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tv   The Saturday Night Showdown  GBN  March 9, 2024 8:00pm-9:01pm GMT

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gb news. >> hello there. coming up on the saturday night showdown. a british man has been jailed for two years for stickers saying things like. it's okay to be white. it's exposing our two tier justice white. it's exposing our two tierjustice system that allows tier justice system that allows anti—israel protesters to scream for genocide while slamming british nationalists for the slightest infraction. his political opinions aren't my cup of tea, but this orwellian decision sets a dangerous precedent for all of us, and poshos for palestine. and the not so surprising revelation that the vandal behind the attack on a painting of lord balfour. balfour was wearing a £1,000 mulberry backpack , a £1,000 mulberry backpack, a luxury handbag to keep her luxury handbag to keep her luxury opinions in, and everyone's favourite beer mascot, dylan mulvaney has had a
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go at stand up, but is he sorry? she they whatever. i just read read the pronouns on his badge as convincing being a comedian as convincing being a comedian as he is at being a woman. i'll be discussing with my panel of comedians this is your saturday night showdown discussing all of tonight's topics are my brilliant panel. joining me tonight, hotshot lawyer andrew eborn and the top comedians, diane spencer and quincy . but first, let's get quincy. but first, let's get your latest news headlines from ray addison . ray addison. >> good evening. i'm ray addison in the gb newsroom. our top stories. the prime minister says he plans to pay for cuts to national insurance contributions
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by kerbing the benefits budget. rishi sunak told the sunday times he's concerned by forecasts which show welfare spending is set to rise by more than £100 billion a year until 20 2829. mr sunak said 2.5 million working age people have been signed off as unfit to work and, quote, that just doesn't strike me as a system that's working properly, he insists he'll end national insurance contributions if he wins the next general election. well, the uk was involved in a joint operation overnight which saw dozens of drones downed in the red sea. the defence secretary confirmed that hms richmond shot down two drones, repelling an attack by iranian backed houthis. the us says in total , houthis. the us says in total, coalition forces hit 28 unmanned aerial vehicles. in a post on social media, grant shapps said the uk and its allies will continue to take the action
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necessary to save lives and protect the freedom of navigation . huge crowds have navigation. huge crowds have marched through central london and glasgow , demonstrating and glasgow, demonstrating against the war in gaza . pray, against the war in gaza. pray, pray, pray , pray, pray pray, pray, pray, pray palestine. thousands took part in the palestine solidarity campaign protest. in the palestine solidarity campaign protest . they're campaign protest. they're demanding an immediate ceasefire in london. the rally began at hyde park and finished at the us embassy. the met police says there was no significant public order disturbance , but six order disturbance, but six people were arrested and one man was later de—arrested did well. meanwhile, the met says officers are dealing with multiple public order offence across london. the force says there are pockets of violent disorder in bermondsey , violent disorder in bermondsey, where officers are dealing with fans as they to travel the tube. over 2300 officers have been policing 11 events today, including eight football matches, an international rugby fixture and of course , the fixture and of course, the pro—palestine protests . two tory
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pro—palestine protests. two tory mps have used a social media post to demand more defence spending in further signs of tension within the conservative party. foreign office minister anne—marie trevelyan and security minister tom tugendhat published an article appearing to criticise the absence of funds in the recent budget for defence. they're calling for a spending increase to at least 2.5% of gdp, citing global risks posed by countries such as russia and china . police are russia and china. police are investigating whether any criminal offences have been committed at three branches of an undertaker in yorkshire, cordoned laws are in place at legacy independent funeral directors in hull and east riding. that's after humberside police received reports of what it says was concern for care of the deceased. that was on wednesday. the direct line has been set up for anyone who may have been affected. for the latest stories , you could sign
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latest stories, you could sign up for gb news alerts by scanning the qr code. it's on your screen right now, or go to gb news .com/ alerts. now back to leo kearse . to leo kearse. >> welcome to the saturday night showdown. just in case anyone was under the impression that we live in a free and fair country, a man was sentenced earlier this month to two years in prison for stickers that said such inflammatory racist things as it's okay be white, just to it's okay to be white, just to be clear, i do not think that this is acceptable. it is definitely not okay to be white, and anyone who is thinking of being should being white should hand themselves in to the police to be true. dolled up a bit now i don't want to downplay the severity of sam's stickering rampage, the report rampage, so i'll read the report from guardian, a wing from the guardian, a left wing newspaper. leeds crown court heard the related to heard the charges related to racist stickers milia allegedly designed and produced between 2019 and 2021, which he had then
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posted in public places around his community and encouraged thousands of online followers to imitate. they bore slogans such as reject white guilt, nationalism is nurture, we will be a minority in our homeland by 2066, and diversity designed to fail, built to replace detective chief superintendent james dunkerley, head of the counter terrorism policing in the north east, said at the sentencing, with no hint of irony. those that seek to bring hatred to our communities through actions such as stickers will be identified and brought to justice. wow i mean, thank god this monster is off our streets. imagine if one off our streets. imagine if one of those mohammed cartoon protesters saw such a sticker and got so upset that they dropped their sign saying behead those who insult islam and had to go back to their council house they get a chance house before they get a chance to for jihad. house before they get a chance to forjihad. or imagine to chant for jihad. or imagine if blm protester and if a blm protester saw one and got a fright. they dropped got such a fright. they dropped their saying kill whitey their sign saying kill whitey and their books on abolishing the white race. the stickers carried very dangerous carried some very dangerous messages, reject white messages, such as reject white guilt. listen, sam, white guilt
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underpins a multi—billion pound industry in diversity, equity and inclusion . some of those and inclusion. some of those diversity coordinators just have a few payments left to make on their yachts. and you want to stop their grift now? are you mad? another sticker said nationalism is nurture the horror. someone could see that and think that it's okay to love their country. and our authorities wonder why military recruitment is falling when the bafic recruitment is falling when the basic requirement for serving, feeling such a strong loyalty and devotion towards your country that you're willing to die for it is criminalised. another sticker said we will be a minority in our homeland by 2066. i mean, this is dangerously rose tinted nonsense. the way immigration has accelerated under rishi will be a minority by tuesday. this case is important because it exposes the two tiered nature of hate crime policing , exposes the two tiered nature of hate crime policing, and exposes the two tiered nature of hate crime policing , and shows hate crime policing, and shows how you can now be jailed for your opinions . the wrong think your opinions. the wrong think that george orwell warned us about. that george orwell warned us about . i'm that george orwell warned us about. i'm not that george orwell warned us about . i'm not arguing that sam about. i'm not arguing that sam melia isn't a naughty man with some naughty opinions, but we
