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tv   Free Speech Nation  GB News  March 18, 2024 12:00am-2:01am GMT

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the next election. senior figures in the conservatives have been attempting to downplay claims of a plot to replace the prime minister with penny mordaunt . the move would mean mordaunt. the move would mean a fourth leader of the party in just five years, while mr harper says unlike labour, the conservatives do have a plan to deliver for the country. >> you've got to show them by the time of the election two things we've got to show them that we've got a plan. the plan is working and it's delivering for them, and i think we can see that it for them, and i think we can see thatitis for them, and i think we can see that it is on inflation and on taxes. we've also then got to show them that the party show them that the labour party doesn't have plan and will be doesn't have a plan and will be a big risk. for example, we know the labour party wants to spend £28 billion on their green plan. they've hidden the price tag now, but they don't know how to pay now, but they don't know how to pay for it. that would mean taxes going up. >> drivers have been dealing with more disruption on the third day of the m25 closure, amid reports lengthy amid reports of lengthy tailbacks. a mile stretch tailbacks. a five mile stretch between junctions ten and ii in surrey has been closed since
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friday night, so a bridge could be demolished and national highways say the planned gantry was installed overnight and work is on schedule to reopen for monday. rush hour at 6 am. steve harley best known as the front man of the british rock band cockney rebel, has died at the age of 73. come up and see me to make me smile. the age of 73. come up and see me to make me smile . well, that me to make me smile. well, that was their big hit back in 1975. a number one hit, make me smile, steve harley had continued touring until recently, but had touring until recently, but had to cancel dates to have treatment for cancer. his daughter greta says he died peacefully with his family by his side . and revellers have his side. and revellers have been gathering in cities around the world to celebrate saint patrick's day in belfast. thousands turned out in the city centre to watch a noisy and colourful procession. no shortage of shamrocks, music and leprechauns in dublin, where locals usually vie with tourists packed along. o'connell street
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to watch the annual parade, organisers say it's the largest ever this year, but no one celebrates being irish like the americans and chicago is gearing up for the traditional parades with the city's river dyed green. as always . well, for the green. as always. well, for the latest news, you can sign up to our alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to our website gb news. com slash alerts. now it's time for free speech nation . speech nation. >> the nhs band's puberty blockers activists call for jk rowling to be arrested and the scottish police unleash their hate monster. this is free speech nation . welcome to free speech nation. welcome to free speech nation. welcome to free speech nation. welcome to free speech nation with me. andrew doyle. this is the show where we take a look at culture, current affairs and politics. now coming up on the show tonight, tony
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sewell a backlash 2021 sewell faced a backlash in 2021 when commission when his government commission concluded britain is not institutionally racist. he's going to be here to tell us about his journey from windrush baby the house lords ahead baby to the house of lords ahead of the release of his new book, and here to tell us about their manifesto will manifesto for policing, we will have phillimore from we have sarah phillimore from we are and doctor kate are fair cop and doctor kate coleman of keep prisons. single sex and campaigner maria stein will tell us about the win on the no side of the recent irish referendum, and how she believes it was a victory for common sense. and of course, i've got a lovely panel here of comedians who are going to answer questions from our wonderful studio audience. my comedian studio audience. and my comedian panellists are panellists this evening are cressida bruce devlin cressida wetton and bruce devlin . welcome both. hello. >> thank you. are you all in green for saint patrick's day.7 >> green for saint patrick's day? >> i planned it, andrew. >> i planned it, andrew. >> you didn't i didn't know. >> you didn't i didn't know. >> no. green is just your colour, isn't it? >> that's all it tonight. >> that's all it tonight. >> yeah, tonight it is. and bruce, he drove the snakes out of didn't he, saint of ireland, didn't he, saint patrick? oh did he. no, not you,
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not you. >> oh, he thinking god, how >> oh, he was thinking god, how much i drink? i don't much did i drink? i don't remember doing that. >> you thrown out of >> when you got thrown out of harvey nichols for drinking too much champagne. saying? harvey nichols for drinking too mu yes hampagne. saying? harvey nichols for drinking too mu yes haidubai. 3. saying? harvey nichols for drinking too mu yes haidubai. and saying? harvey nichols for drinking too mu yes haidubai. and don't saying? >> yes in dubai. and i don't want about it. okay. want to talk about it. okay. that's right. >> no, you not. okay, >> no, you better not. okay, well, let's get some questions from our lovely audience. our first is izzy. first question is from izzy. izzy. first question is from izzy. izzyhello. good evening, has the >> hello. good evening, has the hse sensible decision on hse made a sensible decision on transgender health plans? >> health and safety >> hse's health and safety executive. i know, bruce, you were confused. >> i thought it was the train that was going to birmingham, not genuinely i did. i was like, oh my goodness, can i clarify? no. >> so an. an health >> so the hsc, the health and safety they've safety executive, they've now they're the they're the regulator they've regulator in britain. they've said that the new transgender health that they're health plan that they're implementing have to implementing will not have to follow path. the world follow w path. the world professional for professional association for transgender health care. now, i mentioned that, last mentioned that, because last week did a special free week we did a special free speech nation show about the w path files , all of these, these path files, all of these, these internal discussions and memos and messages from some of the leading health care professionals in the realm of transgender health were leaked
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and it was discovered that a lot of leading clinicians in this area know full well that children can't give informed consent . one of the doctors was consent. one of the doctors was caught saying, oh, well, they don't even have high school biology, them on biology, but let's put them on these practices anyway. biology, but let's put them on thesemean practices anyway. biology, but let's put them on thesemean , practices anyway. biology, but let's put them on thesemean , what ctices anyway. biology, but let's put them on thesemean , what a ces anyway. biology, but let's put them on thesemean , what a shock. (way. biology, but let's put them on thesemean , what a shock. who >> i mean, what a shock. who knew a year old couldn't knew a nine year old couldn't consent to life altering puberty blockers, exactly blockers, right? exactly what i know, so , yeah, this is this is know, so, yeah, this is this is good news. what's the question? is sensible? is it sensible? >> so hhc are >> yeah. so the hhc are obviously perhaps in obviously taking it perhaps in the the w path files. the wake of the w path files. but i have to say the mainstream media have just basically left it alone. >> extraordinary, isn't >> it's extraordinary, isn't it? i've googling to i've been doing some googling to see it. and it's see who's covering it. and it's you. that's who's covering it, well, looked on the bbc news well, i looked on the bbc news website. >> em- em— e two weeks. yeah, >> it's been two weeks. yeah, not mean, it's not a peep. i mean, it's absolutely did absolutely incredible. they did put out about a cat in put a story out about a cat in essex who got a statue put up to it. oh, well, i mean, look, i've got nothing against the cat, but i think the medicalisation and sterilisation and sterilisation of gay and autistic kids should take priority. >> argue that, yes, >> i would argue that, yes, given that the licence payer is paying given that the licence payer is paying is paying for this, that is something the public,
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paying for this, that is som know, the public, paying for this, that is som know, it's the public, paying for this, that is somknow, it's in the public, paying for this, that is somknow, it's in their public, paying for this, that is somknow, it's in their interest you know, it's in their interest to understand about the w path files. it's a bit maddening. >> of course, bruce, >> and now, of course, bruce, we've the nhs saying they we've got the nhs saying they are banning puberty blockers. i mean i mean they knew mean this is i mean they knew all along that were no all along that there were no long tum studies, so they weren't sure. the most generous interpretation is that people didn't know know now in didn't know what we know now in terms harm it terms of the, the, the harm it can to bones and to brain can do to bones and to brain development. all this stuff development. all of this stuff is out. but we were is coming out. but we were really experimenting kids for really experimenting on kids for all years, but they're all these years, but they're only them in england, only banning them in england, is that correct? well, that's because law unto because scotland is a law unto itself, it? itself, isn't it? >> been and you have been >> i have been and you have been there. yeah, the model is flawed. >> so why is that? i mean, like, you know, we've had the tavistock in the uk, which is being down because it was being shut down because it was deemed children. the deemed unsafe for children. the sandyford glasgow sandyford clinic in glasgow is the they're the equivalent and they're just going they going to power through. they actually to carry on actually are going to carry on with w path, though w path with w path, even though w path says doctors should be says that doctors should be castrating say castrating people who say that their identity is eunuch. that's insane. is scotland so insane. why? why is scotland so sorry? not blaming you. no, sorry? i'm not blaming you. no, i not i know you're not a representative of scotland. no. >> you. no, i'm here on
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>> thank you. no, i'm here on behalf of harvey nichols. yeah. >> i know, is. it is >> no, i know, but it is. it is a bizarre story, isn't it? all of this. like, maybe eventually it just get resolved . it will just get resolved. >> don't know, i don't know, >> i don't know, i don't know, but mentioned sandyford but you mentioned the sandyford and remember when people and do you remember when people were about monkeypox? were worried about monkeypox? yes, thought as yes, yes. and i thought as the type gentleman i i spend type of gentleman i am, i spend a on botox , so i don't want a lot on botox, so i don't want to be human braille. so i went and got my monkeypox. i know that's a thing to that's maybe not a nice thing to say, it's true. and the say, but it's true. and the sandyford didn't have any. i had a in glasgow who was very a friend in glasgow who was very worried about monkeypox. worried about the monkeypox. i know not what you've know that's not what you've asked my asked me, but that's my association sandyford. association with the sandyford. >> but i'm interested >> okay. no, but i'm interested to everything about it. yeah. >> no, i'll back yeah. >> no, i'll back on the >> no, i'll pop back on the train to birmingham and see what's happening. train to birmingham and see whtso happening. train to birmingham and see whtso i|appening. train to birmingham and see whtso i mean, ng. train to birmingham and see whtso i mean, it|. train to birmingham and see whtso i mean, it is it is kind train to birmingham and see wimad mean, it is it is kind train to birmingham and see wimad thatin, it is it is kind train to birmingham and see wimad that we t is it is kind train to birmingham and see wimad that we reach is kind train to birmingham and see wimad that we reach is ki point of mad that we reach this point isn't it, that it took this long. well, yeah, absolutely. >> you know, it >> it is. and, you know, it feels like a victory. i'm a bit concerned about the loophole, though. still allowed though. we're still allowed to do children. the do this to children. what's the right phrasing? not right phrasing? it's not experimental. research. experimental. it's for research. for purposes. is that for research purposes. is that what doing far? what we've been doing thus far? >> yeah i know, i mean, that's
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all very well. if you're dealing >> yeah i know, i mean, that's all very va ll. if you're dealing >> yeah i know, i mean, that's all very va rodentiu're dealing >> yeah i know, i mean, that's all very va rodent or'e dealing >> yeah i know, i mean, that's all very va rodent or human1g with like a rodent or human vivisection. mean, vivisection. well, yeah, i mean, you're experimenting on you're we are experimenting on kids. bizarre. also, people kids. it's bizarre. also, people can private. and why can go private. and this is why there was attempt to have a there was an attempt to have a debate this on friday. there was an attempt to have a debat> you>nster? scotland's new from penny. hi penny. hello. >> you know? scotland's new from penny. hi penny. hello. >> you know that's»tland's new from penny. hi penny. hello. >> you know that's»tland's rby' >> you know that's not me, by the way. >> you know that's not me, by the we 1. >> you know that's not me, by the we invited the hate monster. >> we invited the hate monster. no, is the thing. it feels no, this is the thing. it feels like anti scotland like quite an anti scotland night. not that, bruce, night. it's not that, bruce, i love scotland, i adore it, i love scotland, i adore it, i love tartan. anyway, all the other got. tell other things you've got. so tell me, you think about me, tell me what you think about this. the hate monster this. because the hate monster is effectively this creature that police have that the scottish police have created quite an image of that the scottish police have creecreature. quite an image of that the scottish police have creecreature. they'rel image of that the scottish police have creecreature. they're afraide of the creature. they're afraid it's a red hate. must be angry. oh, yeah. it's furious. yeah well, it's very hateful. well. and the idea now what's going on in scotland? so they're implementing these draconian hate speech laws which going hate speech laws which are going to force on april to come in into force on april the 1st. >> i you not. ironically. >> i kid you not. ironically. >> i kid you not. ironically.
