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tv   Headliners  GB News  February 19, 2024 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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former poa chairman has deepened . tonight henry staunton has accused kemi badenoch of making an astonishing series of claims after today. she told mps he'd sped, made up anecdotes following his dismissal . miss following his dismissal. miss badenoch took aim at mr staunton today in the commons , accusing today in the commons, accusing him of making up claims that he was told to delay government compensation payments for post office staff . and yesterday mr office staff. and yesterday mr staunton said the government had deliberately delayed compensation payments and tonight he says he's standing by those comments. miss badenoch had earlier said mr staunton's claims were a blatant attempt to seek revenge following his own dismissal . dismissal. >> mr staunton claims that when he was first appointed as chair of the post office , he was told of the post office, he was told by a senior civil servant to stall on paying compensation . stall on paying compensation. there is no evidence what so ever that this is true in fact, on becoming post office chair , on becoming post office chair, mr staunton received a letter from the bazball permanent secretary, sarah mumby, on the 9th of december, it 9th of december, 2022. it welcomed him to his role making
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it's crystal clear that successfully reaching settlements with victims of the post office scandal should be one of his highest priorities . one of his highest priorities. well in other news today, a man who piloted a people smuggling boat across the english channel has been found guilty of manslaughter. >> here's the rescue taking place in december 2022. if you're watching on tv, you can see the dinghy has collapsed in on itself . it killed four people on itself. it killed four people on itself. it killed four people on board. ibrahim abbas, who's a senegalese migrant, was in charge of the vessel navigating using only mobile phone technology, which the judge said led to the deaths. one of the passengers told kent police it was common knowledge among those in the boat that once they entered british waters, they would be rescued and new government guidance was issued today for teachers in england on restricting the use of smartphones in schools . as smartphones in schools. as concerns grow over the impact of social media on young people , social media on young people, head teachers can now choose to include a ban on phones with
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provisions for searches of school bags if necessary. headteachers say the guidelines aren't needed because robust rules already exist. the government says , though recent government says, though recent data shows 29% of secondary school pupils report sorted mobile phones being used during class , and lord cameron has been class, and lord cameron has been visiting some key battle sites in the falkland islands in the south atlantic today, as part of his visit to show islanders there that they are a valued part of the british family at goose green, where 18 british army personnel lost their lives in 1882, lord cameron visited the museum and thanked locals for keeping their memory alive. he also laid a wreath at san carlos, nicknamed bomb alley due to the aerial attacks faced by british warships at the time, as they protected the land against invading argentinians. it's the first visit by a foreign secretary for 30 years to the falklands islands, and comes amid renewed argentine calls for
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negotiations on their future . negotiations on their future. for the very latest news stories , do sign up to gb news alerts, scan the qr code on your screen right now or go to gb news .com/ alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners your first look at tomorrow's top stories i'm simon evans and joining me tonight we have comedians josh howie and nick dixon . good evening nick dixon. good evening gentlemen. how are you. all right. yes. excellent. >> all right . nick. >> all right. nick. >> all right. nick. >> loving life . absolutely. >> yes. loving life. absolutely. well, to love.7 how's well, what's not to love.7 how's your health? it's well, what's not to love? how's your health? it's all right. it's all right. it's complicated . and it's not been great lately, has it ? i think it's all lately, has it? i think it's all right. i think it's all right. gonna make it through. i've had. i've had the tests that the i've had all the tests that the king i it's king recommends. so i think it's better you have, better every time you have, like, your podcast record or you do suddenly you're do a live event, suddenly you're better. and when have better. and when you have a shift here, you're sick again.
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yes. like automatic. yes. weird. it's like automatic. it it doesn't being it doesn't it doesn't like being challenged. it doesn't it doesn't like being cha lastjed. it doesn't it doesn't like being cha last say i think i have the last say i think is i have to do the live events because there's a paying this there's a paying audience. this doesn't matter. that's true. anyway, a look at the anyway, let's have a look at the front pages. daily kick anyway, let's have a look at the fro off)ages. daily kick anyway, let's have a look at the fro off hundreds daily kick anyway, let's have a look at the fro off hundreds ofaily kick anyway, let's have a look at the fro off hundreds ofaily riskkick us off hundreds of high risk flights to land the uk until flights to land in the uk until checked. one of them contained joanna lumley . by the look of joanna lumley. by the look of it, the telegraph us moves to block israel's offensive. the guardian stand with me, yulia . guardian stand with me, yulia. by guardian stand with me, yulia. by neville naowa vows to continue to her husband's fight. uh, the express prime minister i know it's been tough, but our plan will boost britain . i news plan will boost britain. i news labour set to pledge triple lock on uk state pension and finally the daily star indian jones and the daily star indian jones and the indomitable mrs. mop. those were your front pages . so let's were your front pages. so let's kick off with the daily mail. josh. >> hundreds of high risk flights
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land in the uk unchecked, so this is another loophole . this is another loophole. >> uh, essentially private jets . >> uh, essentially private jets. and they come in and they're they don't have a border control . so they just all the but the difference is it's okay because it's rich people. yeah it's rich gangsters and drug dealers and uh, people being sex trafficked. >> so did they not have to go through any sort of customs at all? well, 20% do. >> okay i suppose >> okay or i suppose so. >> okay or i suppose so. >> a of check >> it's a sort of spot check type thing. that's the idea. >> but they're that high >> but they're saying that high risk >> but they're saying that high fisk have >> but they're saying that high risk have been risk flights have been just basically getting through. yeah. uh,so is the serious risk? basically getting through. yeah. uiitso is the serious risk? basically getting through. yeah. uiit cocaine is the serious risk? basically getting through. yeah. uiit cocaine paine serious risk? basically getting through. yeah. uiit cocaine pain andious risk? basically getting through. yeah. uiit cocaine pain and ors risk? is it cocaine pain and or people actually bringing in arms. >> yeah, it could be trafficking victims, extremists, gangsters . victims, extremists, gangsters. yeah. uh, really? anybody we don't know. that's the point. >> i suppose it has to be worth the expense of running a private jet. yeah. so they're rich, be bringing in loads of b and h, you know, past customs. you know, to get past customs. >> might be doing as well. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and little extra bottle of whisky >> and little extra bottle of whiyeah. suppose on the >> yeah. but i suppose on the other if you're going to do other hand if you're going to do the private jet anyway you might
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say, what they're paying. >> how much are they paying to come over on the boats. they're paying, come over on the boats. they're paying, know, they paying, you know, if they pulled all their money together that they're already paying thousands of that. yeah, it's of pounds for that. yeah, it's probably equivalent really. of pounds for that. yeah, it's pro it's.y equivalent really. of pounds for that. yeah, it's pro it's actually lent really. of pounds for that. yeah, it's pro it's actually lent rthere >> it's actually true. there might might might even be a, uh, it might even a nice little we even be a nice little racket we could onto there. anything could get onto there. anything on that? nick, just want on that? nick, i just want to know, can call this an know, when can we call this an invasion? what i mean? invasion? you know what i mean? they're in planes. they're now coming in in planes. they've mean, they've got boats. i mean, regard the private bit as regard the private jet bit as the most worrying the way the most worrying in the way that suggests to me that sort of suggests to me those probably those people are probably economically well, economically an upside. well, you but says it you say that, but it says it means that gangsters, illegal immigrants, trafficking means that gangsters, illegal imnevents, trafficking means that gangsters, illegal imneven extremists ng means that gangsters, illegal imneven extremistsng have and even extremists may have entered the says even entered the uk. it says even extremist like, think extremist like, don't you think some of categories might some of those categories might also you know also be extremists? you know what even extremist? what i mean? but even extremist? i at book this, i was just at book club this, uh, month doing uh, this month we're doing a book julia, which is a book called julia, which is a rewriting 1984 from the rewriting of 1984 from the perspective of girlfriend perspective of his girlfriend julia, written by a woman called sandra and, certain sandra newman. and, um, certain aspects of it crop up. you know, sometimes it intersects with the original, and then and then it departs. and there's a bit where they have asked he they have to be asked when he thinks he's joining the brotherhood, whether he'd be
