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tv   Headliners  GBN  March 8, 2024 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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>> you're watching and listening to gb news with me. sam francis, the headlines at 11:00. northern ireland's first minister has apologised today to the families of alleged informers who were killed by the ira. and she says that she wholeheartedly is committed to healing the wounds of the past . it's after a major of the past. it's after a major investigation found it's likely that more lives were lost than saved by a double agent during
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the troubles . codenamed the troubles. codenamed stakeknife, he was working covertly for the british army inside the ira's internal security unit . he's widely security unit. he's widely believed to have been a west belfast man who was 77 when he died last year. solicitor kevin winters , who represents a number winters, who represents a number of the victims families, says the agent needs to be officially identified . identified. >> the decision not to name freddie scappaticci as the agent stakeknife has been difficult for many to accept the legal and tactical rationale for doing so will be lost on many people, particularly next of kin of those murdered . those murdered. >> george galloway has said that he has hundreds of candidates who are ready to run in the next general election . the worker, general election. the worker, the leader of the workers party of britain who was sworn into parliament on monday following his by—election win last week. speaking to neil oliver on gb news earlier, the mp said his success in rochdale was the straw that broke the camel's back.
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>> the spread of candidates challenges, new parties, independent candidates and so on is now proceeding like wildfire. if i tell you that i have now in my pocket , more than 300 my pocket, more than 300 prospective parliamentary candidates, all paying their own election expenses, by the way, because we can't pay them more than 300 workers party parliamentary candidates . parliamentary candidates. imagine that. >> well, that interview is available in full now with george galloway. you can find it on youtube or on our website , gb on youtube or on our website, gb news. com and you can also tune in to tv or radio this sunday with neil oliver at 6:00 in the evening. well, in other news, we've heard this evening that leicester city council has temporarily shut down it systems and phone lines in the city following a cyber incident. the authority there says that they are actively investigating with
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specialists from the national cyber security centre and other law enforcement agencies to determine what has taken place. the council has apologised for any inconvenience . this and they any inconvenience. this and they say it was working to. they are working rather to minimise disruption to services . a disruption to services. a historic piece of artwork has been damaged by a group of pro—palestinian activists at cambridge university today. footage here. if you're watching on tv shows that painting of former prime minister lord balfour being sprayed with red paint before being slashed to pieces , the government's adviser pieces, the government's adviser on political violence and disruption has described that protest as outrageous and he said senseless. the palestine action group, though, claims the piece symbolised the bloodshed of the palestinian people since the balfour declaration in 1917, police have confirmed today that broadcaster india willoughby's accusation of misgendering by the authorjk accusation of misgendering by the author jk rowling accusation of misgendering by the authorjk rowling does not meet the criminal threshold.
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willoughby, who is transgender , willoughby, who is transgender, had reported rowling to the police for an alleged hate crime after calling her a man on social media. the harry potter author, though, rejected those allegations, saying that it's not a crime to hold gender critical views and police in nonh critical views and police in north yorkshire have arrested an 11 year old boy who was caught driving a bmw down the m1 whilst towing a suspected stolen caravan today. officers said they were staggered when they found the boy driving down the motorway. he now faces charges including theft, burglary and dangerous driving. thankfully, though, no injuries were reported . and finally, in a reported. and finally, in a unique celebration of love, a couple have tied their not the knot on board a train. leah and vince smith, who first met on a train, shared their first kiss on a train and you guessed it, commuted by train throughout their relationship. so where better to celebrate their entire wedding than on another train from london paddington to
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swansea? their ceremony unfolded with 14 guests on board, including traditional vows and a three course meal in the dining car . those are the headlines. car. those are the headlines. for more, you can sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen, or go to gb news .com/ alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners, your first look at saturday's front pages on the nation's favourite news channel. >> i am simon evans. i'm joined tonight on this wonderful friday evening by the lovely leo kearse and nick dixon . and nick dixon. >> good evening gentlemen. hello you yeah. you well yeah. >> does that mean i'm part of the lovely. was it the lovely leo kearse comma and nick. >> yeah. lovely. and then open brackets names brackets and both your names inside brackets and both your names insiso it applies equally to both >> so it applies equally to both of you. >> you got to on being
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>> you got to work on being lovelier. the lovelier. yeah. you've got the same guys as well. same jacket you guys as well. what's that about. >> well it's like >> yeah. well it's like a slightly taxi vibe it, slightly taxi vibe isn't it, for, know, the friday for, you know, the, the friday nights, but you're still in kind of drab . yeah. of midweek drab. yeah. >> know what day it is >> i don't know what day it is anymore. that's problem. anymore. that's the problem. >> would, to be >> i don't i would, to be honest, i was about to announce tuesday's front pages because i'm but i'm just used to that. but anyway, let's have look anyway, let's have a look at saturday's pages. this saturday's front pages. this will a novelty for me. daily will be a novelty for me. daily mail go boost defence mail go with boost defence spending story about spending now and a story about meghan acknowledging, finally, that all the meanness comes from other women. telegraph usaf in row over £250,000 gaza cash . row over £250,000 gaza cash. that's a lot more than the snp have earned under his, supremacy. the times we've lost faith in justice say stab victims, mothers . there they victims, mothers. there they are. pictured the guardian 10th of elective operation done in private hospitals. the nhs in decline. the eye budget falls flat as tories lose votes to
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reform and the daily star. end of the beer belly. i'm pretty sure that's a stand up comic of my acquaintance pictured there. those were your front pages. so the telegraph have most of the day's news on their front page . day's news on their front page. leo, what's their headline? >> so the headline is about humza yousaf , the scottish first humza yousaf, the scottish first minister. accused a minister. he's been accused of a conflict interest after conflict of interest after overriding his own officials to give £250,000, which is the entire gdp of scotland under the snp, to a gaza aid agency. well, member members of his family were trapped in the war zone, so officials had recommended giving, you know, maybe £100,000 to unicef and instead, hum. humza over overrode , overruled humza over overrode, overruled them and said, no, we're going to give a quarter of £1 million of taxpayers money. a lot of engush of taxpayers money. a lot of english people's tax taxes, by the way, to the united nations relief and works agency, the
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unrwa, which has actually been unked unrwa, which has actually been linked to hamas. according to israeli intelligence, some people for the unrwa, people who worked for the unrwa, were in the october were participated in the october the 7th attacks. >> i thought they had already been sort of denounced and cut their funding cut and so on. they're still you can still give oh, this was before then, was it not humza? not from humza? >> wants to keep the >> humza still wants to keep the cash flowing in it's pretty cash flowing in and it's pretty disgusting considering not disgusting considering it's not just, like just, i mean, it looks like a breach the ministerial code . breach of the ministerial code. you're supposed to keep your family everything. family life and everything. you're not supposed to do anything prejudice or anything that can prejudice or improve your your, your family life, , i improve your your, your family life, , | mean, improve your your, your family life, , i mean, the life life, but also, i mean, the life expectancy is actually lower in glasgow than it is in gaza for men. so gaza and gaza, they should be having a whip round to try and, you know, improve life expectancy in glasgow. >> they should drop a bit of a couple bottles of buckfast couple of bottles of buckfast off in gaza. that would probably that would fight that would equal the fight out probably wouldn't it. yeah. what do you reckon? >> i'm not saying he >> well, look, i'm not saying he did it. he denies the donation was way connected to was in any way connected to release family. i am release of his family. i am saying if did, it would be saying if he did, it would be the sympathetic thing about
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saying if he did, it would be the that sympathetic thing about saying if he did, it would be the that he npathetic thing about saying if he did, it would be the that he actuallyc thing about saying if he did, it would be the that he actually wanted about saying if he did, it would be the that he actually wanted to»ut him that he actually wanted to help the only help his family. it's the only thing actually empathise help his family. it's the only thingslightly. :tually empathise with slightly. >> with yusuf. >> with yusuf. >> i get what saying, >> i get what you're saying, never have scandals. want to never have scandals. i want to just that he is cropping just state that he is cropping up in the story. >> let' s story. >> let's leave a e’_l >> so let's leave a little bit of icing on that cake. do you want mention meghan? i do want to mention meghan? i do find she is find this interesting. she is saying that most of the meanness onune saying that most of the meanness online women. saying that most of the meanness online so women. saying that most of the meanness onlineso meghan's women. saying that most of the meanness onlineso meghan's ofromen. yeah, so meghan's a kind of first for first thing she said for a while. makes some sense. while. that makes some sense. and i think is the first time i've agreed with her. i've ever agreed with her. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> well, yeah, spoken at >> well, yeah, she's spoken at some, conference for, for some, some conference for, for posh don't have to do posh women who don't have to do anything. oh, anything. yeah, saying that. oh, yeah. online. yeah. i got bullied online. so the is we know the great thing is we now know that reads of our that she reads all of our everybody replies to her tweets, so. stuck in. so. yeah. get stuck in. yeah. >> come lads, get the >> come on, lads, get the numbers up. >> just women. numbers up. >> i just women. numbers up. >> i do just women. numbers up. >> i do notice: women. numbers up. >> i do notice: wom she numbers up. >> i do notice: womshe is, >> i do notice also, she is, raising hand in a well known raising her hand in a well known black there as well. black power sign there as well. i don't know whether that's going picked up by the going to be picked up by the papers. yeah, papers. is she? yeah yeah, that's not just that's a gangster. not just waving. but her waving. yeah. no, no, but her right is saying right hand is saying white supremacy. >> confused . >> so i'm very confused. >> so i'm very confused. >> she giveth and taketh away that you got give it to that line. you got to give it to her. daily mail. nick. her. the daily mail. nick. >> daily mail have boost