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>> yeah. and then, basically, you go your you can go to your local mushroom which mushroom shop or whatever, which i we had mushrooms farms in >> we had mushrooms farms in scotland because people aren't that vegetables the that keen on vegetables up the road. but not a shiitake. road. but not even a shiitake. but you can report a hate crime at these private places, but you can do it anonymously, and then the police will, i don't know, unleash the hate monster. >> i know how this works. >> i don't know how this works. what's going on? >> think the hate monster >> i think the hate monster is mythical. don't think mythical. yes, and i don't think the hate monster actually exists. what i do think is exist. i'm genuinely really worried about comedy right now. believe it or not, some people in scotland, they're wrong, but they don't and the fact they don't like me. and the fact of the matter is, they could come because don't come because people don't necessarily you necessarily listen to what you say. articulate what say. they articulate what they've or how they they've heard or how they interpret what you're saying. exactly. i genuinely exactly. and i genuinely feel that a lot of time is going to be you know, someone be wasted. you know, if someone calls you a name in a shop, you probably deserved me probably deserved it. believe me , that's comedy be quite , that's a comedy can be quite offensive, yours. offensive, particularly yours. well, , no, but you know what well, no, no, but you know what i could be quite i mean. you could be quite waspish i think that's waspish on stage. i think that's fair to say. >> i think horrible , you know,
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>> i think horrible, you know, to be honest. but think that to be honest. but i think that a lot time, you know, i think lot of time, you know, i think a lot of time, you know, i think a lot of time, you know, i think a lot of people will abuse it. they'll that they're really they'll say that they're really upset. the doctor, upset. they'll go the doctor, they'll doctor along they'll spin their doctor along and of and and all that kind of stuff. and i'm sure, i'm not necessarily sure, as i've show before, i've said on the show before, i remember mum was worried when remember my mum was worried when we decided all we scotland had decided that all residential properties needed special alarms, mum special smoke alarms, and my mum was this was to do was convinced this was to do with crime, and that with the hate crime, and that there camera in and there was a camera in them and was very resistant to getting hers fitted. >> thing he's not nice. >> the thing is, he's not nice. >> the thing is, he's not nice. >> don't like me, if you >> if you don't like me, if you don't want to meet mary, i don't think being that paranoid. think she's being that paranoid. >> scotland is a kind >> i mean, if scotland is a kind of state, you know, of nanny state, you know, actually, humza when actually, humza yousaf, when he implemented the hate crime bill, put which put a subsection in that which said can criminalise put a subsection in that which saidfor can criminalise put a subsection in that which saidfor things can criminalise put a subsection in that which saidfor things you've minalise put a subsection in that which saidfor things you've said lise put a subsection in that which saidfor things you've said ine you for things you've said in the privacy own home. the privacy of your own home. >> why my mum was >> but that's why my mum was worried cameras. yeah worried about the cameras. yeah that's worried about the cameras. yeah tha probably, yeah. you >> probably, yeah. what do you think this terms of think about this in terms of comedy? i mean thankful that scotland have the scotland doesn't have the largest in the largest arts festival in the world. wait, no does, world. oh, wait, no it does, it does. actually have does. it actually does have that. comedians are does. it actually does have thathere comedians are does. it actually does have thathere now. comedians are does. it actually does have thathere now. we:omedians are does. it actually does have thathere now. we hadedians are does. it actually does have thathere now. we hadedianbefore up there now. we had this before because if you go back about to 2000 what was 2003 when
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2000 and what was it, 2003 when new labour trying to push new labour were trying to push through and through their racial and religious hate crime bill, which meant that if anyone complained about it was about a comedy show, said it was blasphemous the blasphemous offensive, the police would shut it police would have to shut it down they investigated it, down while they investigated it, and comedians were in and all comedians were up in arms we're not arms saying, we're we're not going with this. going to put up with this. the comedians are silent now. something completely something is completely changed. there's shift there's been a gear shift where comedians are basically, comedians are now basically, basically regime . basically for the regime. >> well, and it's not just that bruce started doing bruce has started doing comedy, although did happen although i think that did happen dunng although i think that did happen during didn't it? during that time, didn't it? yeah. devastating , isn't yeah. it's devastating, isn't it? yeah. it's devastating, isn't h? idea yeah. it's devastating, isn't it? idea that police it? and the idea that the police are to whether or are going to decide whether or something's not something's whether or not something's whether or not something's inappropriate, i mean, the of mean, what was the point of audiences , the audience how audiences, the audience know how to either. to define hate either. >> the irish hate >> i mean, in the irish hate crime bill, which is which is going through the moment, going through at the moment, they hatred they actually define hatred as hatred. brilliant. it's a complete definition. hatred. brilliant. it's a conyeah, definition. hatred. brilliant. it's a conyeah, absolutelyfinition. hatred. brilliant. it's a conyeah, absolutely .nition. hatred. brilliant. it's a conyeah, absolutely . and n. hatred. brilliant. it's a conyeah, absolutely . and that >> yeah, absolutely. and that tells me when something's woolly, tells me that woolly, that tells me that it's not going applied fairly. not going to be applied fairly. it's be applied it's going to be applied according applying it. >> but that the thing that >> but that was the thing that you'd say that the police are going on the going to take on board the complainer, person that complainer, not the person that they're complaining about. so that's the that's the thing. the formulation that it's formulation of it is that it's about perception the about the perception of the victim than complainant.
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victim rather than complainant. >> they're already bypassing victim rather than complainant. >> processre already bypassing victim rather than complainant. >> process withinady bypassing due process within the legislation it is insane. >> it's a bit like they tried to bnng >> it's a bit like they tried to bring a thing in edinburgh bring in a thing in edinburgh with a view. a motorist, i'm with a view. as a motorist, i'm involved a collision with a involved in a collision with a cyclist. you were automatically culpable until proven incorrectly. yeah. which again i think is wrong. >> well, there's a lot we're bound to be talking about this a lot more on the show, but let's move on to another question now from armin. armin. from armin. hi, armin. >> evening. the >> good evening. is the union jack now? jack controversial now? >> well, it depends who you ask. there is a chip shop which is in greenwich called the golden chippy, and the guy who runs it had put this rather interesting mural of a humanoid fish. there it is. there's a picture of the fish there, which is rather nice and cheery, although a bit disturbing that a fish is trying to sell dead fish be eaten by to sell dead fish to be eaten by the public. but let's not think too much about it. and he's talking about how it's great talking about how it's a great british local british meal and now the local council have said this is inappropriate. they are demanding gets painted demanding that it gets painted oven demanding that it gets painted over. there's a big battle opening up because i think they
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think the i don't think think that the i don't think it's the fish offensive. it's the fish that's offensive. i what upset about i think what they're upset about is and that the flag is the flag and that the flag might upset this is what might upset people. this is what a council spokesman a greenwich council spokesman said following said about this, following a number made to number of complaints made to local councillors, local ward councillors, an enforcement raised enforcement case was raised about in question are about the mural in question are planning team is planning enforcement team is investigating as it is investigating this as it is effectively an unauthorised advert for a chip shop. the owner has agreed to paint over it. we will always try to negotiate with the owner before proceeding. di blah proceeding. blah di blah di blah, , this is. don't blah, cressida, this is. i don't think do with the think it is to do with the unauthorised mural painting. you don't think? i think it's probably do with well, probably to do with that. well, what do you think? >> no. many, moons ago, i >> no. many, many moons ago, i used work for local used to work for a local authority in building control, which adjacent planning. which is adjacent to planning. and petty . i mean, and they are that petty. i mean, i put it past if i wouldn't put it past them. if you try erect without you try and erect a sign without asking, be asking, there is going to be consequences. but what consequences. but i think what you're is the phrase you're getting at is the phrase where said it's not where they've said it's not suitable the area. where they've said it's not suityeah, the area. where they've said it's not suityeah, exactly. rea. where they've said it's not suityeah, exactly. okay. do you >> yeah, exactly. okay. do you have any thoughts this one? have any thoughts on this one? >> thinking, would >> i was just thinking, would someone have painted over geri halliwell union halliwell wearing that union jack dress at the blitz? >> they have. it >> well, they should have. it wasn't. wasn't very
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wasn't. well, it wasn't very tasteful, it? i mean, it was tasteful, was it? i mean, it was fun. was. was fine. yeah, fun. it was. it was fine. yeah, it fun . i'm fun. it was. it was fine. yeah, it fun. i'm going to go fun. it was. it was fine. yeah, it fun . i'm going to go with it was fun. i'm going to go with fine than fine. okay. fine rather than fine. okay. yeah. know, you yeah. well, you know, and i, you and spice and i disagree about the spice girls. do. girls. well we do. >> true actually. yeah, >> that's true actually. yeah, yeah. you're not real yeah. because you're not a real person. >> f- f— >> okay, our final question. i can't believe that was considered i'm considered controversial. i'm not. the not. at least i'm not the scottish okay, scottish hate monster. okay, our final comes from final question now comes from david. where's david? hi. >> much . is it wrong >> thanks very much. is it wrong to say cheese when you pose for photos? >> i love this story. this was about peter . peter? who were the about peter. peter? who were the animal rights, the biggest animal rights, the biggest animal rights, the biggest animal rights organisation in the world. i've said, don't say cheese when you're getting a photo taken , because that could photo taken, because that could be upsetting or offensive because know, it's because it's, you know, it's a dairy product, and you know , dairy product, and you know, animals are being exploited. we actually do have a promotional video . can we see this? video. can we see this? >> and one, two, three say babies slaughtered for veal, baby slaughter for veal, say calf cow separation. >> calf cows operation repeated
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and forced impregnation , and forced impregnation, dehorning and tail docking . dehorning and tail docking. >> say cheese . no . >> say cheese. no. >> say cheese. no. >> i mean, actually baby slaughter for veal does create quite a good look, doesn't it? >> the smile. i think it's terrible. >> i find that advert very painful because that last girl, that's me when i was i would that's me when i was 19, i would have taken. i would have been very board this and i've very on board with this and i've just that that's not the just learned that that's not the way persuade is it? way to persuade people. is it? just being very pious and irritated. >> you know what? think it >> but you know what? i think it is they are is with peter that they are trolling. genuinely believe is with peter that they are trolllike genuinely believe is with peter that they are trolllike they|uinely believe is with peter that they are trolllike they areely believe is with peter that they are trolllike they are a! believe is with peter that they are trolllike they are a! be animal this like they are a big animal rights organisation, but they always say really, genuinely stupid they stupid things. you know, they put this tweet about how we put out this tweet about how we shouldn't gender shouldn't assume the gender of animals photograph animals with a with a photograph of the pigeon. had of a pigeon and the pigeon. had they them pronouns. just they them pronouns. and i just kind they're they're kind of think they're they're not being serious there or what they're doing is, i suppose, getting to about it getting people to talk about it because talking about because we're now talking about it. trolls, aren't it. but they're trolls, aren't they trolling they deliberately trolling and
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have it? have you pronounce it? >> sounds like feta, >> peter? that sounds like feta, which a cheese. which is a cheese. >> is a you're absolutely >> it is a you're absolutely right. are. wow. right. they are. wow. >> they are complete hypocrites. >> yeah. totes. >> yeah. totes. >> absolutely. well >> absolutely. okay. well i think we've covered that, next up free speech nation . lord up on free speech nation. lord tony saul will be here to tell us about book on his us about his new book on his life, from windrush baby to the house of lords. go house of lords. don't go anywhere.
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welcome back to free speech nation. in july 2020, a government commission was set up, tasked with looking into race disparity in the uk. it was chaired by lord tony sewell, a product of the windrush generation who had spent a lifetime in business, charity and politics. his appointment was criticised by the muslim council of britain, which argued that lord saul was keen on downplaying race disparities . downplaying race disparities. the report, published in march 2021, concluded that while racism does exist in the uk, the uk was not institutionally racist , and tony's new book,
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racist, and tony's new book, black success has just been published and i'm delighted to say he's here to tell us all about it. welcome to the show. thank you . i suppose you could thank you. i suppose you could say the title of this book, black success, could relate to you. you are a success story . you. you are a success story. perhaps you could tell us a bit about your background. >> well, mean, my success. >> well, i mean, my success. i mean, there is irony in the mean, there is an irony in the title you know, black title because, you know, black success. what is it? it's actually nothing to do with being black, it's all being black, actually. it's all everything that. but everything else. but that. but i mean, success, i suppose, has everything else. but that. but i meandrivenjccess, i suppose, has everything else. but that. but i meandriven byass, i suppose, has everything else. but that. but i meandriven by my i suppose, has everything else. but that. but i meandriven by my mother,;e, has been driven by my mother, really, who was over on really, who was came over on that so—called windrush sort of thing, 1950s. she ends up in a, in a, in a, in a factory doing sort of my kind of things are electronic things in a small factory down the road in that, in that situation there are 30. she works with 30 white men. yeah.i she works with 30 white men. yeah. i felt feel sorry for the 30 white men, you know, because i mean, i'm telling you, she was the don of our area , the ped, the don of our area, the ped, and actually in the high street, the meat person, the greengrocer
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better get everything in order, because when she's coming down that high street, they just were running like flies. so we never understood anything about this thing privilege . it thing called white privilege. it was kind of like, what is this thing going on? because we ran things, know? yeah. and that thing going on? because we ran thingof know? yeah. and that thing going on? because we ran thingof jamaican? yeah. and that thing going on? because we ran thingof jamaican kind h. and that thing going on? because we ran thingof jamaican kind ofand that thing going on? because we ran thingof jamaican kind of ,nd that thing going on? because we ran thingof jamaican kind of, if that kind of jamaican kind of, i suppose, self—confidence that seems just escaped this seems to have just escaped this new generation, you know, kind of was what they brought that over with them. >> and weirdly, people think this is controversial , what this is controversial, what you're saying now. there are you're saying now. but there are a people in society now a lot of people in society now who told they will always be who are told they will always be oppressed. always be oppressed. they will always be downtrodden, oppressed. they will always be downtrodde|certain sections people, but certain sections of the community. but is that helpful? that it's not helpful. >> and i want to say is >> and what i want to say is that this also can actually hit certain communities. don't certain communities. i don't want liverpool a lot, want to pick on liverpool a lot, but that i will do. i mean, in a sense, can get yourself in sense, you can get yourself in this sort of situation where everybody against us, all everybody is against us, all worlds against us, that kind of notion. think that what notion. and i think that what that's tended to happen here and when, in fact, the reality when, when in fact, the reality is something different, as numbers in that report tells you
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it's going elsewhere. >> it's interesting that you mention your mother as well, because, of course, what one of the things you in the book so the things you do in the book so convincingly talk the convincingly is talk about the family so family and how family is so important communities important in certain communities in black communities. can you talk little bit about that? talk a little bit about that? >> i mean, a sense it >> well, i mean, in a sense it can explain why there is a difference within. that's what we did in the report. we didn't want lump everybody together want to lump everybody together as acronyms want to lump everybody together as bame acronyms want to lump everybody together as bame or acronyms want to lump everybody together as bame or whatever, ms want to lump everybody together as bame or whatever, because called bame or whatever, because we're same. so for we're not all the same. so for example, communities of example, the communities of canbbean example, the communities of caribbean and nigerian a caribbean origin and nigerian a really running different numbers at the at the moment. and also in the past, i mean, and that explained a lot of the reasons why. in fact , in schools you can why. in fact, in schools you can have a whole classroom of black children and the nigerian children and the nigerian children who you wouldn't face, that you wouldn't sort of know the suppose, were the difference, i suppose, were doing better than any other doing much better than any other group. and then the caribbean group. and then the caribbean group was were doing poorly. but then when you, when you, when you the numbers on top, you put the numbers on top, canbbean you put the numbers on top, caribbean running nearly 65% caribbean was running nearly 65% single parents, whereas the
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nigerians were running way under 30. yeah. and so you then began to say, well, is this is the is the gcse results to do with the horrible racist white teacher or is it to do with something to do with the family? >> so that's so interesting because so many people have said, you know, the educational system institutionally said, you know, the educational systenthat'stitutionally said, you know, the educational systenthat's right.�*|ally said, you know, the educational systenthat's right. but' you racist. that's right. but as you say, is, it the say, if it is, why is it the case that children from african heritage white heritage are outperforming white pupils, caribbean pupils, but from caribbean heritage not, it's a very heritage or not, it's a very targeted racism. it targeted form of racism. if it is, it is and it's a strange one, but it's one that we've grown up to because we feel that we make these we just make these generalisations and generalisations about groups and then we can't kind of get then we, we can't kind of get out of that. >> yes. i mean, what's positive about the book and about what i'm trying to say that i'm i'm trying to say is that i'm optimistic because i think that particular nigerian are particular nigerian group are doing . they're going to doing so well. they're going to go you're seeing like go on. you're seeing people like kemi seeing all kemi badenoch, you're seeing all these people coming up these kind of people coming up now. a it's a new day, now. it's a new it's a new day, you and we don't want to you know, and we don't want to hear that misery anymore. hear that misery story anymore. you suppose your critics you know, i suppose your critics might but, know, are might say, but, you know, are you a single
