to next portland, you know, it's a i don't know how quickly things change there. >> i went down the west coast once 20 years ago and oregon in inland a little bit . it's very inland a little bit. it's very it's like the huge forest. right. they used to do the logging there and you can go to these and they these bars and they have photographs with photographs on the wall with people sitting on vast stumps
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and quite masculine and old fashioned. yet fashioned. yeah. and yet portland itself, i don't know whether enclave whether it's is like an enclave is like more woke than san francisco any of them, isn't francisco or any of them, isn't it? like the well, it? it's like the most. well, they used to this, they used they used to say this, they used to i was there , to when i, when i was there, there they used to say, don't khalife fornicate . khalife fornicate. >> yeah. oregon because they didn't they didn't like it. and eventually it did. all those people moved from portland. people moved up from portland. portland oregon is an amazing state as all as all america. it's so much better than england. >> yeah, i've actually been to portland to do a comedy festival of it's of all things. but yeah, it's amazing. happen in amazing. this would happen in oregon. you because it's oregon. you think because it's so is where dei so woke. but this is where dei is in trouble. and i wrote a piece about this. the other day. it's in trouble because had it's in trouble because you had price cooper and they price waterhouse cooper and they had rewrite one their had to rewrite one of their internships, which hadn't allowed basically , allowed white people basically, they had to that. you they had to change that. you have ackman , who's a lefty, have bill ackman, who's a lefty, but now so against dei he but he's now so against dei he calls it inherently racist and illegal. and he's funding dean phillips democrat candidate. phillips a democrat candidate. he's and he's giving him $1 million and mysteriously , all mention of dei mysteriously, all mention of dei has disappeared from phillips's
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website at the same time. so you now see on the left, they are even tiring of it. elon musk , of even tiring of it. elon musk, of course, is against it. mark cuban defended it but got completely musk on x completely spanked by musk on x because he's musk said him, because he's musk said to him, well, we see a short well, when can we see a short asian dallas asian woman in the dallas mavericks? because it's an absurd the whole absurd proposition. the whole thing . and now people. and it's thing. and now people. and it's costly. him a million thing. and now people. and it's costly. so him a million thing. and now people. and it's costly. so they're1im a million thing. and now people. and it's costly. so they're finallynillion a year. so they're finally getting rid of it was, uh, radicalised by the claudine gay story i think, wasn't it? >> harvard. and he's a big funder of the, uh, ivy league universities . i think they went universities. i think they went after wife or something as after his wife or something as well. know exactly well. i don't know exactly what the she the sequence of events, but she she of cheating, she was accused of cheating, just like, uh , claudine. just like, uh, claudine. >> plagiarism. but what makes this what this one plagiarism? what makes this one plagiarism? what makes this the most interesting this story the most interesting thing is the guy who leading thing is the guy who was leading the charge in clackamas county is a guy named ben west. and he's a republican, but he's a gay nurse . he's he's a republican, but he's a gay nurse. he's a he's a republican, but he's a gay nurse . he's a married to he's a republican, but he's a gay nurse. he's a married to a man, and he has a black child . man, and he has a black child. there's nothing that doesn't
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surprise me in the least, any of the most powerful and influential republican , peter thiel. >> right. >> right. >> he's an oregon republican. you know what i mean ? you know what i mean? >> as they say in yellowstone, anyway . telegraph. now, nick, it anyway. telegraph. now, nick, it seems there is no mention of the bbc the testament . bbc in the old testament. >> after all, no bbc has no god given exist, says tory given right to exist, says tory chairman richard holden. and he was interviewed about it and he says, yeah, i think there is a broad establishment says, yeah, i think there is a broad the .tablishment says, yeah, i think there is a broad the .tablisyeahit says, yeah, i think there is a broad the .tablisyeah that element to the bbc. yeah that skews they look at skews the way they look at some things and, so on. all very things and, and so on. all very straightforward stuff. and he says to understand that says it needs to understand that the country, that there to the country, that it's there to serve kind of stuff serve all the kind of stuff we all about the bbc, this all know about the bbc, this strange thing that