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>> so the daily mail have boost defence now and this defence spending now and this is a former defence secretaries a for former defence secretaries back the back mail's campaign. it's the mail's of always mail's classic thing of always claiming done everything. >> it's all about how >> but it's all about how basically of have basically lots of papers have covered this that are sort of welfare spending has left us welfare spending has has left us vulnerable in europe, not so much britain, but europe. >> basically. >> basically. >> europe aren't paying their bills nato we bills to nato as we know. >> trump's about it. >> trump's talked about it. >> trump's talked about it. >> 1.46. it needs >> italy's paying 1.46. it needs to be 2% minimum. >> trying get up to >> we're trying to get up to 2.5, we're not seriously 2.5, but we're not seriously doing really. doing it really. >> the budget talks a lot >> and we the budget talks a lot about immigration. >> the is nato >> 2% is the is the nato minimum. is right? yeah. minimum. is that right? yeah. yeah sorry. >> we need to it. >> and we need to get it. >> and we need to get it. >> we need know, europe >> we need you know, europe needs get that up because the needs to get that up because the argument the is going to argument is the us is going to be with who've be distracted with china, who've boosted spending. >> all going to kick >> so it's all going to kick off. need to keep up with it. off. we need to keep up with it. we're better than europe, we're doing better than europe, but not really doing it. but we're not really doing it. >> how you do it? you >> but how do you do it? you either tax more when europe's already the already being taxed to the gills. borrow when gills. you borrow more when we've borrowed loads for we've already borrowed loads for these lockdowns. we've already borrowed loads for these you lockdowns. we've already borrowed loads for these you ltake)wns. yeah. or you just take money from services. from elsewhere. other services. well what services. so. >> right. and >> well you're right. and welfare isn't just
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welfare budgets that isn't just of people immediately of course, people immediately think benefit, think of unemployment benefit, but also includes pensions, but it also includes pensions, of a lot other of course, and a lot of other things. i mean, is lots of things. i mean, it is lots of things. i mean, it is lots of things that can be cut, lots of things that can be cut, lots of things that can just we need things that we can just we need a to in and a javier milei to come in and just like, afuera. just be like, afuera. >> an arts council. you >> what an arts council. you have arts council fund. have an arts council fund. you're paying. you're literally paying. >> you're gonna get a huge number out the arts council. >> but this is the thing. everybody's like, oh, but this is in scheme of things, is in the scheme of things, these diversity coordinators. is in the scheme of things, thernotiversity coordinators. is in the scheme of things, thernotivehuge coordinators. is in the scheme of things, thernotivehuge amounttors. is in the scheme of things, thernotivehuge amount ofs. is in the scheme of things, thernotivehuge amount of money. it's not a huge amount of money. it's not a huge amount of money. it's amount money. if it's a huge amount of money. if we it's not a huge of we if it's not a huge amount of money, don't we them money, why don't we fire them all? we of the all? why don't we get rid of the arts why don't we scrap arts council? why don't we scrap instead lottery funding going instead of lottery funding going to pointless monuments and things? why are we building a well, have. why we well, you could have. why are we building lottery? building a monuments lottery? >> suppose would be. that >> i suppose that would be. that would interesting. do would be an interesting. i do want i know want to ask you, because i know this quite this has become quite a contentious issue in the american up. american election. hotting up. this was of biden's biggest this was one of biden's biggest talking the of talking points in the state of the i think, the union, where they, i think, misquote trump's misquote or misrepresent trump's argument, if nato argument, which is that if nato countries willing to pay countries aren't willing to pay their he encourage their way, he would encourage russia to and he's russia to invade. and now he's just it a bit of hyperbole. >> it was a bit of hyperbole. biden quoted state of the
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biden quoted in the state of the union, if that's just what he union, as if that's just what he wants he's even said it wants to do. he's even said it encouraged putin. it's disgusting. it's a joke. disgusting. it's a trump joke. it's not a well it's a it's not a very well advised joke, but is in advised joke, but it is in biden's trump said it, biden's defence, trump said it, and don't think he it as and i don't think he said it as a joke. >> ee- ee— @ spoken of his desire >> and he's spoken of his desire to to america to leave nato to pull america out nato leave europe. out of nato and to leave europe. >> and i think it's literally in his book, the art of the deal, this is you you look as this is what you do. you look as if want to walk away, and if you want to walk away, and that people meet you. that forces people to meet you. >> you're about >> but when you're talking about global geopolitics, where something global geopolitics, where somethircomes from people's strength comes from people's belief in it, belief that it will countries will respond will all countries will respond if attacked, if if one country is attacked, if one the main country one of the if the main country in it says, oh, you know what, we're actually not to we're actually not going to do it. attack this it. no, go ahead and attack this country mafia thing. >> me. you t“ >> pay me. you gotta pay me. otherwise i would just say yes. by otherwise i would just say yes. by means, their take by all means, take their take their produce and close their cafe down. we have just time quickly the i. leo. quickly to look at the i. leo. >> falls as >> so the budget falls flat as tories votes reform. tories lose votes to reform. so apparently voters have been surveyed the budget surveyed and they say the budget won't back won't persuade them to back the tories. i tories. but at the moment, i don't even even if don't think even if, even if everybody got given, you know, piles solomon's
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piles of diamonds from solomon's mines, i don't think people would tory. you know, would vote tory. you know, they're never going they're just it's never going to happen. terminal tailspin. so the interesting thing is the pubuc the interesting thing is the public individual things public support individual things in the budget. so the fuel duty freeze , the cut to national freeze, the cut to national insurance. but overall they say now this budget's rubbish even though i like the things in it. so i'm going to vote. yeah. so i'm not going to vote. yeah. well a claim they well there's a claim they support single individual support every single individual measure but not the whole which would measure but not the whole which wotthere is some in that >> there is some logic in that which of course i want which you say, of course i want the insurance cut, but the national insurance cut, but overall you've not done enough, although it's although they do say that it's just benefiting the rich. so it's rational. but it's not strictly rational. but voters rational, it's not strictly rational. but voters is rational, it's not strictly rational. but voters is the rational, it's not strictly rational. but votersis the toriesional, it's not strictly rational. but voters is the tories need it's not strictly rational. but votersis the tories need a which is why the tories need a better is rishi better story. what is rishi story? something about a pharmacy. not white and pharmacy. and he's not white and he's all he's dying and it's all diversity there's real diversity and there's no real story. >> insufficient. >> it's insufficient. even though non—dom though they nick the non—dom thing. that came up thing. one thing that came up i didn't yesterday i was didn't realise yesterday i was doing radio thing, but doing a radio four thing, but the, the child the, they raised the child benefit , threshold, £80,000 you benefit, threshold, £80,000 you can earn now still get some can earn now and still get some child benefit. i've got a better suggestion. much more conservative, much right conservative, much more right wing. start getting child wing. you start getting child benefit at 80 k and it goes up. so only top earners are having
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kids. that's the new elite. people are having children. yeah yeahi people are having children. yeah yeah i think you should stop paying yeah i think you should stop paying tax once you get to a certain rate because you're. >> they talk oh >> and here they talk about oh the budget helps rich the budget just just helps rich people. rich people are really good with money. invest good with money. they'll invest it economy will boom. >> create jobs. they spend >> we create jobs. they spend money. absolutely >> like a video game. you get to a threshold where you just pay no tax . no more tax. >> once reach like 80, >> once you reach like 80, you've months to spend you've got six months to spend it. then you get taxed. oh, it. and then you get taxed. oh, i that would great. i see, that would be great. that's we to do to get that's what we need to do to get things moving. those the things moving. those are the front done. it's the front pages done. it's the balford desecration up. front pages done. it's the bal'haveiesecration up. front pages done. it's the bal'have the :ration up. front pages done. it's the bal'have the welfare up. front pages done. it's the bal'have the welfare welfare we have the welfare to welfare pipeline. her pipeline. and may casts her final clout. we'll see you in
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and welcome back to headliners. i'm simon evans here on a friday evening. still with leo kearse and nick dixon . have to keep and nick dixon. have to keep reminding myself, not tuesday. let's continue with the stories .