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willing to do certain things to demoralise the big brother's reign . and, you know, the reign. and, you know, the viability of the party. and they're all so obviously things that are happening on a huge scale at the moment. it's quite interesting, you know, introduction into producing pornography. no, i'm just waiting for and, uh, interfering with children and. yes, well, look, the real disease . look, the real disease. >> if i ever read a book, i'll check that one out. yeah, yeah, i was waiting when that came i was waiting for when that came back relevance back to the relevance of this story, never quite got story, but it never quite got there. >> it's kind of a demoralisation . the uh, our . it's the thing, uh, our foreign know, foreign enemies, you know, that's them that's another one of them giving succour support. just giving succour and support. just letting giving succour and support. just letti basically giving succour and support. just lettibasically making giving succour and support. just letti basically making you feel just basically making you feel like has control like your country has no control over itself anymore, you know? >> well, is it. every day, >> well, this is it. every day, they another loophole >> well, this is it. every day, they revealed. another loophole >> well, this is it. every day, they revealed. yeah.1er loophole that's revealed. yeah. >> maybe telegraph >> i hope maybe the telegraph will us up. yes. because will cheer us up. yes. because it's will cheer us up. yes. because ifs and will cheer us up. yes. because it's and women's brains it's got men and women's brains work differently. scientists prove here it is. lewis. lewis has gutted that he's not in tonight. this great for tonight. this is great news for misogyny. ron burgundy said misogyny. when ron burgundy said that men and women are different, that scientific different, that is a scientific fact. different, that is a scientific fact . it now mean, it's fact. it now is. i mean, it's stanford university and they're
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looking hotspot areas, stanford university and they're looidefault hotspot areas, stanford university and they're looidefault hotnetwork,|s, stanford university and they're looidefault hotnetwork, an the default mode network, an area of the thought to be area of the brain thought to be the centre for the neurological centre for self, interesting the neurological centre for self, self interesting the neurological centre for self, self is1teresting the neurological centre for self, self is aeresting the neurological centre for self, self is a sort ng the neurological centre for self, self is a sort of because self is a sort of disputed philosophical concept. but apparently real but anyway, apparently it's real andifs but anyway, apparently it's real and it's different between men and it's different between men and the limbic and it's different between men and is the limbic and it's different between men and is also the limbic and it's different between men and is also implicatedimbic and it's different between men and is also implicated ,nbic and it's different between men and is also implicated , which system is also implicated, which helps regulate emotion . i'm helps regulate emotion. i'm saying nothing. memory and saying nothing. and memory and deals with sexual stimulation and the striatum, which is important in habit forming and rewards anyway . and there's rewards anyway. and there's implications for how women view themselves. and interact with people and recall past experiences. we experiences. so yeah, we are different . it's official. it's different. it's official. it's interesting what you say about the self being. it is, i think, fair is an illusion in fair to say, is an illusion in a way that doesn't mean it isn't real. what mean. real. if you know what i mean. it's real sense that it's like it's a real sense that we have obviously created we have it's obviously created in question is in the brain. the question is whether or not, when you really dwell on it, can actually dwell on it, can you actually sort anything sort of find anything fundamental, you know , and hard fundamental, you know, and hard there. but i was reading a piece , is it different men , is it different between men and what they're and women? is that what they're saying? they're saying? that's what they're saying. have saying. yeah. they might have a different mode network, different default mode network, which is essentially the self god, huge. god, this is huge. >> well, big one is how they
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>> well, the big one is how they recall who's got partner will anybody who's got a partner will know that women remember things incorrectly. yeah. and this is and use them against you years later as to why. >> yeah. default mode network came up in a book i was reading recently and i can't remember it, but i'm going with it, but i'm going to with a constant the self, constant humblebrag, the self, the thing because i think the self thing because i think women get a lot of their sense of self mirror. do you know of self from mirror. do you know what mean? like how other what i mean? like like how other people see society. literally the mirror neurones . the mirror, the mirror neurones. how they seen? is this how how are they seen? is this sexist ? i know, whereas sexist? i don't know, whereas men of self through men have a sense of self through self—actualisation . i was self—actualisation. i was reading a thing the other day suggesting that, you know, this idea having a self is idea of even having a self is a fairly recent in the way that we do this introspection of do with this introspection of the of the west might be sort of relatively recent in ways. relatively recent in some ways. so it might not last so maybe it might not last forever. go on. >> just such >> i just say it's such an interesting because we've interesting time because we've had this movement for 20, 30 years and women are years of men and women are exactly the same. yes. and now it's sort of we're going no, men and are actually different and women are actually different . uh, and now we're seeing some of the scientific reasons why
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it's to have an it's obviously going to have an impact on the trans debate. >> because there >> isn't it? because if there are female people can are female bodied people who can demonstrate they have male demonstrate that they have male bodied in a male, male bodied brains in a male, male orientated brains, in this sense they will have a bit more of a rock star. >> well, the is that they >> well, the idea is that they couldn't, because men women couldn't, because men and women brains develop differently, so they the they actually pushes the argument that way. argument further that way. >> that's assuming anyone listens science. mean, >> that's assuming anyone liste|you science. mean, >> that's assuming anyone liste|you know,:ience. mean, >> that's assuming anyone liste|you know, somethingaan, >> that's assuming anyone liste|you know, something like >> that's assuming anyone list> that's assuming anyone list> that's assuming anyone list> that's assuming anyone list> um, there's another big story i >> -- >> yeah. -_ >> yeah. oh, you want to do the israel one? >> josh, i'm just saying it happens to be there. >> yeah, yeah. okay yeah, >> yeah, yeah, yeah. okay yeah, yeah. doing off yeah. are we doing that off there? yeah. go on. it's israel moves block . sorry. us moves to, uh, block. sorry. us moves to, uh, block. sorry. us moves block israel offensive . moves to block israel offensive. and biden has stepped in here and talking about the, uh, and he's talking about the, uh, the move on rafah . yeah. and the move on rafah. yeah. and he's saying that, uh, based he, he's saying that, uh, based he, he's saying that, uh, based he, he's saying he wants the united nafions he's saying he wants the united nations to come up with a temporary ceasefire on it. so
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it's. think, josh? it's. what do you think, josh? i'm guessing you're not thrilled about no. about it. no. >> think that i. what? >> well, i think that i. what? who the who cares what i think? the only people really matter are people that really matter are the people and their the israeli people and their representatives . uh, this is the representatives. uh, this is the arguably the final battle . this arguably the final battle. this is the last enclave where hamas are in control. there obviously are in control. there obviously are a million citizens, uh, civilians. there as well. but there are hostages that need to be, um, found. and there are hamas terrorists that need to be defeated. >> and hamas have no interest in a ceasefire. >> no. and they also what they do have an interest is using their population as, as, uh, as shields and really the call should be from everybody for hamas to resign and give back, retire and give back the hostages. >> the guardian? >> and what about the guardian? >> and what about the guardian? >> stand with me . yulia >> um, uh, stand with me. yulia navalny . navalny. >> nyah, nyah. that's a feminised version. that's how they do it in russia, right ? they do it in russia, right? that's how they do it, i think. >> yeah, interesting. >> so, yeah, that's interesting. okay. men and women okay. uh, because men and women are different. yeah. vows to are different. yeah. uh, vows to continue fight. continue her husband's fight. this brave for her. this is a very brave for her. uh, although she . she's uh, although she. well, she's