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you suggesting that a single parent family can't be effective, loving, effective, can't be loving, can't, allow a child to can't, can't allow a child to flourish? >> well, saw my mother. >> well, you saw my mother. >> well, you saw my mother. >> was the. she was the >> she was the. she was the black maggie going black maggie thatcher going through with her through the whole thing with her handbag i so handbag. kind of. i mean, so i've been up in, in with i've been brought up in, in with very strong black females and that will, there will always be the case. the men were really in the case. the men were really in the margins in some ways, yes. and so i don't really see that as the what it does, it as the issue. what it does, it has implications. because as the issue. what it does, it heyou implications. because as the issue. what it does, it heyou don'tnplications. because as the issue. what it does, it heyou don't recognise,;. because if you don't recognise, for example, child is playing example, that a child is playing up in a situation, often it's because the mum and dad or the partner is, is in the background and they're fighting over money and they're fighting over money and child support, things like that. and so you can't get to because i think there's a teacher i used go back and teacher i used to go back and find out what were the real reasons this playing reasons why this boy was playing up. back to the up. and you go back to the family, you actually uncover that not have unconscious that not have mass unconscious bias the whole bias training for the whole staff, that tells people that whatever, that's a massive distraction from what is going on in terms of the family. distraction from what is going on in terms of the family . and on in terms of the family. and we don't really want to go there because we feel that it's sort
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of politically incorrect to kind of politically incorrect to kind of go back to the family. it blames the victim. and i think that's wrong. >> mentioned white >> and you mentioned white privilege a concept. this is privilege as a concept. this is something obviously has something that is obviously has developed years. but something that is obviously has dethatped years. but something that is obviously has dethat a d years. but something that is obviously has dethat a helpful years. but something that is obviously has dethat a helpful way?ears. but something that is obviously has dethat a helpful way? irs. but something that is obviously has dethat a helpful way? i mean, is that a helpful way? i mean, you could well , it is that a helpful way? i mean, you could well, it is is that a helpful way? i mean, you could well , it is true you could say, well, it is true that a predominantly white that in a predominantly white country, white people are unlikely to face racial discrimination. therefore, they have privilege . so why have a form of privilege. so why is that an unhelpful framework? >> i think life i've never >> i think in my life i've never like, see, this is quite interesting when you see it doesn't happen all the time. but i think sometimes people feel that they have to say this. they have to go on if they're successful. let's say how i overcome because cause i overcome because cause i overcome this white person who was in front of me. well, i never had any person trying to trip me up or anything. i've never had jeopardy. i never had that jeopardy. i didn't experience but didn't experience racism, but i've jeopardy . so i've never had that jeopardy. so i've never had that jeopardy. so i think that, i think this this whole idea of, the idea that the privilege is stuck with you is difficult because the numbers don't show that the numbers show a more complex story. and in
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fact, what i argue for is a different kind of way of almost looking at success. could it be that what we need to do now, this would be really great, is to say to thinking in london, where the exam where we have the great exam results, particularly for black children. now, why don't we go and say, right, all you london kids and all you london teachers go and help the white kids in hartlepool in almost reverse. missionaries go out there and help help those poor white kids on the on the on the coastline who are not doing well. so it's a completely different framework of looking at yourself, not as some sort of victim, powerless , some sort of victim, powerless, but you are the agency to help your own country . and this is your own country. and this is the idea that britain is owned is owned by all of us. it's ours. it's not just little groups that have it have some privilege. and so that's that's how you should people should be seeing it now that we should go out there and help other people. >> but then you see some critics saying, black
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saying, but, you know, black children, you shouldn't teach them shakespeare them about mozart or shakespeare because, you know, they can't relate individual. relate to that individual. >> you should listen, >> you know, you should listen, let you a story. i used let me tell you a story. i used to teach jamaica. and you to teach in jamaica. and you know to love know what? the kids used to love chaucer's bath. the chaucer's wife of bath. the reason kids loved reason why jamaican kids loved it they related to wife it is that they related to wife of dance or situations of bath to dance or situations in and so they could in jamaica, and so they could relate to her and all her antics and the sex and everything else they could see all around them. and they could, and they loved it. and they loved, they loved, macbeth. they loved all those stories. we just we to stories. and we just we used to jamaican ize them, we used jamaican ize them, and we used to them. so the witches to make them. so the witches would dancehall queens would be like dancehall queens and things like that. >> yeah, be great. >> yeah, it'd be great. >> yeah, it'd be great. >> shakespeare is in the >> and so shakespeare is in the curriculum jamaica. they dare curriculum in jamaica. they dare not that you know . not take that off, you know. and, it's kind of ironic, you know, there's a there's a poet, louise bennett, who's who . louise bennett, who's who. somebody cancelled somebody a horrible white male was cancelled for something. somebody writing . and they put somebody writing. and they put in louise bennett. now, ironically, louise bennett loved
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shakespeare, so they've cancelled somebody who she, you know , the swap around has been know, the swap around has been wrong. yeah. so no , no, we love wrong. yeah. so no, no, we love the classics. >> i mean, it's interesting because, you know, shakespeare belongs to all of us. that's right. >> yeah. that's right. >> yeah. that's right. >> yeah. that's right. >> yeah. and that's one of the great about your book great things about your book and about the that done about the work that you've done is think you're creating is that i think you're creating a really optimistic, positive message for people. message for young people. but why that generates message for young people. but why hostility that generates message for young people. but why hostility that you're|tes so much hostility that you're changing the narrative? >> been >> because we've been we've been brought this sort of brought up in this sort of misery that black misery narrative that black people black kids and people and black kids and whatever down you whatever are down there in, you know, in the bottom of the well and ever the for them, the story will be a negative one. we can't give them a positive story and also, i think it's even more positive in the sense that are they really, in a sense a template for the answer for the whole country. so there are positive template, yet nobody wants to talk to them about that. you let me give you one , that. you let me give you one, one sad example. there was a friend of mine . he had two friend of mine. he had two daughters, but one went to oxford, one went to cambridge.
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black to do to do medicine. yeah and we just flew through great grey days. whatever the one of the daughters said, can we have a party to celebrate? because the, the, the friends around were doing poorly. he said no chance because he didn't want to embarrass the rest of the community. so i'm in a kind of community, this kind of hate success, you know, it's embarrassed to be successful. >> isn't that so interesting? well, your book is called black success. yeah, the surprising truth that is available now. i would highly recommend tony truth that is available now. i would hthank'ecommend tony truth that is available now. i would hthank you nmend tony truth that is available now. i would hthank you so end tony truth that is available now. i would hthank you so much. tony truth that is available now. i would hthank you so much. thank sowell, thank you so much. thank you. appreciate thank you. really appreciate it. thank you. really appreciate it. thank you . and next on free speech you. and next on free speech nation, sarah phillimore and doctor kate coleman will be here to tell us all about their manifesto for policing . don't go manifesto for policing. don't go anywhere
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welcome back to free speech nafion welcome back to free speech nation with me, andrew doyle. later in the show, i'll be turning agony uncle with the help of my panel, cressida wetton and bruce devlin, we're going to help you deal with your unfiltered us unfiltered dilemmas. so email us at gb news. com and at gb views at gb news. com and we'll try our best to answer all of your personal problems. believe last month, believe me. now, last month, scarlett blake was sentenced to life in prison for murder. but thames valley police recorded the trans murderer as female. despite being sent to a male prison campaign group's fair cop and keep prisons single sex. say this is another example where policing has prioritised gender identity over biological sex, and together they've launched a manifesto in advance of this may's police and crime commissioner elections. and to tell us more , i'm delighted to tell us more, i'm delighted to be joined by doctor kate coleman from single sex and from keep prisons single sex and co—founder we are fair cop. co—founder of we are fair cop. sarah , who thank you sarah phillimore, who thank you for the first example of scarlett blake, is just one of many. it's not just the media misreporting the sex of criminals, it's also the police
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in their recordings. well, exactly. >> i really pleased that you >> i was really pleased that you open with scarlett, actually, and particularly and this was a particularly horrific crime. i'm we can horrific crime. i'm sure we can all but it's absolutely all agree, but it's absolutely vital that the sex registered at birth of offenders is recorded accurately by police forces and the case of scarlett break of scarlett blake is by no means an anomaly. yes, we conduct a yearly exercise where we ascertain how police forces nationally are recording the sex registered at birth of suspects in their crime and incident reports, and our 2023 report, which came out towards the end of last year, found that no police force nationally is recording sex registered at birth as standard in all cases, they're recording self—declared gender identity . in some cases, gender identity. in some cases, they're even trying to capture suspects non—binary identities by recording the sex as indeterminate , other or unknown. indeterminate, other or unknown. >> and that's not all police forces . they seem to be having forces. they seem to be having different rules depending on where you go, different rules.
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>> there's inconsistency, but what consistent is that there what is consistent is that there is no police force which is recording sex registered at birth of suspects as standard. in all cases . so what sarah and in all cases. so what sarah and in all cases. so what sarah and i decided to do as keep prisons, single sex and fair cop was in advance of the elections to launch this manifesto for police and crime commissioners , because and crime commissioners, because as you said, it's prioritising gender identity over biological sex, over sex registered at birth. and the point is, is that it is sex registered at birth, which is the variable which has got the greatest explanatory power for offending, for risk , power for offending, for risk, for service development. so what this means is that when you have this means is that when you have this ideological capture, not just that policing decisions are made which are not in the interests of the operational demands of policing and the criminal justice system, but they act actively frustrate those needs. >> now, i think, sarah, we've spoken before about the ideological capture of the police force, which i think by this point is beyond dispute. i
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think is the case. but this think that is the case. but this has particular ramifications, doesn't it, for the police's ability do job without ability to do their job without fear favour. in other words, fear or favour. in other words, it affects often fear or favour. in other words, it with affects often fear or favour. in other words, it with gendercts often fear or favour. in other words, it with gender criticaln views. >> yeah, these elections are really important. the police and crime have dual crime commissioners have a dual role. the targets and role. they set the targets and the standards for the police force, hold them force, and they also hold them accountable. need to be accountable. we need to be reminding they have the reminding the pccs they have the power to sack chief constables. one of the key things in our manifesto is we want transparent kc on what groups the police are working with. interesting video doing the rounds on twitter today , a man called clare, who's today, a man called clare, who's the head of the independent advisory group to the essex police, effectively saying that women with gender critical views should be treated as terrorists . should be treated as terrorists. so we need to know who is influencing the police . you're influencing the police. you're right that that that they have been corrupted by this is beyond doubt. >> is it the case that it's just a number of high level activists within the police force and the judiciary, or is the college judiciary, or is it the college of policing? we go right of policing? can we go right back to the train, people
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back to the train, the people who training of police? who do the training of police? >> it's what the >> well, it's what the infiltration this ideology infiltration of this ideology slash religion has been so powerful and effective because they gone from the top. they have gone from the top. it's a top down movement. the college police , i think, is college of police, i think, is inherently corrupted. and what we've got is lots of chief constables being very, very keen to push this . another good to push this. another good example harry miller example was harry miller went undercover at the staffordshire force's hate crime training and most people, i imagine, have read what he reported back about that i mean, these are our police. i had a look again at the nine peelian principles that govern force. these were set govern the force. these were set out in 1829. really forward thinking the time , and i thinking for the time, and i can't actually see that any force is now compliant with any one of those peelian principles. and the danger is the police cannot operate without our confidence and our trust and our cooperation. and there's quite a large number of us now who are no longer willing to give that. >> so, kate, why is it that this has been allowed to happen? you know, it's all very well saying you had the college of policing inventing thing called
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inventing this thing called non—crime incidents and non—crime hate incidents and doing things. and non—crime hate incidents and doirhave things. and non—crime hate incidents and doir have activistss. and you have various activists within the police force insisting on rainbow lanyards and targeting and insisting on targeting gender why gender critical women. but why doesn't say, doesn't the government say, let's abolish the college of policing, let's revolutionise this. back to those this. let's get back to those peeuan this. let's get back to those peelian principles that sarah is talking i that's always >> well, i mean, that's always the million question. and the million dollar question. and whenever whether it's whenever i come on, whether it's talking or it's talking about prisons or it's talking about prisons or it's talking policing it's talking about policing or it's talking about policing or it's talking collection or talking about data collection or the insanity that's happening in scotland, always, well, why scotland, it's always, well, why is it happening and why is it being allowed to happen ? and, being allowed to happen? and, i think than kind of get think rather than kind of get too hung up about the causation , too hung up about the causation, i think we need to focus on the specifics that are happening and highlight those and stand up against those . so, for example, against those. so, for example, if we're looking at searching of detainees now nationally, local police forces have put in place their own policies which allow for opposite sex strip searching of detainees, which will include children where the officer in question asserts a trans gender
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identity, but that has been challenged quite robustly, even from within parliament, hasn't it? that has been challenged in terms national police terms of the national police chiefs council guidance. but from the time that that guidance was put in place by the national police chiefs council in december 2021 to that challenge in parliament, the damage has already been done because it's already been done because it's already been done because it's already been rolled out . local already been rolled out. local police forces, we foiaed their local searching policies and these policies , many of them these policies, many of them specify opposite sex searching should take place based on the officer's transgender identity. if you're looking at warrant cards and identity cards, the national police chiefs council, they advise forces that where an officer has more than one gender identity, they should get more than one warrant card and a search warrant card . and then search warrant card. and then the wake of wayne couzens, i mean, really, i mean, are we i mean, really, i mean, are we i mean, this is the thing is so much of this stuff, it sounds so unbelievable. >> and that's maybe why a lot of it has taken place. yeah. you
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know , but sounds like this know, but it sounds like this manifesto is a good step manifesto is a good first step forward. sarah but i know that you've started maybe doubt you've started to maybe doubt whether there can actually whether laws there can actually do anything about this. you know, actually do know, what can we actually do going manifesto going from this manifesto forward, have been upset by forward, i have been upset by the fact it's taking so bloody long because we shouldn't be here. >> there are so many other things we could be interested in and doing. and past six years we've been beating our head against the same wall. i do think is only think lawfare is the only way out, is using your voice out, and so is using your voice and vote. tell the peaks. and your vote. tell the peaks. this is what you need to see them doing because this cannot continue . this will destroy the continue. this will destroy the police force because once enough of the population withdraw their consent and their willingness to cooperate it, then the police are dead on their feet. they don't have the numbers . they if don't have the numbers. they if you read the peelian principles, it's like it's going through it like a stick of rock. public trust and confidence, cooperation . confidence, public cooperation. i'm not going to sit here while a man in a leopard print blouse lectures me about being a terrorist, because i won't call
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him woman. now if the police him a woman. now if the police are really going guided by are really going to be guided by that, need to know. and that, we all need to know. and so you to go out and vote. so you need to go out and vote. tell peaks how going tell your peaks how you're going to vote. candidates what to vote. ask the candidates what their are about this. the their view are about this. the manifesto short a manifesto is a short and a snappy document . we can we can snappy document. we can we can print it off. you can look at it on our websites. but this is becoming really vital because it's taken far longer than i dared fear . dared fear. >> well, when you've got people who are so extreme saying things like women with those views are terrorists are in terrorists and they are in positions you're positions of authority, you're going serious going to get some serious pushback kind of reform, pushback to any kind of reform, aren't you? >> i'm just i'm just baffled and bewildered what is happening. bewildered by what is happening. and it's almost though it's more than just cowardice and apathy . than just cowardice and apathy. there's something really serious going while we still going on. but so while we still have a voice and we still have a vote before i'm arrested and locked up for saying a man is a man, let's do something. use your vote. may the 2nd. yeah, let's very clear to the let's make it very clear to the peaks what we expect to see in terms of accountability and transparency from the police. terms of accountability and trarand'ency from the police. terms of accountability and trarand finallyom the police.
