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tv   Headliners  GB News  March 1, 2024 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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gb news. >> good evening. your top stories from the gb newsroom . stories from the gb newsroom. the prime minister says democracy is being targeted by extreme artists addressing the nafion extreme artists addressing the nation outside downing street this evening, he warned about the current situation in britain in the aftermath of the october 7th attacks by hamas against israel . he vowed to back police, israel. he vowed to back police, taking action against problem protests and said universities must also do more to crack down on extremism on campuses. in a statement, the labour leader has backed the prime minister's message calling for unity in the country. rishi sunak signalled the government will unveil what he called a robust framework for deaung he called a robust framework for dealing with the growing problem i >> -- >> want us 5mm >> want us to doubt ourselves, to doubt each other, to doubt our country's history and achievements? they want us to accept a moral equivalence between britain and some of the most despicable regimes in the world. let us prove these extremists wrong and show them that even when we disagree , we that even when we disagree, we will never be disunited from our
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common values of decency and respect whilst addressing the nafion respect whilst addressing the nation , rishi sunak said the nation, rishi sunak said the rochdale by—election result was beyond alarming . beyond alarming. >> that's after it was won by george galloway , the uk's george galloway, the uk's leading jewish organisation has described the workers party leader as a conspiracy theorist who brings division and hate to every place he's ever stood for parliament. during his career, galloway has also presented programmes for both the russian and iranian state broadcaster reuters. the labour leader, sir keir starmer , says he'll stoke keir starmer, says he'll stoke fear and division in. an investigation has been launched after three people were injured in south london following reports of a shooting . a warning reports of a shooting. a warning the following contains flashing images . around 5:00 this images. around 5:00 this afternoon, police said they were pursuing a moped that failed to stop . a shotgun was then fired stop. a shotgun was then fired from the vehicle at clapham common. police say two people sustained pellet injuries . a sustained pellet injuries. a third was injured by the moped
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itself . the suspects fled the itself. the suspects fled the scene . emergency crews say they scene. emergency crews say they treated three people at the scene and took two to hospital. two of the victims were taken to a major trauma centre in the caphal a major trauma centre in the capital. none of the injuries are thought to be life threatening . and a driver has threatening. and a driver has been rescued from the cab of a truck that was left dangling over the edge of a bridge in kentucky in the united states , kentucky in the united states, after her vehicle crashed through a barrier. the woman was miraculously unharmed. video shows rescue workers descending to pull her out of the cab. she was back safely on the bridge in about 45 minutes. attention now turns to how to remove the truck from its position as it hangs over the ohio river . it's not over the ohio river. it's not yet clear how the incident happened. yet clear how the incident happened . for the latest stories happened. for the latest stories , you can sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen . or you can go to on your screen. or you can go to news.com.au alerts.
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>> hello and welcome to headliners your run through tomorrow's newspapers with three comedians. >> i'm leo kirsten. tonight i'm joined by gb news answer to purdey and steed . it's lewis purdey and steed. it's lewis schaffer and cressida wetton. how are you both doing? who is purdey and steve? well, this is the thing . i mean, i was the thing. i mean, i was thinking not everybody's going to get that reference. it was from the new avengers, which was a show i thought wouldn't a show i thought people wouldn't get uh, get the reference because, uh, because get the reference because, uh, bec it.;e get the reference because, uh, bec it. but apparently i got get it. but apparently i got that wrong. steed >> steed. yes. >> steed. oh, yes. >> steed. oh, yes. >> i've got no idea, but the avengers does mentioned avengers does get mentioned on twitter quite lot. twitter quite a lot. >> yeah, that we're that. yes, it's a bit of that. oh, yeah. that's it is that we are that's what it is that we are the, um. >> yeah. well, that's the awkward explanation of my intro the way let's have a quick look at saturday's front page is the daily mail leads with rishi delivers speech. britain needed to hear. the guardian has. democracy is at threat from extremists, claimed sunak . the
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extremists, claimed sunak. the times leads with banning this hatred from our streets, implores the prime minister. the telegraph has democracy under threat. the financial times weekend has opened. i sued by musk for breaking word and the daily star has wider long face that's about a farting police horse. and those were your front pages. horse. and those were your front pages . and let's have a closer pages. and let's have a closer look at those front pages, starting with the telegraph. lewis um, yeah. >> good news. uh, democracy under threat . this is what the, under threat. this is what the, uh, rishi sunak has given a speech. he's given the equivalent. he gave a speech in front of the, uh, in front of number 10 downing street about the threat that's going on to democracy in terrorism all democracy in terrorism and all that it's like . it's like that stuff. it's like. it's like with, like going with, um, it's like i'm going to. going write a very to. i'm going to write a very sharp letter. what that sharp letter. what is that saying with english people? >> like it was written by disgruntled of wells. disgruntled of tunbridge wells. >> disgruntled in >> yes. like disgruntled in tunbridge he seems tunbridge wells. and he seems very george
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very disgruntled at george galloway getting elected. yes. which basically he brought on which he basically he brought on himself. the point is , is that himself. the point is, is that this rishi sunak nothing this guy rishi sunak nothing personal. i listened to the speech or maybe first few speech or maybe the first few minutes it and it's the same minutes of it and it's the same thing that he that he that he's been saying or should have been saying, but hasn't acted on saying, but he hasn't acted on it now saying it. they it and now he's saying it. they were like riots in the street it and now he's saying it. they werethee riots in the street it and now he's saying it. they werethe finals in the street it and now he's saying it. they werethe finals in th> i was going to ask, did anybody hear that and what was going on? i thought i was hoping like maybe a policeman like maybe it's a policeman shouting something important that i think that he has to. but no, i think it nutter heckling it was just a nutter heckling our prime minister. >> that says everything you >> and that says everything you need know prime need to know about the prime minister he even turn. minister he couldn't even turn. and you shut that and we say, will you shut that guyso wants so he wants, you >> so he wants so he wants, you know, a more civilised britain, >> so he wants so he wants, you knotknow, ore civilised britain, >> so he wants so he wants, you knoi know, or britain ed britain, >> so he wants so he wants, you knotknow, or britain ed britunited you know, a britain where united values stuff. but all the values and stuff. but all the while calling that. an while he's calling for that. an extremist screaming abuse. extremist is screaming abuse. >> at him alleged at this >> well at him alleged at this point we'll have to go back over the footage . the footage. >> yes. >> yes. >> says, we draw line.