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speaking undisclosed speaking from an undisclosed location , wherever, but still, location, wherever, but still, to target her head to put a target on her head after her husband's been murdered and assassinated. uh, and she's putting her and i guess she's putting her forward focal point and i guess she's putting her fonprotest focal point and i guess she's putting her fonprotest against focal point and i guess she's putting her fonprotest against putin. point for protest against putin. >> of course, you don't know that for a fact that he's been murdered or associated at this point. is, i have to say, point. it is, i have to say, ofcom just ever so slightly . uh, ofcom just ever so slightly. uh, i do find it quite curious that he would just kill him at this precise moment. i don't how precise moment. i don't know how he operates but or he operates, but putin or how they do it. but the timing they they do it. but the timing is a bit odd, don't you think? well, it was a bit suspicious the way he was walking around. fine. was making jokes the fine. he was making jokes the next walking around the next day he's walking around the yard ill. yard and he's suddenly ill. a bit but see bit suspicious, but i see what you no definitely you mean. no it's definitely suspicious. in suspicious. i mean, it's in fact, balance of fact, i would say the balance of probability he's been probability is he's been assassinated. know probability is he's been assassin they know probability is he's been assassin they it know probability is he's been assassin they it through �*iow probability is he's been assassin they it through some whether they do it through some kind michael kill kind of long terme michael kill kind of long terme michael kill kind way or. do you want. kind of way or. do you want. yeah. well she says she's going to reveal why putin killed. i mean, much mean, it's not really that much doubt it, isn't doubt why he would do it, isn't it? because he's his bitter rival? to control rival? he's trying to control a massive know, you massive his, uh, you know, you could argue it's clean, it's hygienic. there is minimal collateral involved. know ,
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collateral involved. you know, the way putin tends to eliminate opposition is extraordinarily surgical. how do you think they'll do it with trump ? yeah. they'll do it with trump? yeah. very good question. well there attempting to do it through the courts aren't they at the moment, be probably courts aren't they at the mormost be probably courts aren't they at the mormost can be probably courts aren't they at the mormost can we probably courts aren't they at the mormost can we get ably courts aren't they at the mormost can we get inly the most humane. can we get in 30s on the daily star? we can. it's a little bit more detail than they normally have. it's indiana and the indiana jones and the indomitable, indomitable. i thought that indomitable, indomitable. i thougibut that indomitable, indomitable. i thougibut i that indomitable, indomitable. i thougibut i didn't that indomitable, indomitable. i thougibut i didn't miss that indomitable, indomitable. i thougibut i didn't miss his that right, but i didn't miss his mop, bottled anyway, mop, i bottled it. um, anyway, it's holy so it's about the holy grail. so british spies attempted to snatch grail in a real snatch the holy grail in a real life jones plot life indiana jones style plot that foiled spanish that was foiled by a spanish cleaning bombshell. cleaning lady bombshell. new research has revealed that it was in 1939, as a spanish civil war was ending. this is not a quick it's not your normal quick like weather and seagulls and boffins. this is very detailed and started to and i've only just started to read so think does read so they think it does exist. still it's like the exist. still yeah. it's like the difference and difference between men and women. real. wow and like women. it's real. wow and like another thing to do women another thing to do with women very hard. please. no. no more sequels. indiana jones as the front pages. all done in part two. have latest from the two. we have the latest from the dinghy have dinghy of death. we have pointless speculation
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pointless election speculation and republicans over and republicans wrangling over a mere 95 billion in military aid in america . we'll see in
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radio. and welcome back to headliners, your first look at tuesday's top stories. >> so, josh, the telegraph kicking us off in this section with a deadly dismal dinghy, failing to make it to dover. >> nice alliteration there. dinghy pilot ibrahima bah guilty over channel migrant deaths. uh, they this in 2002. he's a senegalese migrant. uh, 43 people got out on the boat. uh, it was supposedly only would fit 20. and it was like a homemade and totally inappropriate thing for crossing the channel. yeah, he's claiming that he was ordered to do it. uh, but but they've said no, you could have just turned them down. uh, four people, at least, uh, drowned. uh obviously, which is, uh, very
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sad . and, uh, this is an sad. and, uh, this is an interesting development and i think a really good idea is a, you know, a immediately as the people get off the boat, find out who exactly was , um, driving out who exactly was, um, driving the thing and arrest them and put them in jail. right. and i think soon enough that would deter people . yeah, yeah. deter people. yeah, yeah. >> sending him to rwanda. >> from sending him to rwanda. >> from sending him to rwanda. >> i think that could be the question is, of course, when his time , where is he time is served, where is he going become and going to become christian and settle i suppose also you settle here? i suppose also you have to. >> you'd have to trust everyone to be truthful about it, wouldn't you? well, maybe it has to take evidence. >> who's the. >> who's holding the. >> who's holding the. >> it's usually mean >> yeah, it's usually i mean it's usually but quite often they collapse and you know , they they collapse and you know, they go over a, um, halfway out anyway and have to be rescued by various coast guards or rnli or whatever, don't they. yeah. it's something i mean, i suppose so the culpability comes from the fact that he getting a free fact that he was getting a free crossing because he'd agreed to pilot something along pilot it, but something along those it's it's odd those lines, it's a, it's an odd thing to then say, well then
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you're, you're you you're, you're if you take responsibility, take responsibility for determining that as well. but that it's overladen as well. but no, but he because looked at no, but he because he looked at it, was it was it, he said it was it was overlaid . he then overlaid. but he didn't then pull claiming that pull out and he's claiming that the smugglers made him do it. but only claim. but it's only his claim. there's no evidence that. so no other evidence for that. so they've so they've dismissed that. so it was people. i'm was built for 20 people. i'm surprised more people didn't die. built 20 people. die. it was built for 20 people. they had 40 something on there. i punctured. i mean, it was punctured. at one point with point they were navigating with a i mean, i'm surprised point they were navigating with a weren'tzan, i'm surprised point they were navigating with a weren't morem surprised point they were navigating with a weren't morem surpriit's there weren't more deaths. it's almost shackleton and the almost like shackleton and the small isn't it? small boat crossing, isn't it? to georgia. but i to the south georgia. but i agree, that he's been done agree, now that he's been done for surely for manslaughter, that surely you'd some people you'd hope would put some people off. be off. yeah well, that would be a good start. if sps now, nick, good start. so if sps now, nick, what sounds like a somewhat wishful speculation of a hung parliament on reform parliament based on the reform party . that would party. that would be interesting. a stark interesting. yeah, it's a stark warning for labour that reform uk could wreck starmer's dream of and comes of a majority. and this comes from labour together and josh williams, is saying williams, this guy is saying this is he's the director of labour together . this is he's the director of labour together. he this is he's the director of labour together . he says labour together. he says something interesting. something quite interesting. he says as the says a long way to go. as the old saying there can be old saying goes, there can be many between cup the many a slip between cup and the lip. twixt, you
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lip. it's actually twixt, as you would know, simon, obviously i have used that very often. yeah, that doesn't surprise me at all. um, so he's saying, let's um, but so he's saying, let's not get complacent because it could landslide. could could be a landslide. it could be majority , or it be a working majority, or it could say, could even be, as you say, a hung parliament certain hung parliament in certain projections, which would be interesting. also interesting. and there's also soft take into soft switches to take into account part of the lgbtq. soft switches to take into acc(they're part of the lgbtq. soft switches to take into acc(they're notart of the lgbtq. soft switches to take into acc(they're not the if the lgbtq. soft switches to take into acc(they're not the people sbtq. soft switches to take into acc(they're not the people that. no, they're not the people that changed. they were going to vote. they changed back to who they so yes, they normally vote for. so yes, you hope reform could, especially back , especially if farage came back, they make this impact. but they could make this impact. but how have an impact, how they could have an impact, but surely only take but they would surely only take voters . so voters away from the tories. so the would happen the worst that would happen would be that would expect would be that they would expect encourage people who might to be depressed by the tories to vote tory, but they would come out and vote reform. but it still wouldn't be. i mean, it would, it would be only in a seat that would have tory, would otherwise have been tory, wouldn't reading the >> well, my reading of the article if only article is that if it only would be hung parliament, if the be a hung parliament, if the reform collapses . yeah. so reform vote collapses. yeah. so if reform pulls out , yes, then if reform pulls out, yes, then there could be a hung parliament. >> or if reform come to some
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sort of pre coalition pre—vote coalition arrangement with the tories . tories. >> but this is what they say here. so if they so it's interesting that it's reform that is holding back . that arguably is holding back. um more of a balanced parliament in the next election. so we saw that in the by—election right. >> added the tories and >> if you'd added the tories and the know, votes the reform, you know, votes together, have won. together, they would have won. but mainly saw people but we mainly saw was the people just vote. right. just refusing to vote. right. the 20,000 in wellingborough just going, no, we're not going to for the tories anymore. to vote for the tories anymore. yeah. probably yeah. and that's what's probably most like say most likely. but like you say it's collapse. out. it's the collapse. come out. it could those could it could galvanise those people. would have people. but then they would have to sort of, i mean to come to some sort of, i mean they occasionally these they do occasionally do these things they. like there's things don't they. like there's kind of tactical voting arrangements beforehand. well, yeah. well, farage has said he'll never do that again because it last because of how it went last time. to the red sea. time. would over to the red sea. now , the guardian says the now josh, the guardian says the houthis are claiming palpable houthis are claiming a palpable hit. yeah >> houthis claim ship is >> houthis claim cargo ship is at of sinking after red sea at risk of sinking after red sea attack . so this is a, um, uh, a attack. so this is a, um, uh, a boat that would come out of the uae, uh, to bulgaria and the