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can all see that the law isn't appued can all see that the law isn't applied fairly. there's a gulf in how people like melia are treated compared with the far left or islamists that's visible from space, and this two tier treatment does far more to stir up racial tensions than anything a few stickers could do . the a few stickers could do. the same week that sam melia was jailed for stickers, george galloway, a man who said equally provocative things , was elected provocative things, was elected to the british parliament by muslims in rochdale . although, muslims in rochdale. although, to be fair, it's not the worst thing muslims have done in rochdale. and just look at how the judge who handed sam his sentence. tom bayliss kc, seen here having a good old virtue signal next to a statue of mandela, let off much worse criminals. tom bayliss gave a man who had sex. images of children as young as three know jail time. he clearly feels the need to protect the hypothetical feelings of hypothetical people who might read a sticker saying it's okay to be white, but the feelings of very young children being subjected to the worst crimes in humanity don't matter
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as much. he gave someone caught with four grand worth of crack and heroin jail time. and heroin no jail time. apparently a big pile of hard drugs less damage drugs does less damage than stickers . other racially stickers. other racially motivated crime seemingly gets a passif motivated crime seemingly gets a pass if it's by a different group. hamud al—sulami, a muslim member of a grooming gang who targeted children based on their race, was found guilty of sexually assaulting a 12 year old girl and received no jail time. just 180 hours of community service. mosques across the country, such as birmingham's green lane mosque, host hate preachers who teach their followers such enlightened ideas as the correct way to stone adulterous women to death or execute homosexuals and openly spread hate against infidels, i.e. british people. not only is this tolerated by the authorities, green lane mosque was incredibly awarded millions of pounds of government funding . and take a look at funding. and take a look at these guys here. >> well, hatred for the non—muslims doesn't stop us from being unjust. them my argument would be it also doesn't stop us
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from coexisting with them living in a society with them. >> but i can be in a land where i lived with live with these people. but i have hate for them. i don't like them . them. i don't like them. >> british muslims merely chatting about the hate they have for britain and showing their followers that this can be done without any fear of repercussions. if these were white talking about white men talking about a different race, they'd be locked up than you can say up faster than you can say blatant policing. and blatant two tier policing. and every see marches on the every week we see marches on the streets of britain with anti—semitic chants calling for genocide and jihad, and the police are instructed to stand and although they can and watch. although they can still get tough if any white men appear a football match. appear for a football match. they even arrested a man who was waving an anti hamas placard. the police have denied it was for placard , but in sadiq for the placard, but in sadiq khan's london it seems acceptable to chant jihad acceptable to chant for jihad but illegal oppose but illegal to oppose terrorists. we living in a terrorists. we are living in a clown world. let's have a look at what the protester said , he at what the protester said, he told me. >> is it danger for your life and for the people when they see
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maybe attacked you? >> and what did your sign say exactly? >> how much is terrorist ? this >> how much is terrorist? this is a yeah. >> no, that was the sign. police. and that's what your sign said. >> i told the police they attacked me and i want to complain. he said, go to police station near your home. >> a man detained for opposing hamas terrorists. i wouldn't be surprised if some of the people at the anti—israel protests had actually downloaded some of sam's stickers as well. i mean, look at this placard claiming that zionists control the media. why is this guy allowed to wave it in public while sam goes to jail? it's his intent and ideology that was on trial. he's been jailed for his opinions. we're told the state has the ability peer into someone's ability to peer into someone's brain measure their intent. brain and measure their intent. this shows the weakness of laws that punish people for intending to stir up racial hatred. they can be interpreted, however, the state wants and applied with discretion to silence whoever they now i don't approve they want. now i don't approve of what sam did. i think it's
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very silly to put up stickers saying people born in britain should deported. that should be deported. i think that being skin being british isn't about skin tone it's about the tone at all. it's about the culture values that you hold culture and values that you hold and the culture and values that made great equality, made britain great equality, tolerance, liberty, tolerance, individual liberty, fairness but his fairness of law. but his sentence rankles with me, not just because it shows there's no fairness of law. but i think the thoughtcrime element of his conviction doesn't hold water. i've some i've spoken to some nationalists, overall they nationalists, and overall they don't seem to be driven by a desire to stir up racial hatred. if anything, it's the opposite. the sentiment the overwhelming sentiment underpinning them seems to be concern about their country and concern about their country and concern immigration concern that mass immigration and lack of integration and the rise islamism leading to rise of islamism are leading to disharmony hatred. and what disharmony and hatred. and what precedent does it set for other people? sam's wife, laura, was de—banking five years before they came. for the mainstream politician nigel farage, these measures to punish and censor people start at the fringes and work their way inward. it's not even doing any good. the authority's heavy handed attempts to stamp down on people like sam melia backfiring by
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like sam melia are backfiring by drawing attention to their message. more will message. far more people will have sam stickers because have seen sam stickers because of his conviction, and the state have somehow managed to make him a sympathetic figure amongst all this . never mind this nonsense. never mind stickers. the state should take their two tier approach and stick where the don't stick it where the sun don't shine . shine. >> and i'm joined tonight by lawyer brad , broadcaster and lawyer brad, broadcaster and futurist andrew eborn, comedian and fudge enthusiast diane spencen and fudge enthusiast diane spencer, and a award winning funny man quincy. >> now, andrew, i'm going to start with you because you've got a legal background. i mean, it seems our hate crime laws rely too much on on intent and what the you know , what what the what the you know, what what the prosecution people prosecution and what people imagine and the intent and the thoughts behind a terrible two tier treatment, as you say, an amazing avalanche of alliteration on. >> reality is this. it's >> the reality is this. it's section 18 of the public order act 1986, which talks very specifically about use of words or behaviour or display of