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>> yes. >think says, we draw line. >> yes. >think he s, we draw line. >> yes. >think he should draw line. >> yes. >think he should draeraw line. >> yes. >think he should draera line line. >> yes. >think he should draera line he i think he should draw a line. he is the prime minister. >> should just done something. >> well, thing is, if he >> well, the thing is, if he says to stop extremism, says he wants to stop extremism, if uses the same he if he uses the same method he used stop the boats extremism used to stop the boats extremism is going to explode. there's no pun there's going to pun intended. there's going to be 20 times as many be like 20 times as many extremists were, which extremists as there were, which is going to happen. >> people here have very >> people here have been very like today in the channel. >> people have been very positive said the positive because he said all the right things. you know, he's he's police to take he's told the police to take a harder with protesters. harder line with protesters. well, that. but well, everybody wants that. but i the of it was i just felt the tone of it was was reserved and. was very reserved and. >> yeah. and also he, uh, you know, diverse city but know, praised diverse city but also hinted that multiculturalism isn't working and we all need to be united under under one value like the american system where, you know, everybody's equal under god and you sort of everybody becomes an american. don't don't american. you don't you don't stay in your own siloed ghetto ized culture when you , uh, well, ized culture when you, uh, well, we are not allowed to say that multiculturalism hasn't worked because what people think of multiculturalism , what they
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multiculturalism, what they really mean is everybody getting along. >> but that's not what multiculture ism is, is, is like you said in america, everybody in theory becomes an american . in theory becomes an american. if and here you can't have groups of people that that hate their their next their the town next door. that's what happened dunng next door. that's what happened during the angles and the saxons time. and look what happened there. yeah, but i mean , at there. yeah, but i mean, at least the angles and the saxons shared, you know, basic values . shared, you know, basic values. >> mean, we've got now, >> i mean, what we've got now, they they they they did they did, but they didn't share the values with the britons were already living there. >> and the britons were forced to the nether reaches of wales and cornwall and so this country was completely taken over by the angles and the saxons. >> yeah. but those who we are now, i mean, i think the. >> yeah, well, he's saying >> yeah, well, what he's saying is in 2000 years, the 3000 years, it'll all be history anyway, very anyway, which is a very philosophical point lewis philosophical point for lewis schaffer. >> so in a thousand years will be caliphate and be an islamic caliphate and nobody will be allowed to complain. >> that's exactly where his point yeah isn't point goes. yeah that isn't where point goes. yeah that isn't wh
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>> my point goes is that english people sitting here all people who are sitting here all smug saying, this is our smug and saying, this is our country, should remember when they over this country. oh, they took over this country. oh, this is an absolute nonsense argument, lewis . argument, lewis. >> i hear there's so many times always from the owen jones types. know, the oh, we types. you know, the oh, we should have open borders because here we've always here we had massive we've always had no we had massive migration. no, no we haven't. but we have. had massive migration. no, no we hav but. but we have. had massive migration. no, no we hav but we'vebut we have. had massive migration. no, no we havbut we've also re have. had massive migration. no, no we havbut we've also had|ve. had massive migration. no, no we havbut we've also had massive >> but we've also had massive violence we have not had violence haven't we have not had 1.4 million people coming. that's fine. but my point is it's never happened in absolute nonsense. >> it's absolutely nonsense. >> it's absolutely nonsense. >> not arguing that at most >> i'm not arguing that at most tens thousands. tens of thousands. >> yeah tens of thousands. >> and yeahalso those people . >> and that's also those people. >> and that's also those people. >> those people tended to come those come from those people tended to come from countries that were nearby. so weren't a huge cultural difference . yeah. difference. yeah. >> and you know, i denounce what you're saying because you're saying denounce it. i'm not saying i denounce it. i'm not saying i denounce it. i'm not saying that i'm saying that when the angles and the saxons moved into britain . okay. and they into britain. okay. and they swamped this country and they forced the native people out of most of the country. yeah okay. >> well, i'm not if we're going
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to get into angle and saxon phobia , i think we're a few phobia, i think we're a few centuries too late. anyway, next up, we've got the financial times weekend. cresta. what have they got? okay >> openai sued by musk for breaking word . so elon musk has breaking word. so elon musk has sued openai, who i think he used to be. he was one of the founders. right. or the founder in 2015? i think something like that. and this company is now branched off. so there's now two sections to this company. originally, he said he wanted it to always be its original mission of building artificial intelligence systems for the benefit of humanity. and he's now accusing the people who are currently running it of just wanting to turn it into a business and make profits. >> a company >> yeah, imagine that a company wanting to money. i mean, wanting to make money. i mean, elon seems to quite like elon musk seems to quite like money given that he money as well, given that he paid himself. >> he must have known billion dividend. >> he have known this. >> he must have known this. >> he must have known this. >> the kind of thing >> it's not the kind of thing that you will look that you get. and you will look after won't you, lads? that you get. and you will look aftel won't you, lads? that you get. and you will look aftel mean,1't you, lads? that you get. and you will look aftel mean, it'sou, lads? that you get. and you will look aftel mean, it's an, lads? that you get. and you will look aftel mean, it's a very,s? that you get. and you will look aftel mean, it's a very, very >> i mean, it's a very, very powerful product. >> all money. the >> it is all about money. the reason and not all about it. but
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elon musk put in $44 million of his money. it's granted it's his own money. it's granted it's just change him. but just chump change for him. but he and now microsoft he put it in and now microsoft paid $13 billion for it. so he want s he probably this is my guess. want s he probably this is my guess . he wants want s he probably this is my guess. he wants some of want s he probably this is my guess . he wants some of the guess. he wants some of the money that he invested. and this is a ploy to get it. >> so he's trying to get some of the money back. it could also be from the, you know, he's got strong beliefs about, uh, about freedom and about freedom of speech and about fairness. we've seen in fairness. and we've seen in other ai systems when their coded, they've bias coded into them. so if you search for, uh, search, for example, the anglo—saxons that you're talking about, they come back as sub—saharan anglo—saxon for louis schafer the other day i said, show me louis schafer, and you were a black lady. >> the quiet one, no less. >> the quiet one, no less. >> you're at a party in 1992. >> you're at a party in 1992. >> is that true ? because they >> is that true? because they have said that i've been on the bbc many times. yeah, i, i they should redo this this headline , should redo this this headline, though, it says openai sued by
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musk for breaking word. >> i assumed that openai was now, uh , the technology behind now, uh, the technology behind that little paper clip that pops up, and it had broken words somehow. >> but no, it broke word or breaking word. the word thing, the word, the word document, you do that several times a week. that's what they meant. that's a good, joke. that's what they meant. that's a goothank joke. that's what they meant. that's a goothank you:e. that's what they meant. that's a goothank you for saying it's >> thank you for saying it's a good joke. yeah moving on to the mirror, lewis. what have they good joke. yeah moving on to the miriin. lewis. what have they good joke. yeah moving on to the miriin the vis. what have they good joke. yeah moving on to the miriin the front?1at have they got in the front? >> well, they got the front page. good news. terry, i don't know how long i can continue to do that and make myself laugh. minus seven times minus seven. i got to go back in time. anyway. thank you. cressida. jerry's texted turmoil. this is a showbiz inclusive . it's in the showbiz inclusive. it's in the mirror. it's about geri halliwell , whose boyfriend, halliwell, whose boyfriend, christian horner, was texting one of the girls in the office. i think one of the women in the office just let you just like me and you can't do that anymore. so and she was felt very put upon by it was very embarrassing and humiliated. but the truth is , let's be honest, men are pigs. i hate to say it. i know that's