could strange thing that they could be. great people strange thing that they could be. the great people strange thing that they could be. the scenes,great people strange thing that they could be. the scenes, great people . behind the scenes, great people. but, for some but, but, but, but for some reason there's this ridiculous liberal bias. they can't get rid of and it's destroying liberal bias. they can't get rid of (it's it's destroying liberal bias. they can't get rid of (it's interestinging liberal bias. they can't get rid of (it's interesting how a lot of >> it's interesting how a lot of people feel it in their bones. as say about as stephen fry would say about brexit being, we in brexit being, we feel it in our bones. there guy who bones. but there was a guy who wasn't his name, uh, tory wasn't his name, the, uh, tory minister. was who was he? he minister. who was who was he? he was to burley on sky was talking to kay burley on sky , and he the bbc news is , and he said the bbc news is terribly biased. and said, terribly biased. and she said,
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give he said, give me an example. he said, well, i listen to news quiz well, i listen to the news quiz last and it was, you last last night. and it was, you know, this of know, there was this tirade of abuse against the sukh. well, that's a against simon evans. >> there i mean, there is bias. >> think on radio, radio >> i think on on radio, radio four but that isn't >> i think on on radio, radio four for but that isn't >> i think on on radio, radio four for them that isn't >> i think on on radio, radio four for them to at isn't >> i think on on radio, radio four for them to complain. enough for them to complain. they've actually get they've got to actually get some. to nail down some. they've got to nail down some. they've got to nail down some i had a ton the some examples. i had a ton the other day. >> got the brexit >> you've got the brexit coverage, got the coverage, you've got the lockdown got lockdown coverage, you've got the woman laughing about boris johnson emily johnson going. you've got emily maitlis slash entire maitlis monologue slash entire career. he could have mary career. i can he could have mary hugh or something. >> his name was i can't remember but he completely but he was, he was completely unable to give a plausible example. happened the other example. i happened the other day to frazer. day to lucy frazer. >> think need to be, even >> i think they need to be, even if no examples. >> i think they need to be, even if there's no examples. >> i think they need to be, even if there's no place ples. >> i think they need to be, even if there's no place fors. >> i think they need to be, even if there's no place for a state >> there's no place for a state broadcaster a world where broadcaster in a world where there's lots of different outlets . outlets. >> would you it was too centralised? >> i would say it's it is centralised at. and here's lucy frazer, met lovely woman frazer, who i met a lovely woman and is not sufficient and she says is not sufficient impartiality. screw impartial reality. this misses the point . reality. this misses the point. the point is they're owned by the state or they're a tool of the state or they're a tool of the state. it takes our money
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against our . will it's theft. against our. will it's theft. >> well, that's the whole of tax. i personally yes, that's what tax is on the whole, you know bbc over the course of know, the bbc over the course of his lifetime. but it it is in his lifetime. but it is it is in like a lot of these institutions , it is doing exactly what its enemies would hope it would do in to order continue the argument for its abolition. >> and just quickly for louis, because american, that the, because he's american, that the, the impartiality is tied to the fact we're expected to fact that we we're expected to pay fact that we we're expected to pay library. what makes pay library. that's what makes it responsibility to it their responsibility to represent because they're represent us because they're extracting the licence fee. otherwise wouldn't matter extracting the licence fee. othervimpartiality.n't matter about impartiality. >> when had tv >> that's when they had one tv channel there's channel and now there's a million channels. there's million tv channels. there's a million tv channels. there's a million of news and million sources of news and nothing on. >> yeah, very encouraging news about bowel cancer. now in the sun . louis, uh, nick about bowel cancer. now in the sun. louis, uh, nick is going to sit this one out, but i want to hear your views. >> well, it's this is this is a lie. this is in the sun and the sun is owned by news corp. and news corp owns the times. and these people just they love drugs what and not drugs and what they and it's not even it's gecko. even a vaccine. it's gecko. >> thought that news corp