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written material where they intend. and that's the key element intend thereby to element they intend thereby to stir up racial hatred. now, every legal stuff, there's a serious bit of it. there are two things to it. there's what's called the actus reus, which is the act itself, and the other is what's called the mens rea. the guilty mind. yeah. the trouble with this is get the with this is you get the headlines. so the newspaper, you get these reports get all these terrible reports and off what they and people get off what they start do in the legal system start to do in the legal system is to basically broadcast a lot of sentencing so they can of the sentencing so they can explain their rationale behind it. happens this it. so what happens if this happened think happened about, i think two years ago, where the very first case, the sentencing case, they did the sentencing guidelines case, they did the sentencing guidelinievery sentencing because every sentencing council has you has that, they give you a guideline as to what to do. but you start with the finding of fact. so this case, they fact. and so in this case, they found his intent was to be found out his intent was to be racial. it was. and that was the thing you disagree with thing you might disagree with that because that's our headline. to compare headline. it's easy to compare all other judgements and headline. it's easy to compare all otherjudgements and so all the otherjudgements and so on forth. but without on and so forth. but without looking case, it's looking at the whole case, it's very and i always say very difficult. and i always say trust on but trust comes in on foot but leaves on horseback. we
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leaves on horseback. what we need, need is clarity to need, what we need is clarity to make that work. >> yeah. and i don't think we're getting i mean, getting that clarity. i mean, quincy, totally like quincy, this seems totally like we're of people we're seeing one group of people treated way, and another treated one way, and another group of people treated a completely different. group of people treated a comrcan'tl different. group of people treated a comrcan't give erent. group of people treated a comrcan't give myit. group of people treated a comrcan't give my right >> i can't give my right honourable friend you honourable friend how you articulated argument articulated that argument was absolutely superb. thank you. because i could come again. quincy. because the quincy. yeah, because the section 18 of east london is bang out of order. and what he's, this guy is the same. it says it in your rhetoric. you were saying that in 2066, there's going to be no white people, right? so you want to spend a minority minority? no white people basically. right. so we're to say so so we're trying to say so basically he would have spent less time worrying about everybody else. right. and start making to love his missus and get some babies. that's what he needs to do. >> well, how are you going to do that when he's in jail? >> i could volunteer, right, and start off and get some more colour into the country to work as there you as a fluffer. yeah. there you go. know what mean? if go. you know what i mean? if that's what his main concern is that's what his main concern is that there's no people look that there's no people who look like 2066. i don't
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like him in 2066. well, i don't think the size of him. think look at the size of him. he's going to live that long. >> i'll tell you what. the >> well, i'll tell you what. the interesting thing quincy, there was by blue mink. do you was a song by blue mink. do you remember? you might remember this did, and they this blue mink who did, and they had several years had a line in it several years ago saying, they're to be ago saying, they're going to be coffee people by the coffee coloured people by the score. that's what they're score. and that's what they're predicting. years predicting. and several years ago americanos. ago or americanos. >> you go. >> there you go. >> there you go. >> this is when just >> but this is when coffee just came in white, one colour. came in one white, one colour. >> know i mean? >> you know what i mean? >> you know what i mean? >> before there were millions of different that's i said. >> but this i mean, that quote the, the, the white british people will be a minority in their own country 2066. that their own country by 2066. that comes oxford professor comes from an oxford professor that's not, you know, plucked comes from an oxford professor that'swho'syou know, plucked comes from an oxford professor that'swho'syou kncdon'thked comes from an oxford professor that'swho'syou kncdon't sleep from who's clearly don't sleep with his missus. >> i'm saying, you're >> yeah. i'm just saying, you're seeing these these nationalists. >> with the >> but the trouble with the british nationalist is they're just enough to, like, just not sexy enough to, like, procreate. i'm not nora procreate. i mean, i'm not nora forster british nationalist. >> know a lot of them just >> i know a lot of them just look weird. >> you know, of them >> like, you know, some of them just, look at. just, like, look at. >> at nick griffin. who's >> look at nick griffin. who's gonna who's gonna jump on that? >> in dangerous >> you are in dangerous territory now because the
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territory right now because the attractiveness people attractiveness of people has been this been discussed before on this channel. in a very good way. channel. not in a very good way. >> that was >> a five pointer. that was the phrase, wasn't it? >> i would say that if, if >> i would just say that if, if you look at what he was doing, he was putting these small stickers on lampposts. now, if you take your political leanings from read on a from something you've read on a lamppost , what you've got to lamppost, what you've got to accept, a bit simple to accept, your a bit simple to start with, but you did raise an excellent point. it's an asymmetrical application of authority going with the alliteration and also what i reckon what happened as well those stickers is put on those lampposts. >> right. what is the reason why he's probably gone to jail? because he's covered some lost dog or cat? or do you think that's what's happened? >> do think the dog's missing? >> yeah. and what sent >> yeah. and that's what sent him it was nothing to him to jail. it was nothing to do. what? she's like, rover has been missing, and you've covered it not saying it over. no, i'm not saying that's the judges. >> thing , what they >> the judges thing, what they need to do, in all seriousness, to get trust back the legal to get trust back in the legal profession those profession is to explain those other that you explained , other cases that you explained, and mentioned reference in and you mentioned reference in your monologue, your brilliant monologue, because soon as you have that
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because as soon as you have that as a headline, he didn't go to prison for this, or they let him off a little smack. you've off with a little smack. you've been naughty boy or a naughty been a naughty boy or a naughty girl. then makes the whole girl. then it makes the whole thing ridiculous. what you thing look ridiculous. what you need clarity the need is clarity across the board, which they board, which is why they introduced tv. introduced tv or not tv. it's why they introduced televising of get better of sentencing. so we get better trust public. we trust from the public. and do we understand in the uk? understand that in the uk? >> no. >> no. >> or is it just an american do. >> or is it just an american do. >> no. start. we get it >> and no. we start. we get it here. wall to television in here. wall to wall television in america is brilliant in america which is brilliant in court. strangely, i was sitting with with in his case with with harry in his case and there a little you there was a little artist. you have wall wall television, have wall to wall television, pictures videos america. pictures and videos in america. you have little sketch artists doing stuff, which doing this sort of stuff, which is so we don't have is bizarre. so we don't have that yet. we do have it for the sentencing. however and the idea of that is basically to encourage to understand encourage people to understand the you understand the process. if you understand the process. if you understand the get the process, you can get trust in i think in it. yeah, but i think i understand this process and, and i it's been applied fairly. >> and also i see people waving like jeremy corbyn waving the hammer and sickle. that's that's an symbol. to me. an offensive, symbol. to me. this has killed tens an offensive, symbol. to me. th millions has killed tens an offensive, symbol. to me. th millions of has killed tens an offensive, symbol. to me.