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against my trope. >> that's the bigotry of low expectation , lewis. expectation, lewis. >> and you should expect more from people i don't. >> i know men, i know one man. i'm always saying that women are horrible. yeah, but you have to remember how horrible men are to their anyway. yeah. their their anyway. yeah. >> the worst thing about this story to be that he was story seems to be that he was trying to cheat. yeah and then got by company hr got pulled up by the company hr department. they through department. and they dug through his and he didn't his messages and he didn't actually it in actually get to put it in horrible to. >> so he i feel so bad for her that this front page news. that this is front page news. >> that there's some >> i hope that there's some cynical under plot and actually she's out of this. she's making money out of this. >> you do know something ? >> do you do you know something? i women ? first of i mean, women, women? first of all, she stole him away from his wife. is that true? oh, yes, i think. oh, cheater is always gonna. >> she'll do it with you . >> she'll do it with you. they'll do it to you. >> they'll do it to you. that's interesting. okay. phrase . interesting. okay. great phrase. and is, i know about and the truth is, i know about being extremely humiliated because i've wife's because i've seen my wife's face. you know, my ex—wife , when face. you know, my ex—wife, when she had, she was so embarrassed
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with me, i was. >> so i couldn't believe that, you know what? >> i didn't think so. i thought i was, like, a total, legitimate person. now all right, well, look, you know, you've got you've suit. you've got a suit. >> you're on television. you've got a suit. >> iou're on television. you've got a suit. >> i hade on television. you've got a suit. >> i had an television. you've got a suit. >> i had a suit.evision. you've got a suit. >> i had a suit. then n. you've got a suit. >> i had a suit. then i looked, i even better. i looked even better. then i looked better. >> unbelievable . >> unbelievable. >> unbelievable. >> she was by me. she >> she was fooled by me. she should done her research. should have done her research. youokay , let's finish this >> okay, let's finish this section starcrest . what section with a starcrest. what have they got? >> okay. >> okay. >> the long face? >> why the long face? uh, cops deploy giant six foot, two inch farting wipe smile off. farting horse to wipe smile off. thugs must his, uh. and that's more or less all we know about this. so so there's a horse that eats a lot . eats a lot. >> i assume there's a full 48 page in—depth analysis. >> i wish we had the whole story. we'll just have to guess. um, it's some kind of. i think it's like some kind of security horse. there's a person in whoever's it, and whoever's riding it, and apparently life apparently it's making life miserable for yobbos in greater manchester. >> yeah, it sounds like that horse is itself, uh, guilty of breach ring. peace breach of the ring. peace >> thing is, this this >> and the thing is, this this i think horse one those think this horse is one of those kind shire horses that
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kind of like shire horses that were, like, good for pulling. doesn't that shiny. doesn't look that shiny. whatever. it's the don't make the it's b, it's the the jokes. it's the b, it's the same the b, the same b or the b, the anheuser—busch, the clydesdale . anheuser—busch, the clydesdale. yeah, exactly. so it's just probably reminds the yobbos about drinking . yeah. okay. about drinking. yeah. okay. >> right. well, that's the front pages. us in a moment pages. done. join us in a moment for fallout george for the fallout from george galloway's seismic rochdale election. and islamophobic election. when and islamophobic iranians. see you in a couple of
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welcome back to headliners. i'm leo castille here with louis schaefer and cressida wetton , schaefer and cressida wetton, kicking off this section with the independent . and jews are the independent. and jews are worried as muslims elected george galloway and rochdale . to george galloway and rochdale. to be fair, it's not the worst thing muslims have done in rochdale. >> louis um , i think rochdale is >> louis um, i think rochdale is a pretty mean, it was probably a pretty i mean, it was probably bad they even arrived. a pretty i mean, it was probably bad whole they even arrived. a pretty i mean, it was probably bad whole place even arrived. a pretty i mean, it was probably bad whole place was arrived. a pretty i mean, it was probably bad whole place was horrible. the whole place was horrible. oh, it was it. oh, it was beautiful. it was it. i mean, it's still beautiful. i don't what rochdale don't even know what rochdale i know in the northern know it's in the northern manchester. the
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manchester. just tell us the story. you story. story. i'll tell you the story. dork day the jewish dork day for the jewish community apologises community is labour apologises for jewish jew. george for the jewish jew. for george galloway by—election. dark. they listen . there's going to be listen. there's going to be a lot of bad days for the jews coming. so this is not this is not the worst one. but so what happenedis not the worst one. but so what happened is george galloway, who i i did it, i did i have met, i did it, i did a show with the guy and he was so nice to me. we discussed football in this country and he's from, but he's very charming charismatic charming and charismatic politician, very charming. and when, throw me off of the know, throw me off of the building for being gay, um, which not gay , but they'll, which i am not gay, but they'll, they'll i am just to they'll maybe say i am just to throw me off. um it's not because he was a jew because he was annoying george galloway . was annoying george galloway. i'm saying you've got to stop me. i'm going off on a tangent. you're too. no i mean, i'm enjoying it, but but do tell us the story. the story? the story is happenedis the story. the story? the story is happened is up up in is what happened is up in up in rochdale is the is the labour candidate said something untoward. yeah. and semitic and possibly anti—semitic . nick possibly anti—semitic. nick let's just say it wasn't. but
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let's just say it wasn't. but let's say it was. and labour had to take him off the ballot. and by labour taking him off the ballot, they um , they, they gave ballot, they um, they, they gave george galloway a free ride. labour had no candidate effectively. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> think we're just >> i think we're going to just have to put that in a box. they may mean, may be anti—semitic. i mean, yeah, he said that israel yeah, he said that that israel were complicit in the attacks on october the 7th, not on. yeah. so anyway, no carry on. i have to push back on that. >> he he should be the one pushing back. >> well, they let me talk sometimes too, so i'm having go. >> thank you for pushing back. maybe we should. you maybe we should. maybe you should what the. >> you know, what can i just say this. >> you probably will. we don't know if israel was, was or was. listen get from the listen let's get away from the keir starmer said no. >> so apologise. three year old to read the news. >> you basically apologise because he they didn't give the labour camp, they didn't have a labour . it's his labour candidate. but it's his fault picking that labour fault for picking that labour candidate. it was his fault for letting guy be the labour letting this guy be the labour candidate. so so he was right candidate. so he so he was right to but i think it to apologise. but i think it basically told the world there's
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problems in these kind of communities. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> chris, what do you think about the galloway election win? because you know, a lot of people have said i mean, rishi seems, uh, outraged by it. he says it's going too ferment all this fear and all this extremism as outraged as rishi gets. >> yeah. one of the things is when he goes back to work, as it were, is he going to be shunned in parliament? is he to be in parliament? is he going to be sort think sort of. i don't think he's going very popular. i going to be very popular. i think he's used to that. well, right. it doesn't bother him. right. so it doesn't bother him. he just carries on regardless. right. so it doesn't bother him. he and carries on regardless. right. so it doesn't bother him. he and carries on be ardless. right. so it doesn't bother him. he and carries on be enough. >> and there will be enough. i remember and remember he's scottish and there's the snp who's there's probably the snp who's going probably side going to probably take his side and very charming. and he is very charming. >> they're not not in and he is very charming. >> samee not not in and he is very charming. >> same side. not in the same side. >> they're on side. >> they're not on the same side. >> they're not on the same side. >> mean, in some >> i mean, i guess in some issues there would be you know what, i imagine the snp what, i can't imagine the snp doing anything would doing anything that would make me happy. >> but don't know why me happy. >said but don't know why me happy. >said that but don't know why me happy. >said that because on't know why me happy. >said that because |t'l know why me happy. >said that because i don't)w why me happy. >said that because i don't eveniy i said that because i don't even know and i'm not know what they do. and i'm not political, well we've got political, but. well we've got a story coming up about porridge later, actually. oh, well. anyway, want to later, actually. oh, well. any off ', want to later, actually. oh, well. any off topic. want to later, actually. oh, well. anyoff topic. don't want to later, actually. oh, well. anyoff topic. don't get /ant to topic. >> but, uh, so somebody get this