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terms of accountability and trarand finally ,n the police. terms of accountability and trarand finally , i the police. terms of accountability and trarand finally , i mean, lice. terms of accountability and trarand finally , i mean, a:e. terms of accountability and trarand finally , i mean, a lot of >> and finally, i mean, a lot of people do think that, well, the kind of scenario that sarah is describing of being arrested for accurately sexing an individual seems . it can seems so outlandish. it can never but of course, never happen. but of course, scotland introducing their never happen. but of course, scotlcrime introducing their never happen. but of course, scotlcrime billtroducing their never happen. but of course, scotlcrime bill and|cing their never happen. but of course, scotlcrime bill and|cing thihave hate crime bill and people have already rowling to already called for jk rowling to be accurately be arrested for accurately sexing individual. exactly, exactly. >> p e of women who have >> and we know of women who have been hauled in by the police, for the crimes of transphobia, for the crimes of transphobia, for accurately sexing individuals. so it's not a fantasy. fantasy it's a reality. it's happening, i'm extremely concerned about what's going to happen on april the 1st. i mean, you couldn't make it up. no. when the hate crime bill comes into force in scotland, i think things are going to get extremely unpleasant. >> so know sarah mentioned the >> so i know sarah mentioned the website . where people website. where can people find out manifesto? out about the manifesto? >> on of our >> so they're on both of our websites. yes, mine cops websites. yes, mine is cops info for org, and you can also ask for org, and you can also ask for hard copies and we will post those out to you free of charge. >> fantastic. >> fantastic. >> and fair cop can be found on online. >> yep, just google fair cop. i
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think it's fair cop. org. so we've got a link to the manifesto. as i say, it's clear, it's punchy, it's short. so please do directly interrogate these about what these candidates about what they're about the they're going to do about the principles out within principles we set out within it, because are frightening because these are frightening times and women are being targeted. swain, targeted. i mean, jenny swain, i think the last time i was on here, i remember it was breaking news. been arrested news. she'd been arrested for stickering. now bringing news. she'd been arrested for sti
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gb news. welcome back to free speech nafion welcome back to free speech nation . senior conservative mps nation. senior conservative mps have today moved to deny rumours of a plot to oust prime minister. prime minister rishi sunak, penny morton was claimed to be the candidate of choice if she was to lead the party into the next election, she'd be the fifth minister in just fifth prime minister in just five it's fair say five years. it's fair to say politics is a bit of a mess politics is in a bit of a mess and as a result, more people are moving mainstream moving away from mainstream parties and becoming independent candidates. m.b.e. candidates. nick buckley, m.b.e. is a charity worker from manchester. an manchester. standing as an independent year's independent in this year's mayoral elections on a manifesto which charter on free which includes a charter on free speech. and he joins me now. nick, welcome the show . thank nick, welcome to the show. thank you.so nick, welcome to the show. thank you. so you're standing for these in six weeks these elections in six weeks time and one of your main focuses is on freedom of speech. why have you chosen that? >> mainly because of what happened to me four years ago when i was cancelled trying to use my freedom of speech. and when talking my friends when i'm talking to my friends and i'm just walking down the street people, street speaking to people, people all time, people say to me all the time, you can't say that. that's illegal. saying better illegal. saying that, you better be and my answer
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be careful, nick. and my answer is, of this is illegal. and is, none of this is illegal. and we've allowed the elite to convince people that their freedom of speech is now illegal. so that's why i wanted to create a free speech charter. >> now, i know we've spoken about this before, some about this before, but some people might not be aware of what to number of what happened to you a number of years you run a charity years ago. you run a charity called the mancunian way for disadvantaged me disadvantaged youths. tell me what happened there. >> was summer of 2020. >> so it was the summer of 2020. black the black lives matter hit the headlines. a peaceful headlines. there was a peaceful riot in london, where 27 police officers, for some reason got injured, and the bbc described that as mostly peaceful, mostly peaceful. >> apart from the injury. >> apart from the injury. >> yes, exactly . so i went on to >> yes, exactly. so i went on to the black lives matter website, read what they wanted and thought. i don't like any of this, but 700 blog on my this, but 700 word blog on my personal people personal blog page. people called me a racist and a nazi straight away, and the board of the charity i founded panicked and through cowardice , they and through cowardice, they sacked me over email. i joined a free speech union. we fought back and within five weeks i made the board resign in disgrace. we appointed a new board and they offered me my job
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back. >> i mean, it's very interesting because a lot of people at the time just thought that black lives matter was about standing up against which up against racism, which of course, we're but of course, we're all for. but of course, we're all for. but of course, their had all course, their website had all sorts marxist course, their website had all sorts defunding marxist course, their website had all sorts defunding the marxistdid, ideas defunding the police did, demolishing family. demolishing the nuclear family. so it was about a lot of things. and of course, recently the chapter chicago has come out chapter in chicago has come out in terrorism in the in support of terrorism in the form so, know, form of hamas. so, you know, this organisation that form of hamas. so, you know, this has organisation that form of hamas. so, you know, this has all organisation that form of hamas. so, you know, this has all thatnisation that form of hamas. so, you know, this has all that much�*n that credibility. >> fair to them. they were >> to be fair to them. they were completely honest. they were. the wanted to the problem was no one wanted to read their website or listen to anything saying. anything they were saying. yeah, absolutely. >> through this >> so you went through this cancellation, you've come cancellation, but you've come back and this has made you a kind of political figure, suppose. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> so me a bit about >> yeah. so tell me a bit about your campaign. what what is it your campaign. what what is it you to achieve? you want to achieve? >> policy is really >> so my main policy is really about the police. the about fixing the police. the police across police are broken across the country, greater country, but in greater manchester, more likely country, but in greater mtbe hester, more likely country, but in greater mtbe stabbed more likely country, but in greater mtbe stabbed and more likely country, but in greater mtbe stabbed and murdered ly to be stabbed and murdered in greater manchester today than you how is you were five years ago. how is that the woke that right? or the woke nonsense? identity politics nonsense? the identity politics in police, two in the police, the two tier policing system you guess we're talking we don't talking about before we don't even man or a woman even know what a man or a woman is in the police. and as
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is anymore in the police. and as the police crime commissioner, as mayor, i'll be as well as mayor, i'll be changing that from one. changing all that from day one. and constable and if the chief constable doesn't those ladies doesn't like it, as those ladies said, he's the said, i'll sack him. he's the only police officer can sack. only police officer i can sack. i'll the police. the chief i'll sack the police. the chief constable , until we get who constable, until we get one who will the people want. will do what the people want. >> , is andy burnham doing any >> so, is andy burnham doing any of already? of this already? >> burnham is great at >> andy burnham is great at saying to do me. i saying nothing to do with me. i don't know about crime. you need to speak to my deputy and that's all he ever says. >> okay, but that's probably not good enough, is it? >> really isn't good. really, >> it really isn't good. really, really enough really isn't good enough at all. but i mean, the majority but i mean, surely the majority of would be would would but i mean, surely the majority of the ould be would would but i mean, surely the majority of the kind be would would but i mean, surely the majority of the kind of would would but i mean, surely the majority of the kind of policies/ould support the kind of policies you're advancing it's you're advancing because it's about all same. about treating us all the same. >> and people equally >> and treating people equally and fair liberal and advancing a fair liberal society. absolutely >> the only people i don't want to treat the same. the to treat the same. and the criminals, and want them criminals, and i want them hammered on daily basis. hammered on a daily basis. >> okay, in terms of free >> yeah. okay, in terms of free speech, then, you know, we have various which various developments which are quite got this quite sinister. we've got this scotland crime bill, which scotland hate crime bill, which is coming april is obviously coming in on april the first. ireland's pushing through worst through one of the worst draconian crime bills that draconian hate crime bills that we've ever seen the uk. we've
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we've ever seen in the uk. we've got crime , hate speech laws got hate crime, hate speech laws in the form public order in the form of the public order act the communications act. act and the communications act. but politicians to but no, politicians seem to take this seriously. it that this seriously. why is it that the two main parties don't seem to understand importance of to understand the importance of this very fundamental principle? >> care. they've been >> they don't care. they've been captured themselves. we stopped voting for leaders many, many generations ago. all we vote for now are career politicians who are basically middle managers as they get told what their job is. so that's what they do , and so that's what they do, and they're always looking at how am i going to get elected again? and we've been blind to this as the public. i mean, we live in a democracy. ultimately, it's our fault that we've allowed the country get this state. it country to get to this state. it is our fault. so therefore we can change need to start can change it. we need to start telling leaders , our telling our leaders, our politicians, isn't good politicians, this isn't good enough. not for enough. and i'm not voting for you of these things. i'm you because of these things. i'm going to vote somebody else. going to vote for somebody else. >> suppose people because >> i suppose people feel because of the past post of the first past the post system, because got two system, because we've got two big don't really big parties. they don't really have a choice but to for have a choice but to go for either labour conservative.