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th millions of people. > yeah. because is exactly >> yeah. because this is exactly what has detained for. i what he has been detained for. i don't with pretty 90% don't agree with pretty much 90% of anything that he said. i do think it's to be white. i think it's okay to be white. i really don't have any choice, but he vile person. but but he he's a vile person. but that's his thinking. when that's his thinking. and when you showed actually those clips like, this is what i mean, if you see a sticker on a lamppost, that's not really is that really going to sway what you think? but whereas you see people walking chanting, behead walking around chanting, behead anybody in anybody who doesn't believe in islam, that is a much more imposing. >> and it's absolutely it is freedom of speech, but it's not freedom of speech, but it's not freedom of speech, but it's not freedom of consequences. and that's the reality . so you need that's the reality. so you need to enforce you need to to enforce it and you need to enforce it across the board. >> but what really want to >> but what we really want to know well, can you put those know is, well, can you put those same in in that cell is same stickers in in that cell is going to be for in a couple of years. >> well, we'll find out anyway. coming up, we will assess the week's winners and losers in
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cursed week cursed or blessed. this week we've tyson fighting we've got mike tyson fighting jake mulvaney trying jake paul, dylan mulvaney trying stand anti—israel stand up and anti—israel protester slashes a painting but reveals poshness. we'll reveals her poshness. and we'll show you what happened when this guy speech guy delivered his speech in a house of god. >> maybe minority sexual and gender have something gender minorities have something to teach the church about dying to self, about
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i >> -- >> carl heneghan. >> carl heneghan. >> welcome back to the saturday night showdown. kirsten blessed coming up. but first, i promised i would show you what happened when this guy gave a speech in the house of god. >> minority sexual and >> maybe minority sexual and gender minorities have something to teach the church about dying to teach the church about dying to new life, about . to self, about new life, about. preaching . preaching. >> that was unnecessary from . >> that was unnecessary from. >> that was unnecessary from. >> that was unnecessary from. >> that is not a sign of god's judgement. okay i think god
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literally hit that pulpit with lightning. >> he missed a trick. he should have done this and said many hands make light work. he would have.it hands make light work. he would have. it would have been brilliant. >> yeah. what'd it's time now for? >> kirsten blessed me and my brilliant panel will look at three stories and decide who three big stories and decide who are the week's winners and losers. up, you may losers. first up, you may have seen the footage of the palestine protester vandalising a balfour, a painting of lord balfour, the man 1917 declaration man behind the 1917 declaration supporting a home for the jewish people in palestine. well there's been an update. it looks like the little madam carried her red spray and scissors in a rather expensive satchel. a £1,000 mini black quilted carriage lviv napa bag. >> that's probably not how you pronounce delevingne's. >> you said it so well, leo. >> i'm scottish. i'm not used to words like delevinge . words like delevinge. >> i think leo just read it. leo just read out the wi—fi pass. we heard you pronounced delevinge delphine v delphine written like that. >> then it's written delevinge.
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delphine. >> international superstar. well, that's her name. >> sales will plummet now. >> sales will plummet now. >> she needs to learn how to spell delphine, if you ask me. >> anyways, a bag by mulberry bag. if anybody's looking for , bag. if anybody's looking for, for a fancy present for the wife. this is a cambridge student with a designer bag. was destroying balfour's portrait . destroying balfour's portrait. simply elite virtue signalling. we never see working class people defacing art. i mean, quincy, do you think just stop oil are jealous because this is somebody who actually got through the perspex ? through the perspex? >> i actually saw that. and i personally feel that that could be abstract art, be classed as an abstract art, you i mean ? she could you know what i mean? she could have remixed it. so like banksy. >> yeah. banksy shredded his own painting at auction. yeah. >> it went up in value as a >> and it went up in value as a result. the glorious thing. and they hammer went down and this wonderful picture went through the brilliantly shredded. the thing brilliantly shredded. >> i think most modern art would go in value if you shredded it. >> i have to it.— >> i have to say it. >> i have to say that was disgusting. however, and there is a big calling it out. i forget her bag. i have a
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beautiful you sold it. the reality, the reality, the reality, the reality, the reality that is absolutely appalling. deserves go to appalling. she deserves to go to jail. you're talking about sentencing things like that. sentencing and things like that. that be stopped that needs to be stopped and that needs to stopped right that needs to be stopped right now. people need to now. so people need to act incredibly quickly and condemn that. yeah. >> also lord balfour, >> and also lord balfour, i mean, he actually an mean, he actually was an advocate the rights of advocate for the rights of palestinian he palestinian people, but also he was is thing was see, this is the thing history and people are more complex than just one tiny little thing that they did, he was one of the reasons why women could go into universities. and he created the education act, and he he wanted to do so much to help so many people. and she's just read one thing gone mad and gone in there and committed this horrendous act of, of a beautiful painting by a very talented artist. and i went and actually saw banksy's exhibit in glasgow and that painting that got shredded and the amount of iterations they had to do to actually build the mechanism to go off at exactly the right time. absolutely
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incredible. yeah. >> and i, and i personally feel the, the security should follow her to prison as well because they stood there and watched her do that. yeah. did they. and i could imagine them all sitting back thinking, i don't get paid enough this. they sat there enough for this. they sat there like tesco security guards one the the one time the the time it's the one time the one they actually had one job. >> one job and nobody >> you had one job and nobody ever goes into slash slash paintings. ever goes into slash slash paintirthat's the one. the one >> so that's the one. the one time they could actually earn their money and they didn't. anyway, dylan mulvaney remember him them that the him her they them that the transgender tiktoker who tanked bud light after he was featured in one of their adverts? well, he's tried his hand at stand up as well in a skit that surfaced on social media, mulvaney takes aim at conservative. >> i would be, i would feel like i was a part of something bigger than myself. that was a double entendre. at me , stand up. entendre. look at me, stand up. it's the conservative. men are just pissed that i can beat them in beer pong , and the in beer pong, and the conservative women are pissed