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even a vaccine. it's gecko. >> the thought that news corp even a vaccine. it's gecko. >> the answer that news corp even a vaccine. it's gecko. >> the answer and news corp even a vaccine. it's gecko. >> the answer and the ns corp even a vaccine. it's gecko. >> the answer and the bbch’p even a vaccine. it's gecko. >> the answer and the bbc was was the answer and the bbc was the problem. >> i would have a news >> i would rather have a news corp state owned corp than the state owned propaganda network. >> would, but essentially >> yes, i would, but essentially you truth you just like to know the truth automatically having automatically without having to refer to it. >> i would referto it. >> no, no, i would like to have an open debate. but here an open an open debate. but here this is game changing. bowel cancer vaccine could be available the nhs and just two years. but this is not a vaccine because this is this is something that they give to patients before surgery. so they have bowel cancer. yeah okay. so they're already sick. >> so like a vaccine you take as a child. >> no it's very similar to that that bogus vaccine they gave people for covid. they used to wear vaccine now as a kind of catch all for anything that's injected. >> don't they just a bit odd. i know what you mean. yeah, is. know what you mean. yeah, it is. how supposed how are you supposed to be. >> it is a bit a vaccine is a very particular mechanism whereby production very particular mechanism whereby with production very particular mechanism whereby with a. production of antibodies with a. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> because said >> just because you've said i'll say have address say this one, i have to address it. people think i'm dying if you at that. you just leave it at that. i only just don't look these only just don't look at these because i've because my because i've got, because my extreme and the extreme health anxiety and the producers hurt producers put them in to hurt me because don't i
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because they know i don't like i can this. can look at this. >> so you need to worry can look at this. >> so bowel need to worry can look at this. >> so bowel cancer. 1d to worry can look at this. >> so bowel cancer. just worry can look at this. >> so bowel cancer. just have! about bowel cancer. just have an all and you'll fine. >> yes. that is, believe that >> yes. that is, i believe that completely. and not only that, like say you do get like let's say you do get cancen like let's say you do get cancer. out there cancer. anybody out there with cancer? seefried y cancer? thomas seefried s e y f r okay. r i e d okay. >> it says have no knowledge >> it says i have no knowledge about that. we have. >> it says i have no knowledge abowell,)t. we have. >> it says i have no knowledge abowell, you we have. >> it says i have no knowledge abowell, you came have. >> it says i have no knowledge abowell, you can lookve. >> it says i have no knowledge abowell, you can look ve up. >> well, you can look it up. >> well, you can look it up. >> have all means it >> well, you can look it up. >> but�*nave all means it >> well, you can look it up. >> but i'm�* all means it >> well, you can look it up. >> but i'm thomasneans it >> well, you can look it up. >> but i'm thomas seefried it up. but i'm thomas seefried further with that thomas seefried . quackery. interesting seefried. quackery. interesting scenario being laid out by former british nato commander in the mail, nick, this is interesting to those of us in our 50s at least. >> yeah, this is former british nato commander. calls for nation to the to start thinking the unthinkable and reconsider conscription army chief conscription after army chief says brits should be equipped to fight war against russia. fight in a war against russia. so course, general so we of course, we saw general sir sanders say that the sir patrick sanders say that the other day. now he's to other day. now he's added to this, well, we this, saying, well, maybe we could national could have mandatory national service, which is quite different from the two scenarios. is, you think scenarios. one is, you think national of 18 year national service of the 18 year olds slovenly . we olds stop being so slovenly. we all go, fine. yeah. conscripting me into you're like, hang me into a war. you're like, hang on, a different thing. on, that's a different thing. >> were two >> there were always two answers, like answers, two, two. uh, like criteria, like benefits. i suppose , for national service