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let's continue with the stories. leo, we kick off this section with the latest brain dead waste of oxygen to inspire murderous revenge fantasies in all sentient beings in the telegraph. so yes, a pro—palestinian protester has damaged the portrait of lord balfour at the university of cambridge . cambridge. >> so this is obviously, you know, a progressive feminist woman. so it's great to see her standing up for the rapists in hamas . so in a video posted on hamas. so in a video posted on social media by palestine action, which is of these, action, which is one of these, groups seen, she spray groups she's seen, she spray paints it and then she slashes it a knife, which is, you it with a knife, which is, you know, normally we see just know, this normally we see just stop defacing paintings, but stop oil defacing paintings, but they're behind perspex. this is they're behind perspex. this is the canvas. the actual canvas. >> gone for it this >> she's really gone for it this time. >> and interestingly so, lord balfour, was one of the chief balfour, he was one of the chief supporters a jewish supporters of creating a jewish homeland palestine. which was homeland in palestine. which was created 1917 balfour created by the 1917 balfour declaration. also an declaration. he was also an advocate for palestinian rights and said that they shouldn't be they shouldn't have any rights taken away from them. they should, know, live in. should, you know, live in. >> all there. it's >> yeah, it's all in there. it's in declaration. i've seen it in the declaration. i've seen it many it's an interesting
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many times. it's an interesting thing even the thing because even before the current flared it has current thing flared up, it has cropped up on many occasions. balfour it's balfour declaration, and it's obviously of obviously a key part of the history of zionism. there was a suspicion, i think, at the time, i to get i hope i'm not going to get cancelled voicing this. cancelled for voicing this. i think the suspicion was think part of the suspicion was that was granted in 1917, in that it was granted in 1917, in the of, encouraging jewish the hopes of, encouraging jewish americans to support the idea that america would join the first world war. so there was a sort of little bit of realpolitik going on. but as you say, nevertheless , the point is say, nevertheless, the point is that, he made it quite clear that, he made it quite clear that this was not some kind of license to, for a free for all of , of just a license to, for a free for all of, of just a smash and grab raid on on the pre—existing palestinians. >> yeah. well, at least there's a logic to this one a touch more logic to this one than just attacking random than just attacking a random picasso. but it's picasso. i mean, but it's absolutely though, absolutely disgusting, though, because slashing because she's actually slashing the no the real painting. there's no glass. a level of glass. it's a new level of depravity. were suggesting depravity. you were suggesting revenge fantasies ? i mean, i revenge fantasies? i mean, i think the death would be think the death penalty would be a and would never a good idea and would never happen would it? happen again. would it? >> saying, you know, >> i'm just saying, you know, you her up, but that you could lock her up, but that doesn't solve the problem. you've smash fingers you've got to smash the fingers at yeah, just
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at this point. yeah, yeah, just satirical obviously, satirical content, obviously, but it's also thought but but, but it's also thought that was another of that she was another one of these shows because she had these posh shows because she had a designer bag on that people reckoned grand new reckoned costs about a grand new £500 second hand. >> mean, the regime >> so, look, i mean, the regime seems to want this. don't seems to want this. why don't they seem to want they stop it? they seem to want it. it's funny enough, the ordinary people who wouldn't it. it's funny enough, the ordin hadieople who wouldn't it. it's funny enough, the ordin had much who wouldn't it. it's funny enough, the ordin had much li'ito wouldn't it. it's funny enough, the ordin had much in the 'ouldn't it. it's funny enough, the ordin had much in the pastn't it. it's funny enough, the ordin had much in the past are have had much in the past are the ones a sentimental the ones with a sentimental attachment to our history, whereas the current regime just don't country don't care about our country or values, monuments values, our monuments or anything all. they anything at all. oh, they just want homogenised. want a global homogenised. >> britain to be >> they just want britain to be a sort of banal economic trading zone. yeah, with no ties to. well, you a well, this is what you call a narco tyranny. >> heard somebody >> and i heard somebody else describing earlier and it's describing it earlier and it's absolutely it's absolutely correct. if it's if the victims, perpetrators the victims, if the perpetrators of a crime are the currently protected people look the protected class, people look the other the, protected class, people look the otthey're the, protected class, people look the otthey're the the, protected class, people look the otthey're the victims the, protected class, people look the otthey're the victims of the, protected class, people look the otthey're the victims of a the, if they're the victims of a crime, then immediately before you know it, it sort of judge dredd. yeah, i can't claim to have that terms coined in 2005, not mine. >> do say it. >> but i do say it. >> but i do say it. >> you're right. so just i want to get too technical, but do we happen to know what the establishment where the establishment is? where the balfour painting was hanging? >> is >> was it so the cambridge, is it i'm it university of cambridge? i'm not think they've got
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not sure. i think they've got more one building her more than one building in her own, own college. own, in her own trinity college. >> college. right. yeah. >> trinity college. right. yeah. i it is weird how long i mean, it is weird how long they get to there and do they get to stand there and do these isn't it? it's these things, isn't it? it's like no sense that like there's no sense that they're to quickly they're trying to do it quickly before. before they're pounced on. >> security guards >> it's because security guards don't have guns in this country. we we that urgently. we need we need that urgently. >> tend to agree with >> i would tend to agree with you, a great college. i've you, it's a great college. i've had lunch you got newton had lunch there. you got newton and byron all hanging and bacon and byron all hanging on the yeah, i know this on the wall. yeah, i know this is what i feel for it. i do genuinely. i thought you were describing bacon. describing the menu with bacon. francis . knowledge is francis bacon. knowledge is power, nick. daily mail. it's major november as old leopard feet is the next ahead for the door at the next election. >> yeah, old leopard feet. >> yeah, old leopard feet. >> one of the best songs by the beautiful south. >> but, theresa may joins tory exodus as pm becomes the 60th mp to announce they are quitting parliament. >> oh yeah, there because it's plural. >> more. i thought it was. i thought she'd gone there for a second. more than any time since 1997, polls pointing 1997, with polls pointing to labour may 1997, with polls pointing to lab(gone? may 1997, with polls pointing to lab(gone? she may 1997, with polls pointing to lab(gone? she was may 1997, with polls pointing to lab(gone? she was a may