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that their kids are calling me mother. and all of my instagram ads. >> no, we have a few comedians on the panel tonight. what's the verdict on dylan's efforts? i mean, diane , i love the way mean, diane, i love the way dylan convincingly spanks his bum , just just like just like a bum, just just like just like a real woman. just like real women do all the time. >> in no way a caricature of womanhood. but would you rate the stand up? is it as convincing as the transition, i, i mean, number one, when you do stand up as a woman, you have to deal with the innate sexism that you get the second you walk on stage. you don't get it from everyone. but every so often you'll get somebody who'll just look you. had people look at you. i've had people literally go, nah, and i just fold their arms, walk about fold their arms, walk away about people loudly ordering drinks for and i don't for each other. and i don't think dillwyn's ever going think that dillwyn's ever going to put up to have to necessarily put up with think it's with that, i think it's interesting. personally interesting. like, i personally didn't enjoy the act, but it's comedy. yeah. so somebody else is going to find it funny. i personally didn't, but i don't
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think it's been written for me. andrew loves this. >> i know credit where absolutely. you're absolutely right. i love you more. you right. i love you even more. you brought credit where brought fudge and credit where credit due. however, credit is due. however, i thought did incredibly thought dylan did incredibly well. have seen i to be well. i have seen i used to be chair. i used to be who? dylan. is it dylan? no, it's dylan . is it dylan? no, it's dylan. >> dylan. dylan. it should be. >> dylan. dylan. it should be. >> shouldn't it be? >> shouldn't it be? >> it turn to correct >> no, it is my turn to correct the name for you . you look the name for you. you look gorgeous. not just miss, not just misgendering , but adding consonance. >> there's nothing worse, nothing worse . i thought dylan nothing worse. i thought dylan did very well. and i've seen far worse. i used to be chair of the montreal comedy festival, and people come from all over the world, and i thought she delivered pretty well. thought delivered pretty well. i thought the okay. the material. okay. >> for first go. come on. >> i've seen i've seen much worse. i'm pretty sure i was much worse than that. >> yes. and also probably more famous. >> i liked i liked the >> i liked i liked how the person was literally a person. yeah. >> oh, look at you. right on. >> oh, look at you. right on. >> i liked her a asda's into it because they all slap in the back. yeah. into it. and this
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just shows me that this ain't my world, because didn't know who world, because i didn't know who that until walked that person was until i walked into this building. right. yeah. there you go. >> well, it's great that no one stood by asda. >> well, moving on, after after anthony joshua's victory last night, fans have another night, boxing fans have another battle to look forward to. >> youtuber jake paul is to take on former heavyweight mike tyson in july, with a mere 30 years between the two of them. it's been alleged that fights like this degrade boxing altogether. not that either participant will be concerned. they're expected to earn more than $9 million each from the fight . i to earn more than $9 million each from the fight. i mean, i don't know, i feel like this is when rome was in decline and the emperor staged these fights in the colosseum, you know, increasingly bizarre fights between and bears and between giraffes and bears and things that try and things like that to try and distract the people. but, quincy, a as well, quincy, you're a boxer as well, are you? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> used to. >> used to. >> i used to love your acts. don't get they get everyone online. >> oh, fire! jake. probably. jake. paul. yeah being from that world to me is the biggest
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liberty that it diminishes boxing as an art form. it just shows that money talks even as we saw last night with the joshua fight. yeah, that francis . no, not now. should not be in that ring with him. yeah, because he's not a boxer. >> he's not a boxer. i mean, he's a great mma fighter, but he's a great mma fighter, but he's not a boxer. and jake paul fighting a 57 year old legend, he ain't fighting the boxer. he's fighting a brand. yeah and that's the bottom line. yeah. so who's next? do i fight elvis? >> i think you should fight him. >> i think you should fight him. >> i think that's a great give them ideas. >> but i mean, andrew, this is. it does like, it's almost it does seem like, it's almost exploitative. i mean, mike tyson is 57. to be fair, i've seen some of mike tyson some footage of mike tyson training inspiring, looks training inspiring, and he looks like definitely batter me. >> know right. me. >> right. and what >> i know you're right. and what i is the new invigorated. i love is the new invigorated. joe biden's going to be in the next round because i think that'll be fantastic. so he was brilliant before, p.t. brilliant the day before, p.t. barnum, showman, said, barnum, the great showman, said,
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if draw a crowd, if you want to draw a crowd, start fight. you're right, start a fight. and you're right, it's the brands. it's the big brands. >> he talking about >> he wasn't talking about working that. he working on that. he wasn't talking boxing, he was talking about boxing, but he was around essential. around that. it's essential. yes. boxing, you do need to yes. for boxing, you do need to have a at some point. have a fight at some point. >> you are you going to >> are you are you going to watch it down? >> i sometimes not good >> i sometimes i'm not very good with mean, a little bit of blood >> i mean, a little bit of blood and i'll over into my and i'll keel over into my curry, but, what i think is quite interesting the point quite interesting with the point that made about the brands that you made about the brands is that might i can think is that there might i can think of positive and that there of one positive and that there might generation of might be a whole generation of kids know paul, but kids who know jake paul, but they mike tyson, and they don't know mike tyson, and he might get another little bump from this is kind of nice. from it. this is kind of nice. >> no, no, no, because the reality is this if jake paul was fighting the tyson on the way up, he would even think about that. >> oh no, no, no, he wouldn't go anywhere. >> and so while wait for a man who's still got his name. yeah, like bmw and then say, and you're not fighting him to beat him, you're fighting him just to keep yourself relevant to me. you're disrespecting a legend. and even mike tyson's people. i
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would talk to them. you shouldn't be fighting this, man. you've got a legend. >> i was going to say tyson could say no. >> he could say no, and he should say no. he wants that 9 million reasons why he's not going say no. going to say no. >> would work on that principle. >> you mentioned, leo, you >> as you mentioned, leo, you mentioned factor have you mentioned the factor of have you seen do his shadow seen mike tyson do his shadow boxing? logan seen boxing? logan i've seen keir starmer a bag. yeah, starmer punch a bag. yeah, that's that's that's a fight. that's >> i don't think keir starmer could beat the bag anyway , next could beat the bag anyway, next on the saturday night showdown, we've got the massive medical scandal around child transitioning that's breaking this we'll show you this week. and we'll show you how is pushing how hollyoaks is pushing a storyline child storyline about child transitioning . plus, i'll show transitioning. plus, i'll show you what happened when this lady went shops.
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welcome back to the saturday night showdown . first, night showdown. first, i promised i would show you what happened when this lovely lady got more than she bargained for dunng got more than she bargained for during a shopping trip.