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suppose, for national service and the one for of my and the one for most of my lifetime has exactly what lifetime has been exactly what you layabouts get, you say. layabouts get, you know, shipshape know, brushed up and shipshape and shouted they learn and shouted at, and they learn to straight and set to sit up straight and set an alarm clock and on. but the alarm clock and so on. but the other one that you have kind other one is that you have kind of pre battle hardened individuals ready so that if there is a sudden outbreak of war, conscription doesn't go from 0 to 60. in like two weeks, you've basically you've already been drilled. it's kind of familiar you get called up familiar when you get called up again. familiar when you get called up agathat's that's good >> that's a that's a good reasons. but the they're reasons. but the reason they're giving . russia giving is totally wrong. russia is threat to country . is not a threat to this country. see russia is on the way out . see russia is on the way out. they've they're popular. they've had demographic collapse . had demographic collapse. >> elle edwards got that. >> elle edwards got that. >> okay. but everybody's got that. but they do. they they've lost all these troops in the ukraine having ukraine which they're having trouble actually defending. but they've other they've got a million other borders. in the north borders. finland in the north caucasus in the south, certainly no threat to our territory . no threat to our territory. >> i suppose it's the nato proposition, but proposition, isn't it? but i personally to agree with personally tend to agree with you. interests me about you. but what interests me about this, it this, you may have covered it before that is before on the show, is that is this that no one wants
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this the fact that no one wants to army, even in to sign up for the army, even in theory, the left doesn't theory, because the left doesn't want because they're like, theory, because the left doesn't want we because they're like, theory, because the left doesn't want we becaulike 1ey're like, theory, because the left doesn't want we becau like 1ey'rcountry well, we don't like the country where of or where citizens of europe or where citizens of europe or where immigrants, where citizens of europe or where it immigrants, where citizens of europe or where it is,nmigrants, where citizens of europe or where it is,nmigthe ts, whatever it is, and the right doesn't because it's doesn't want to because it's like because captured like because he's been captured by the left. >> yeah. the whole is >> yeah. the whole country is captured mass captured by the left. mass immigration and all immigration is so on and all that kind stuff. and that kind of stuff. and raf won't there was won't take white men. there was this leaked. you this thing leaked. i'm sure you saw it from 2017, where it was like for extreme like looking out for extreme indicators like looking out for extreme indicaitrs from the army. some wing. it was from the army. some of were patriotism one of them were patriotism was one of them were patriotism was one of them were patriotism was one of them calling, istan of them calling, putting istan after , and one of after tower names, and one of them was, uh, making inaccurate generalisations about the left or so if you said or government. so if you said the of the government are the left of the government are good, that would be an inaccurate you inaccurate generalisation. you wouldn't fit for the army. wouldn't be fit for the army. >> insane having any kind wouldn't be fit for the army. >>remotelyne having any kind wouldn't be fit for the army. >>remotelyne hawingany kind political. >> that's people would >> that's the people that would have army. have gone into the army. the patriots. absolutely. have gone into the army. the pat that's absolutely. have gone into the army. the patthat's forysolutely. have gone into the army. the pat that's for parttely. have gone into the army. the pat that's for part three. and >> that's it for part three. and the section, have wacko the final section, we have wacko russian wacko british russian scientist, wacko british boffins core boffins and the absolute core science immortality. stick science of immortality. stick around. this is when it gets fancy in
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welcome back to headliners we have the mirror now, lewis. shocking news of religious persecution in mother russia. >> uh, could be religious persecution. top russian scientist fired after claiming human beings can live for up to 900 years. and and this is a guy who was head of the geneticist general genetics institute at, uh, of the russian academy of science. he was a big shot, and he said that people used to live to 900 years and they don't live now that long. and i think a lot of this and there's also they said that anybody who died , uh, said that anybody who died, uh, the reason they died was because god was punishing them for sin. so it's a bit wacky. it's not wacky. >> that's everyone's view that used to be in the old testament. >> there are people who live that long. i don't know if he's >> there are people who live tijewong. i don't know if he's >> there are people who live tijew or]. i don't know if he's >> there are people who live tijew or ifi don't know if he's >> there are people who live tijew or if he's|'t know if he's >> there are people who live tijew or if he's anznow if he's >> there are people who live tijew or if he's an orthodoxe's a jew or if he's an orthodox russian thing, but the, um, the, the old testament is full of it. and that is the story. and as he says, generations, the says, seven generations, the sins are visited upon the. >> think about as >> yeah, well, think about it as well, methuselah.