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back top. back on top. >> what the point here? >> what is the point here? so it's a day for the jewish it's a dark day for the jewish community. or well community. yes or no? well yeah. it's the whole it's not good, is it? the whole thing's right. >> sorry. >> sorry. >> well, i think it could be a good jewish good day for the jewish community george community because george galloway is going to into galloway is going to go into parliament. could he parliament. and yes, he could he could who could be offensive. he who knows, who knows what extreme things uh, things he's going to say. uh, but to be a conduit but he's going to be a conduit for the people who elected him. and he's going to reveal he's going bring light. and he's going to reveal he's goiiso bring light. and he's going to reveal he's goiiso this bring light. and he's going to reveal he's goiiso this anotheright. and he's going to reveal he's goiiso this another example of >> so this is another example of the freedom of the benefit of freedom of speech. out the open. speech. get it out in the open. let's views let's hear everybody's views then they are. yeah then we know what they are. yeah >> perfect. moving on. we've got the guardian iranians the guardian now and iranians are in an are refusing to vote in an election rigged elect election rigged to elect hardline islamist . it's sounds hardline islamist. it's sounds like iranians are islamophobic . louis. >> it does sound that because this is iran and 27% of the population of iran didn't , or population of iran didn't, or only 27% voted in the in the big elections that they're having. and only 12% in tehran, which is the capital, metropolitan type city. yeah. which tells you that the people didn't want to vote. and the reason they didn't want to vote is because every candidate that runs has to be
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vetted and chosen and selected by the guardian council of the islamic state. and so they vote test, they vote . they don't test, they vote. they don't vote, which is their protest , vote, which is their protest, which tells you that people in iran do not like the government. and the reason this is so important is because iran is the nexus of evil all around the world, or they're being accused of it. they're basically in sherlock holmes. they're the moriarty of countries. >> well, on a on a note that's relevant to us, chris. i mean, in 1979, iran was a relatively open, prosperous and tolerant country . then it had an islamic country. then it had an islamic revolution in which marxists left wing people and islamists marched side by side, just as we're seeing in the uk right now . and they brought in this islamic theocracy , and then islamic theocracy, and then suddenly the workshops for queer youth that had been promised to the leftist didn't materialise. >> not a lot of them even lower turnout than for voting . turnout than for voting. >> yeah, great. great point. um,
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and you know , what i find and you know, what i find fascinating about this is that people are allowed to not vote. i've got an australian friend where she gets she where she gets fined if she doesn't turn and vote. doesn't turn up and vote. >> because australia is a >> yeah, because australia is a police state. anti—democracy. police state. anti —democracy. >> the police state. anti—democracy. >> the only country. it's >> it's the only country. it's the only country that's actually stricter and more authoritarian authoritarian than iran. >> well, it turns out. yeah. so they take leaf out of they could take a leaf out of australia's book. but yeah, australia's book. um, but yeah, that's to me that that's fascinating to me that they're home. that's fascinating to me that theyit's, home. that's fascinating to me that theyit's, it's home. that's fascinating to me that theyit's, it's really home. that's fascinating to me that theyit's, it's really it's home. that's fascinating to me that theyit's, it's really it's very|e. and it's, it's really it's very clear what the people think, isn't it. by their absence. >> absolutely. we've got the telegraph now and tory mp has telegraph now and a tory mp has been of racism . assume been accused of racism. assume he said, some totally common sense. tory accused of sense. cressida tory accused of fanning racism over traveller site opposition , says he won't site opposition, says he won't be silenced . be silenced. >> so this guy, sir conor burns , >> so this guy, sir conor burns, um he has, he's the bournemouth west mp and there's proposed to put a traveller site on a car park in a residential area in his constituency, kc and surprise, surprise, his constituency aren't very interested in this. so he interested in this. and so he said so he says it's inappropriate to put it in the
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middle a residential area. middle of a residential area. and course, he's being and of course, he's being told that this inciting that this is inciting discrimination against the traveller community. but he's just not backing down. he says, i not, however, silenced i will not, however, be silenced from raising legitimate issues on behalf of my constituents. yeah, so that's that's his position. >> yeah. and it seems like, i mean, the people who find , uh, mean, the people who find, uh, his stance a problem or racist or whatever , uh, why don't they or whatever, uh, why don't they put the traveller community next to their house? well, because then everybody's happy . then everybody's happy. >> a large part of it is the traveller community, so they don't have a house to put themselves in. right? that's one of problems. of the problems. >> that they they >> but yeah, say that they they did they were settled. did say they were settled. >> i don't get involved >> i don't want to get involved in because this is one more in this because this is one more group i'm going group of people that i'm going to probably alienate by saying the i think think the wrong thing. i think i think communities have right communities should have a right to in their to what gets built in their town. it's in town. yeah. whether it's in bournemouth or like in my place , bournemouth or like in my place, which is southwark. and so they let the council do whatever let the, the council do whatever they shouldn't they want. they shouldn't let they want. they shouldn't let the put, put the council just put, put buildings in the thing and the people should say we don't want
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it. that's this it. and that's all this congressman . congressman. >> but the problem with that is if already if somebody's already got a house and they're to house and they're trying to block, appreciate isn't block, i appreciate this isn't about they're about housing, but they're trying people trying to block other people coming into the area just because their first. because they got their first. they their bit. they they only own their bit. they don't own that. and that. they just they yeah. just own what they own. yeah. so you don't know. yeah. you can't i don't know. yeah. >> i mean if there's >> but people i mean if there's if for planning if you apply for planning permission, take permission, you have to take into account the views of into account the, the views of neighbours . neighbours. >> why the, why >> and why should the, why should council away >> and why should the, why shou to council away >> and why should the, why shou to anybody, il away >> and why should the, why shou to anybody, whatever ay >> and why should the, why shou to anybody, whatever their land to anybody, whatever their ethnic group is? yeah. that's i'm against it makes absolute sense. >> anyway , we've got the >> anyway, we've got the guardian with good news guardian now with some good news about our population decline. we can save the can shut schools and save the taxpayers some money. lewis. >> good news. and because >> yeah? good news. and because this is a story about about, uh, london's. says london's london's. it says london's secondary school applications are by 4000 after falling are down by 4000 after falling birth rate . i've, i've, we have birth rate. i've, i've, we have a new cup a new cup. it doesn't it's not going to it's going to look a bit like this. it says that death of love and that's what's the world. what's happening in the world. they don't want to stop children. don't want us to children. they don't want us to