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1997, with polls pointing to lab(gone? she was a very ay has gone? sure, she was a very nice person. sure, she worked hard for her constituent as a pm. >> she was a disaster. she was part of the continuation of blairism very much taken up by cameron. >> the complete disintegration of tory party, the fake of the tory party, the fake conservative of the tory party, the fake conterriblee of the tory party, the fake conterrible choice after an >> terrible choice after an extremely weak on brexit. >> but you know, this is part of the the tories are fleeing the tory the tories are fleeing because they they're going because they know they're going to desperate. they to lose. they're desperate. they seem lose the seem desperate to lose the election. i suggested they on x. they're so desperate to lose it i might vote for them just out of that's thing of spikes. that's the one thing they in. they don't want them in. >> yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> because desperate to >> because they're desperate to lose. they also, by the way, lose. and they also, by the way, they keep going this they keep going on with this woke politics, you know, you woke id politics, you know, you know, 0h, know, sunak was saying, oh, she's the second female prime minister. for minister. thatcher didn't go for in rubbish. hated all in that rubbish. she hated all that sunak keeps that stuff. but sunak keeps pushing the time. pushing that all the time. do you that today? you see that post today? conservatives are the for conservatives are the party for women. i'm like over women. i'm like all over a staircase photoshop. yeah. staircase or photoshop. yeah. who's party for? men can who's the party for? men can we vote for because like vote for that? because it's like we thought. we thought we're the tories. were sort tories. we were getting sort of classical where classical liberalism where it's sort of colour—blind. if sort of colour—blind. but if you're going this identity you're going to do this identity politics, like, why should politics, it's like, why should i if doing i vote for you? if you're doing identity politics? >> doesn't he? about the most
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diverse as diverse cabinet in history, as if voting point, if that's a voting point, i don't i don't mind that it is. >> it's not really. you're not going to vote for it because of that. it's not really sure. in the strength of diversity ehhen >> no. exactly. so think we've >> no. exactly. so i think we've made, to just made, to be fair to her, just specifically, turn as specifically, she did a turn as prime what, 17? prime minister from, what, 17? no, 16. wasn't it immediately after the referendum 16 after the referendum and 16 through mid 18, through to about mid 18, something johnson something like that. johnson i mean she stuck around a bit is what i'm saying. yeah. and i think she was obviously think under she was obviously just brexit and just shackled by brexit and i think under different circumstances she could have been a good prime minister. >> she's very diligent and conscientious. she's quite >> she's very diligent and conscioftious. she's quite >> she's very diligent and consci of technocrat. she's quite >> she's very diligent and consci of technocrat. nots quite >> she's very diligent and consci of technocrat. not that te a sort of technocrat. not that usually like technocrats. two, two geography. right is that right? >> yeah. from oxford, two, two in the valley as well. yeah. no, i agree with you actually. i mean, she was a pretty good home secretary. i remember her, fronting up to the police, which is, takes a certain is, you know, takes a certain amount courage . yeah. anyway, amount of courage. yeah. anyway, farewell. financial farewell. may, nick, financial times. that is certainly what we're living in. when ireland's women are forced out of their home by their own constitution.
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yeah, this is, ireland votes on changing women's duties in constitution. >> so they've got this 87 year old constitution, and they're updating it because it's not feminist enough. and i had a look at what they were updating. so i've got it here. >> precisely. there's this article 41 .2.1. and the current text says in particular, the state recognises that by her life within the home woman gives the to the state a support without which the common good cannot achieved. fair cannot be achieved. seems fair enough. there's second part. >> the state shall therefore endeavour ensure that mothers endeavour to ensure that mothers shall economic shall not be obliged by economic necessity , to engage in labour necessity, to engage in labour to neglect of their duties to the neglect of their duties in so saying that in the home. so it's saying that a shouldn't to work a woman shouldn't have to work at of the home. it at the expense of the home. it seems reasonable me seems perfectly reasonable to me they've this much they've updated it to this much more state more woolly. the state recognises provision of recognises that the provision of care members to care by members of a family to one another, reason of the one another, by reason of the bonds that exist among them, gives a support gives the society a support without which the common good cannot be achieved, and shall strive such strive to support such provision. can't provision. i'm like, i can't even make nor tail of that. even make head nor tail of that. so it's taking away something that perfectly that looks to me perfectly logical women, logical and protecting women, allowing you know,
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allowing them a role, you know, to raise children. >> it? this is >> so what is it? this is a constitutional right. i mean, i didn't really understand that ireland a constitution, ireland has a constitution, and the all the most famous one that we all know is america's. you know, number i don't number two is fairly i don't know, you know, this is the sort of thing that constitutions describe. that there a describe. is it that there is a presumption that woman's presumption that a woman's ability a mother presumption that a woman's abilinot a mother presumption that a woman's abilinot have a mother presumption that a woman's abilinot have to a mother presumption that a woman's abilinot have to eworkher presumption that a woman's abilinot have to work isr and not have to go to work is protected aconstitutional level? >> well, it's more i think it's more about state supporting more about the state supporting the it's really it's the mother. so it's really it's almost thing of almost a feminist thing of saying have access saying women should have access to really to benefits. the really contentious is , and is contentious thing is, and is this, is proposed recognition for families based on durable relationships instead of the standard sort of, you know, husband, wife, children. they're talking durable relationships, which would mean, you know, if somebody who's a flatmate could make a claim to an estate after after the death, they try and they try say that 40% of they try and, say that 40% of children are born out of wedlock. so they need to be included in the family. they're already like, you apply through the courts for guardianship or whatever the children. whatever of the of the children. so a complete so that's a complete irrelevance, this whole thing. in i believe the irish
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in fact, i believe the irish government has breached the constitution by constitution as it is by campaigning for the for the yes vote in this referendum. the government is supposed to step back and not and not campaign on either side of a referendum i saw today. >> i don't know if it's to do with this because it just caught my eye before i realised it was a story would come up about a story that would come up about varadkar arrested varadkar possibly being arrested for exactly for having, overstepped exactly that mark. and, campaigning on an which they're an on an issue on which they're supposed to remain neutral. i don't know, but i mean, it's all it's all very new to me. but i can't help thinking britain has the idea. no written the right idea. no written constitution, a constitution, you know, just a sort vague of doing the sort of vague sense of doing the right sort of vague sense of doing the rigiyeah, but that vague >> yeah, but then that vague sense the right thing sense of doing the right thing completely over and completely drifts over time. and now what the now now we don't know what the what right thing is. i mean, what the right thing is. i mean, you've you've people out you've got you've got people out in and mobs chanting in the street and mobs chanting anti—semitic things and anti—semitic horrible things and people a lot of people say it's the right thing do. the right thing to do. >> those british values. >> those are british values. now. yes the programme now. liam. yes the programme times now. leah we've never had a guest on this show actually expire from sheer excessive schadenfreude , but i suspect schadenfreude, but i suspect