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crew has been evacuated. now it didn't have anything to do with israel. the ship and, um, supposedly a missile shot. now, costs are going up. insurance costs are going up. insurance costs in particular, are going up. uh petrol costs or, uh , up. uh petrol costs or, uh, because they're having to detour around africa. yeah. uh, and that's also means that less money is going into to being made in the suez canal by egypt. so this is an issue obviously all around. yeah >> um, it's commercial, but it's a commercial on a scale that is like becomes a foreign policy concern, isn't it? it seems like the interesting that the, uh, ships aren't really being targeted. >> are chinese ships. oh, it suggests could be some suggests there could be some kind of strange deal there between houthis or not. between the houthis or not. again, you see this on the weekends , about and weekends, uh, about yemen. and you see people chanting for yemen and ignoring the fact they've got slaves and they have child hypocrisy child soldiers and the hypocrisy is disgusting. >> can't the yemen be more >> why can't the yemen be more like oman ? good question. very like oman? good question. very good. good that one, isn't it? what do you think about putting an iron dome over red sea
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an iron dome over the red sea i mean, be the obvious mean, that would be the obvious thing it? thing to do, wouldn't it? how would work? well, would that work? well, it basically shoot basically just needs to shoot down missiles and things, down houthi missiles and things, don't that threatening , don't you, that are threatening, uh, threatening ships. >> drones and >> yeah, but it's drones and whatnot. i think they should just houthis to whatnot. i think they should juststone houthis to whatnot. i think they should juststone age. houthis to whatnot. i think they should juststone age. butthis to whatnot. i think they should juststone age. but of; to whatnot. i think they should juststone age. but of course,o the stone age. but of course, they're in the stone age. so, yeah well, a massive yeah, well, you're a massive hawk, is your thing. >> war ? yes. there are an >> war? yes. there are an example of quite a common sort of phenomenon these days where you a bunch of sheep herders you get a bunch of sheep herders who suddenly get hands on who suddenly get their hands on tactical ground tactical sort of ground to air missiles a it's missiles and things. it's a it's and cause a massive problem. >> yeah. and cause a massive problem. >> for h. and cause a massive problem. >> for the whole world aspects of the whole daily of the whole thing daily mail, nick, joe biden says he's never seen anything like it. but to be fair, that could be memory issues. happened issues. yes, it happened yesterday. he's forgotten. yeah. biden says house republicans are making mistake by not making a big mistake by not approving ukraine when approving more ukraine aid when asked if has blood on their asked if gop has blood on their hands the valleys death and hands for the valleys death and reveals considering reveals he's considering more sanctions classic sanctions on putin. so classic long headline. long mail headline. very interesting, because interesting, though, because what about is the what this is really about is the reluctance on side of the
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reluctance on the side of the republicans to get too involved in funding foreign wars, you know, so the senate passed a 95 billion aid package, but mike johnson, house speaker, was refusing to bring it up for a vote and demanding meeting vote and demanding a meeting with obviously, with biden because obviously, following the neocon era of cheney you know, the cheney and bush, you know, the republicans got sick of all that they're now, so they're in the trump era now, so they're in the trump era now, so they fund ukraine. they're in the trump era now, so they see fund ukraine. they're in the trump era now, so they see our fund ukraine. they're in the trump era now, so they see our living:und ukraine. they're in the trump era now, so they see our living standards1e. they see our living standards are going down. you know, they're hated by half the country. they they called maga fascists this. they fascists and all this. and they look should look at it and think, why should we ukraine? and to be we pay for ukraine? and to be fair, they haven't really made the could make the case. you could make a case fairly that russia, fairly obvious that if russia, china and iran and all these countries gain more power in the us, reduces in power, then your average american citizen is going off, less going to be worse off, less safe, but i don't safe, less free. but i don't really hear that case being made. i just hear sort of give us money and they're us the money now, and they're sort going, well, should sort of going, well, why should we? always we? it's does seem to always be expressed very, basic, expressed in very, very basic, quite old fashioned sort of cold war doesn't like this war terms, doesn't it? like this is putin's evil. is your return putin's evil. what understand about what do you not understand about not russia ? not trying to defeat russia? >> yeah, i mean, it doesn't make sense that , uh, first of all,
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sense in that, uh, first of all, that money spent in america, that money is spent in america, so it facilitates american so it's it facilitates american jobs. so it's it facilitates american jobs . those billions go towards jobs. those billions go towards america . uh, and secondly, it's america. uh, and secondly, it's money well spent in that if they don't, if it's america first and they don't want to involve american troops in nato, this has been proven to get incredibly value for money in terms of running down russian and, uh, supplies and, and, and defeating them without using americans dying basically . americans dying basically. >> so if anyone's got blood on their hands , i mean that that their hands, i mean that that phrase seems to be being used about navalny, which i think is just ridiculous. can't see just ridiculous. i can't see that say that that you could say that republicans have got blood on their is their hands as far as brown is concerned. that their hands as far as brown is con(t01ed. that their hands as far as brown is con(to be. that their hands as far as brown is con(to be fair, that their hands as far as brown is con(to be fair, he that their hands as far as brown is con(to be fair, he said that their hands as far as brown is con(to be fair, he said he that and to be fair, he said he wouldn't use that tum. he wouldn't use that tum. he wouldn't they're wouldn't use that. so they're just press just trying to. it's the press doing do. but but doing what they do. but but there's interesting point there's an interesting point there. it's like, yes, in the wake of death, that wake of the death, does that galvanise support ukraine? galvanise support for ukraine? or it or as trump has said, does it make it make it make it? does. does it make it more case that he's the more the case that he's the navalny figure being persecuted by opponent? by a political opponent? you know, that's the way know, and also that's the way he sees know, terms of sees it, you know, in terms of blood hands. i mean, if
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blood on their hands. i mean, if that policy that is the foreign policy initiative, if that is the benefit , the bonus, the dividend benefit, the bonus, the dividend that for run that they're aiming for to run down then have got down russia, then they have got blood on their because blood on their hands because they're basically feeding ukrainians grinder. ukrainians into a meat grinder. and how many and they don't care how many ukraine young lives are shattered and how much of a nafion shattered and how much of a nation is left to rebuild because really care because all they really care aboutis because all they really care about is degrading russian military. >> but ukrainians are , to their >> but ukrainians are, to their mind, are fighting for their survival and willing to sacrifice their lives for their nation's survival. >> well , i nation's survival. >> well, i don't nation's survival. >> well , i don't know how nation's survival. >> well, i don't know how many individual choices are being made along those lines. anyway diplomacy news in the guardian . diplomacy news in the guardian. now, of world's now, josh, two of the world's most adorable autocrats have got a new love match brewing. >> i know china offers to deepen security ties with hungary . uh, security ties with hungary. uh, and, uh, they're talking about, um , uh, this is the china's um, uh, this is the china's minister for public security . minister for public security. um, and he says they want to cooperation in areas including counter terrorism and combating transnational , uh, crimes counter terrorism and combating transnational, uh, crimes and security and law enforcement