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get so i'm going get married. so i'm going to give it you a death give you give it to you a death of to join other of love mug to join the other ones on shelf. ones on the shelf. >> well, what beautiful girl >> well, what a beautiful girl on mug. on the mug. >> girl >> the girl from. >> the girl from. >> yeah. this looks like a sort of cover, but in of 80s, uh, album cover, but in a it's the death of love. >> it's the death of love. anyway, didn't you a cup anyway, didn't i give you a cup of red? >> you gave me a mug. you give me cup, lewis. me a team world cup, lewis. >> you a team. >> i gave you a team. >> i gave you a team. >> drank out it. >> world drank out of it. >> world drank out of it. >> all right, know what i'll >> all right, you know what i'll give? you the thanks. give? i'll give you the thanks. >> thanks. you can you tell >> thanks. any you can you tell us these schools? us about these schools? >> the schools is has been drop of for 4000 places of applications for 4000 places and secondary schools. >> old the >> i don't know how old the secondary people are. secondary school people are. what they to 11 what are they like 11 to 18, 11 to 11 to 16, i guess 11 to to 8, 11 to 16, i guess 11 to 16. and so that's good news because it means there because it means that there aren't people to aren't going to people going to be get the places for be able to get the places for their but also, their kids. but it's also, i think the why they're think the reason why they're putting the newspaper. putting this in the newspaper. it about it says, hey, don't worry about mass because mass immigration because there's still space. but the still plenty of space. but the truth is, is that all the people who are men, who are coming in are young men, and going bring their and they're going to bring their wives and families. so in about five it's. five years, it's. >> and huge , a huge >> yeah. and a huge, a huge proportion the babies being proportion of the babies being born here are, you know, born to
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people come from overseas people who've come from overseas , which is wonderful and a huge strength to the country. uh, but, know , you have but, you know, you have to wonder, to if wonder, you have to wonder if it's such sensible idea to it's such a sensible idea to have rapid demographic have such rapid demographic change such change in a country in such a short space of time. >> guardian is saying this >> the guardian is saying this is to birth but it is down to birth rates, but it might also be that people just is down to birth rates, but it migh to lso be that people just is down to birth rates, but it migh to go be that people just is down to birth rates, but it migh to go and hat people just is down to birth rates, but it migh to go and live )eople just is down to birth rates, but it migh to go and live in»ple just is down to birth rates, but it migh to go and live in essex, ;t want to go and live in essex, because there's more space. i mean, that's a legit concern, because there's more space. i mea|it?hat's a legit concern, because there's more space. i mea|it? lots a legit concern, because there's more space. i mea|it? lots of legit concern, because there's more space. i mea|it? lots of people ncern, because there's more space. i mea|it? lots of people move isn't it? lots of people move out breed. out to breed. >> yeah, and also people will, uh, they talk about birth rates, but maybe people would have have more children if they could afford houses, and maybe houses would, be if we would, would be cheaper if we didn't keep bringing people into the country and having spend the country and having to spend money them and use up the country and having to spend morhousing them and use up the country and having to spend morhousing stockem and use up the country and having to spend morhousing stock likeind use up the country and having to spend morhousing stock like thatise up the country and having to spend morhousing stock like that .e up our housing stock like that. just a theory. >> can i tell you >> can i just tell you something? don't agree with something? i don't agree with you, okay? i don't i don't want to let the people because people are going to see me sitting here. they can and they here. they can sit and they think, oh, this guy louis schaefer do schaefer is just like lee. i do agree with the sake of agree with you for the sake of the no, we don't know. we the show. no, we don't know. we don't know. my turn out amazing. it doesn't look it's
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it doesn't look like it's turning it might turning out amazingly. it might turn out well. >> know what? it's going >> you know what? it's going to be yes, it's going be fun to watch. yes, it's going to maybe maybe so to be fun. maybe maybe not so much you, but for the rest to be fun. maybe maybe not so m|us, you, but for the rest to be fun. maybe maybe not so m|us, it'syou, but for the rest to be fun. maybe maybe not so m|us, it's going jt for the rest to be fun. maybe maybe not so m|us, it's going to for the rest to be fun. maybe maybe not so m|us, it's going to be the rest to be fun. maybe maybe not so m|us, it's going to be funrest of us, it's going to be fun anyway. made it halfway. anyway. we've made it halfway. stay to find how stay with us to find out how foreigners. oh the nhs 180 foreigners. oh the nhs180 million it could soon be million and how it could soon be illegal that have illegal to say that men have penises and women
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soon welcome back to headliners the guardian. now, in another historic british building, is going to get pulled down. cressida mass wins court challenge to gove's block on razing of oxford street store. >> so mass of one michael gove didn't want their plans to go ahead. they've got a store they want to pull it down and start again and build one. so again and build a new one. so that's raising with a ayes rather ayes up um flat rather than ayes up um flat innit. and uh, people like very much like lewis came along and said no, no it's old and beautiful. reuse what you've got lewis. >> yes. >> yes. >> just like lewis. i know it's a bit like people complained
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about it, just like lewis , about it, just like lewis, including mr gove. um so gove said his intention , which was said his intention, which was contrary to the recommended action from the inspector people inspectors had already said no, you've got to let them do what they want to do. it all been they want to do. it had all been agreed and gove comes along and thinks he's got better ideas and causes unnecessary, causes lots of unnecessary, expensive delays, which of course pay course he didn't have to pay for. this is all on the developer. was it like developer. uh, was it m&s like you about the developer? you care about the developer? well, because well, i do actually, because i think i think there's something well, i do actually, because i thin about1k there's something well, i do actually, because i thin about1k there's where hing well, i do actually, because i thin about1k there's where you can odd about a system where you can complain and cause complain and complain and cause all these problems somebody all these problems for somebody trying a business and trying to run a business and it's no well is ultimately it's a cost to the taxpayer, actually , um, i'm assuming you feel differently about this . differently about this. >> i totally do. i mean, the thing about this country free is when i'm living in america and america filled with, like, america is filled with, like, new stuff , and say, new ugly stuff, and i say, i want to move britain, which want to move to britain, which is old ugly stuff. is filled with old ugly stuff. and point. and that's the whole point. that's moved here. i'm an that's why i moved here. i'm an old and thought this is old guy, and i thought this is the place for me. i am against tearing buildings . it's tearing down any buildings. it's not marks and spencer to
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not for marks and spencer to tear down a building. you know who it's for? for the who it's for? it's for the germans. when bomb . when germans. when they bomb. when they again, there'll be they bomb again, there'll be enough room buildings to be enough room for buildings to be a lot of empty spaces. when the germans and germans are germans and the germans are coming they are coming back. >> there's nothing wrong with planning. i agree with you. planning laws fine. but planning laws are fine. but the point already point is, they've already been through and through all of that. and then gove along says, no, gove comes along and says, no, i just to own planning law. >> it is so. it is the most absolutely corrupt part of local government. guessing i government. i'm guessing i had a deal government. i'm guessing i had a deal. not saying. i'm deal. i'm not saying. i'm not saying because fought planning saying because i fought planning in, what what in, uh, in southwark what what they were doing with building on parks they built on peckham green . green. >> they're cemetery >> they're building a cemetery as . as well. >> they're building on they're not cemetery. not building on the cemetery. they remove all of this, they want to remove all of this, the headstones and they want to cut down all the trees so they can plant rows and they're can plant rows of. and they're doing destroying this doing it just destroying this ancient, god so ancient, not ancient god so people have somewhere people can have somewhere to live . live. >> e— e as somebody trying to >> i mean, as somebody trying to get property market, this get on the property market, this is slightly different is a slightly different perspective. >> it is not going provide >> it is not going to provide you ounce of any ounce. you with any ounce of any ounce.