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this might be the first. >> yeah, it's not a great day for humza yousaf as there has been just one donation to the snp a living person under snp from a living person under humza yousaf. so he's raided the piggy humza yousaf. so he's raided the piggy banks of dead people . but piggy banks of dead people. but yeah, parties. the snp have yeah, the parties. the snp have attracted just in attracted just 75,000 in contributions individuals contributions from individuals and since he took over and companies since he took over from nicola sturgeon about a yeah from nicola sturgeon about a year. well, a year ago, a year ago now. whereas just for comparison, alex salmond and nicola sturgeon received 8.2 million and £4.1 million in donations respectively. i know they were there for a bit longer. yeah. but still, i mean, it shows orders of magnitude, two orders of magnitude there. >> is that one donation of 75 >> so is that one donation of 75 grand then? >> no, no, it's made up of a >> no, no, no, it's made up of a number but yeah, number of donations. but yeah, one one one making a one one of the one making a living guy was £5,000. >> it basically. >> that's it basically. >> that's it basically. >> and the rest are companies. is that the point? >> the rest are bequest from >> no, the rest are bequest from from people who are dead. oh in that 70,000. but then, bizarrely, not bizarrely, they were not bizarrely, they were not bizarrely annoyed they bizarrely but annoyed me. they got million this got 1.1 million during this penod got 1.1 million during this period westminster period from westminster and from the why the electoral commission. why
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are we why they getting westminster? >> well, that's classic westminster, isn't it? supporting it. >> well, i think i think all political parties, once you reach a certain threshold, you get of money. get a certain amount of money. oh, like the premier league. >> once you get champions league >> yeah. >> yeah. >> wow. but exactly like >> wow. but it's exactly like that. made it to the end that. we have made it to the end of section two. in part three we have latest horrors from have the latest horrors from w path. shadow boxing, path. we have shadow boxing, gillian keegan and a moment of cnnge gillian keegan and a moment of cringe in
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welcome back to headliners. a latest on the w path scandal. now, nick, in the daily mail and the maggots keep wriggling out of this one. >> yeah, this is shocking how influential trans health doctors and have secretly and activists have secretly shaped nhs policies for more than so as you say, than a decade. so as you say, this w path, which the great this is w path, which the great andrew doyle is doing an entire show on sunday and it's show on on sunday and it's a topic the bbc doesn't seem to want to explore. but luckily gb
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news there's two things news is. and there's two things really. disgusting really. one is how disgusting was w path their guidance, was w path and their guidance, and much influence did and two how much influence did they the on they have over the nhs. so on they have over the nhs. so on the first question, they had an entire on eunuchs and entire chapter on eunuchs and said they castrate said that they should castrate or castrating anyone or consider castrating anyone that identified as such. can you imagine and look imagine that? and then you look into it. there's recording of into it. there's a recording of a about whether a discussion about whether minors can really consent to this stuff, and a hormone specialist at one point says, look, these are people who haven't even had a biology class in high school yet, he says. i can talk to them about fertility preservation, but i'm essentially a blank essentially talking to a blank wall. says this. he wall. but then he says this. he says, but still, the says, but still, we want the kids to happy the moment, kids to be happy in the moment, right? like, what? sort right? it's like, what? the sort of of that. of rousseauian insanity of that. that's at the heart that's the sickness at the heart of society. like, know of our society. like, we know this is terrible. will this is terrible. this will destroy terme, but destroy children long terme, but hey, we want them to have a subjective feeling of happiness now. irresponsible now. absolutely irresponsible and loads now. absolutely irresponsible an stuff loads now. absolutely irresponsible an stuff this. loads now. absolutely irresponsible an stuff this. there's loads now. absolutely irresponsible anstupeople:his. there's loads now. absolutely irresponsible an stu people who there's loads now. absolutely irresponsible an stupeople who have's loads now. absolutely irresponsible an stu people who have thingsis other people who have things like post—traumatic stress disorder schizoid typical like post—traumatic stress disord but schizoid typical like post—traumatic stress disord but sciazoid typical like post—traumatic stress disord but sciazoid tyrisal traits. but then a doctor is saying but they saying to them, yeah, but they can hormones. it's can still have hormones. it's like, they are in like, can they are they in a position be to consent position to be able to consent to absolutely not. so
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to that? absolutely not. so i would say not. so this. and so it turned that they've this it turned out that they've this has very influential on has been very influential on the nhs and in their guidance. now they the nhs it has they claim the nhs that it has had no impact. it says, you know, while we're aware of double we are clear double standards, we are clear that these are not determined nhs ongoing nhs policy. so the ongoing question much did it question is like how much did it impact nhs? impact the nhs? >> a like stonewall >> definitely a like stonewall at or whatever. isn't it at the bbc or whatever. isn't it the amount power these the amount of soft power these people yeah, very decisive. >> and certainly with the tavistock hugely tavistock it was hugely influential. these leaks influential. and in these leaks they much admit to, they also pretty much admit to, to being experimental to this being experimental treatments. know treatments. whereas you know the, the, the official line is like no, we're science and evidence based as if it's all cut and dried and we know what we're they don't all we're doing. they don't at all is horrifying. this is going to be big medical scandal be the next big medical scandal after thalidomide all after thalidomide and all the rest infected blood rest of it. the infected blood inquiry. you know, we've we've sort the ability to sort of lost the ability to critically question and apply common sense to this. obviously, giving puberty blockers, hormones, drugs and surgical maiming to children and adolescents is that's something
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that should be done in a very, you know, very extreme situation. >> i mean, almost makes me feel nostalgic for the days when we were giving antidepressants to kids. you know, at least you would just thinking, well, they might get addicted and might would just thinking, well, they mi�*difficultiddicted and might would just thinking, well, they mi�*difficultiddicteithem might would just thinking, well, they mi�*difficultiddicteithem off.|ight be difficult to get them off. but, mean, at least there was but, i mean, at least there was an strategy. an exit strategy. >> makes electroshock therapy >> it makes electroshock therapy look chill, doesn't mean, look chill, doesn't it? i mean, this going this is this is going to be looked on just a crazy looked back on as just a crazy time. they taken over by time. they were taken over by this and they sick this ideology and they did sick things these people things and some of these people should treated like war should be treated like war criminals, my opinion. we criminals, in my opinion. we should later say, should look at it later and say, what were you thinking? >> letting this >> you know, letting this happen, is almost just happen, i mean, is almost just ridiculously evocative of mengele, know, mengele, wasn't it? you know, it's sort of it's exactly the sort of thing that them. the that he would do to them. the eunuch thing as well. i mean, this adults this is presumably adults as well you're talking about, but even adults, i mean, even that with adults, i mean, i don't know, i don't feel comfortable somebody don't know, i don't feel comfo ables somebody don't know, i don't feel comfo able at somebody don't know, i don't feel comfo able at any somebody don't know, i don't feel comfo able at any age somebody don't know, i don't feel comfo able at any age to somebody don't know, i don't feel comfo able at any age to say,ebody don't know, i don't feel comfo able at any age to say, ibody being able at any age to say, i identify as if somebody wanted to remove their arm. >> they'd be sent for psychiatric evaluation and treatment and therapy. yeah. you wouldn't be like, well, you identify as a one armed person. let's whip your arm off.