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>> yeah, well, think about it as well, me didn'tah. >> yeah, well, think about it as well, me didn't mention they >> they didn't mention they didn't mutations. >> they didn't mention they did methuselah mutations. >> they didn't mention they did methuselah mutationsfamously , >> methuselah was 969, famously, noah was 950. adam was 930. then everything went wrong . you know, everything went wrong. you know, he had the garden. you had cain. then you era of the then you had the era of the nephilim increasing corruption then you had the era of the nephiliearth,'easing corruption then you had the era of the nephiliearth,'easingled ruption then you had the era of the nephiliearth,'easingled god on then you had the era of the nephiliearth,'easingled god to on the earth, which led god to flood everything. that's what flood everything. so that's what he's the fall he's talking about. the fall into sins into decay because of the sins of this just everyone of people. this is just everyone used now it's used to think this is now it's presented used to think this is now it's pre ianted used to think this is now it's pre i suppose the thing is, is he >> i suppose the thing is, is he sort of he privately, like, sort of does he privately, like, cherish beliefs and keep cherish these beliefs and keep some leather editions some old leather bound editions of shelf to of the bible on his shelf to consult pride , you consult in times of pride, you know, difficulty? or is he is he weaving them into the text as he gives a powerpoint presentation at international genetics at the international genetics society? his society? well, he says it's his personal society? well, he says it's his per he al society? well, he says it's his per he says no way is >> he says he in no way is the position church the position of the church or the academy sciences , because academy of sciences, because it's like rees—mogg, isn't it? >> know, some >> who? um, you know, some people was , uh, his people felt was, uh, his catholic at odds with catholic views were at odds with liberal he never liberal democracy, but he never let with his, uh, let them interfere with his, uh, actual voting in house of commons and so on. >> yeah. that's true. he's basically saying sin in basically saying sin gets in the genes. you healthy genes. if you want healthy offspring, develop bad offspring, don't develop bad habits, into habits, don't fall into sin. it's advice. the it's good. good advice. by the way, say also in
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way, can i just say also in a serious scientific thing as well? aubrey de grey has said that the first person born has already been born. live to already been born. he'll live to already been born. he'll live to a there are serious a thousand. so there are serious scientists saying that. >> mean, there is a >> i think i mean, there is a it's exactly it's a yeah, it's not exactly mainstream, but there is certainly the possibility that we be some, to some extent we may be some, to some extent degraded. of course, louis will say that if you if you go on to the diet, eat meat. the all meat diet, eat meat. >> that thing? terminal >> what's that thing? terminal escape velocity. what is that the where where escape velocity. what is that the where whe two different >> where there are two different velocities. is velocities. escape velocity is the one you need to get away from the pull the from the gravity pull of the earth. terminal velocity is earth. and terminal velocity is the highest speed. >> mean , then >> what's the one? i mean, then the one. what's the one? that means um. where means that, um. where where solving quicker than solving ageing quicker than we're the rate of. you we're outpacing the rate of. you know, i heard that one. >> you never die. yeah. >> you never die. yeah. >> we'll never die because we're we're increasing our life expectancy than expectancy each year faster than than. i can't than. it's getting us. i can't remember it. it's remember the name of it. it's something something. remember the name of it. it's somethingname something. remember the name of it. it's somethingname slightly1ething. remember the name of it. it's somethingname slightly wrong. i've got a name slightly wrong. someone someone tweeting someone someone will be tweeting angrily . it exists. >> yeah. okay. hopefully >> yeah. okay. well, hopefully we can that. we can get that. >> i say ? yeah. uh, and i'm >> can i say? yeah. uh, and i'm going to go a limb here. going to go out on a limb here. i think i think possible ,
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i think i think it is possible, you know, 900 years. it is possible . first of all, we don't possible. first of all, we don't know how many revolutions . as know how many revolutions. as the earth spins around , spin the earth spins around, spin around the sun, we don't know how many , how many how how many, how many days, how fast the earth was moving. so we don't what a year is. oh, don't know what a year is. oh, you think possibly people live for years because the earth for 900 years because the earth was that much was going around that much quicker a lot of quicker? yeah. and a lot of times people about their quicker? yeah. and a lot of timesbecause about their quicker? yeah. and a lot of timesbecause twanted eir get quicker? yeah. and a lot of timyofecause twanted eir get quicker? yeah. and