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and i would you do and what i would suggest you do is handsome older man is you find a handsome older man , older man, lower your standards a little bit. >> would that be a really poor one? >> problem w— one? >> problem is you're >> your problem is you're a pretty you've got pretty girl. you've got high standards . standards. >> we'll see if we can >> well, we'll see if we can find men find any handsome older men later on. but we've got the male now, people from other now, and people from other countries flying countries have been flying into britain to use nhs for free, britain to use the nhs for free, not just lewis, it's cost us not just lewis, and it's cost us £180 million. surely this should come out of our foreign aid budget? no this is over five years. >> so this is so much, so much for the crackdown on health tourists. nhs hospitals have lost a staggering £180 over the last five years, £100 million, £180 million. sorry, what's inflation? what's the point is the point is that's only like £30 million a year. that's chump change for the nhs, wastes billions . it's all a waste. it's billions. it's all a waste. it's andifs billions. it's all a waste. it's and it's probably way more than that because it says that the nhs doesn't even ask people for money. >> well, this is this is what i was going to say. >> how do they even know how do they know? because they're only catching people. i agree catching the people. i agree with that chump
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with you that that is chump change. the true figure is change. but the true figure is going because going to be vastly more, because there's people there's going to be people flying saying, you flying in and then saying, you know not from that know what? i'm not from that country. british. yeah, in a country. i'm british. yeah, in a strange accent. country. i'm british. yeah, in a stréabsolutely. wouldn't trust >> absolutely. i wouldn't trust these and, these figures at all. and, you know, reminds me that know, it reminds me that whenever people are campaigned to fund a particular illness , to fund a particular illness, they never think like. and you're taking that from somewhere know, and somewhere else, you know, and i'm i've the i'm not saying i've got the right answers, that's the right answers, but that's the job isn't it? know, job of nice, isn't it? you know, that organisation they have to decide is worth it. that decide this is worth it. that isn't everybody doesn't decide this is worth it. that isn't and everybody doesn't decide this is worth it. that isn't and thisybody doesn't decide this is worth it. that isn't and this kindr doesn't decide this is worth it. that isn't and this kind ofoesn't decide this is worth it. that isn't and this kind of brings get it. and this kind of brings that it? we that to light, doesn't it? we don't resources. don't have infinite resources. well we could have infinite resources if we let independent hospitals be independent businesses. >> and we didn't have nice. and we let each maybe let insurance companies like they do in america, they got infinite america, where they got infinite resources in america. no but they though they don't. and they tell people, i'm sorry, we're not provide that like not going to provide that like this. is going to start this. ozempic is going to start is the economy . is going to kill the economy. ozempic that's the weight loss thing. >> not exactly sure what tangent that went on. we don't even need
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half. we've got the mail again. we do need hospitals. we've got the mail again too in many brits are self—diagnosing with autism. i wonder being unable i mean, no wonder being unable to contact and being to make eye contact and being anxious about social situations . anxious about social situations. that's just describing every british person. cressida. >> that's right. unless we've had uh, nhs can't had a few drinks. uh, nhs can't cope with surge in brits self diagnosing with adhd and autism , diagnosing with adhd and autism, expert warns. so everyone is on tiktok seeing that . but it says tiktok seeing that. but it says in here that being a flirt is supposed to be like a sign of bad, bad judgement or something. the point is, the symptoms are are not that, they're not that unusual. so. so en masse, people want a rubber stamp diagnosis. so they're all getting in the queue. and there's been a nine fold increase in fold increase since 1998. in autism . um, which, you know , autism. um, which, you know, presumably there really hasn't been a nine fold increase, i think is what the articles implying. >> yeah, a lot of people, a lot of people just lived with it before without getting diagnosed. >> well, now with the >> well, and now also with the adhd, seen my adhd, i've seen this in my friends. become very trendy friends. it's become very trendy in comedy community to have
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in the comedy community to have adhd number one, so that if you're a white, a straight white guy ' you're a white, a straight white guy , you've got something that guy, you've got something that makes special . you can makes you a bit special. you can tick box arts council tick a box on an arts council funding form. number two, if you get adhd and it's get diagnosed with adhd and it's very get diagnosed with very easy to get diagnosed with adhd everybody basically adhd because everybody basically has , then you get has adhd, then you get prescribed medical grade speed paid for by the nhs. >> yes, exactly. it's ritalin andifs >> yes, exactly. it's ritalin and it's part of this whole self—identity . the problem is self—identity. the problem is the two teams, team world believes in self—identity. they believes in self—identity. they believe if you're a woman and you call yourself a man, you can be a man. if you if you call yourself mental, you can be mental. or is they the kids say, ihave mental. or is they the kids say, i have mental health. that's what they say i've got. not even i'm not mentally ill. i've got mental is that it's mental health. is that it's about about about self. it's about self identity. luckily i don't identity. and luckily i don't have to self—identify myself because so many other people are i >>i -- >> i have a girlfriend who tells me, who tells me i am these things and she she yes, she's a man that i met when i went to my doctor, i went to my doctor and
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my doctor looked at me and says, you're depressed and she prescribed citalopram . prescribed citalopram. >> and you were like, i'm not depressed. and she's like, well, you should be. >> around you are, but >> people around you are, but you're fine. >> your life is horrible. louis. yeah, okay. >> another health >> we've got another health care. health care story care. health care related story here, but the express with which doctors scamming patients they should be struck off the which doctors register. louis. >> news. good news. >> yeah. good news. good news. it says basically the cracks are promising and possible cures for cancen promising and possible cures for cancer. yeah. and they're charging up to £3,000. impossible cures like prayer or astrology or voodoo , whatever. astrology or voodoo, whatever. and the truth is, the truth is why are people going for these cures? because the real cures don't cure. there's been no increase in cancer survival ability over the diagnosis has been earlier . ability over the diagnosis has been earlier. but but chemo doesn't work. louis, this is . doesn't work. louis, this is. >> and i'm going to push back on this because it sounds like copper plated absolute beeswax . copper plated absolute beeswax. there has been an increase in
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survival ability of a lot of cancers. no no, there's not the major cancers . major cancers. >> if you get pancreatic cancer, you're a goner. >> some some cancers, pancreatic . that's steve jobs belief. had steve jobs i mean it's not hard to think of the other ones. >> they detect them early and the don't any the people don't live any longer. i know what i'm longer. i don't know what i'm talking saying talking about, but you're saying where are, right is you're where you are, right is you're saying get a point of saying people get to a point of desperation, and so they turn to these part desperation, and so they turn to thesehuge part desperation, and so they turn to thesehuge of part desperation, and so they turn to thesehuge of cash|rt with huge amounts of cash because feel they've got because they feel they've got nothing to lose. >> honest , i've seen >> but to be honest, i've seen this happening. >> cousins , uh, a palliative >> my cousins, uh, a palliative doctor , um, just helping people doctor, um, just helping people sort of end the terminal diseases . she helps them end diseases. she helps them end their end . their their last their end. their their last months, uh , in a better way. and months, uh, in a better way. and she was working as a locum for a harley street. uh doctor. and they were dealing with people with terminal illnesses and sailing, sort of up sailing, uh, inappropriate treatments and obviously when you've got a terminal illness and lots of money, you're desperate and you'll chuck money at whoever promises you know, a slight chance of recovery .
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chance of recovery. >> well, i am 67 years old, and i think about cancer every single day . and i've i've seen single day. and i've i've seen a lot of youtube thumbnails about it , and i'm lot of youtube thumbnails about it, and i'm going to make an enemy here. i don't think i don't think medical doctors know any more than these quacks. i think if i thought i had cancer, i'd be very interested to speak to a medical doctor. yeah, well, you know something? i would not be. well, the only cure the only the only way for to prevent. not that you preventing cancer is one thing, but stopping cancer is by reducing your glucose levels. glucose feeds cancer. and if you eliminate that cancen and if you eliminate that cancer, if you eliminate glucose , the cancer cannot grow . , the cancer cannot grow. >> there's a certain amount of truth , and yet it's the first. truth, and yet it's the first. >> but you know what? >> but you know what? >> i've heard you say something. >> i've heard you say something. >> is that true? you can go to louis schaefer at, uh, twitter. >> you won't eliminate cancer, but can cancer but certainly you can cancer because more nutrients .