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she still . she still. >> she still what i love about that. >> what i love about that. she didn't let go. she didn't let go of her shopping trolley. >> she didn't. she didn't. >> she didn't. she didn't. >> absolutely brilliant. she was, in fact, supposed to be going into the shop to clean it. >> the guy who came and >> and the guy who came and rescued him. it's a brilliant song. i've been loving it all week. what is the guy week. what happened is the guy who came to rescue shop who came to rescue was the shop owner, was his fault owner, and it was his fault because been to get because he'd been trying to get the of her forever, i the revenge of her forever, i think. so she sort of think. and so she was sort of obviously hooked up on that sort of stuff. but you're right, holding trolley for holding onto the trolley for dear glorious. dear life as glorious. >> that you've the
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>> i love that you've done the deep dive research on this, on this. >> the stories are everything i could everything from could do. everything from whatever i could act is. and whatever i could act it is. and the that, to the the reason for that, to the slashing, watching this, watching well. slashing, watching this, watyou've well. slashing, watching this, watyou've got well. slashing, watching this, watyou've got to well. slashing, watching this, watyou've got to blame ll. slashing, watching this, watyou've got to blame the >> you've got to blame the government here because if they blame government, if you if blame the government, if you if they lowered the age of, of retirement, she wouldn't retirement, well, she wouldn't have in first have been there in the first place. you're probably right. she'd >> she'd retired at 40. >> she'd retired at 40. >> you go. yeah. see >> there you go. yeah. see i mean, it's lucky, you know, the obesity crisis isn't any worse. >> or would have probably >> or she would have probably just and she'd have been just snapped and she'd have been terrible. corner terrible. anyway, culture corner next be discussing the next and we'll be discussing the emerging around the emerging scandal around the world. association world. professional association for or for transgender health or w path. to psychopath, path. no relation to psychopath, although have although it should be, who have helped nhs policies for helped shape nhs policies for more decade. the mail more than a decade. the mail online week that online revealed this week that standards documents standards of care documents produced the w path have been produced by the w path have been used a basis for guidance to used as a basis for guidance to medical practitioners across the nhs. led to, for nhs. this guidance led to, for example, 96% of children sent for assessment to end endocrinology clinics being given puberty blockers. these puberty blockers can have horrific side effects , including horrific side effects, including osteoporosis and infertility,
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and prescription of puberty blockers usually sets the kid on a pathway, leading to fully transitioning when concerned. health care professionals say that puberty usually resolves any feelings of being trapped in the wrong body, so you don't need to pump kids full of drugs. shockingly, leaked video from a meeting of w path trans health workers revealed that they themselves don't believe the adolescence they're treating. understand the consequences of their treatment and, crucially , their treatment and, crucially, a doctor says the kids aren't able to give informed consent about their treatment. >> the developmental it's out of their developmental range sometimes to understand the extent to which some of these medical interventions are impacting them, we do it. >> we try to talk about it, but most of the kids are nowhere in any kind of a brain space to really, really, really talk aboutin really, really, really talk about in a serious way, that's always bothered me. but, you know , we still want the kids to know, we still want the kids to be happy, happier in the moment.
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right >> other leaks reveal that w path doctors admit to experimental treatments, despite outwardly saying the w path is an evidence based institution. i mean, diane, were you shocked by these revelations , i am deeply these revelations, i am deeply alarmed , because this w path the alarmed, because this w path the world professional association of trans health, it sounds professional. does it, but it's actually a group of people they pay actually a group of people they pay to be members . and what was pay to be members. and what was leaked? these files came from a message board . and this group message board. and this group has been responsible for giving advice to other medical professional angels and to clinics and producing guidelines on how they should treat children, that are questioning their gender identity. and what is really alarming about this is that these people have admitted in private , oh, we're probably in private, oh, we're probably making a lot of mistakes. yeah. how dare you admit that in private and not admit that publicly? because these are people's lives that are being
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irreparably changed by their actions . and a lot of these actions. and a lot of these people have got, connections kind of they're on the chair of w path, and then they're also on the chair of like a medical board in a hospital. >> so there's a financial incentive for them to, to be encouraging more, transitions to, to happen because they're getting they're making money from them. >> yes. i mean , quincy, the >> yes. i mean, quincy, the thing that that worries me, we're going to deluge of we're going to see a deluge of claims from people who feel that they have detransitioned and feel sort of mis feel that they were sort of mis sold , not their ppi, but their sold, not their ppi, but their transition, i mean, as a taxpayer, i didn't want to pay for the transition in the first place, and now i'm going to have to pay for them to detransition and have to pay for claims. i think i'm the real victim here. >> i think that, personally is what i'm going to say. yeah. let me just take a sip. this there was also they did i was gonna oh, okay. >> this is a dramatic pause . >> this is a dramatic pause. >> this is a dramatic pause.