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either labour or conservative. but future but do you think the future is really smaller parties? the future is to punish the >> the future is to punish the politicians you don't like. now you labour you might have to vote labour to punish somebody punish the tories or somebody else. those main parties else. those two main parties will change, will change what they're aiming to achieve if they're aiming to achieve if they realise by changing, we will get more votes and we will get power . you've got to get into power. you've got to understand nature of understand the nature of the beast the of the beast and the nature of the beast and the nature of the beast in politics is i just want votes. politicians don't votes. most politicians don't even believe in the policies they're pushing. just want they're pushing. they just want votes . votes. >> yes, but surely there must be some who some politicians who are vocational got into this vocational who got into this because want to change because they want to change society better, got society for the better, who got into because they want to into this because they want to serve serve the serve citizens, serve the public. you're describing public. well, you're describing there careerist there as the kind of careerist politician. suggesting politician. are you suggesting maybe that it's tipped in the scales the scales too far towards the careerist side? >> it has, but even the >> maybe it has, but even the people who go into politics for the right they're the right reasons, they're tempted every day of the year about and more power. about promotion and more power. and lots of people end up being the politician they despise 20 years ago. so the system itself corrupts you. and that's why we
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need a whole new generation of leaders who will go into parliament tonight, who want to fix the problems of the country and don't care if it costs them their career because they know they improved this country over four years. and if that's the end of my career , that's the end end of my career, that's the end of my career. but we don't have that anymore. >> as independent, you're >> so as an independent, you're free what you want. free to say what you want. >> that's why i picked >> and that's why i picked independent time independent this time around, because was on the because when i was going on the hustings and speaking and campaigning years campaigning a couple of years ago, saying to me, ago, people were saying to me, nick, i'm not voting for you because hate all the parties. because i hate all the parties. i them not going i hate them all. i'm not going to any of them. and to vote for any of them. and when i went thought when i went away, i thought i need to address that, and i address by being an address it by being an independent. whatever i say independent. so whatever i say i'm going do, i will do it. i'm going to do, i will do it. and it, there's and if i don't do it, there's only to blame and only one person to blame and that be me. that will be me. >> nick buckley, thank you very much. at the end of the much. thank at the end of the first hour free speech first hour on free speech nation. don't away. nation. but don't go away. there's more to there's a lot more still to come. see a moment. come. see you in a moment. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb
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news. >> hello there. welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast from the met office. well, for the week ahead is remaining changeable across the country, but for the most part it's going to be fairly mild. so as we end this weekend, still got low pressure in charge this weather front here will bring another spell of rain as we go through the course of the night ahead of it. it does turn largely dry and clear, especially across parts of wales. some mist clear, especially across parts of fog wales. some mist clear, especially across parts of fog forming nales. some mist clear, especially across parts of fog forming inles. some mist clear, especially across parts of fog forming in as. some mist clear, especially across parts of fog forming in a few>me mist clear, especially across parts of fog forming in a few spolsiisl and fog forming in a few spots and fog forming in a few spots and in behind. it does then turn and in behind. it does then turn a bit drier and clearer for the end of the night. across northern ireland. but for all of us is going to be a mild night. temperatures not falling much lower than 5 to 7 lower than around 5 to 7 degrees. we do start the day degrees. so we do start the day off with some sunshine across eastern parts of midlands, east anglia, away. anglia, lincolnshire away. but the west will the cloud further west will spread its way that little bit further eastwards. any rain on it will slowly peter out, so not actually a lot of rain arriving
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into east anglia and then behind it, turn drier and it, it does turn drier and brighter. some good spells of sunshine before then. sunshine developing before then. the next band of rain arrives in the west. mild temperatures potentially reaching 17 degrees in south—east. tuesday in the south—east. tuesday a rather grey and damp start. plenty of spots of rain around as the day goes on. we will see some bright spells across parts of northern ireland, scotland, maybe northern england too, and still remain a fairly mild still remain in a fairly mild wednesday. thursday stays fairly changeable , quite wet, changeable, quite wet, potentially on wednesday, but all the time temperatures for all the time temperatures for all of us in double figures . all of us in double figures. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> there's plenty more still to come on. free speech nation.
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this week. but let's get a news update first from aaron armstrong. >> hi, there. very good evening to you, aaron armstrong here in the gb newsroom. at least 74 people have been arrested in russia on the final day of an election. vladimir putin is guaranteed to win . thousands of guaranteed to win. thousands of people staged a symbolic noone against putin protest, forming long queues at polling stations across the country. in an apparent show of dissent, allies of the late opposition leader alexei navalny, including his wife yulia, called on voters to spoil their ballots. vote for any other candidate or write navalny's name down. she led a demonstration outside the russian embassy in berlin with similar scenes outside russia's embassy in london. it is the third day of an election in which no genuine opposition figures have been allowed to stand. transport secretary mark harper says rishi sunak will lead the tories into the next general election . a senior
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general election. a senior figures in the party have been attempting to downplay claims of attempting to downplay claims of a plot to replace the prime minister with penny mordaunt. the move would mean a fourth leader of the party in just five years. mr harper says that, unlike labour, the conservatives have a plan to deliver for the country . country. >> we've got to show them by the time of the election on two things. we've got to show them that we've got a plan. the plan is working and it's delivering for them, and i think we can see that it for them, and i think we can see thatitis for them, and i think we can see that it is on inflation and on taxes. we've also then got to show them that the labour party doesn't plan and will be doesn't have a plan and will be a big risk. for example, we know the labour party wants to spend £28 billion their plan . £28 billion on their green plan. they've hidden the price tag now, but they don't know how to pay now, but they don't know how to pay for it. that would mean taxes going up for motorists have been dealing with more disruption on the third day of the m25 closure, with reports of lengthy tailbacks. >> a five mile stretch between junctions ten and 11 in surrey is being closed since friday
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night, a bridge has been demolished, but national highways say the planned gantry has now been installed and the work is on schedule, so they will reopen the road on monday morning at 6 am. tributes have been paid to steve harley, the cockney rebel front man who's died at the age of 73. come up and see me to make me smile . and see me to make me smile. while the singer, best known for the 1970s hit make me smile, had to pause his tour last month to have treatment for cancer. rod stewart says he's absolutely devastated. duran duran's john taylor thanked steve harley for the good vibes. his family, in a statement said his heart exuded only core elements passion, kindness , generosity and much kindness, generosity and much more in abundance . and it's more in abundance. and it's march 17th, which means today there's an alternative meaning to going green. thousands of people across the uk and ireland have turned out to celebrate saint patrick's day. a noisy and
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colourful procession in belfast but no shortage of shamrocks, music and oversized hats in dublin, where locals vie with tourists along o'connell street tourists along o'connell street to watch the annual parade. but if you really want to be surrounded by leprechauns, ginger wigs and genuine irish heritage, there's no place like the united states where people take it seriously, especially in glasgow , glasgow, chicago, where glasgow, glasgow, chicago, where they die. the river green . more they die. the river green. more pictures from that as we get them here at gb news. you can get updates by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts. now back to free speech nation. welcome back to free speech nafion welcome back to free speech nation with me andrew doyle. >> now, on friday, there was an extra ordinary debate in
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parliament about ferrets . now parliament about ferrets. now i've got nothing against ferrets. i think looking after their welfare is important. but a four hour debate on this one subject. now you might be thinking that something is amiss. so here's labour mp maria eagle and sarah champion . eagle and sarah champion. >> there ought to be further provisions in respect of safety of ferrets that are not set out in the regulations. so far that have been said. so i'd be interested to hear what the minister might have to say about that. well, my honourable friend, i will give way. of course . i am very interested course. i am very interested about my honourable friends. well, keen mention of ferrets at every opportunity during this debate. and just to put on record, my brother had a ferret called oscar. well, i'm she has that now on the record. i don't really know what else to say about that except i'm sure i'm sure it brought i'm sure that oscar brought her brother. great joy, oscar brought her brother. great joy, great joy. that's joy, great joy. and that's that's what pets do. and, and
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i'm sure there are many other ferret owners who, who who might attest to the to the same thing . attest to the to the same thing. >> so this was a discussion on the animal welfare bill, which could have been over within 20 minutes. let's face it. and the reason it took four hours is that politicians were filibustering prevent filibustering to prevent a debate liz health and debate on liz truss's health and equality act's amendment bill, which would have offered protections women's spaces , protections for women's spaces, prevented the social transitioning children transitioning of children in schools banned puberty schools and banned puberty blockers. so apparently many of our think that domesticated our mps think that domesticated polecats are more important than the safeguarding of women and children. and to be honest, it was a cross—party affair. so here are tory mps mark spencer and peter gibson would be remiss of me not to put on the record, my three dogs, tessa, barney and maisie and my cat parsnip . and, maisie and my cat parsnip. and, there's been a proud tradition this morning of mentioning various pets, including harry, george, henry, bruce, snowy,
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maisie, scampi , becky one, becky maisie, scampi, becky one, becky two, and pixie. who are the cats? i'll give way to the honourable gentleman. >> i'm very grateful to my hon. friend for giving way. i admitted earlier to put on the record the names of my own dogs, clemmie, pepe and ebony, and clemmie, pepe and ebony, and clemmie, as we all know, came third in the westminster dog of the year show in 2022. >> well, he's corrected the record . there were, of course, record. there were, of course, two ferrets, one of whom had passed away round it. and oscar, what an absolute farce. >> it's a waste of parliamentary time. it's insulting to the electorate. it's dismissive of women's rights, and it shows a complete disregard for the medical experimentation on children that has been taking place on the nhs in plain sight. and as a result of these shenanigans, truss's bill will now be delayed until the 22nd of march. but as it's going to be the last on the days agenda, it's unlikely to be debated at all. you would think our all. now you would think our representatives would take this matter more matter a little bit more seriously . but no, when seriously. but no, when challenged on this, was
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challenged on this, here was sarah champion's response. god, i ferret. powerful and i love a ferret. powerful and full of love. well, sarah champion, perhaps your trivialisation of these important issues might not look so impressive in a few years time when everyone has woken up to the madness of recent years, women are concerned about their single—sex spaces and children have been medicalised for being autistic , gay or gender autistic, gay or gender non—conforming. both political parties are effectively supporting a new form of gay conversion therapy , but they conversion therapy, but they don't want to talk about that. they wanted to compare the names of their pets. why? because getting one over on liz truss is apparently more important than the safety of children. i'm sure in a few years time, there's going to be a people going to be a lot of people claiming never along claiming they never went along with this. but it's all with any of this. but it's all on now. so perhaps all on hansard now. so perhaps all the involved this the mps involved in this infantile filibustering might want their want to start thinking of their excuses now, because in the future they might be asked, what did do about the state did you do about the state sanctioned medical experimentation oh, experimentation on children? oh, well , we spoke about ferrets. well, we spoke about ferrets. well, bet that well, i'm willing to bet that history isn't going to look too
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kindly on that sort of thing. i guess have to and guess we'll have to wait and see. so i want to bring my panel in on this issue of the filibustering. cresta. i think it's mad. i think it's absolutely mad. and i think it's really insulting. and i think those people, all of them involved, deserve voted involved, deserve to be voted out. 100. out. oh, 100. >> and you say, how is this >> and like you say, how is this going age? i can't wait to going to age? i can't wait to bnng going to age? i can't wait to bring this out what it bring this out in. what is it going five, ten going to be two, five, ten years? i mean, it's just appalling. no there's appalling. there's no there's i just don't understand it just i don't understand it. it leaves speechless. just i don't understand it. it lea' i as speechless. just i don't understand it. it lea' i as the echless. just i don't understand it. it lea'izs the generous >> i think the generous interpretation of them interpretation is none of them know anything about this know know anything about this subject. don't. subject. they just don't. >> it's also generous >> well, it's also a generous interpretation, isn't it? you know, you that don't know, you hope that they don't because can they? because you how can they? >> can they not? the nhs has >> how can they not? the nhs has just banned blockers. just banned puberty blockers. they've the they've just done it. the experts, review, experts, the cass review, said that tavistock wasn't safe. that the tavistock wasn't safe. we know that these that this we now know that these that this is experimentation. we is medical experimentation. we know there were no long tum studies ignorance at this studies is ignorance at this point an excuse from the point really an excuse from the likes mark and peter likes of mark spencer and peter gibson sarah champion? gibson and sarah champion? >> i'm just appalled .