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because it needs more nutrients. this is what steve jobs did. he starved , essentially starved starved, essentially starved himself because the cancer starved, starved first. starved, uh, starved first. >> no, that's not not what he did . he was on an all fruit did. he was on an all fruit diet, which caused the cancer to grow. but you are right about that. the okay, well, let's move on to something a bit cheerier. >> we've got the telegraph now with suella worried about plans to make it illegal to say boys have a penis, girls have a vagina. also make vagina. it will also make kindergarten cop illegal. cressida suella braverman fears she could be criminalised if trans conversion therapy is banned. >> so , uh, she is a parent and >> so, uh, she is a parent and she says that she teaches her kids that a boy can't become a girl and a girl can't become a boy. um, and so there's potential . it's going to be new potential. it's going to be new legislation that bans trans conversion therapy . so gay conversion therapy. so gay conversion therapy. so gay conversion therapy, we all know we don't want that. we don't want to try and convince people out of their sexuality. but if you have, say, an eight year old saying, in wrong saying, i think i'm in the wrong body , it might be reasonable to
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body, it might be reasonable to say , shall we discuss that a bit say, shall we discuss that a bit before we start giving you any drugs or chopping anything off and the problem drugs or chopping anything off and this the problem drugs or chopping anything off and this is the problem drugs or chopping anything off and this is that the problem drugs or chopping anything off and this is that we 1e problem drugs or chopping anything off and this is that we could3lem drugs or chopping anything off and this is that we could get] with this is that we could get to a point where therapy, talking about how you feel could be illegal. i mean, it just sounds nuts, doesn't it ? sounds nuts, doesn't it? >> it does. no, no pun intended. >> it does. no, no pun intended. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> well it's saying it's saying that if a parent tells their child that you are not a boy and the child says , she says she's the child says, she says she's a boy or whatever it is, that that could be illegal and i could see it coming. i was doing scheduled to do a gig and one of the videos that i said, i said, you know, jokingly because of course, i don't believe this, that that you know, you can't a man can't be a woman because that that's this self—identity question . varne. and there are question. varne. and there are two we're in a war. we're a war between the people who believe in self—identity, which is team world, and the people who don't, which is team gb or team whatever we are. and i, i'd like
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to think that they should be able to see it, but they can't see it. and we can't see what they say either. i don't when they say either. i don't when they say either. i don't when they say stuff, i go, that's crazy, but maybe they're not crazy. one us is crazy. crazy. one of us is crazy. >> i don't know, i mean, i think everybody we're sort of caught in this sort victorian in this sort of victorian politeness trap where we have to, you know, if some bloke with a beard puts on a frock and says, i'm a woman, you've all got to be like, yes, she is a woman called susan . and it's woman called susan. and it's like it's everybody knows us, everybody . everybody. >> everybody does it. >> everybody does it. >> no, they don't . >> no, they don't. >> no, they don't. >> that part of the we hear a lot about that, don't we? trans women getting into women's spaces and so on and on. spaces and so on and so on. i appreciate problem, but appreciate that's a problem, but i think we hear as much i don't think we hear as much about parents of about concerned parents of children trying to navigate this difficult space. and if it's the first time you've ever thought about trans stuff you and about trans stuff and you go and see actually see an expert and actually they're an activist, that poor parent, sometimes parents are told do this, your told if you don't do this, your child's to kill child's likely to kill themselves , cause that's themselves, cause that's horrendous , given that it's not
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horrendous, given that it's not actually true and that in something like, is it, uh, 80% of female to male trans are actually autistic. so they actually autistic. and so they need more. might be slightly need more. i might be slightly wrong that, but the point wrong about that, but the point is say no, no is to just say no, no discussion. yeah it's just insane. >> absolutely . but gressitt >> but absolutely. but gressitt is right . but >> but absolutely. but gressitt is right. but people do >> but absolutely. but gressitt is right . but people do believe is right. but people do believe that about they're going to commit suicide and that they are saving a life by yes, changing you know, the physical aspect when you watch some of these detransitioning videos, i watched one recently, brianna ivy with candace owens. >> it's absolutely heartbreaking i >> -- >> okay, well, just one section to go. in a couple of minutes. we'll have jerry. we won't have geri halliwell . we covered geri halliwell. we covered that already. we'll have billion already. we'll have a billion obese man who's obese people and a man who's eaten 34,000 macs. they're eaten 34,000 big macs. they're separate . seen a couple separate stories. seen a couple of
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welcome back to headliners. we've got the mail now. and the scottish government has
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classified porridge as an unhealthy junk food. who better to tell us about this madness than the only person who probably agrees with it? lewis. i do agree with it. >> i agree with it totally. totally. so it says good news it's under fire after it's snp under fire after scottish government lists junk foods be subject to foods to be subject to supermarket promotion ban and includes porridge because cause because they think oh well, what isjunk because they think oh well, what is junk food. it's a it's processed. it's heavily processed. it's heavily processed food, it's sugary foods. it's but or or sodas and things like that. but the truth is, is that oats or oats is 80% sugan is, is that oats or oats is 80% sugar, 80% sugar. >> that's he won't make a distinction. frosty. >> no, no he won't. he simple sugars and carbohydrate . he's sugars and carbohydrate. he's not having it. he won't separate them. we've had this conversation many times . maybe conversation many times. maybe the scottish government . why the scottish government. why don't i think what some of these products they're talking about when the quick the go when you get the quick on the go oat cereal bar breakfast things and they often do have a lot of added as well, don't they? and they often do have a lot of awonder as well, don't they? and they often do have a lot of awonder whetherell, don't they? and they often do have a lot of awonder whether those »n't they? and they often do have a lot of awonder whether those are they?