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>> exactly. extraordinary telegraph. leo, the latest telegraph. now, leo, the latest episode in gillian keegan's. ooh, your hard campaign of talking tough and doing nowt so gillian keegan said i would have punched rude school inspectors . punched rude school inspectors. >> this is the education secretary. she was at a conference of headteachers on friday, at and said she'd spoken to teachers at a school in chichester after it had been inspected . this is in her, in inspected. this is in her, in her constituency . and the her constituency. and the teachers told her how their ofsted experience had gone and she was shocked. she said i was actually shocked. i thought, god , if i had met these people i would have probably punched them. they were really i them. they were really rude. i don't this, seems to don't know this, this seems to me show, a remarkable lack of me to show, a remarkable lack of critical thinking for gillian keegan. so she's only hearing one side of the story. she isn't going to the ofsted inspectors. she's obviously nobody likes being . no, you know being inspected. no, you know what obviously what i mean. and obviously they're stuff like, they're going to say stuff like, oh, to improve some oh, you need to improve some things. and people are things. and then the people are going to be, oh, don't like that. she's, she's just heard that. so she's, she's just heard one and this
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one side of the story. and this side physical violence is side of physical violence is appropriate. you appropriate. yeah, she, you know, people know know, also these people know know, also these people know know they're don't know what they're doing, don't question also, question their methods. also, you're part of the government. you send out these state apparatchiks your apparatchiks to force all your stupid can't stupid rules because we can't live libertarian society live in a libertarian society for reason. so don't for some reason. so don't be surprised when you're horrible, when you state apparatchiks when you give state apparatchiks too and then they too much power and then they use that act powerful. that power. they act powerful. >> most sort of tired that power. they act powerful. >> plot most sort of tired that power. they act powerful. >> plot from 3st sort of tired that power. they act powerful. >> plot from every�*t of tired that power. they act powerful. >> plot from every hollywood old plot from every hollywood movie, the arrive movie, isn't it? the fbi arrive at the local crime scene and there's sort of tussle for there's a sort of tussle for authority. know, that's authority. you know, that's exactly. we know what's exactly. we all know what's going my patch. i going on. this is my patch. i know this school works, you know how this school works, you know. see what's know. well, we can see what's going but you're going wrong, but you're absolutely right. they have literally only literally she has literally only heard and heard one side of it. and i mean, maybe i'm being humourless about do you remember about it, but do you remember when swearing on when she was started swearing on tv as on that occasion tv as well on that occasion about, would be nice to get about, it would be nice to get a bit of effing credit or something on one occasion. she just of, don't just seems to sort of, i don't know, relish bar room, sort of, i don't know, like a sort of swagger, as if she thinks it gives her some, like she's character or flavour or something. i find it something. ijust, i find it really off putting. >> although any sign of life
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from tories almost from the tories is almost welcome. is welcome. you're right, it is a bit, it is a bit labour. but yeah, i don't know. >> bit prescott >> yeah, it's a bit prescott isn't oh well not big isn't it. oh well not a big story. over to independent story. over to the independent and partridge esque and almost partridge esque moment puppet and songbird moment from puppet and songbird sophie ellis—bextor at the bataclan. yeah >> so sophie ellis—bextor addresses bataclan deaths before singing murder on the dancefloor at paris venue. so of course, the song people may not know. written almost entirely greg written almost entirely by greg alexander, , alexander, the underrated, underrated genius from new new radicals. >> people don't realise that. no, . no. yeah, a music nerd. >> so yeah, but the story here is that said before, so 130 is that she said before, so 130 people were murdered and a further 500 injured by isis unked further 500 injured by isis linked militants in november 2015. so that's the context. and she says before doing the song, she says before doing the song, she said it didn't feel right to just waltz into a song called murder on the dance floor without and paying without noting and paying tribute all tribute to the history. all i want is that murder on want to say is that murder on the dance is a song the dance floor is not a song with evil in its heart. the with any evil in its heart. the whole intention of that song, like bring like this venue, is to bring joy and onto the dance floor. and music onto the dance floor. so you don't know. so it's a bit you don't know. of course, the tragedy is horrific,
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but there's a of a, as you but there's a bit of a, as you say, a partridge he say, a partridge moment. he couldn't not doesn't have couldn't not she doesn't have that let's be honest. >> he has play it. isn't it. >> she can't not play it. she can't so she is in can't play it. so she is in a classic. yeah >> no, no, no stain on her character i think. but yeah. oh god. seems difficult. i've god. she seems difficult. i've been on a radio show her been on a radio show with her once. absolutely lovely. once. she's absolutely lovely. i think. yeah. and i do like that song it's my sort of song and it's not my sort of genre, yeah , yeah, i think genre, but yeah, yeah, i think she handled relatively genre, but yeah, yeah, i think she hconsidering relatively genre, but yeah, yeah, i think she hconsidering rethinkly well, considering i think who handled it badly the handled it badly is the authorities. >> something like >> every time something like this oh this happens, they're like, oh no, anger. no, don't look back in anger. oh, religion peace. oh, it's the religion of peace. oh, it's the religion of peace. oh, asks any questions or oh, nobody asks any questions or you're racist. it's like, you're racist. and it's like, that's the really that's the that's the really offensive bit. >> quite agree. okay when >> yes, i quite agree. okay when we do it news. now leo and the guardian are asking the important about race important questions about race and . and abusing coppers. >> so the guardian says oversimplifying a serious matter or a fair cop where sam kerr's alleged words really racist. this is about the australian, i believe the women's football team captain, sam kerr, who's been charged with racially aggravated harassment and has pleaded not guilty after , she
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pleaded not guilty after, she allegedly used the phrase stupid white and then a word that sounds like bar steward. so politicians in australia have been arguing over whether it's racist, whether it's not racist. the guardian is here to pull out professor fathi mansouri, who's an expert in intercultural communication in a fuera afuera. he can go no or she or they, whatever it is, there's a couple of rounds. >> yeah, yeah, for someone's machine gun . machine gun. >> yeah, so they explain how racism in many ways reflects the nofion racism in many ways reflects the notion that one group is categorised on a hierarchy as being better than the other group. so pulling out this argument that, that white people are over, over are on a hierarchy over, over black people only racism when it works with the grain of power in society . the thing that's wrong society. the thing that's wrong with that is under diversity, eqtu with that is under diversity, equity inclusion. minority equity and inclusion. minority or as they're or global majorities, as they're called elevated over called now, are elevated over us. and also they say that, you know, it can't racist because know, it can't be racist because london's this talking about london's this talking about london's majority or it's racist
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towards london's majority white group. london doesn't have the white british is a minority and also so i think sorry she is like the captain of a of an international football team and he's just a copper. >> i think her status is quite a bit higher then. yeah, yeah, he gets around. >> he says to the majority white group in that society, of course he or britain. but he means england or britain. but as say, london 37, as you say, london being 37, just 37% white british, just under 37% white british, it's white minority it's been white minority since about course we are about 2011. so of course we are so globally as well. you so and globally as well. if you want to say are of course want to say we are of course white people are a tiny minority. oh no, minority. so it's like, oh no, i mean country. it's mean the country. so it's absolutely ludicrous. what i tend when i look at tend to think when i look at this is didn't want this world this is i didn't want this world like i want. i don't care, you know, chris rock said, if know, like chris rock said, if someone off traffic someone cuts you off in traffic and one arm, i'm going and they have one arm, i'm going to i don't to talk about the arm, i don't care. you wanted this care. yeah, but you wanted this world obsessed world of everyone's obsessed with you have to apply with race, so you have to apply the course, it is the rules. and of course, it is racist and she's getting easy racist and she's getting an easy ride. no, it's ride. i'm saying, oh, no, it's completely white completely because it's white people. why? why is it so different? guy, different? and then this guy, this mansouri again, this professor mansouri again, like we look the like we need to look at the