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>> not no. i'm just appalled. it's no, no, it's absolutely not. and they're just copying the trans activists, aren't they? they're not having the debate. the is debate. you know, the slogan is no debate. rather than no debate. and rather than discussing challenging discussing it or challenging what report found, what the cass report found, they're messing about smirking. >> can i ask a question? yes. what is filibustering mean? >> okay, no , because i'm going >> okay, no, because i'm going to start filibustering is when it's when you delay . it's when it's when you delay. it's when you delay by just talking nonsense. a tactic nonsense. and it's a tactic that's in you do it that's often used in you do it a lot. yeah, and it's, i feel seen. >> and it's a tactic that's used in parliament. >> you see, at that point, they needed to extend the time of that debate to prevent liz truss bill debated. they just bill being debated. so they just talk nonsense. but it's so brazen. i mean, listening to them listing the names of cats and dogs and ferrets and you just think it's a huge just sort of think it's a huge waste of time. just sort of think it's a huge wasandf time. just sort of think it's a huge wasand why e. just sort of think it's a huge wasand why are they why can they >> and why are they why can they possibly to themselves? >> it. >> i don't get it. >> i don't get it. >> it's job i think i would >> it's a job i think i would like because it's, well paid and you absolute rubbish. you just speak absolute rubbish. i able to swear. but i wouldn't be able to swear. but yeah, great. eagle yeah, that's great. that eagle woman, she to angela woman, is she related to angela eagle? thank don't eagle? thank you. don't you think angela eagle looks like
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vivienne westwood? >> well, i'm glad we're covering the important aspects of this story. are filibuster, but story. you are filibuster, but aren't what i don't aren't they? what? what i don't understand is why are they not embarrassed? >> why is it when sarah champion's called out on this, she just makes a joke? why are they. they see this? they. why can't they see this? >> i genuinely don't and >> i genuinely don't know. and it that it makes me think. is that how mps the electorate mps think of us? the electorate in because in general, you know, because obviously, know, all know obviously, you know, we all know they massive expenses and they claim massive expenses and they claim massive expenses and they well—paid they have these well—paid apartments what apartments and jobs and what have and like, have you. and it's just like, wow, is, you say, very brazen. >> yeah. incredible stuff. okay. well, anyway, let's some well, anyway, let's get some more questions our lovely more questions from our lovely audience. question audience. our first question comes where's comes from miranda. where's miranda? evening. >> hi. good evening. >> hi. good evening. >> rowling actually >> has jk rowling actually committed a crime? >> okay, well, i think miranda, the answer is no, but that hasn't stopped activists from trying to get her arrested over misgendering , and this was misgendering, and this was a complaint that that at first was dismissed by northumbria police. but of course, we have the scottish hate crime bill coming in on the 1st of april. this is to do with india willoughby, jk rowling that india rowling pointed out that india
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willoughby is male. india willoughby is male. india willoughby was willoughby said that this was a hate and that, jk rowling hate crime and that, jk rowling should but should be arrested for it. but of rowling sent of course jk rowling has sent this abuse a number of this woman abuse for a number of years india willoughby years now, india willoughby is a troll, effectively , and has just troll, effectively, and has just been really rude and nasty about people online. and then when you get little bit pushback, get a little bit of pushback, suddenly, to the police. >> but that was i was telling you about jillian michaels, the trainer and she said trainer in america. and she said a of people, but she was a lot of people, but she was talking z's. i don't talking about gen z's. i don't really understand what that means. we'll means. but anyway, we'll digress. saying digress. and what she was saying was, these people that was, a lot of these people that have arguments, minute was, a lot of these people that havethey're arguments, minute was, a lot of these people that havethey're backed1ts, minute was, a lot of these people that havethey're backed into minute that they're backed into a corner or they don't have anything positive then anything positive to say, then it's, you me, you've it's, you hate me, you've threatened and i'm going threatened me, and i'm going to a authority, and it's all a higher authority, and it's all about trying get the about people trying to get the last see. last word, as far as i can see. i very interesting i mean, it's very interesting because lot of people we because a lot of people say we know courtesy they will know out of courtesy they will call the pronouns they prefer. >> but india willoughby has not been courteous. quite the opposite. why opposite. so why on earth, why on our courtesy? >> well, i don't think. i mean, i still i still say she. i don't think india willoughby is deserving think deserving of courtesy. i think india, willoughby had a india, india willoughby had a very narcissistic sort of way of
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deaung very narcissistic sort of way of dealing world. and also dealing with the world. and also i india willoughby i don't think india willoughby is it for the is really sort of in it for the right reasons. she's not worrying the trans worrying about the trans experience it's about experience en masse. it's about india brand. india willoughby and the brand. and i've no patience whatsoever. >> and what will happen? >> and what will happen? >> i mean, you were >> i mean, bruce, you were talking earlier the talking earlier about the ramifications for the comedy ramifications for for the comedy and this kind of thing. >> i genuinely think >> you know, i genuinely think that that that something will not that i'm psychic but i think psychic or anything, but i think i of hate crime i think one of these hate crime things, will try and push things, they will try and push something jk something through against jk rowling, then they've something through against jk rov1ang, then they've something through against jk rov1a prize, then they've something through against jk rov1a prize, don't then they've something through against jk rov1a prize, don't they?:hey've something through against jk rov1a prize, don't they? they've got a prize, don't they? they've got a prize, don't they? they've got profile people got a really high profile people person, should i say. and then that this hate bill seem, that makes this hate bill seem, you it'll done its you know, it'll have done its purpose. i the purpose. well, i mean, the question the crime been committed. >> well it hasn't here. i mean, this what's going to happen. this is what's going to happen. >> well, that's the issue, isn't it? that jk rowling it? and i know that jk rowling in past tweeted out in the past has tweeted out saying you she'd saying that, you know, she'd be happy prison for happy to serve prison time for misgendering to make the point to back this stuff. to push back against this stuff. and, you know, on the back of what were talking about what we were just talking about earlier coleman what we were just talking about earl sarah coleman what we were just talking about earl sarah phillimore, coleman what we were just talking about earl sarah phillimore, we leman what we were just talking about earl sarah phillimore, we have] and sarah phillimore, we have to take stand this is take a stand against this is authoritarianism in its its authoritarianism in its in its essence, authoritarianism in its in its ess no, 5, authoritarianism in its in its ess no, it's scary. and what >> no, it's scary. and what i will say and i'll include them
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both this. both have both in this. both have committed both in this. both have committbut no talking about. >> let's get question from william. >> where's william? hi, william. hello. >> can paintings be racist? >> can paintings be racist? >> well, i suppose it depends on what you paint, william. but i know what you're talking about. this the fitzwilliam museum this is the fitzwilliam museum in cambridge. suggested in cambridge. they've suggested that british that paintings of the british countryside evoke dark nationalistic feelings . now you nationalistic feelings. now you know what's happened recently. so in recent years, whenever you go to an art gallery, there's always these little plaques next to basically to the paintings, basically hectoring evil the hectoring you about how evil the artist because he was born artist was because he was born 300 years ago, and thought 300 years ago, and they thought a differently we do a little differently than we do today. museum's a little differently than we do today. at museum's a little differently than we do today. at fitzwilliam director at the fitzwilliam museum that museum has basically said that you know, this panel just you know, this panel is just it's woke thing. it's not it's not a woke thing. it's not a thing. they're just a woke thing. they're just pointing out if you look at pointing out that if you look at paintings the countryside by paintings of the countryside by turner whoever, be, turner or whoever, it might be, if constable's the if you look at constable's the haywain, suddenly haywain, you'll suddenly start goosestepping haywain, you'll suddenly start goosestoinng haywain, you'll suddenly start goosesto happen. i mean , i think bound to happen. i mean, i think these people are self—satirising at this point. >> absolutely. and i worry about people who are so , not robust people who are so, not robust that this could really impact a
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painting, could have that much of an influence on them. i mean, what are they going to do about everything else in the world? >> i also just think, given what i to talking tony sewell i was to talking tony sewell about earlier, just strikes about earlier, this just strikes me racist. the me as incredibly racist. the idea painting great idea that painting the great paintings history paintings from british history don't black people, don't belong to black people, that all part the that we're not all part of the same going on? >> feel like i've got as much >> i feel like i've got as much to do a picture of an old to do with a picture of an old haybarn as somebody the same age as happens to be black, as me who happens to be black, who's english, you it's who's english, you know, it's like, i have more claim like, why do i have more claim over than they it's over it than they do? it's a very weird idea. over it than they do? it's a verdo eird idea. the countryside >> do you think the countryside is racist? >> i it depends where you >> i think it depends where you go does. it does not. go for it does. it does not. >> honestly. there are some very xenophobic in the cotswolds. >> actually true. was >> that's actually true. i was once called name from once called a nasty name from a squirrel. that was squirrel. yeah, but that was another no, i yeah, another hate crime. no, i yeah, i don't get by looking at a painting of a hill that would invoke nationalistic tendencies. no it's like you really have to. >> maybe it's a real stretch when they were doing the, hogarth exhibition at the tate, there was a self—portrait. he's sitting on a chair, and the plaque something like
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plaque said something like the wood that the was made out wood that the chair was made out of have come from of might have come from a plantation slave the plantation or a slave or the slave trade. it was so tenuous that was actually beyond that it was actually beyond ridiculous. but they why they ridiculous. but they why do they bother? do remember , do bother? and do you remember, do you the, what it, you remember the, what was it, the rose, ship the mary rose, the tudor ship where they were trying to queer the and they up the mary rose, and they put up a blog on website talking blog on their website talking about a queer nit comb and, and an old, an old tudor mirror. and they said, well, sometimes queer people the mirror people would look in the mirror and would reaffirm their and it would reaffirm their identity. are identity. these people are insane. really insane. insane. just really insane. >> look in the >> queer people look in the mirror due for mirror and think, i'm due for botox. come on. botox. so come on. >> but i would put it to you that in tudor times they weren't thinking of botox particularly. >> i don't think can speak >> i don't think you can speak for and think that's racist. >> that's true. >> that's true. >> that's true. >> that is true. okay. well, next on free speech nana campaigner stein join campaigner maria stein will join us tell us about us from ireland to tell us about the last week's the no vote in last week's referendum family and care. referendum on family and care. don't
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welcome back to free speech nafion welcome back to free speech nation with me, andrew doyle. referendums. proposing changes to the constitutional definition of family and on the issue of care were comprehensively defeated in ireland last weekend. in the ballots, the government proposed expanding the definition of family in the constitution recognise constitution to recognise durable relationships, such as cohabiting couples their cohabiting couples and their children , and replacing the children, and replacing the language around women in the home with language recognising care within families. one of the most vocal no campaigners was barrister maria stein and she joins me now. welcome to the show, maria. can i ask you first to begin with, what is it about these constitutional changes that most that you most objected to ? to? >> well, there were two questions put to the irish people. the first was in relation to, family and the redefinition of family. so as things stand, under the irish constitution , the family article constitution, the family article 41 defined the family as founded on marriage. now the government put a proposal to the people to change that so that that it
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would read the family was founded on marriage or other durable relationships, but they wouldn't tell us what the definition of a durable relationship was saying. instead that it should be left to the supreme court to decide. so essentially, the irish people were being asked to vote on something that they would find out what it meant. so that out later what it meant. so that was the first issue. the second issue, go on. sorry. the second issue, go on. sorry. the second issue was in relation to, article 41.2 of the constitution, which refers to women and their work in the home and the service that provides for society . it's basically an for society. it's basically an expression of gratitude and secondly, it went on to say that, a mother should not be forced out into the workplace, out of economic necessity. so it was putting, if you like, an onus on the government to help support mothers who wish to stay at home with children , the at home with their children, the government wanted to erase the word , the word mother, and word woman, the word mother, and the word home from the constitution . and instead what
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constitution. and instead what they said was, they wanted to replace what they said was outdated and sexist language with a gender neutral, proposal. and so we've heard a lot about this kind of changes of language by activists who are who are promoting gender identity ideology . ideology. >> but it's a little strange, isn't it, when it's coming from the from the government? >> yes. and thing about this >> yes. and the thing about this proposal that there was a proposal was that there was a stifling consensus in terms of the irish, political landscape. so it wasn't just the government that was supporting this, but every other political party, bar one, supported it all. the establishment basically were pushing for this change and what was really highlighted in the results of the two referenda was that the political elites and the establishment were totally out of step with the irish people, who comprehensively rejected the proposals . rejected the proposals. >> now, we've seen that again and again, haven't we? where the, the those who are in charge, those who are in power are not in step with the with
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the and referendum the public. and this referendum is example of that. is a further example of that. but do you think it's but why do you think it's happening? particularly in ireland? people happening? particularly in ireland�*made people happening? particularly in ireland�*made the people happening? particularly in ireland�*made the case people happening? particularly in ireland�*made the case thatple happening? particularly in ireland�*made the case that ever who've made the case that ever since ireland, tried to distance itself from the catholic church, had referendum on same sex had the referendum on same sex marriage, that they've actually just kind of just embraced a new kind of state religion. do you think there's anything to that? >> i think there is something to that. but but interestingly, i suppose was different suppose what was different about this referendum this particular referendum was that of the no that in terms of the no campaign, there was quite a broad coalition so it wasn't just catholics or conservatives that were , against this, there that were, against this, there were a number of feminist writers who were against it because of, of course, the, the de—gendering , if you like, of de—gendering, if you like, of women or, and, the desexing of women or, and, the desexing of women and anything to do with motherhood, but there were also people right across the spectrum who , had issues with this. and who, had issues with this. and one of the, one of the big issues was the redefinition of the family . and the government the family. and the government refused to entertain the valid
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concerns that the no campaign had , for instance, that the had, for instance, that the words durable relationships could bring in, the recognition of polyamorous relationships and what that might do to the definition of family , and they definition of family, and they simply weren't able to answer the questions that were put to them on that. so i think the irish people smelled a rat and decided to reject it. >> and it's not just the political class, is it? i mean, i think the dublin media class in particular is very much skewed in one, in one particular way. but at what point will these elites, as you describe them, realise that they're not in sync with the public and that maybe they should be listening to what people are saying? >> yeah, well, that that's that remains right remains to be seen. you're right . the certainly the, both the print and broadcast media there is, as i say, a stifling consensus among them, and a kind of a refusal to, recognise or give a voice to those who don't toe the political line , so we'll
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toe the political line, so we'll see if this is a wake up call for the politicians and for journalists, or if they will continue as they have been doing up until now. >> do you fear, maria, when it comes to this changing of language that this is going to be particularly important when it to irish crime it comes to the irish hate crime bill, defines as bill, which defines hatred as hatred. in other words, a completely circular definition that could surely be exploited against anyone who who takes a contrary view absolutely . contrary view absolutely. >> and you're right to say there is no definition in the bill of what hatred is. so essentially we're looking at thought crimes, and, the, the consequences, in the current for bill people are significant, so if you're convicted of, a hate crime, you could face up to five years in jail, for such a hate crime. and again, because of the protected classes of people that are listed , particularly somebody in listed, particularly somebody in who is a religious or
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conservative, simply expressing a view either online or in person could find themselves , person could find themselves, you know, convicted of a crime under this bill. and police are given powers as well, to, you know, enter a premises and search, computer records and so on. so it's a very concerning, development. >> and finally, maria, what can people do about this? because if all of the political parties are in lockstep and people's voices aren't being represented in the media, what what route out of there is there in this situation? or do we just have to resign ourselves to an authoritarian future? >> well, no, there's an election. election coming up actually, in next year, early next year, possibly by the end of this year. and, as i say, there was one party, a small party that did not, you know, that swam against the political tide. and i think, i hope they do well in the next election. they certainly deserve to. we