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>> i was just going to say, look at the fact that it was leaked and they kept it in—house. yeah, i don't condone snitching , but i don't condone snitching, but in this case, all power to them. >> yeah. and it's about kids potentially being damaged. >> horrific stuff. and >> it's horrific stuff. and there's sign of companies there's no sign of companies cutting advertising with cutting back on advertising with trans influencers trans influencers. influencers even though it sometimes backfires, it did with bud backfires, as it did with bud light and dylan mulvaney this week. doritos, corn crisps week. doritos, the corn crisps have sacked trans influencer samantha hudson after it was revealed that samantha had written social media posts threatening to do thuggish things to a 12 year old girl. other old posts by samantha, born ivan gonzalez, renaldo read in the middle of the street in majorca and panties and screaming that i'm a nymphomaniac in front of a super beautiful eight year old girl. hmm'hmm not the sort of thing you want your mascot to be shouting. and another declared, i hate women who are victims of sexual assault and go to self—help centres to overcome their trauma. annoying. i can't say this word, but it rhymes with klutz. samantha hudson said they were sorry for the tweets,
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which were described as pure provocation and in very bad taste. well, that's all right then. that's fine. i mean, like literally, literally sort of. >> that's what you want with a chip brand, isn't it? >> bad taste when you're advertising food? >> yeah, the chips are certainly down, though. the reality is this that everything ever this that everything you've ever said anybody, ever is going said to anybody, ever is going to out. yeah. work on to come out. yeah. and work on that of principle. it was that sort of principle. it was an judgement a lot an appalling judgement and a lot of when they're talking of people, when they're talking about limitation, about damage limitation, if somebody you on an somebody takes you on as an agency or whatever they say, look, skeletons look, tell us all the skeletons in we can deal in the cupboard so we can deal with the brand are quite with that. the brand are quite right to call it out. what was said there is despicable and it's right, don't you it's quite right, don't you think brand should have think the brand should have done just mean, everybody's got >> i mean, everybody's got access google, just google access to google, just google and have little search on and have a little search on their media to if their social media to see if they've said revealing they've said anything, revealing themselves massive themselves to be a massive paedophile. before you hire them. >> surely. >> elm— >> well, what's interesting there people there is their hiring people based on their social based already on their social media . yeah. so if you're media tracks. yeah. so if you're hiring someone their social hiring someone on their social media traction, like, not their talent, not their audition,
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nothing like that. then how come it wasn't spotted? >> yeah , well, maybe satanists >> yeah, well, maybe satanists do run world. do run the world. >> and conspiracy theories >> and the conspiracy theories are right. and the channel, channel soap, hollyoaks hit channel 4 soap, hollyoaks hit the headlines this week for pushing the idea that it's absolutely, totally , completely absolutely, totally, completely normal a stranger a normal for a male stranger in a dress talk to your child dress to talk to your child without knowledge. take without your knowledge. take a look at this. without your knowledge. take a loo i'm this. without your knowledge. take a loo i'm aris. without your knowledge. take a loo i'm a boy, but my body's all >> i'm a boy, but my body's all wrong. and how am i supposed to tell parents? i'll help you tell my parents? i'll help you in whatever way can, but you in whatever way i can, but you need know that your life is need to know that your life is in hands . in your hands. >> i mean, this goes against everything i was taught as a kid . we were told, you know, stranger and all the rest stranger danger and all the rest of i like they're of it. i feel like they're trying to sort of normalise the idea you a trans woman idea of, you know, a trans woman coming in and talking to your kid, talking to your kid behind your back. >> i don't know the >> i mean, i don't know the actual, like, specifics of that storyline. mean, soap operas storyline. i mean, soap operas have been nana, have always been nana, but i made up, filled it with made up, i filled it in with my. >> never the truth stand in >> never let the truth stand in the of a good story. the way of a good story. >> i know you do know there will be a character arc. there will
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be a character arc. there will be a character arc. there will be a whole like soap operas have got a history of sort of tackling social issues. so i'm not actually surprised that hollyoaks have brought this in because something because as soon as something kind of trending in on x or kind of is trending in on x or whatever, they'll bring a storyline about it and storyline out about it and they'll it that way. they'll explore it that way. although, admit, way they'll explore it that way. alth> but this is i mean we've seen hollyoaks. >> well not hollyoaks. it was brookside , the first lesbian brookside, the first lesbian kiss in a soap opera , although kiss in a soap opera, although not the first one i'd seen thanks to a taxi driver who sold my dad a vhs. but, but i mean, we're seeing people, you know, pushing sort of social progress , pushing sort of social progress, but i feel that this is a part of the progress that has. maybe we should have a warning about the potential downside, especially after what we've seen. >> i think there's a difference
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between showing a lesbian kiss >> i think there's a difference betweecouples�*ng a lesbian kiss >> i think there's a difference betweecouples�*ng soap bian kiss >> i think there's a difference betweecouples�*ng soap operas,s or gay couples in soap operas, because supposed to reflect because it's supposed to reflect reality, shielding reality, so we're not shielding people that if you're people from that if you're pushing it the other way. pushing it down the other way. so basically becomes the so it basically becomes the other that's to be other extreme. that's got to be wrong. and we always talk wrong. yeah. and we always talk about respect, it's respect about respect, but it's respect for the for everybody in the conversation. and what people are to try and do is are not going to try and do is look i not doing this look at why am i not doing this or are we doing that. people or why are we doing that. people get where get taken to pantomime, where people in outfits and people dress up in outfits and people dress up in outfits and people to the, know, people object to the, you know, the people dressing up in to tell time, you know, drag tell story time, you know, drag story time and so on and so forth. >> pantomime, pantomime. >> pantomime, pantomime. >> like >> they're like they're like 20ft the kids and 20ft away from the kids and they're on a stage. they're acting on a stage. they're not like they don't have the their knee. the kid on their knee. >> what did the wolf. >> you know what mean? it's >> you know what i mean? it's like, why do you want to like, well, why do you want to read stories to kids? >> why don't you go in an old folks home? >> old folks would love >> i'm sure old folks would love to have day brightened by to have their day brightened by somebody in. to have their day brightened by sonyou're. in. to have their day brightened by sonyou're. absolutely. in. to have their day brightened by sonyou're. absolutely. and n. to have their day brightened by sonyou're. absolutely. and this >> you're. absolutely. and this is what we need to at is is what we need to look at is all about context. >> all about that sort >> and it's all about that sort of but you're right. of side. but you're right. respect. recognise the respect. let's recognise the diverse, society diverse, glorious society that we but not it
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we have. but let's not shove it down their throats. we have. but let's not shove it down the no 1roats. we have. but let's not shove it down the no 1roatintended. yeah, we have. but let's not shove it dowrto. e no 1roatintended. yeah, we have. but let's not shove it dowrto. i no 1roatintended. yeah, we have. but let's not shove it dowrto. i setiroatintended. yeah, we have. but let's not shove it dowrto. i set youintended. yeah, we have. but let's not shove it dowrto. i set you upended. yeah, we have. but let's not shove it dowrto. i set you up for any 'eah, i try to. i set you up for any other orifice. hizb ut—tahrir saturday night showdown. >> tell you why >> we're going to tell you why snp humza yousaf is snp leader humza yousaf is having terrible plus, having a terrible week. plus, i'll unusual catch i'll show you the unusual catch made fishermen.