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and they often do have a lot of awonder whether those are some i wonder whether those are some of would you of the products. so would you explain people okay, what explain to the people okay, what why oats are just as bad as regular sugar. no, because we argued about this so many times . argued about this so many times. oats are still a slower release of carbohydrate than a simple sugan >> it's got a low glycine index. lewis. that's a word i learned . lewis. that's a word i learned. >> but glycemic index doesn't take into account fructose . it take into account fructose. it just measures glucose , which just measures glucose, which eventually turns into fructose, which turns raises uric acid, which turns raises uric acid, which causes gout and a million other disease. >> anyway, should a government be telling people what eat? be telling people what to eat? do with that? do you agree with that? >> i there you go. well yeah, that's the second nail the that's the second nail on the head. agree with you. head. i agree with you. >> the government >> well, if the government if the going tell the government is going to tell people what to eat and especially scotland, where the average consists average kid's breakfast consists of and of a packet of chips and a menthol, b and surely they menthol, b and h surely they should like allowing porridge should be like allowing porridge as part of a. it's definitely for a scottish kid. it's definitely an improvement. >> you know what? isn't an >> you know what? it isn't an improvement. bad for improvement. it's really bad for you the people prepare you and the way people prepare porridge. know, original porridge. you know, the original scottish know, scottish people, as you know, used to, they used used to. they used to, they used to it for a week. yeah. and
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to soak it for a week. yeah. and it was. >> you'd f-l >> and you'd have it in a drawer, like a drawer. like a, like a bedside thing. yeah fermenting. cut a slice fermenting. and you cut a slice off genuinely had salt off it. this genuinely had salt in it to preserve it winding me up. >> toxicity. there's incredible toxicity notes. stay away from oats. it's one of the worst foods you can eat. don't oats. it's one of the worst foods you can eat . don't listen foods you can eat. don't listen to lewis. >> eat lots of. >> eat lots of. >> i am a registered nutritionist. >> he's not a registered. the only register he's registered . only register he's registered. the only register he's on is not one to be proud of. well, we've got the sun now, and it looks like drive to eradicate like the drive to eradicate world went little world hunger went a little bit too far. cressida. >> more than 1 billion people around now obese around the world are now obese and risk of killer diseases and at risk of killer diseases including 159 million children. so that's dreadful , isn't it? 30 so that's dreadful, isn't it? 30 years ago, in many poor countries were starved thin, but in most places they're now more likely to be overweight. experts have so . i suppose this is have said so. i suppose this is because people can get calories, but they're not necessarily eating ones. wasn't eating good ones. there wasn't there push coca—cola to be there a push for coca—cola to be available in every country in the world at one point? yeah. and that's supposed to have
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because it's delicious. >> well, of but >> well, i'm full of sugar, but not protein. >> well, i'm full of sugar, but not well, protein. >> well, i'm full of sugar, but notwell, in)rotein. >> well, i'm full of sugar, but notwell, in intein. >> well, i'm full of sugar, but notwell, in in america, you can >> well, in in america, you can get coca—cola on like, food stamps, like the government gives like the women and gives out for like the women and children they could they used to just give out milk, but now they give just give out milk, but now they giv> well, true. and . it >> well, it is true. and. it prepares us for the wintertime. we're all getting fat. not you, but not even me. i look amazing, maybe i look a bit heavy on me, but the process of but by the process of elimination, fat. but. but elimination, i'm fat. but. but nick dixon. sorry. nick dixon. no, sorry. >> oh, god. he's gonna. >> oh, god. he's gonna. >> he's not. he lost a stone . he >> he's not. he lost a stone. he wants everyone to remember that the point is, the point is the reason why people are fat is because we're not getting enough protein. >> we're a protein in our diets. okay so we have to eat extra food. and that extra food is very high in sugar. >> i think people are more protein, more protein than they were. well, we've got the guardian now. let's fit this one in with a man. lewis probably thinks is the best diet in the
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world. >> ah, yes, this is good news. us man extends record for most big macs eaten in a lifetime to over 3400. this is a nutter. his name is don gorske . i mean, he's name is don gorske. i mean, he's not that much of a nutter because he's 70 years old. he's was a he's a, uh. >> we follow you on twitter. >> we follow you on twitter. >> he's going to please follow me because i love this guy. he was a prison he's was a prison guard. he's a prison guard. he's been married all but years all these years. but 50 years ago, had big mac when it ago, he had a big mac when it first came out. basically, maybe came out in 1969 or 1667 or something. he this something. and he said, this is delicious. and single delicious. and every single day he he had big macs he wrote down, he had big macs every wrote every single day. and he wrote down had, and he down how many he had, and he saved the boxes. and said , saved the boxes. and he said, he's had 34,000 of these things. >> oh my god , i respect that. >> oh my god, i respect that. >> oh my god, i respect that. >> well, what have you kept track of? >> what this . >> what this. >> what this. >> absolutely nothing like that. um this is about him living a long time. so he says many people thought i'd be dead by now because he's 70. but it also said he started skipping the fries miles fries and walking six miles a day. like a postman. he's day. he's like a postman. he's just walking all okay.
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>> a super fit guy who >> this is a super fit guy who just says, like, the healthy bit of the big mac every in of the big mac every once in a while. anyway, the show is nearly take nearly over, so let's take another at saturday's another quick look at saturday's front daily front pages. the daily mail leads rishi delivers leads with rishi delivers speech. needed to hear. speech. britain needed to hear. the guardian has. speech. britain needed to hear. the guardian has . democracy speech. britain needed to hear. the guardian has. democracy is at threat from extremist claim sunak.the at threat from extremist claim sunak. the times has banished this hatred from our streets, implores prime minister the telegraph has democracy under threat. also about rishi's speech, the financial times weekend has opened. i sued by elon musk for breaking word . elon musk for breaking word. that's breaking their word, not the word document. the daily star has. why the long face and those rare front pages? and that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, luis scheffer and christina wetton . scheffer and christina wetton. andrew doyle will be here tomorrow at 11 pm. and if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. good night. a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb
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news. >> good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update with me, annie, from the met office. this further hill snow to areas to come for northern areas throughout tonight and through saturday, going to be saturday, and it's going to be staying the uk staying cold across the uk through low through the weekend. low pressures very much in charge. we've got occluded fronts we've got some occluded fronts wrapped that low pressure wrapped around that low pressure system that's where the system and that's where the focus for the heaviest rain will continue throughout focus for the heaviest rain will continueso throughout focus for the heaviest rain will continueso someroughout focus for the heaviest rain will continueso some persistent rain tonight. so some persistent rain will turn to snow over parts of southern and then into southern scotland and then into northern scotland later northern areas of scotland later on and another on tonight. and then another batch push into batch of rain will push into southern of england , southern areas of england, bringing a risk of some hill snow here. but anything that does accumulate should does start to accumulate should quickly the temperatures quickly melt as the temperatures rise after sunrise. but it will still be quite a cold start to the weekend. wherever you are . the weekend. wherever you are. some quite persistent rain will continue across central and eastern areas of england and then into southern scotland later on in the day, and we'll also see this rain turn to snow across far north of across the far north of scotland, particularly over the highlands through saturday afternoon. quite
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afternoon. there'll be quite a brisk northerly breeze across northwestern areas, bringing that , and in fact that chilly feel, and in fact it'll still feel fairly it'll actually still feel fairly cold there for many areas. cold out there for many areas. turn drier throughout saturday night, so it should be a much dner night, so it should be a much drier day on sunday. there'll still be mist and fog still be some mist and fog around a showers across around and a few showers across western i think it western coasts, but i think it will feel a much more pleasant in the sunshine, with lighter will feel a much more pleasant in the and shine, with lighter will feel a much more pleasant in the and aine, with lighter will feel a much more pleasant in the and a bit with lighter will feel a much more pleasant in the and a bit more lighter will feel a much more pleasant in the and a bit more ligthe' will feel a much more pleasant in the and a bit more ligthe way winds and a bit more in the way of sunny and dry weather. however across the east coast there be rain moving there could be some rain moving in times. like it'll in at times. looks like it'll stay cold into the start next stay cold into the start of next week, start week, but temperatures do start to onwards . to rise from tuesday onwards. bye looks like things to rise from tuesday onwards. byelooks like things are heating >> looks like things are heating up boxt boilers as sponsors of weather on .
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>> well i >> welcome to the amazon's real world. and tonight we're in the parson's pig in crawley. i think that's in essex. it's down south anyway. somewhere tonight on the show we've got belinda de lucy. she's a former mep . also got she's a former mep. also got denis macshane former labour mp who got my mom. your dad? reality tv contests stint. that's, uh, natalie russell also got former model and reality tv star. that's chloe goodman, the first. let's go to the . first. let's go to the. news >> good evening. your top stories from the gb newsroom. the prime minister says islamist
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extremism aims to drain us of our confidence in ourselves as a people addressing the nation outside downing street this evening , he vowed to back police evening, he vowed to back police to tackling taking action against problem protests and said universities must also do more to crack down on extremism on campuses . more to crack down on extremism on campuses. rishi sunak says islamist extremists are spreading a poison in a statement, the labour leader has said have backed the prime minister's message, calling for unity in the country. the prime minister signalled the government will unveil what he called a robust framework for deaung called a robust framework for dealing with the growing problem of extremism. i want us to doubt ourselves, to doubt each other, to doubt our country's history and achievements. >> they want us to accept a moral equivalence between britain and some of the most despicable regimes in the world. let us prove these extremists wrong and show them that even when we disagree, we will never be disunited from our common values of decency and respect
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