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capacity , uh, all by basically capacity, uh, all by basically stopping doing what china is doing. >> yeah , that's that's the idea. >> yeah, that's that's the idea. >> yeah, that's that's the idea. >> uh , get them on board. we >> uh, get them on board. we don't want , uh, closer ties. don't want, uh, closer ties. really, i would say we, as in the west, i don't think europe, hungary is an interesting an outlier in lots of ways, isn't it? >> within the eu, you might you might say it's a maverick or even a thorn in the side of the eu. it has closer ties with moscow than anywhere else in the eu . eu. >> don't want them eu. don't want them having >> and we don't want them having close arguably close ties with china arguably being that coalition is being part of that coalition is not. quite sceptical not. they're quite sceptical about the eu agenda generally. >> well it like >> yeah, well it seems like china's and they're china's noticed that and they're sort you want to sort of hey, hey, you want to come with us? it's because because they're not getting on with the eu belt and and it with the eu belt and road and it could yeah. exactly. with the eu belt and road and it coulthey yeah. exactly. with the eu belt and road and it coulthey they h. exactly. with the eu belt and road and it coulthey they don'tictly. with the eu belt and road and it coulthey they don't love and they know they don't love biden. just being biden. whereas orban just being sort he tempted sort of maybe he is tempted by china. he's just being very clear. saying saying clear. he's saying he's saying we can't interfere other we can't interfere in other countries we'd countries elections. but we'd very see president very much like to see president trump house. trump return to the white house. so back, so he's saying, come back, trump. to have to hang trump. i'm going to have to hang out china. you don't out with china. if you don't come soon. that's what he's come back soon. that's what he's basically lot
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basically saying. i see a lot of physiognomy orban physiognomy as well. orban and she really no, i think she no, she really no, i think there's think there's definitely i think there's definitely i think there's probably rapport there's probably some rapport there's probably some rapport there . really. you mean there. really. no. you mean based on their faces are the same as they have some of the same. yeah. teddy bear faces. yeah >> someone's getting assassinated . assassinated. >> we've reached the halfway point in the second half. we are looking forward to an end to fox hunting and end to disadvantaged kids. and an end to wet weekends in scarborough . see you in scarborough. see you in a utopian future in a couple of
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gb news radio. and welcome back to headliners. >> so the telegraph now, nick, bad for news traditional fox hunting though all the more for the julian moms of the world to finish off in their wives kimonos. oh good point. yes the baseball bat fox hunting will be on the rise. its labour vows to eliminate fox hunting, so shadow environment secretary steve reed promises to close loopholes in the ban to prevent hounds killing pets or livestock . so he
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killing pets or livestock. so he wants to toughen the hunting act in brought during tony in brought in during tony blair's administration. so we know labour attacked the know that labour attacked the countryside and they hate rural people. and now completely out of , even before they've of ideas, even before they've got in, they're threatening to bnng got in, they're threatening to bring if we bring back fox hunting as if we haven't it enough bring back fox hunting as if we haven'tcountry it enough bring back fox hunting as if we haven'tcountry just it enough bring back fox hunting as if we haven'tcountry just sot enough bring back fox hunting as if we haven'tcountry just so they ugh bring back fox hunting as if we haven'tcountry just so they can in this country just so they can ban just they can ban ban it again, just they can ban it more . well, i've really it even more. well, i've really ban it's already of ban it. it's already sort of banned really banned when i'm really, really banned when i'm really, really ban just encroach. ban it. so it's just encroach. it's what we're gonna expect from encroaching from labour encroaching on freedoms, attacking they from labour encroaching on freed it's a very symbolic fight and it worked for them once. but i can't it. people want to i can't see it. people want to be able to afford food and to have a working nhs, and to have police that do their job. >> yes, to focus on this kind of stuff is and i like it's a stuff is and i feel like it's a luxury issue. >> some people who feel strongly
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about tiny about this, there'll be a tiny minority it will minority on both sides. it will anger some people. traditionalists who think that they know, suffered they have, you know, suffered enough saboteur enough. but the hunt saboteur kind people, they are a kind of people, they are a dwindling. and is a very dwindling. and that is a very old version of labour. old fashioned version of labour. now it? i think it's a now isn't it? i think it's a luxury issue from better time, luxury issue from a better time, you before blair you know, before blair completely the completely destroyed the country, something country, it was we had something like, hunting. like, okay, fox hunting. but now, there's now, as josh says, there's so many they're many other issues, as they're saying housing, many other issues, as they're saying services, housing, many other issues, as they're saying services, agricultural ing, access services, agricultural transition, rural issues , but transition, rural issues, but national issues, there are so many pressing problems. many more pressing problems. it's you it's absolutely it's funny, you know, there thing last know, there was a thing last week wrote thing about week and i wrote a thing about it spiked is the it in spiked about is the countryside up countryside racist? it comes up every yeah and i every six months. yeah and i was thinking, think always thinking, i think there's always been fear the been this kind of fear in the metropolitan areas you know, metropolitan areas of you know, folk a kind genre folk horror is a kind of genre in cinema and stuff. and that came wicker yeah, came the wicker man. yeah, exactly. thing . so exactly. that sort of thing. so 2002, i looked it up was the countryside alliance, and there was wicker man was a lot of kind of wicker man type humour at that time. do you know i mean? like lot of know what i mean? like a lot of wicker man bans uh, the wicker man bans anti uh, the idea countryside idea that all countryside communities inbred and uh, communities are inbred and uh, you know, it's the shire, isn't
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it. it's the attack on the shire. it is traditional england and what labour hate more and that's what labour hate more than afraid you're than anything. i'm afraid you're right. josh. good balance right. anyway josh. good balance .josh right. anyway josh. good balance . josh snipped there. if i could resist, here's an idea that surely no humane , loving, surely no humane, loving, sympathetic marxist could resist in the guardian children's services , leaders in england services, leaders in england call for national plan for childhood . childhood. >> uh, and the idea is that they would set up, like a sort of department of children, essentially to coordinate all these services education, health. yeah. uh, and, uh, to deal with things like child poverty and crumbling schools. seems like a good idea if they can implement it. i think one of the, uh, not, i wouldn't say saddest things, but i think it was a bad for this country that short start was closed down by the tory government. i think they did good. i used to work for them. oh did you in the for them. oh did you back in the day. they. and made day. and they. and they made an impact families lives. impact on, uh families lives. it's certainly a problem. families. idea was did you
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families. the idea was did you all start doing then. well, they would sort of identify these certain every certain key families in every area are kind of have area that are kind of would have the cycle of, you know, teenage pregnancies domestic pregnancies and domestic violence and abuse whatnot violence and abuse and whatnot to target them, put a lot of resources those families resources into those families to break and it worked break the pattern and it worked okay. it really did work . and okay. it really did work. and then they closed that. those services down. then services down. and then of course, everything goes course, it just everything goes back business as usual, which back to business as usual, which i of problem i think is part of the problem of government. the of this government. over the last 13 years, it has been a sort cowardice able sort of cowardice of being able to , to plan to think long terme, to plan long terme , because there's long terme, because there's nothing for them . but then nothing in it for them. but then we the results ten years we see the results ten years from when generation from now, when this generation that's been through. uh covid. >> but nobody's having anymore. of course, that's the problem >> but nobody's having anymore. of coisn't that's the problem >> but nobody's having anymore. of coisn't it?at's the problem >> but nobody's having anymore. of coisn't it? yeah.e problem >> but nobody's having anymore. of coisn't it? yeah. we'relem >> but nobody's having anymore. of coisn't it? yeah. we're going >> but nobody's having anymore. of getsn't it? yeah. we're going >> but nobody's having anymore. of get on it? yeah. we're going >> but nobody's having anymore. of get on it’:that h. we're going >> but nobody's having anymore. of get on it’:that h. we'reinoing >> but nobody's having anymore. of get on it’:that h. we'rein the to get on to that maybe in the next but i think for next show. but i think for yourself, a couple of things on this. you said this. firstly when you said department this. firstly when you said departm it|t this. firstly when you said departm it just like all pictured it just like it's all run children. open the run by children. you open the doon run by children. you open the door. that's malone. door. yeah. that's malone. more importantly guardian importantly though, the guardian here me they're here annoy me because they're saying, generation of saying, oh, a generation of youngsters scarred by austerity and you go, and the pandemic and you go, yeah, the guardian, yeah, and the lockdown guardian, which always