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welcome back to the saturday night showdown. sophie ellis—bextor is coming up. but first, i promised i would show you what these fishermen caught. oh, yeah. that is recorded , rick oh, yeah. that is recorded, rick waller, i mean, so what's the. i didn't know whether to say rick waller or james corden there. managed to get it completely wrong. not well wrong. i'm not doing well with names anyway, not the names today anyway, it's not the weirdest we've ever weirdest thing we've ever caught, that's between us caught, but that's between us
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and clinic. it's time and the std clinic. it's time for clown world. and starting us off sophie ellis—bextor off is sophie ellis—bextor singing murder on the dance floor at the bataclan. the site of the 2015 terror attacks. more offensive, i think, is the response of the authorities. after every islamic terror attack. they say, don't look back in anger. it's the religion of peace. don't ask any questions or you're islamophobic. i mean, diane, i've some sympathy i've got some sympathy for sophie ellis—bextor. she had to sort before sort of reference it before singing that song, and she couldn't not sing that song because about her only couldn't not sing that song bec here about her only couldn't not sing that song bec her big about her only couldn't not sing that song bec her big old about her only couldn't not sing that song bec her big old partth her only couldn't not sing that song bec her big old party piece.)nly it's her big old party piece. >> but ellis—bextor , it >> but sophie ellis—bextor, it comes me as an comes across to me as an incredibly individual and incredibly nice individual and thatis incredibly nice individual and that is a really, really great disco song. and they knew that they were booking her. but it was weird. like there is a cnngey was weird. like there is a cringey moment where she sort of acknowledges the song . yeah. and acknowledges the song. yeah. and then sings it and i, i the then she sings it and i, i the problem is, i don't think she could win in this situation . could win in this situation. >> yeah, she had to reference it. >> i thought, i thought she did win. she handled it with grace. it was a rather like you're killing. it means you're doing very of the
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very well. the lyrics of the song unfortunate. the song are very unfortunate. the place sang because place that she, she sang because of that happened. of the atrocities that happened. but made famous by the but it was made famous by the brilliant we're brilliant saltburn. we're talking and barry talking about this and barry doing dance through doing his naked dance through the thing. you haven't seen her? i want spoil it. well, i don't want to spoil it. well, i've it. i've it. i've spoilt it. i've seen it. it's fantastic thing. and it's a fantastic thing. and making song and her making that iconic song and her bringing back again is superb. >> saltburn is overrated anyway, talking of atrocities, it's been a for scottish first a bad week for scottish first minister humza yousaf. first up, the telegraph revealed that he overruled official advice to give a quarter of a million pounds to a gaza aid agency unked pounds to a gaza aid agency linked hamas , allegedly by linked to hamas, allegedly by israeli intelligence. his own officials recommended a donation officials recommended a donation of £100,000 to unicef, but he overruled them and handed taxpayers cash to the unrwa , taxpayers cash to the unrwa, which, according to israel, had employees who took part in hamas terrorist attacks of the of 7th october. the employees have been let go. i think that's , that's let go. i think that's, that's quite a bad thing to do as an extracurricular activity in your job. but there are also allegations that he breached the ministerial code as his in—laws
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were on holiday in gaza at the time and needed to escape, which they successfully did. and then it came out in friday that the snp has received only one major donation from a living person since as leader in since he took over as leader in the time. with humza as leader, they've only £75,000 they've raked in only £75,000 compared with over £8 compared that with over £8 million. when alex salmond was in power . where million. when alex salmond was in power. where has it all gone wrong for the boy humza? >> i mean he's kind of proving that the snp are really bad at finance his, which we know from the luxury motorhome that was parked outside nicola sturgeon's mother in law's house. >> yeah, because they depreciate like milk. >> yeah, like all the financial documents inside. so already the snp is mired in financial scandal. so why humza yousaf went against all of his advisers and thought this was a good idea. ridiculous as well. >> finally this week we're just going to squeeze this in. trump showed that it's just a big kid who'll do anything for a laugh when posted a video of joe when he posted a video of joe biden's state of union biden's state of the union address with funny address with a few funny filters. let's have a look.
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>> we're going to buy american. we're going to buy american folks. >> so trade rules buy america has been the law since 1933. >> also caps and won't go into effect until 2025. and by the way, that law was written and the benefit expires in 2025, new electric grids that are able to weather major storms and not prevent those fire forest fires. >> okay. i mean, quincy, are you looking forward to trump's second presidency? it looks like he's going to win. >> i the fact of america is so big. those are the last two people who can save it a combined age of moses. >> okay. well, right up next is mark dolan tonight. what have you got for us this evening, mark? >> well, leo, could a return of bofis >> well, leo, could a return of boris johnson to the tories before the election save their fortunes? also after they got clobbered this week, are people that own second homes selfish? plus, meghan markle is planning
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her uk comeback. don't hold your breath. >> sounds brilliant mark. can't wait to watch it. well, thanks to my brilliant panel tonight and i'll see you again next week. and don't forget headliners as well tonight 11 headliners as well tonight at 11 pm. next week p.m. see you next week. >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers sponsors of up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hello there. welcome to your latest gb news weather from the met office as we move into sunday, it remains cloudy and damp across many areas and we keep that keen easterly breeze too. and that's thanks to this area of low pressure. just sat to the south of the uk, feeding in areas of cloud outbreaks of rain, isobars rain, the tight isobars indicating that brisk easterly wind there too for the rest of saturday into the early hours of sunday. it remains cloudy. further outbreaks of rain, which
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could be heavy at times across parts of england and wales and then pushes northwards as we move through towards the end of the night, temperatures generally staying above freezing for the vast majority due for the vast majority of us due to the cloud and the outbreaks of rain. so for most it's a cloudy, damp start to sunday morning. there could be a few glimmers of sunshine across central southern parts of england , later on into parts of england, later on into parts of wales, but for most of us it will be cloudy, further outbreaks of rain at times and nofice outbreaks of rain at times and notice the wind still coming in off the north sea. so eastern coasts, particularly chilly for the time of year. best of the temperatures towards the west and southwest, reaching double figures spells figures in any brighter spells into monday. another cloudy day, the wind still driving in outbreaks of rain and low cloud from the north. see the best of any brighter spells will be across areas, but even across western areas, but even here it will remain on the cloudy side and it remains cloudy side and it remains cloudy right through much of the week. largely dry, though there will be some light rain and the winds generally start to winds will generally start to ease to a brighter outlook with
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gb news. >> away . >> away. >> away. >> good evening. it's 9:00 on television. on radio and online. in the united kingdom and across the world. this is mark dolan tonight, in my big opinion. the world. this is mark dolan tonight, in my big opinion . i'll tonight, in my big opinion. i'll be dealing with outdoor company the north face who want to brainwash their customers with divisive ideas about race. remember the good old days when businesses just wanted to sell you stuff? my mark meets guest is the voice of paddington bear, popular british actor and star of one foot in the grave. jonathan kidd in the big story. the rumour mill has gone into overdrive with both the express
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and the telegraph reporting

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