a lot of timyof it.ause twanted eir get quicker? yeah. and a lot of timyof it. they wanted eirget quicker? yeah. and a lot of timyof it. they wanted1ted eir get quicker? yeah. and a lot of timyof it. they wanted1teyget get out of it. they wanted to get out of it. they wanted to get out of it. they wanted to get out of the draft, or they were on and they wanted to on tv and they wanted people to like they they like them. so they said they were much older than they were. instead thinking that were much older than they were. i|lookd thinking that were much older than they were. i|look horrible, thinking that were much older than they were. i|look horrible, longevityg that i look horrible, longevity escape velocity. >> interesting . >> okay, that's interesting. we'll look, staying with dubious pseudo science though, nick. and apparently some people have rich looking . clean for a looking faces. clean for a start, i guess. yeah but probably no one here, sadly. >> well , probably no one here, sadly. >> well, certainly not me. do you resting face? you have a resting rich face? people with narrow, friendly faces as wealthier than faces are seen as wealthier than those white faces. i'm those with white faces. i'm looking at louis. looks pretty wide friendly, wide. not that friendly, but yeah, from yeah, this comes from a university of glasgow. they've never a person, never seen a rich person, i mean, it's apparently , you mean, but it's apparently, you know, know, the know, i don't know, it's the usual physiognomy usual sort of physiognomy is real internet .
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real meme from the internet. it's don't know, it's like, yeah, i don't know, some them. i mean, rich face some of them. i mean, rich face is defined protruding is more defined with protruding noses, upturned mouths, huge high forehead. mine's all right. i mean, maybe i'm all right, but yeah, it's basically some people look rich. therefore trust yeah, it's basically some people look rand therefore trust yeah, it's basically some people look rand therthink trust yeah, it's basically some people look rand therthink they're;t yeah, it's basically some people look r'when erthink they're;t yeah, it's basically some people look r'when erth putthey're ;t yeah, it's basically some people look r'when erth putthey'reyou better when you put when you cast for a film or a play, you certainly that mind, certainly bear that in mind, don't you? >> there some >> i remember there was some controversy a little while back. you the tv you know, the crown, the tv series, recast the series, and they recast the queen, remember, she's queen, i can't remember, she's that colman that olivia colman who's in everything and chap called charles, what's his name? is it not charles spencer ? i can't not charles spencer? i can't remember his name. who? um ex—editor of the telegraph writes spectator. writes for the spectator. he said had a socialist face. said she had a socialist face. yeah. he said she wasn't a plausible actress for the queen because she just looked like she'd be left wing and. and there was a real serious uproar about that. but i thought there was little of truth. was a little bit of truth. >> well, there is there is truth. proof positive is truth. and proof positive is that in six episodes that i've been in six episodes of the crown . okay. number one, of the crown. okay. number one, number two, fat people look poorer because because they're they do . now can i just say. on
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they do. now can i just say. on a serious note, i loved you as butler number three. >> i was brilliant, i played i played your hands. amazing >> minister, >> the canadian prime minister, we're squeeze in one we're going to squeeze in one more think, the more story, i think, before the break or before the end of the show. >> rather telegraph lewis. this looks dangerously close to lifestyle filler, but it's obviously vein . obviously in the same vein. >> come on, it could be about me. rules for slowing down me. seven rules for slowing down after 60 why shouldn't after 60 and why you shouldn't take too easy. and this is take it too easy. and this is the telegraph. and this woman, poor woman. got older poor woman. she's got an older husband like, lost husband who's like, who's lost it? or boyfriend. husband who's like, who's lost it? he's or boyfriend. husband who's like, who's lost it? he's tired or boyfriend. husband who's like, who's lost it? he's tired of)r boyfriend. husband who's like, who's lost it? he's tired of her,»yfriend. husband who's like, who's lost it? he's tired of her, isn't1d. >> he's tired of her, isn't he? >> he's tired of her, isn't he? >> of he's tired >> he's tired of her. he's tired of she's run him of life. she's run him down. she's go, go. but she's always go, go, go. but there's advice in there. >> any of it is any good? >> no, good? > no, no, good? >> no, no, it says get fit and exercise is one. is two of the six the truth is, is six things. and the truth is, is that exercise is really debilitating. know they it debilitating. i know they it exhausts you. you burn off your gains, don't you? whether you burn. yeah. you just the burn. yeah. you just get the endorphins and you feel better about working with lewis schaffer. the number one thing you can do the show is run out of time. eat red meat. oh, what a shocker . a shocker. >> show nearly over . >> the show is nearly over.