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history okay. well history of slavery. okay. well then slave comes from then the word slave comes from slave, which was white people. >> wasn't >> yeah, it certainly wasn't maori's, think what maori's, which is, i think what she or something. right. she is or something. right. she's like an indigenous or i don't she's aboriginal. don't think she's aboriginal. i don't think she's aboriginal. i don't sam don't know, she's indian. sam kerr, she's not if she's australian is she, is she indian? >> i think think i think indian? >> i mentionedik i think indian? >> i mentioned india, i think indian? >> i mentioned india, butthink they mentioned india, but i've got idea. i'm probably got no idea. i'm probably probably a simple minds. >> the thing is, they're just desperate. tripping desperate. they just tripping themselves this. not to themselves over this. not to apply white people, but it apply to white people, but it has to people has to apply to white people because to because and our instinct is to say it? say no, isn't it? >> i mean, is. mine is to >> i mean, mine is. mine is to 90, >> i mean, mine is. mine is to go, it used nothing but go, well, it used nothing but but now you well. no. i'm sorry. >> you don't want to play the victim. occasionally we just victim. and occasionally we just have the game. if these have to play the game. if these are rules, we're going are the rules, well, we're going to the game. to play the game. >> absolutely. >> yeah, absolutely. >> yeah, absolutely. >> telegraph forever. >> telegraph in jail forever. >> telegraph in jail forever. >> i feel torn >> well, i confess i feel torn about this about this one. this is obviously a ccp sci up, but also about this one. this is oipretty.y a ccp sci up, but also about this one. this is oipretty decent' sci up, but also about this one. this is oipretty decent' sci to, but also about this one. this is oipretty decent' sci to share|lso a pretty decent way to share content comedy tickets. content and flog comedy tickets. so to tick so really, you want to tick tiktok now the kids. tiktok now with the kids. >> tick tock urges millions >> so tick tock urges millions of users to up against us of users to speak up against us bans. you say, i mean, bans. so as you say, i mean, tiktok but it's tiktok was a sign up, but it's graduated outright propaganda graduated to outright propaganda and on and it's getting everyone on there say, speak up now
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there to say, speak up now before your government strips 170 of 170 americans of their constitutional rights. so yeah, i it's the problem i mean, it's but the problem is that compelled to that you could be compelled to hand under chinese hand over data under chinese security law. this long been security law. this is long been a thing. chinese are going security law. this is long been a 1get]. chinese are going security law. this is long been a 1get your chinese are going security law. this is long been a 1get your data|ese are going security law. this is long been a 1get your data and are going security law. this is long been a 1get your data and butgoing security law. this is long been a 1get your data and but then to get your data and but then mind you, biden's there. you know, a load of know, appealing to a load of tiktok influencers doesn't care at a problem. at all. but it is a problem. >> think the main problem >> do you think the main problem is data, or do you think the main problem cultural? main problem is the cultural? you the of you know, like the rotting of the the of the mind, the sharing of pornography or pornography? pornography or not pornography? exactly. you know, exactly. but kind of, you know, worse pornography, just worse than pornography, just sort of degrading. >> worse than >> it's much worse than pornography you can pornography because you can watch without, watch pornography without, turning queer turning into a gender queer communist. this tiktok just communist. yeah this tiktok just propagates all this, all this stuff that's really degeneracy. and really. oh, yeah. >> wasn't that a revisionist thing bin laden a while thing about bin laden a while ago? bin laden a great ago? like, bin laden was a great guy. like going viral. guy. was like going viral. >> also, you know, the >> and also, you know, the medium message. know, medium is the message. you know, just you're just just the fact that you're just constantly just the fact that you're just constarand nothing is sticking thumb and nothing is sticking and your mind is just losing its capacity chew . capacity to chew. >> i'm just worried that this sets precedent that they can sets a precedent that they can then come other then cover. come for other social platforms i social media platforms that i use. so telegram, which
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use. so i use telegram, which gets a lot of a lot of politicians say this needs be politicians say this needs to be banned because a it's an banned because it's a it's an absolute of the absolute bear pit of the horrible stuff, humanity. it's fantastic. it. yeah fantastic. i love it. yeah >> well, i mean, gb news is, at least as much a social media phenomenon as it is a tv. hopefully people are watching us at home on tv, but also our reach depends a lot on people sharing on twitter and so on. >> i thought you were going to say gb news is the telegram of news channels. >> we not pit. we're >> we are not a bear pit. we're more like a snakey. anyway, join us final section after us in the final section after the break, we discuss gemini's germination, the sneaky french hiding in our glorious tongue, and the latest tantalising disappointment in human cloning. we'll see you in a couple of minutes
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and welcome back to headliners for the final section. before we go any further, i would like to give a shout out to colin, who
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was very helpful to me at the tottenham court road tube station earlier this evening and congratulated the show . congratulated us on the show. nice see you again nice one colin, see you again i hope. gemini farrago . aftermath. hope. gemini farrago. aftermath. now leo, the guardian is in no doubt which were its most offensive images. i see this was interesting . interesting. >> yes. so this is about the gemini google ai tool that made offensive historical images. and sergey brin, who's one of the co—founders of google, has come out and said, we definitely messed up. and this comes after google's chief executive sundar pichai said, i don't know if i've pronounced that right, says that the responses produced by gemini were completely unacceptable. i thought they were it included were hilarious. so it included pope's founding fathers of the us and german second world war. soldiers were presented as people of colour. because google ai is so desperate to inject diversity into the images that it shows, you know, it goes even further than a television ad break and just everything, everything that can possibly, possibly be, i did think, though, it was interesting that
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the guardian definitely find it most offensive that nazis were portrayed potentially portrayed as being potentially east asian women. >> not that like the people who achieved extraordinary things of northern europeans. yes. you know, the good ones. yes. yeah. >> that was that was the only part of the new york times like, how dare you have a black stormtrooper ? stormtrooper? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> it's amazing. is it? i mean, you wonder why it happened. was it some sort of publicity it some sort of weird publicity stunt? woke regime stunt? was it just woke regime overreach? it because the overreach? was it because the product lead hated white people and anti—white and posted all those anti—white posts? is it just because it's drawing which drawing from the internet, which itself is woke? >> thing, it was definitely programmed. >> even, sergei brin has >> even even, sergei brin has popped up >> even even, sergei brin has popped up and said, you know, yeah, we definitely messed up and they their parent and they did lose. their parent company, alphabet inc lost 70 billion. people saying billion. some people even saying 90 its share price. 90 billion off its share price. so actually finally made 90 billion off its share price. s
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order to control the present and into the future. but at the moment they're doing it. so so candidly nobody is candidly that nobody is persuaded just persuaded and everyone just laughs. persuaded and everyone just laughs . but we already saw in laughs. but we already saw in the year how quickly it the last year how quickly it progresses from al video. you know, the thing with will smith eating spaghetti, that was ridiculous. the fort going through mouth . how good that through his mouth. how good that now that's now is in a year that's indistinguishable from genuine footage. and that's what will happen this. the next happen with this. the next generation of propaganda, or the one after that, and i've met will so clever, he will be so clever, so subtle. he does so finely judged does eat a lot, so finely judged . yeah. >> they'll just they'll just get better hiding the bias. yeah. better at hiding the bias. yeah. they're be the they're still going to be the invisible. hands on the invisible. the hands on the scales background. scales in the background. what we need some of we really need is some sort of digital constitution makes digital constitution that makes all this data and all the algorithms and all that sort of stuff open. is musk stuff open. this is what musk was about before he was talking about before he bought twitter. >> absolutely. agree we >> yeah, absolutely. agree we should the should take this seriously. the telegraph story telegraph now, nick, a story about eating about the cheese eating surrender making surrender monkeys making another desperate their long desperate lunge at their long since lingua franca. since vanished lingua franca. >> hard to top that. >> nice. very hard to top that. but everything you said there, though, simon was influenced by