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which you pushed it always really absolute really annoys me. the absolute lack accountability. lack of shame or accountability. they even they were running like lack of shame or accountability. theypieces:hey were running like lack of shame or accountability. theypieces ofy were running like lack of shame or accountability. theypieces of like, �*e running like lack of shame or accountability. theypieces of like, �*e r|why1g like puff pieces of like, oh why i love lockdown i chill out love lockdown and i chill out and my sourdough bread. it's and eat my sourdough bread. it's like being teachers, like you were being teachers, weren't point? weren't they? at that point? exactly that. yeah, so exactly that. yeah, yeah. so they of it. it's not they were part of it. it's not they were part of it. it's not the only cause, one of the only cause, but it's one of them. city is also one them. austere city is also one of that gets of those words that gets thrown around the guardian. which is around by the guardian. which is not we've obviously not to say that we've obviously had spending, but not to say that we've obviously hachave spending, but not to say that we've obviously hachave had spending, but not to say that we've obviously hachave had austerity], but not to say that we've obviously hachave had austerity forut we have not had austerity for over the over ten years now. the definition austerity is that over ten years now. the defi reduce austerity is that over ten years now. the defi reduce the|sterity is that over ten years now. the defi reduce the deficit is that over ten years now. the defi reduce the deficit yearat over ten years now. the defi reduce the deficit year on you reduce the deficit year on yeah you reduce the deficit year on year. that just hasn't happened . year. that just hasn't happened. we've more than we've been spending more than we've receiving tax we've been receiving in tax revenues. i'm not saying it's been enough. it's not been cosy. a lot of people have been in pain, words pain, but you have to use words correctly. know, have correctly. you know, they have meanings. i mean? meanings. you know what i mean? >> well, not this >> yeah. yeah. well, not to this generation yeah. >> yeah. yeah. well, not to this gernotion yeah. >> yeah. yeah. well, not to this ger notiontheeah. >> yeah. yeah. well, not to this ger notionthe guardian. that's >> not to the guardian. that's true. no, no child. currently a child austerity child grew up in under austerity like they're at like my kids. maybe they're at university now. anyway, here's a good reason why children in the uk are actually suffering. that's in daily mail. uk are actually suffering. that's in daily mail . yeah, that's in the daily mail. yeah, this is nuclear. families in the uk higher almost uk face higher taxes than almost any other advanced country in the report warns. this the world. report warns. this comes from the family hubs
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network, and they found that the uk ranked 26th of uk ranked 26th out of 32 nations. i'm expert , but that nations. i'm no expert, but that sounds quite low. yeah, and they were likes it. were only above the likes of it. says greece , lithuania and says here greece, lithuania and finland. words , but we finland. not my words, but we got score of 3.5 points. but got a score of 3.5 points. but the winner was the czech repubuc the winner was the czech republic with 193 points. it's like the eurovision song contest. this is not contest. i mean, this is not quote, we're nil. greece quote, we're almost nil. greece has a of minus six. so so has a score of minus six. so so of all the g7 nations , we were of all the g7 nations, we were the lowest. so this is this is shocking stuff. this is just the attack. and of course that's totally nobody attack. and of course that's totgreece nobody attack. and of course that's totgreece pays nobody attack. and of course that's totgreece pays taxes. ody attack. and of course that's totgreece pays taxes. good in greece pays those taxes. good point. attack the point. it's an attack on the family. is problem family. and this is the problem in blair era, the in the post blair era, the cameron osborne continued cameron era, osborne continued to punish family. he had the tax on on having families. so on on having larger families. so we've so wrong by taxing we've got it so wrong by taxing families. need to families. obviously we need to encourage families. you mentioned rate. we're mentioned the birth rate. we're at roughly. we need to be at 1.5 roughly. we need to be 2.5 for replacement. and here we are families are taxing families into oblivion . so it's a real oblivion. so it's a real problem. i absolutely agree with you. you know, our our you. and you know, our our erstwhile friend dominic frisby has written a brilliant book about manipulate about how you can manipulate fate, the course of a country
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through fiscal measures, through the choose to impose the taxes you choose to impose and don't impose . it's and those you don't impose. it's and those you don't impose. it's a very subtle way of doing it. much than amount of much better than any amount of propaganda , or or, you know, propaganda or, or or, you know, criminalising certain behaviours or it just it's or whatever. it just it's extraordinary how people do respond incentives . so if you extraordinary how people do resrthem incentives . so if you extraordinary how people do resrthem right,ntives . so if you extraordinary how people do resrthem right, butzs . so if you extraordinary how people do resrthem right, but at so if you extraordinary how people do resrthem right, but at the if you get them right, but at the moment the wrong moment they're all in the wrong direction. feels like moment they're all in the wrong direa ion. feels like moment they're all in the wrong direa deliberate feels like moment they're all in the wrong direa deliberate ploy.els like it's a deliberate ploy. >> feels like you're >> well, it feels like you're being for having being punished. yeah. for having children. being children. punished for being married . yeah. i recently had married. yeah. i recently had a sane tax bill that we had to because we went a tiny bit over a threshold . right. uh, my wife a threshold. right. uh, my wife and i had had to pay and i had to we had to pay back the years thing , even the previous years thing, even though a month over it. though we were a month over it. suddenly you got to the suddenly you got to pay the whole back top of your whole year back on top of your normal you normal tax. uh, so you have things that, and, and, you things like that, and, and, you know, talks about here about know, it talks about here about child unfairness and child benefit increased, marriage benefit, increased, uh, marriage allowance . there are steps, as allowance. there are steps, as you say. >> p- e there's this you say. >> there's this kind of >> and yet there's this kind of weird isn't there, weird thing, isn't there, in this particular issue that any attempt create pro—natalist attempt to create a pro—natalist , uh, tax regime is regarded as just like adjacent to hitler eugenics , you know? yeah, like
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eugenics, you know? yeah, like like what? what's wrong with just importing people , you know, just importing people, you know, as if it's you . that's kind of as if it's you. that's kind of weird about about, like, thinking we need to build the nafion thinking we need to build the nation . nation. >> but i wonder if that's changing idea. people changing or that idea. people are with these are more familiar with these ideas. paying high are more familiar with these ideas.as paying high are more familiar with these ideas.as long paying high are more familiar with these ideas.as long as paying high are more familiar with these ideas.as long as you aying high are more familiar with these ideas.as long as you getg high taxes as long as you get something yeah, and something for them. yeah, and when? the has been when? when the money has been wasted ridiculous things. wasted on ridiculous things. >> having children and, um, >> but having children and, um, and giving them a good start in life , exactly as you said in the life, exactly as you said in the previous about the previous story, is about the single selfless and long single most selfless and long terme constructive activity that, ah, people can the best that, ah, people can the best that you could do for your country. >> yeah, absolutely. >> yeah, absolutely. >> all right. we're all in agreement on that one. and let's see if we can have a row here. telegraph news of measures introduced to hamper people benefiting financially from second homes though to be honest, anything short of total conflagration will fail to satisfy the cornish i think. no. >> yeah. so second home owners will need planning permission to let houses on airbnb and this because in certain places of the country , certainly in cornwall.
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country, certainly in cornwall. yeah there are real issues with local housing lack of local housing or lack of availability a lot of availability because a lot of them out and had them are rented out and i've had some great holidays cornwall. some great holidays in cornwall. thank you. yeah. from thank you. yeah. uh, from exactly uh, this exactly using this, uh, this seems of a blunt exactly using this, uh, this seems to of a blunt exactly using this, uh, this seems to deal of a blunt exactly using this, uh, this seems to deal with blunt exactly using this, uh, this seems to deal with the tl exactly using this, uh, this seems to deal with the issue hammer to deal with the issue making now local councils, supposedly anything that's already , uh, a second home and already, uh, a second home and is used for airbnb will be kind of just pushed through right. but any new properties this will give the councils the ability to control it. >> and yet it's they're saying airbnb . i obviously haven't read airbnb. i obviously haven't read the small print. you think the small print. do you think alternative agencies will alternative rental agencies will will also i mean, they must be i think it's just anybody renting out that they're using that as a synonym. yeah, yeah. synonym. yeah, yeah, yeah. i mean the idea of mean i don't like the idea of people government people of the government regulate your property. at regulate your property. but at the time, people the the same time, people in the areas the lakes areas like mine in the lakes struggle get enough housing struggle to get enough housing and airbnbs don't seem have and airbnbs don't seem to have the as as small the same regulations as as small businesses. example, businesses. for example, the fire they seem to fire regulations they seem to get because course, get away with because of course, they ambiguous whether they are ambiguous whether they're a business. they are ambiguous whether they'r maybe a business. they are ambiguous whether they'r maybe should |ess. they are ambiguous whether they'r maybe should be .. yeah, maybe they should be treated businesses . treated more like businesses. well, an example. well, i mean, it is an example.