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>> the show is nearly over. >> this has been my worst show. i think. >> this has been my worst show. i th let's another quick look >> let's take another quick look at day's front pages. at saturn day's front pages. we have time . nottingham mother have the time. nottingham mother calling for an inquiry into killings . the telegraph us to killings. the telegraph us to move nuclear weapons back to the united kingdom's mystery redhead. still unidentified. the guardian israel ordered by court to prevent genocide in gaza. the express king chose kate's hospital to save taxpayers money. thoughtful the eye news uk golden age with china harmed british intelligence says former mi6 spy chief to late now. the daily mail. camilla's smile that says the king's fine and his prostate is bouncing back to life. those were your front pages. that's all we have time for. thanks to my guest, lewis schaffer and nick dixon. josh howie will be in the seat howie will be in the hot seat tomorrow lewis and jonathan tomorrow with lewis and jonathan kogan. be a storming show kogan. it'll be a storming show if you're watching at 5 am. stay tuned for breakfast. otherwise thank you. good night. >> feeling inside from >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsor of weather
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on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hello again. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office with the gb news forecast . there will be a lot of dry weather this weekend. some rain in the far northwest at first before turns wetter across before it turns wetter across scotland and northern ireland. by scotland and northern ireland. by sunday afternoon , and by sunday afternoon, and increasingly but increasingly windy but essentially high pressure sits to the south. low pressure way to the south. low pressure way to the south. low pressure way to the north over iceland in between quite a tight pressure gradient and as a result, we're going to see a blustery end to friday across the north and northwest of the uk , northwest of the uk, particularly northwest scotland, where they'll continue to be showers or longer spells of rain . 1 or 2 spots of rain for northern ireland, northern england. the cloud and england. but with the cloud and the will be frost the breeze here will be frost free. and free. meanwhile in the south and south—east, well , it will be south—east, well, it will be a chilly start day. a few chilly start to the day. a few mist patches here and there, nothing extensive otherwise. nothing too extensive otherwise. plenty and plenty of sunshine and temperatures the temperatures rising through the morning . as result, morning. as a result, a perfectly fine day on saturday for many parts of the uk. increasingly breezy to the north
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and the west , increasingly breezy to the north and the west, and some very wet and the west, and some very wet and windy weather for the far north of scotland later on for the west of scotland . feeling the west of scotland. feeling cold here, elsewhere . 910 cold here, but elsewhere. 910 celsius perfect mild for the time of year into sunday morning. a lot more cloud, more of a breeze as well . so of a breeze as well. so generally frost free away from some sheltered parts of the far southeast east and we keep largely cloudy skies into the afternoon, although some glimmers of brightness will lead to some remarkable mild air across wales and northern england. increasingly wet for scotland and northern ireland. similar conditions on monday looks like things are heating up boxt as sponsors of boxt boiler as sponsors of weather on .
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ata at a british space as boris johnson vows to join the army if the country goes to war. >> a new york court orders donald trump to pay $83 million to the writer e jean carroll for defamation, ahead of a republican rally in nevada . republican rally in nevada. >> the world remembers the millions of victims who suffered under nazi persecution on holocaust memorial day. we must never forget its important to remember it's only that way that we might we might be able to learn from the appalled genocides in the past. >> elsewhere, king charles is doing well, reportedly after undergoing treatment for an enlarged prostate . enlarged prostate. >> a parents in uproar after a school in kent threatened to find them for picking up their children late. we're going to debate that later on, and aiden

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