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also have some very good independent candidates . yes, and independent candidates. yes, and ihope independent candidates. yes, and i hope that they will be rewarded in the next, election to but for the political parties , i think this referendum should be a big wake up call for them, and i hope that they will rethink their attitude. there is in ireland towards people who do not agree with the, the kind of woke consensus, there is an attitude of regarding us as a basket of deplorables or , or, basket of deplorables or, or, you know, that in those kind of terms . so that attitude needs to terms. so that attitude needs to change. ultimately, we live in a democracy, and the politicians need to listen to the people. that's what the purpose of this referendum was. it was to put a question to the people. and if they continue to ignore the voice of the people, i think they they will pay for that. >> well, congratulations on your campaign, maria stein. thank you very much for joining campaign, maria stein. thank you very much forjoining me. thank you. andrew and next on free
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speech nation, we'll be discussing nhs england's decision this week to end routinely prescribing puberty blockers. you're watching free speech nation on
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>> we're asked to leave because they finally . they finally. >> welcome back to free speech nafion >> welcome back to free speech nation with me . andrew doyle. nation with me. andrew doyle. nhs england announced this week that from next month, they will no longer routinely prescribe puberty blockers . they will be puberty blockers. they will be available in the future, but only through a mandatory research trial. so here to discuss in more detail, i have co—founder of lgb alliance, kate harris, and founder of transgender trend, stephanie davis rac . stephanie, i want to davis rac. stephanie, i want to come to you first, because transgender trend has been sounding the alarm about puberty blockers for a number of years. i saw an article by michael biggs , a researcher at oxford biggs, a researcher at oxford today in telegraph who has today in the telegraph who has also instrumental in also been instrumental in raising the problems here. can you a about what
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you tell us a bit about what you've done comes to you've done when it comes to this issue? >> so michael approached us. so we've the alarm we've been raising the alarm about of puberty about the use of puberty blockers this , because blockers about this, because it's experimental, treatment it's an experimental, treatment of , and, you know, as of children, and, you know, as soon as we understood what was happening at the tavistock, i mean, part of the reason that i set up transgender trend in 2015 was knowing that this treatment was knowing that this treatment was being given to children , was being given to children, varne, at the time, a puberty blockers trial was happening. it was started in 2011, in 2014, that trial was rolled out. is initially a cohort of 44 children. it was rolled out to anybody, coming into without any results having been published. and that to led the first article that michael biggs wrote for the website. but he'd previously tried to get me to do a talk at oxford university that had been cancelled. so we had the usual things going on. but that's when michael first, first wrote and we. >> but it's interesting because
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he's an expert in this field. but, but, but it was quite brave of him say something about of him to say something about this they, they knew this because they, they knew there tum studies there were no long tum studies into now we know the into this. and now we know the risks brain development, risks to brain development, to bone development. were bone development. so you were right. was right. right. and he was right. >> really. yeah, i mean, he >> and really. yeah, i mean, he risked his he risked his his career. he risked, know , as everybody risked, you know, as everybody does. and he and damaged his career through doing this. we really have to credit michael because know, he he's because you know, he he's a researcher. he's you know, he's at oxford and because of his research now the thing that he found in, in an foi was an internal report that showed the increase in the number of children who tick the for , box children who tick the for, box more likely to self—harm or attempt suicide after a year on puberty blockers. so everything they said, they said about puberty blockers being beneficial and even life saving, saving that if you if you don't allow it, kids are more likely to take their own lives. all of that kind of emotional blackmail
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they used was false. these these blockers were having, know , blockers were having, you know, detrimental results after a yeah detrimental results after a year. but even so, they rolled the trial out now. but from michael's research that got to newsnight, we all know what happened then. newsnight did, i think two episodes on on blockers and did more, episodes on the trial . and michael was on the trial. and michael was interviewed and i think that was the really the start of this whole process. yeah and it's very interesting, isn't it? okay. i want to bring you in here because we know now that the majority of children who do feel feelings of gender dysphoria, puberty resolves feel feelings of gender dysphfeelings. puberty resolves feel feelings of gender dysphfeelings. so, )erty resolves feel feelings of gender dysphfeelings. so, )erother)lves those feelings. so, in other words , we were blocking the cure words, we were blocking the cure for the time. but also for most of the time. but also we hannah barnes we know from hannah barnes research between 80 and 90% research that between 80 and 90% of adolescents referred to the tavistock sex tavistock were same sex attracted. was happening attracted. so what was happening here children were being here is gay children were being fixed heterosexual ized on the nhs. and that's why lgb alliance presumably has such an interest in this. >> yes , it's a horror story, but
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>> yes, it's a horror story, but we're again, we're beginning to get to a happy ending . we're not get to a happy ending. we're not there yet, lgb alliance is the only charity in the united kingdom that focuses exclusively on promoting the rights of lesbian, gay and bisexual people . and we are absolutely delighted with the news that came out on tuesday. the nhs bans puberty blockers now that has gone around the world, even joe biden is now being challenged to look at what he's doing in america. so this is very good news. but it's not good enough. and i'll tell you why it's good. not good enough. it's because a there are loopholes. b there's a media apart from your brilliant work. and i have been told by my team, i am not to come onto this programme without thanking you for your courage and bravery and in in shining a light on all of this. thank you. but the media in general does not want to
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discuss it. >> but also people are attacked, aren't they? i mean, you've been smeared and called all sorts of names roshi murphy, the names when roshi murphy, the musician, concerns about musician, raised concerns about puberty shows puberty blockers, she shows council she was smeared in the guardian and all sorts things guardian and all sorts of things , she was right. and you were right. right. right. she was right. >> all right. graham >> we were all right. graham linehan was right. everybody >> we were all right. graham lineipuberty right. everybody >> we were all right. graham lineipuberty blockerserybody >> we were all right. graham lineipuberty blockers are ody said puberty blockers are utterly shameful , said puberty blockers are utterly shameful, and i would say verging on criminal child abuse. say verging on criminal child abuse . but let me show you my abuse. but let me show you my handy poster i made this earlier . this is just one example, because we, lgb alliance are not allowed to speak on bbc, we are not allowed. we are. you will never hear us on itv, channel 4, because there is a very has been a very effective campaign from stonewall , my organisation, stonewall, my organisation, where i've said to you before, my dna was in stonewall. yes
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until 2015, when the incoming ceo , ruth hunt, decided to add ceo, ruth hunt, decided to add the t. thank you . alicia kearns the t. thank you. alicia kearns lgb alliance has not removed the t. the t was added by stonewall in 2015, but just as an example of the type of censorship that we face, and we believe that we represent the views of the vast majority of people in this country, i'm going to show you this poster. this poster says basically , well done, nhs. there basically, well done, nhs. there is a little bit more to do, but there is nothing controversial or law breaking about this poster. it simply says we are pleased that the nhs will no longer be prescribing puberty blockers , saying that there is blockers, saying that there is not enough evidence of safety and clinical effectiveness. and it goes on to say , but there is it goes on to say, but there is more to be done. we urge mps to close the loopholes. there are unscrupulous clinics out there and there are unscrupulous, organised ones like stonewall,
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like mermaids and many others who are going to encourage children to go online to buy these drugs that have no clinical effectiveness. we were not allowed to place this advert, so this is what we're facing now . facing now. >> and we've seen in parliament this week when there was a debate about precisely this issue, about the loopholes you describe, the that describe, about the fact that private clinics still private clinics can still prescribe these drugs. they prescribe these drugs. and they filibustered about filibustered by talking about ferrets yes. ferrets for four hours. yes. >> seen that despite >> and we've seen that despite sarah champion on twitter today saying, oh, it was just as much the tories as labour. it wasn't. it was predominantly labour who decided deliberately to filibuster . we could see we filibuster. we could see we could see maria eagle , we could could see maria eagle, we could see lloyd russell—moyle smiling, laughing as they discussed ferrets names. >> i think they forget that there are cameras in the house of commons. >> i think they do, and they will hang their heads in shame
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because we're seeing, thank because what we're seeing, thank god , is a return to sanity. god, is a return to sanity. thank god for david bell. >> i think the whistleblower from the tavistock, the whistleblower from the tavistock who told us on on evan davis's shockingly biased discussion on tuesday. >> this is the end of the transgender trial. there has never been a transgender trial. gender dysphoria is a symptom we are now entering. we hope a penod are now entering. we hope a period of clarity, of science and of safeguarding for children. and i, i my heart goes out to every child, every family who has suffered because of these gender identity zealots who put their own justifications for their mad cult beliefs before the safety of children. >> and finally, stephanie, with all of that in mind, it's still going to be i mean, i can see that kate is right, that things are going in that direction. we are going in that direction. we are learning more the nhs band is a big step forward, but as we
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saw a lot is a big step forward, but as we sa'very a lot is a big step forward, but as we sa'very powerful a lot is a big step forward, but as we sa'very powerful people a lot is a big step forward, but as we sa'very powerful people who lot is a big step forward, but as we sa'very powerful people who are of very powerful people who are still cult and still caught up in this cult and they still think that they're doing right thing they doing the right thing and they think protecting think that they're protecting a trans people. are they? >> there's still a to do. >> there's still a lot to do. there's still the message that that gender affirmative care and i mean, the experiment of social transition, as well as the medical experiment of blockers and hormones. but the message that that is beneficial to children, it's good. it's so deeply embedded now throughout society , from groups like society, from groups like stonewall and mermaids. and i think we have to stop and say, well, okay, is it good or is it bad?is well, okay, is it good or is it bad? is it harmful? is it actually child abuse ? let's ask actually child abuse? let's ask those questions and not just accept unquestioningly . the accept unquestioningly. the gender affirming care is a good for children. i don't think it is. i think it is a child abuse. i think it is harmful and i think it has proven harms and no proven benefits. well stephanie,
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kate, thank you both so much for joining me. >> really appreciate it. now we did approach stonewall and mermaids for a statement. we received the following from mermaids. this announcement is deeply disappointing and a further restriction of support offered to trans children and young people through the nhs, which is failing trans youth. there were virtually no first appointments offered in 2023, with growing waiting lists with ever growing waiting lists of five years. and they of over five years. and they also say mermaids will continue to advocate strongly for access to advocate strongly for access to timely, holistic and supportive health care for trans youth, including access to puberty blockers to those who need them. everyone deserves access healthcare and to live access to healthcare and to live happy and healthy lives. trans youth no exception. so next, youth are no exception. so next, lee anderson and dylan mulvaney both launched new pop careers. yes, it's time for social sensations . you're watching free sensations. you're watching free speech nation on
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gb news. welcome back to free speech nafion welcome back to free speech nation with me . andrew doyle. nation with me. andrew doyle. it's time for social sensations. that's the part of the show where we wade through the turbid waters of the internet and see what's been going viral. so first up, the issue of stereotyping women. it's made even worse when the stereotyping is made by a man, says a trans activist and influencer, dylan mulvaney has decided has released debut single, a song released a debut single, a song called days of girlhood. let's have a listen . bring called days of girlhood. let's have a listen. bring me called days of girlhood. let's have a listen . bring me alarms immediately. >> we have a code p emergency calling women of all ages. girls like me gotta learn the basics. let's look quick. change sip champagne. playing catchup. cause we miss the pre—game. pull up the group chat where you at? drop a pin . drop a pin. >> okay, i think, let's be honest, he's trolling . he's honest, he's trolling. he's having a lot. like, there's no way that, like, comedians get
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get people having a go at them for sexist jokes. that's the most misogynistic thing i've ever seen. probably. and but of course, he's getting away with it. it's bizarre, isn't it? >> i don't know how he's getting away with yeah, my girlhood away with it. yeah, my girlhood didn't that. we didn't look like that. we were far. are you not drink? >> drinking champagne and shopping and no retail therapy and less sex workers and more acne, less sex workers for friends? >> yeah, but what i do >> yeah, a lot, but what i do understand is why very progressive are looking understand is why very pr
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into one video. >> and just because he's declared himself to be a woman, well, that side i just find hard to smiley . i can't believe to smiley. i can't believe you're calling her her, because, i mean, is that not what she is? >> no, no. okay. >> no, no. okay. >> it's a bloke. it's a it's a bloke. it'sjust >> it's a bloke. it's a it's a bloke. it's just declared himself and is performing cosplaying as a woman, using every possible stereotype. >> there. >> i'm an espresso pod. there. >> i'm an espresso pod. there. >> go . there we go. >> there we go. there we go. okay, think it's all a big okay, i think it's all a big troll . i think he's going to troll. i think he's going to come out in a couple of years and i got you all. think. come out in a couple of years and think got you all. think. come out in a couple of years and think that'su all. think. come out in a couple of years and think that's what think. come out in a couple of years and think that's what he'snk. >> i think that's what he's actually other side all along. >> i think he's satirising woke, woke culture. really do, woke culture. yeah, i really do, because you know, job, because i don't, you know, job, you know, it's anyway, you you know, it's anyway, did you like song ? no, it's like like the song? no, no. it's like one danny's b songs. one of danny's worst b songs. >> hey hey hey , save that for >> hey hey hey, save that for the locker room. >> okay? >> okay? >> so next up , this this video >> so next up, this this video of a police officer telling off american tourists for bothering one of the king's guards by trying to get to tell them trying to get him to tell them his name. yes.
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>> right, ladies , yeah. so these >> right, ladies, yeah. so these soldiers serve their country , soldiers serve their country, all right? they take their job seriously. they are responsible for% listlessly. they are not an object of ridicule , appreciate object of ridicule, appreciate you having fun. he's not having fun. he's got a long day. there's a lot of hours he's got to do. is tiring, exhausting . to do. is tiring, exhausting. >> i mean, they're not allowed to move, are they ? no. so, you to move, are they? no. so, you know, because i think he should have just stabbed them with that bayonet. >> oh, 100. >> oh, 100. >> yeah, absolutely. >> yeah, absolutely. >> gun involved. you >> get the gun involved. you know, incitement to know, it's that incitement to violence. yeah. violence. sorry. yeah. >> annoying. look, >> it's so annoying. look, i love lots of american people. >> have american but >> i have american friends, but there among there is a tendency among certain americans to not the certain americans to do not the american ness. >> not >> no, it's not being a teenagen >> no, it's not being a teenager. yeah. no, absolutely not. >> do you think, you know, if we lived in a different type of state, they would have been impaled . impaled. >> a taser is still a thing. >> a taser is still a thing. >> they are, but they don't have them in the guards. all right. what would you do? you find them annoying. >> what do you think? i find
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everyone annoying? yeah, yeah, but for the noise i make, i can't stand loud people. >> isn't that funny? >> isn't that funny? >> yeah. no. it's weird. i'm wearing double standards. >> yeah. double standards. henrietta. >> hypocrite . >> hypocrite. >> hypocrite. >> is that what you. yeah. >> is that what you. yeah. >> henrietta. hypocrite and hate monster. that's what you're known as. >> w- w.— >> henrietta the hate henrietta the monster. >> henrietta the hate henrietta the there �*nonster. >> henrietta the hate henrietta the there we |ster. >> henrietta the hate henrietta the there we|sterright. so >> there we go. right. so finally, lee anderson has been making career making some interesting career choices could he choices recently, but could he now bid for the pop now be making a bid for the pop charts? have charts? hey, dylan, let's have a listen . i love you. listen. i love you. >> we love you . and appg bannau >> we love you. and appg bannau tuc are my lovers . do it for tuc are my lovers. do it for you. try one time. spend one time hannah wilde all michael crick brazier i think it needs a remix or something . remix or something. >> a bit of work. >> a bit of work. >> the trouser enthusiasts remix. >> it's something like that. or motiv8 or something. absolutely no. we need to crack at it or something like that. >> yeah, you're not saying that
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morby's no, i'm morby's on crack? no, i'm not saying no. >> all clear. >> not at all clear. >> not at all clear. >> sorry about that. >> sorry about that. >> like the song? at >> do you like the song? at least it's. >> really not bothered by >> i'm really not bothered by any that. ithink >> i'm really not bothered by any that. i think lee any of that. i think lee anderson has bigger problems than a sing along in a community centre perfectly centre to be perfectly honest. >> viral, you >> well, it did go viral, you know, haven't seen it. know, i haven't seen it. >> mean, i work here, how have >> i mean, i work here, how have i that it was i not seen that it was compulsory us watch that? compulsory for us to watch that? >> but i would not >> well, yeah, but i would not be in. be joining in. >> know. >> you know. >> you know. >> no, i think so. no, >> no, i don't think so. no, i find it offensive. okay. let's move. it'sjust find it offensive. okay. let's move. it's just a song. find it offensive. okay. let's move. it'sjust a song. it's find it offensive. okay. let's move. it's just a song. it's so annoying. okay going annoying. okay we're going to now unfiltered now talk through your unfiltered dilemmas. so much dilemmas. thank you ever so much for with all of your for emailing in with all of your problems, a dilemma problems, we have got a dilemma here from stewart, stewart says my always insists on my boyfriend always insists on wearing a stupid, oversized green stetson to the pub on saint patrick's day. he goes out looking like a gnome. any advice? how i can tell him he looks ridiculous . i think you looks ridiculous. i think you could just tell him he looks ridiculous. i mean, i mean, all this sort of diplomacy within relationships. think if you're relationships. i think if you're going looking going to go out looking like that, need need someone that, you need you need someone who to correct you and who is there to correct you and say, no, that's a mistake.