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we've a times . we've used airbnb a few times. um, but, you know, it is obviously an example of a thing where people can be clever and avoid paying tax and can put all kinds through kinds of things through as expenses know , expenses. and, um, you know, it's i don't know, it does make me feel a little bit uneasy the way that everything just gets immediately when immediately rented out when you're not using it now and that sort you sort of thing. there are, you know, there were well—established businesses that used to make money by you used to make their money by you know, presenting a, a well—established offer to the tourist trade. and now , i don't tourist trade. and now, i don't know, i think i know things change, uber change, you know, everything changes. >> but as the point has said here representative here by representative for this, it says the presumption is if you shut down all these short tum holiday rentals, that the housing going housing crisis is going to be solved no for solved. there's no proof for that. and they're 100% that. no, no. and they're 100% right. are enough right. there are not enough houses being built now. >> other problem they >> and the other problem they have that regard, suspect , have in that regard, i suspect, is that you didn't have if is that if you didn't have if you don't have enough people coming in tourists , it's, you coming in as tourists, it's, you know, got a second know, if you've got a second home and you're renting it home and you're not renting it out, people going
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out, then fewer people are going to the spa , and you to be visiting the spa, and you know mean? and that's know what i mean? and so that's going as going to go out of business as well. want the well. you actually want the tourists there, don't tourists to be there, don't you? which believe you've seen in which i believe you've seen in scotland haven't you. >> they've tried >> some issues they've tried to do there do something like this and there it's impact. it's made a massive impact. >> don't know, you'll >> yeah, i don't know, you'll own you'll be happy. own nothing and you'll be happy. that's, that's what do. you that's, that's what they do. you say reefer madness close say reefer madness to close us out the out very quickly in the guardian, want guardian, nick, i wouldn't want to to tell mike tyson to be the one to tell mike tyson it's course. it's reefer madness. of course. good point. yeah mike tyson urges to 3000 locked urges biden to 3000 locked up over right these over cannabis right these wrongs. people wrongs. so more than 2000 people overwhelmed people of colour in federal jail sentence for conduct be conduct that would be essentially legal today, i.e. possessing and so on. possessing cannabis and so on. but they hit back the us government saying no, it's people actually who have other charges, including drug trafficking. it's not just that they're in for cannabis charges, but trump actually better on they're in for cannabis charges, but thenp actually better on they're in for cannabis charges, but he was actually better on they're in for cannabis charges, but he was quite ually better on they're in for cannabis charges, but he was quite good better on they're in for cannabis charges, but he was quite good on ter on they're in for cannabis charges, but he was quite good on these this. he was quite good on these sort prison and, sort of prison reforms. and, you know, is know, where's kamala harris is famously draconian on this. famously more draconian on this. so interesting. would so it's interesting. but i would obviously make weed illegal completely. but i do wonder illegal illegal. but i do understand that if you've done a minor charge, i wouldn't let people in prison people languish in prison forever. seems crazy.
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forever. no, it seems crazy. they again all the wrong they have again all the wrong incentives, they? on that incentives, don't they? on that front, possibly front, although possibly it is also extract from also used to extract people from society that are almost certain to do something worse if to do something much worse if you there. yeah, and you leave them there. yeah, and one other point that you wouldn't he wouldn't say to tyson's face, he of makes off of course makes money off selling you selling cannabis, which is, you know, completely know, he's not completely disinterested oh massive disinterested. oh yeah. massive ban. completely ban. yeah. he's not completely disinterested . disinterested. >> you out. >> you out. >> a m- m— >> oh it's a good line to end on. that's part three down in the wacky free for all. we the final wacky free for all. we have abuses of the pulpit parts one two. pets in food banks one and two. pets in food banks and sacked for snacking on a sarnie. see you in a couple of
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and welcome back to headliner sad times in the daily mail. now josh, as scott has proved unequal to a bit of good old time religion. >> yeah, ultra conservative scott, if i interrupted something there. >> oh dude , the national tv >> oh dude, the national tv interrupted you with your phone .
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interrupted you with your phone. >> he's watching a video there. >> he's watching a video there. >> save that. yeah. >> save that. yeah. >> ultra conservative scottish reverend is blasted for misogynistic hands made tale style sermon calling for all women to submit to their husbands because it's god's will. it's kind of links to an earlier story where our, uh, this is reverend chris demetriou , uh, the royth baptist church in fife. uh essentially did a sermon called submit and love. it says here that quoting from the old testament, the lord jesus is the head of the church . jesus is the head of the church. i'm thinking, i don't remember reading in torah . reading that in the torah. >> yeah, testament. >> yeah, that's a testament. yeah part of it. but he said men and women are equal, but not the same . same. >> yeah. what? >> yeah. what? >> i see price . >> i don't see the price. >> i don't see the price. >> as now >> science. yeah. as now exactly. front of the exactly. on the front of the telegraph. created male telegraph. uh, god created male and female to complement each other. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> all right, that sounds all right. marriage, husband right. in marriage, the husband has given responsibility has been given responsibility for leadership. seems for leadership. maybe that seems to issue . to obviously be the issue. that's certainly the reality that's certainly not the reality in . um, for in my household. um, and for a woman, it's the wife is , um, she woman, it's the wife is, um, she is. if she thinks the husband
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has made a mistake, she should express why. and she's looking out for him and look persuade out for him and look to persuade him with a feminine wiles. i added at end . uh, added that bit at the end. uh, again, really see a again, i don't really see a massive problem with that, but it to be this idea of the, it seems to be this idea of the, the, the, the male being the husband being the leader, not handmaid's tale style, is it? >> no , sir. although maybe >> no, sir. although maybe that's the paper there are some religions could look for religions one could look to for handmaid's it handmaid's tale stuff, but it won't christianity. mean , won't be christianity. i mean, yeah, links to an yeah, josh says this links to an earlier the old earlier story. yes the old testament. that quote, earlier story. yes the old testam say that quote, earlier story. yes the old testam say , that quote, earlier story. yes the old testam say , that that quote, earlier story. yes the old testam say , that sounded quote, earlier story. yes the old testam say , that sounded like e, as you say, that sounded like new testament. colossians i would just would say. but let me just answer nonsense about this answer this nonsense about this guy misogynist and all guy being misogynist and all this kind of thing. it's just this kind of thing. it's just this just this is just normal christianity. go back to christianity. you go back to adam you go back to the adam and eve, you go back to the garden. why? adam and eve, you go back to the garden. he why? adam and eve, you go back to the garden. he was why? adam and eve, you go back to the garden. he was his why? because he was his responsibility. although eve took the fruit, adam went along with didn't check. he with it and didn't check. he tries blame her. doesn't tries to blame her. he doesn't take the lead. so it's just standard christianity . that's standard christianity. that's that's allowed in that's basically not allowed in our culture now. >> i'd say judaism, but you've got. >> yeah, well, right . well >> yeah, well, right. well either got the national either you've got the national secular society, they sound a bit biased immediately to me. i
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mean, in name. mean, it's in their name. they're this. they're they're calling this. they're talking coercive and talking about coercive and controlling behaviour. look, i haven't sermon , haven't read the actual sermon, but submitting it but the idea of submitting it doesn't mean in a coercive way . doesn't mean in a coercive way. it just means that that's the order of things. a man has a responsibility that's order of things. a man has a resjit nsibility that's order of things. a man has a resjit means. that's order of things. a man has a resjit means. and that's order of things. a man has a resjit means. and it's that's order of things. a man has a resjit means. and it's funny, all it means. and it's funny, isn't it? as you mentioned, that there's of that kind there's quite a lot of that kind of rights advice type of men's rights advice type stuff which to stuff on twitter, which tends to emulate you can emulate jordan peterson. you can do voice on this one if you do his voice on this one if you want, which tends to emphasise the men take the point is that men take responsibility. not. it's responsibility. it's not. it's not. to boss everyone not. you get to boss everyone around your fault. around is that it's your fault. if things wrong. so you you if things go wrong. so you you don't just shuck it it's don't just shuck it off. it's that's that's the kind of frame rather than the kind of delegation. that's what he would argue. >> they argue. » they argue. >> they sort of say, this >> they would sort of say, this guy is pushing old school misogyny whatever . the misogyny or whatever. the national secular society , and national secular society, and they're now reporting, um , the they're now reporting, um, the church to the charities commission. and the idea being that , no, they get tax breaks that, no, they get tax breaks because they're a charity. i'd like to see if the national secular society is going into any mosques and reporting any hate speech, because we've seen