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french. yes so they claim his engushis french. yes so they claim his english is not a language. it's just badly spoken french. so this is this shocking nonsense from a guy called bernard. something like an italian name . something like an italian name. he's a linguist, but his name is impossible to say. it's cerquiglini anyway . and he says cerquiglini anyway. and he says that english is, english is emits . the that english is, english is emits. the english is the dominant language. but he says that all the colour comes from french. the, provided french. the, it's provided the abstract the lexicon abstract vocabulary, the lexicon of and administration, of commerce and administration, it's legal and political terms, blah de blah de blah. and he admits this is arrogant and admits that this is arrogant and french him say he's he's french of him to say he's he's got point there about got a point there about commercial legalistic terms. commercial and legalistic terms. >> are roman in >> they often are roman in origin, is what he means origin, which is what he means by mean that. but by french i mean via that. but the likes them anyway. yeah, the he likes them anyway. yeah, exactly. the worst exactly. they're the worst words. ones words. they're the ones that sort of just bore, aren't they? they're ones that give they're not the ones that give colour. ones that they're not the ones that give col�*end ones that they're not the ones that give col�*end in ones that they're not the ones that give col�*end in ation ones that they're not the ones that give col�*end in ation that nes that they're not the ones that give col�*end in ation that badthat all end in ation that bad rappers use communication from the words are the the nato. the good words are the saxon if you want to a saxon words. if you want to be a good, sorry, good good, critical, sorry, a good creative to creative writer, you have to master the saxon vocabulary. >> yeah. and he's just >> yeah. and also he's just saying because they're
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saying this because they're trying to, they've got the academie francais they're academie francais where they're trying to get, french people to use words instead of use french words instead of engush use french words instead of english words. so people in france pipeline. they're france use pipeline. they're trying them to use trying to get them to use garford and they're people garford beck, and they're people in france who say it, girl, as they want to say econ de la mode. and they're losing this battle. they're just battle. so now they're just turning around be like, turning around and be like, well, phrase is well, actually the phrase is these french phrases these are french phrases originally, just trying originally, so it's just trying to save face. >> think it is >> i mean, i think it is a provocateur , isn't he? he's provocateur, isn't he? he's probably it's a probably slightly in which slightly tongue in cheek, which is, a french word. >> that's what i know. yeah >> that's what i know. yeah >> extreme copium >> this is extreme copium drinking tears. i do drinking french tears. i do think that the beauty of the engush think that the beauty of the english language, i mean, obviously we all know the engush obviously we all know the english language is the greatest language world for language in the world for creative are creative purposes. there are all those the man those old jokes about the man who is it? german to who speaks what is it? german to his horse and english to his butler to his butler and french to his mistress. you know, there mistress. and you know, there are different, different are all different, different situations, but the situations, but but it is the fact that british like fact that british is like a tweed where all these colours are woven together. we have some persian languages in there. there's some inuit, you know,
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because explored and because because we explored and we brought it all back, you know. yeah. bungalow is a nice word, jemima. yeah last one possibly. leo. we have an absolutely rock solid, reliable way to spot psychopaths, which is handy , although by the time is handy, although by the time they're choosing the music in youn they're choosing the music in your, bedroom , it might be too late. >> yeah. so this is what your music taste actually says about your personality? according to science. when science science. and when we say science , we mean a bored journalist at the daily mail. so apparently psychopaths are likely to psychopaths are most likely to enjoy by blackstreet , enjoy no diggity by blackstreet, which is very specific. that's very unusually specific . very unusually specific. >> it's kind of like it's like a psychopath talking, isn't it? yeah yeah. >> and apparently, if you like popular chart topping music, you're more likely to be agreeable people who like heavy metal, i just find joy in the music. they're not violent , but music. they're not violent, but apparently that's true. and i think is quite interesting. think that is quite interesting. hard and all the imagery of hard rock and all the imagery of satan those people satan and stuff. those people are gentle, aren't are often really gentle, aren't they? you know. yeah, sweetheart. >> yeah. two but >> yeah. two, two gentle. but apparently osbourne fans apparently ozzy osbourne fans tend obnoxious. yeah.
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tend to be more obnoxious. yeah. >> i'm i'm not a psychopath. i just listen to helter skelter on repeat, but only only the repeat, but only only for the secret messages. exactly. secret messages. yes, exactly. not music . not for the music. >> there's not nearly enough of that music these >> there's not nearly enough of that is music these >> there's not nearly enough of that is there? music these >> there's not nearly enough of that is there? inusic these >> there's not nearly enough of that is there? i like: these >> there's not nearly enough of that is there? i like allese days. is there? i like all music, the whole of the white album, if you do listen album, though, if you do listen to right concoction, to it on the right concoction, it extraordinary. the places it is extraordinary. the places that will take you to. i don't think it's at all surprising that off nut. that manson went off his nut. have it? have you ever listened to it? the the way the white album, all the way through, yeah, i think so. through, no. yeah, i think so. i'm beach boys fan. yeah, i'm a beach boys fan. yeah, whatever that means. >> no agreeable? yeah. never listen beethoven's ninth listen to beethoven's ninth backwards. the show is nearly oven backwards. the show is nearly over. quick over. let's take another quick look saturday's front pages. look at saturday's front pages. the, the daily mail kick us off, boost defence spending. now meghan markle scolding women, telegraph usa humza in row over £250,000 cash to gaza . that £250,000 cash to gaza. that story is worth scanning the times we've lost faith in justice. they stabbed victim's mother . the justice. they stabbed victim's mother. the guardian 10th of elective operations done in
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private hospitals. the eye budget falls flat as tories lose votes to reform and the daily star. end of the beer belly. those be a front pages. and that's all we've got. time for. my thanks to leo kearse and nick dixon. nick will return tomorrow with schaffer and paul with lewis schaffer and paul cox. great weekend. good cox. have a great weekend. good night . night. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello again. good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update. it should stay dry through this evening for many areas, but rain and showers will push up from the southwest to bring some showery outbreaks of rain. for many of us, this weekend, that's a result of weekend, that's as a result of this pressure system this low pressure system bringing these weather fronts into southwest this into the southwest through this evening. bring some evening. so that will bring some showery of rain for showery outbreaks of rain for parts and cornwall parts of devon and cornwall through this evening. elsewhere, though, it should be dry for much of the evening and through much of the evening and through much having said much of the night. having said that, will be quite that, but it will be quite cloudy breezy. that will cloudy and breezy. that will limit just the far
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limit any frost to just the far northwest scotland, but it northwest of scotland, but it will fairly chilly start to will be a fairly chilly start to the weekend, with that easterly breeze continuing . the. the wind breeze continuing. the. the wind will be quite strong, particularly over the high ground and northwestern areas throughout further throughout saturday and further south. we'll see cloud thicken through the afternoon with some drizzly outbreaks of rain to come around lunchtime across central southeastern areas. central and southeastern areas. there will be some brighter weather through the afternoon, but that will some showers but that will allow some showers to those showers to break out. those showers could quite heavy across could turn quite heavy across parts of the southwest, so some very heavy rain is possible for parts of dartmoor, parts of south well . that rain south wales as well. that rain will be much more widespread through sunday, particularly across eastern england, across eastern areas of england, as parts of scotland , as well as parts of scotland, where there'll be some quite persistent and heavy rain at times. could be some times. so there could be some flooding by end of flooding issues by the end of the there will be quite the weekend. there will be quite a lot of cloud on sunday, a lot of cloud around on sunday, but brighter spells in the but some brighter spells in the southwest rain slowly southwest that rain slowly clears monday leave clears through monday to leave a much brighter day on much drier and brighter day on tuesday by. >> that warm feeling inside from
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boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> welcome to the andersons real world blog cracking show. tonight i've got former top cop on the show, peter blakesley. he's the first time for him. we've also got a return to the show for stephen pound, former labour mp, we've got emma woolf journalist. back on the journalist. she's back on the show about the third or show for about the third or fourth time. also got fourth time. i've also got a magician, a very good magician. watch him with his his watch out for him with his his tricks. p jolly tricks. that's graham p jolly and got

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