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>> i think that's, you >> yeah. i think that's, you know, we each know, that's we temper each other's you think the >> or do you think the alternative is actually in relationships? you relationships? you should you should support no should endorse and support no matter what decisions your partner that sounds terrible. >> i think you should send emails a show and then get emails to a tv show and then get them to sit down watch it together. >> for all we know, stewart could be a woman and not gay. this could be lies. >> it could completely >> well, it could be completely made but made up. absolutely. yeah, but i don't this. but don't don't think this. but don't break the spell. sorry. i mean, you let's assume is you know, let's assume this is a real dilemma, okay? >> told. >> just get him told. >> just get him told. >> yeah, told. why? >> yeah, get him told. why? >> yeah, get him told. why? >> email me. what's it got >> why email me. what's it got to do with me? >> sadly. >> sadly. >> pinter. i'll go round you go. >> pinter. i'll go round you go. >> that's that's the >> that's the. that's the solution. going send solution. we're going to send bruce way. bruce on his way. >> hate monster is coming >> the hate monster is coming for it will all be for you and it will all be resolved anyway. let's move on. now. this is a dilemma from lizzie. have lizzie. oh, lizzie says i have a tattoo of a long dead pet on my inner upper thigh , and since i inner upper thigh, and since i put on weight, it's become really stretched . really stretched. >> barely and barely looks like an animal. >> should i pay to have it removed? so yes, it started out as a whippet and now it looks like a rhinoceros. you are .
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like a rhinoceros. you are. >> you are a disgrace. lizzie, put the pringles away . put the pringles away. >> i mean, so is the problem that she's getting wet or is it? why have the pet on your upper inner thigh? to me that's disturbing. i think that's actually gross. >> yeah, think >> yeah, yeah, i think that leads on into other but leads on into other things, but not to say and i think not going to say and i think he's that for because the only people who see your upper inner thigh, unless you're wearing a bikini maybe, i don't know, she could be promiscuous. bikini maybe, i don't know, she couwell, promiscuous. bikini maybe, i don't know, she couwell, pdon't:uous. bikini maybe, i don't know, she couwell, pdon't:uouto assume. >> well, i don't like to assume. >> well, i don't like to assume. >> getting that vibe. >> well, i'm getting that vibe. yeah, i've it. lizzie's promiscuous. >> i think if you've got if you've got tattoos on you've got tattoos of pets on intimate places, you're probably not you not that promiscuous. you wouldn't not that promiscuous. you wotandrew. don't that's >> andrew. i don't think that's a move against me or with me. >> so pick side. >> so pick a side. >> so pick a side. >> you're you're very trump. >> i think they have to be. >> very i think they have to be. >> very i think they have to be. >> yeah. you do, cressida thoughts that one. have you thoughts on that one. have you got tattoos? got any tattoos? >> i haven't i escaped >> no, i haven't i escaped that isn't miracle? i would have isn't it a miracle? i would have thought by now i have like isn't it a miracle? i would have thoughony now i have like isn't it a miracle? i would have thoughon myw i have like isn't it a miracle? i would have thoughon my ankle have like isn't it a miracle? i would have thoughon my ankle or have like a fairy on my ankle or something. i got away something. but i got away scot free do. do you have a. free and i do. do you have a. >> if you going to have >> but if you were going to have a it wouldn't be that a tattoo, it wouldn't be that lizzie's dead pet. >> i'm right though. lizzie's dead pet. >> wait, m right though. lizzie's dead pet.
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>> wait, i| right though. lizzie's dead pet. >> wait, i don't though. lizzie's dead pet. >> wait, i don't evengh. lizzie's dead pet. >> wait, i don't even know what the was it dead? the pet was it dead? >> it. was it like a tattoo >> was it. was it like a tattoo of a corpse? >> it was long dead pet, which >> it was a long dead pet, which i thought meant like dead i thought meant like a dead snake. and you quite snake. and then you quite rightly it's probably snake. and then you quite rightly mistake.3robably wicked mistake. >> okay, well, thanks for emailing do it emailing in, but don't do it again . let's move on now to again. let's move on now to a dilemma from ellie. >> says i'm finding >> ellie says i'm finding it increasingly tempting increasingly more tempting to take my office. it's a take milk from my office. it's a game changer when it comes to fighting cost living fighting the cost of living crisis. thoughts thoughts are crisis. thoughts my thoughts are that an absolute thief. that you're an absolute thief. yeah, going to call the yeah, i'm going to call the police. we her details? police. do we have her details? because to contact the because i'm going to contact the police that. what you police about that. what do you think bruce? think about that, bruce? >> no, her to lose >> yeah. no, i want her to lose herjob. i'm not. her job. i'm not. >> herjob. i'm not. >> i'm not normally for cancel culture, outright culture, but that's outright theft. know, theft. i mean, that's you know, what's coming to? it's ridiculous. >> did she she was borrowing >> did she say she was borrowing milk? she was stealing. milk? no, she was stealing. >> stealing? was it oat milk? how stuff? how expensive was this stuff? >> disgrace. >> we don't know. disgrace. she's a disgrace. i know her mum. you? yeah. and going mum. do you? yeah. and i'm going to after the show. to text her after the show. >> monster is to get >> hey, monster is going to get involved. >> hey, monster is going to get involv�*outrageous. don't that's outrageous. you don't steal you? you steal from work, do you? you took the mugs i. took one of the mugs i. >> oh, i keep being given them by lewis schaffer. if anyone
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wants a mug, i've got thousands by lewis schaffer. if anyone wathem.�*nug, i've got thousands of them. >> did you? wanted christmas bauble. well, bauble. wen, >> well, from the tree, well, people taking those. i people were taking those. i shouldn't that, but yeah, shouldn't say that, but yeah, those were, those were available. >> i've stuff available. » u-ve >> i've taken stuff from here. >> i've taken stuff from here. >> i've taken stuff from here. >> i know you have one. it's all on security camera, and on security camera, bauble and a bit glue. bit of glitter glue. >> make some ourselves. >> we could make some ourselves. >> we could make some ourselves. >> you think any >> great. so you don't think any thoughts you? just should thoughts can. you? just should we just say you're a thief? thoughts can. you? just should we thief?y you're a thief? thoughts can. you? just should we thief?y you'ra a thief? thoughts can. you? just should we thief?y you'ra thief. f? thoughts can. you? just should we just f?y you'ra thief. f? thoughts can. you? just should we just f?y you'rit's 1ief. f? >> just because it's milk and not doesn't mean it's not. >> i know it's not lactose intolerant. that's thing in intolerant. that's one thing in our yeah seriously, our thinking. yeah seriously, that our thinking. yeah seriously, tha that is a good point. yeah. >> that is a good point. yeah. okay, look, has been >> that is a good point. yeah. okayenlightening. has been >> that is a good point. yeah. okayenlightening. thank; been >> that is a good point. yeah. okayenlightening. thank youen >> that is a good point. yeah. okayenlightening. thank you for very enlightening. thank you for joining speech joining us for free speech nafion joining us for free speech nation this the when nation. this was the week when puberty were finally puberty blockers were finally banned. police banned. the scottish police became authoritarian, became even more authoritarian, if and our if that was possible. and our elected representatives made total of themselves by total fools of themselves by talking hours about ferrets. talking for hours about ferrets. thank my panel, cressida thank you to my panel, cressida wetton devlin, and to wetton and bruce devlin, and to my , lord sewell, sarah my guests, lord sewell, sarah phillimore, kate coleman, nick buckley, stein , stephanie buckley, maria stein, stephanie davis erg and kate harris. and buckley, maria stein, stephanie dtyou erg and kate harris. and buckley, maria stein, stephanie dtyou want|nd kate harris. and buckley, maria stein, stephanie dtyou want to kate harris. and buckley, maria stein, stephanie dtyou want to join; harris. and buckley, maria stein, stephanie dtyou want to join us arris. and buckley, maria stein, stephanie dtyou want to join us live. and buckley, maria stein, stephanie dtyou want to join us live in nd if you want to join us live in the studio and be part our the studio and be part of our wonderful audience, that's very the studio and be part of our wondyjust audience, that's very the studio and be part of our wondyjust go dience, that's very the studio and be part of our wondyjust go to�*nce, that's very the studio and be part of our wondyjust go to sro that's very easy. just go to sro audiences.com, come along and join in the fun, stay tuned for
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mark dolan. that's coming up next. don't forget that headliners is on every night at 11:00. that's the late night paper preview show, where comedians talk you through the next day's stories . next day's top news stories. that's tonight at 11 and every night and thank so night at 11. and thank you so much for watching free speech nation. much for watching free speech nafion. . nation. farewell. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news news. >> hello there. welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast from the met office. well, for the week ahead is remaining changeable across the country, but for the most part it's going to be fairly mild. so as we end this weekend . still got low this weekend. still got low pressure in charge. this weather front here will bring another spell of rain as we go through the course of the night ahead of it. turn largely dry and it. it does turn largely dry and clear, especially across parts of england and wales. mist
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of england and wales. some mist and forming in a few spots and fog forming in a few spots and fog forming in a few spots and in behind. it does then turn and in behind. it does then turn a drier and clearer for the a bit drier and clearer for the end night across northern end of the night across northern ireland, for all of us it is ireland, but for all of us it is going to be a mild night, temperatures not falling much lower around lower than around 5 to 7 degrees, so we do start the day off with some sunshine across eastern parts of midlands, east anglia, lincolnshire but eastern parts of midlands, east angcloudncolnshire but eastern parts of midlands, east angcloud furtherire but eastern parts of midlands, east angcloud further west but eastern parts of midlands, east angcloud further west will ut the cloud further west will spread its way that little bit further eastwards. any rain on it will slowly peter out, so not actually a lot of rain arriving into east anglia and then behind it, does turn a drier and it, it does turn a drier and brighter. some good spells of sunshine developing before then. the band of rain arrives in the next band of rain arrives in the mild temperatures the west. mild temperatures potentially reaching 17 degrees in south—east on tuesday. in the south—east on tuesday. a rather grey and damp start. plenty of spots of rain around. as the day goes on we will see some bright spells across parts of northern ireland, scotland, maybe england too, and maybe northern england too, and still remain in a fairly mild wednesday. thursday stays fairly changeable, quite wet , changeable, quite wet, potentially on wednesday, but all the time temperatures for
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all the time temperatures for all of us in double figures looks like things are heating up boxt boiler boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> on mark dolan tonight in my big opinion, with almost 10 million working age brits not active in the economy, we're fast becoming the lazy man of europe again. britain isn't working and we'll all pay the price and it might take a ten. it's being reported that tory backbenchers are plotting to sensationally remove rishi sunak from number 10 before the next election . i'll be giving my election. i'll be giving my reaction. we're live at nine.
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gb news. >> very good evening to you. it's 11:00. i'm >> very good evening to you. it's11:00. i'm aaron >> very good evening to you. it's 11:00. i'm aaron armstrong it's11:00. i'm aaron armstrong in the gb newsroom. if vladimir putin has claimed a landslide victory in russia's presidential election, will make election, saying it will make his and more his country stronger and more effective . early results have effective. early results have given him more than 87% of the vote, ensuring another six year terms, which was fully expected . terms, which was fully expected. he thanked voters for their support. hours after thousands in russia and around the world held anti—putin protests at polling stations , inspired by polling stations, inspired by the widow of opposition leader alexei navalny . mr putin claimed alexei navalny. mr putin claimed he'd agreed to a prisoner swap involving the kremlin critic
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days before his death in prison last month. at least 80 people have been arrested in cities across russia . transport across russia. transport secretary mark harper says rishi sunak will lead the tories into the next election. senior conservatives have been attempting to downplay claims of attempting to downplay claims of a tory plot to replace the prime minister with penny mordaunt. it would mean a fourth leader of the party in just five years, mr harper says unlike labour, the conservatives do a plan to conservatives do have a plan to deliver for the country. >> we've got to show them by the time of the election two things we've got to show them that we've got to show them that we've got to show them that we've got a plan. the plan is working and it's delivering for them, and i think we can see that it them, and i think we can see thatitis them, and i think we can see that it is on inflation and on taxes. we've also then got to show them that the party show them that the labour party doesn't plan and will be doesn't have a plan and will be a big risk. for example, we know the party wants to spend the labour party wants to spend £28 their plan . £28 billion on their green plan. they've hidden the price tag now, but they don't know how to pay now, but they don't know how to pay for it. that would mean taxes going up.
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