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lots of evidence of these hate preachers, literally saying, you know, kill jews in a secular society, a charity. well yeah, but let's see, i'm sure they're happy to sort of consumption level question. let's see if they'll go and their job they'll go and do theirjob where it's a little bit riskier. >> slightly >> they absolutely slightly less traditional now traditional christian views now in the telegraph, nick. yeah this is cathedral apologises as transgender activists eulogise at funeral of can transgender activists eulogise a say 1eral of can transgender activists eulogise a say that of can transgender activists eulogise a say that word. of can transgender activists eulogise asay that word. oh of can transgender activists eulogise asay that word. oh it's can transgender activists eulogise asay that word. oh it's on can transgender activists eulogise asay that word. oh it's on the] i say that word. oh it's on the screen can i apparently so chris, you could say chris, i know you could say horse yeah. it's, uh, can we say that at 5 am? i don't know. well, we'll find out when we get an email from hr, but it wouldn't it? wouldn't be hr, would it? anyway, the point is, this is saint patrick's self—identified as a. were. see, as as a. if you were. oh, i see, as a. saying it a. oh, it's not me saying it right. it's not. it's not like louis. patrick's louis. so it's saint patrick's in this in manhattan. and they had this look, ostensibly, it's a funeral. it really like funeral. it really seems like activism you've activism because you've got hundreds of people chanting. they're wearing fishnet stockings and miniskirts, and they're chanting about the w word. not convinced word. i'm still not convinced i can and, um, and it. yes. can say. and, um, and it. yes. so it's another desecration of a
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christian church. we've just seen the silent disco at canterbury cathedral . this is canterbury cathedral. this is another example of just the humiliation and destruction of christian sacred space at canterbury knowingly canterbury cathedral. knowingly booked. they did it themselves. yes. this cathedral were yes. whereas this cathedral were tricked. were . it just tricked. they were. it was just the booked for the space was booked for a eulogy and a, i don't know, upload of horse, i think, but it was like a memorial. yeah. >> afterwards. yeah. no, the footage was put online. it was. yeah. people dancing in the yeah. people were dancing in the aisles these words and aisles and using these words and it's about a former sex worker who champions trans rights . who champions trans rights. >> were they, were they even ostensibly catholic, or was it absolutely just desecration? they don't sound very catholic to the layman there is that odd thing, isn't there? i'm not, you know, as deep in the law as you are. but there's, you know, mary magdalene probably are. one is the, the kind of uber of the, uh, is the kind of uber of the, uh, is the kind of uber of the new testament, isn't she? is that pretty sure you can't say whatever you just said? but i'm not a catholic. i'm a mere protestant. was protestant. but that was a shocker . all well, maybe shocker. all right, well, maybe somebody could write in and
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explain that to us. daily mail again, the worrying news again, josh, the worrying news that food banks are offering to eat that right? eat people's pets is that right? havei eat people's pets is that right? have i got that right? >> nearly . uh, although that >> nearly. uh, although that might be the solution. when pet owners animal food banks owners turn to animal food banks as they struggle with the cost of living crisis, which has seen the price of pet food 58. the price of pet food soar 58. so a big jump. uh, so that is a big jump. uh, they're saying the rspca is saying 1 in 8 people are finding it hard to pay for their pets. of because also it hard to pay for their pets. of going because also it hard to pay for their pets. of going becau vet, also it hard to pay for their pets. of going becau vet, which lso it hard to pay for their pets. of going becau vet, which is» got going to the vet, which is very expensive. expensive. very, very expensive. expensive. i not have pets very i do not have pets very deliberately that reason , deliberately for that reason, and because got too many and because i've got too many children, now. children, just 30s on this now. yeah, and, uh, but i think that's a good idea. i think, uh, maybe eat the, you know, combine the two. >> yeah. they don't want you to have pets because they're bad for the environment. the woof, all those. it certainly worth beanng buy bearing in mind when you buy a dog. their dog. uh recognise that their appetites do reflect their size very substantially. didn't very substantially. we didn't think just think about that. i just realised costs slightly more realised it costs slightly more than being to that than a human being to raise that thing magdalene thing about mary magdalene probably it was probably wasn't that bad. it was just you said it. just the way you said it. i realised, it's lascivious. realised, okay, it's lascivious.
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show is nearly over. let's take another look at tuesday's another quick look at tuesday's front pages . daily mail hundreds front pages. daily mail hundreds of high risk flights land in the uk unchecked. private jets, telegraph us moves to block israeli offensive. the guardian stand with me yulia navalny inaya vows to continue her husband's fight. the express yes, prime minister, i know it's been tough, but our plan will boost britain . i news labour set boost britain. i news labour set to pledge triple lock on uk state pension and finally the daily star indiana jones and the indomitable mrs. mop about the holy grail. those were your front pages. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, josh and nick. i'll be back tomorrow at 11 pm. leo tomorrow at 11 pm. with leo kearse schaffer. kearse and lewis schaffer. if you're 5 am, you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. otherwise, you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned you3reakfast. otherwise, you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned you and:fast. otherwise, you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned you and good otherwise, you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned you and good night/vise, you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned you and good night .ise, you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned you and good night. that thank you and good night. that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news . gb news. >> hello very good evening to you i'm alex burkill. here's
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your latest gb news weather update . there will be a spell of update. there will be a spell of wet and windy weather for many of us tomorrow. but before that we relatively quiet we do have a relatively quiet night because we night ahead. that's because we have high pressure to the south of which is keeping our of us, which is keeping our weather largely settled. that being a weak front is being said, a weak front is pushing its eastwards across pushing its way eastwards across scotland evening, bringing scotland this evening, bringing some and some some thick cloud and some outbreaks rain for time , outbreaks of rain for a time, then through of the night then through much of the night for it is going to be for many of us it is going to be largely dry, perhaps some thickening west thickening cloud in the west will bring a few outbreaks of drizzly here, and watch out drizzly rain here, and watch out for mist fog patches. for some mist and fog patches. two a touch fresher two it may be a touch fresher than some nights, than some recent nights, particularly the east, where particularly in the east, where we may get clearer skies, we may get some clearer skies, temperatures perhaps dropping to low single figures but staying above . however, as we above freezing. however, as we go through tuesday, wet go through tuesday, a wet morning across parts scotland morning across parts of scotland and northern ireland a band and northern ireland as a band of its way in, of rain pushes its way in, that is going slip further is then going to slip further south into england south and eastwards into england and wales head into the and wales as we head into the afternoon though the afternoon, though across the southeast likely to southeast here it's likely to stay dry least during the stay dry at least during the daytime and mild again. highs of around 14 or 15 celsius. some
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showers pushing in behind that front later on tuesday, but it's on wednesday where we get the heaviest rain and likely to be pretty persistent and could cause some localised problems, especially in the southwest where we do have a warning as some travel disruption and some localised quite localised flooding is quite likely rain does clear likely that rain does clear through into thursday . through as we go into thursday. but unsettled to but more unsettled weather to come we go through the end of come as we go through the end of the weekend. the week and into the weekend. with close with temperatures dropping close to normal for the time of year. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on .
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gb news, a think tank , produces a report a think tank, produces a report saying that he three quarters of a million migrants are no longer working and costing us, the
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taxpayer, over £5 billion every single year . single year. >> have the arguments for mass migration in terms of economics just been holed below the waterline? plus i will give you the latest on the de—banking crisis with natwest and ask the question , is it really the place question, is it really the place of the secretary of state for education to tell heads of schools what their mobile phone policy should be, or would it be better to leave them to get on with it themselves? is the nanny state just incapable of leaving people alone ? but before all of people alone? but before all of that, let's get the news with polly middlehurst . polly middlehurst. >> nigel, thank you and good evening to you. well, the top story from the gp newsroom tonight. is that a man who piloted a people smuggling small boat across the english channel has been found guilty of manslaughter. if you're watching on tv, you'll able to see on tv, you'll be able to see footage obtained gb of footage obtained by gb news of the rescue operation, which took place december 2022 for
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place in december 2022 for migrants drowned during the crossing after the boat ran into difficulty . and ibrahim abar, difficulty. and ibrahim abar, who's a senegalese migrant, claimed he had sailed boats before, which meant he was allowed to make the journey free of charge . others, of course, of charge. others, of course, paid thousands , the judge said. paid thousands, the judge said. the boat was navigated using only technology and only mobile phone technology and as a result of his actions, four people lost their lives , three people lost their lives, three children found dead at a home in bristol yesterday. have this afternoon been named by police. they are siblings. afternoon been named by police. they are siblings . farage bush, they are siblings. farage bush, who was aged seven, three year old george bush and nine month old george bush and nine month old mohammed bush . a heavy old mohammed bush. a heavy police presence remains in the area after the children were found dead on sunday following a call to police officers who responded to a welfare query . a responded to a welfare query. a 42 year old woman was arrested at the scene. she was taken to hospital and remains in police custody . meanwhile, specialist custody. meanwhile, specialist dive teams are continuing to search the river soar in leicester this evening in a
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search for a two year old

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