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tv   Headliners  GB News  June 11, 2024 5:00am-6:01am BST

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iphone software. taking to x to complain, the tesla founder said if apple integrates open ai at the os level, then apple devices will be banned. at my companies thatis will be banned. at my companies that is an unacceptable security violation, he said . his comments violation, he said. his comments followed a presentation by apple today when it said that customers would have access to open ai's chat gpt chatbot through the siri digital assistant , apple through the siri digital assistant, apple plans to roll out the capabilities as part of a suite of new ai features later this year . a suite of new ai features later this year. and lastly, tributes continue to come in after the death of tv nutritionist doctor michael mosley. tv scientist professor brian cox took to x to say that doctor mosley was a genuinely lovely man. the former labour politician tom watson said it's hard to describe how upseti said it's hard to describe how upset i am by this, and pop star major said the news was so sad. police in greece say 67 year old doctor mosley died from natural causes after his body was found following a four day search on
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the island of symi. that's the news. for the latest stories, do you sign up to gb news alerts? scan the qr code on your screen or go to gb news .com/ alerts. time now for headliners . time now for headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners, your first look at tuesday's newspapers with three comedians. i'm i don't know whether that was a pun on two and three. i'm simon evans. tonight i'm joined by a man. i'm simon evans. every night tonight i'm joined by a man who identifies as a bit of crumpet. that's josh identifies as a bit of crumpet. that'sjosh howie identifies as a bit of crumpet. that's josh howie looking very smooth and a man who doesn't go anywhere near crumpet. it's all avocado and boiled chicken for him. that's nick dixon literally said one thing about my diet has got into the autocue, on into the teleprompter. how does that happen later? that's unbelievable. it's like a tv equivalent of a lecture in the corner of the room. you're starting to get little ads for
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them. yeah. start spreading misinformation on purpose . so we misinformation on purpose. so we have some headlines to have a look at. the daily mail kicks off britain's 12 year old machete murderers very disturbing story. and poor old michael mosley at the top there. the times tories offer lower taxes and help for first time buyers could be too late. there's bill nighy, attending a memorial for, michael martin amis , guardian tory, right, amis, guardian tory, right, plans to give sunak set of demands if manifesto falls flat and a couple of, british footballers the express up the workers pm promises £0.02 cut in national insurance. the metro have read alert. yep. and finally, the daily star. here we go for euros, presumably to germany. those were your front pages. germany. those were your front pages . so we germany. those were your front pages. so we will start germany. those were your front pages . so we will start with pages. so we will start with tuesday's daily mail. josh?
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>> yeah, britain's 12 year old machete murderers and, there's not really much sort of insight you can add to this story. >> it's 212 year olds killed this 19 year old. >> he was over here, i believe, from the caribbean, to get a surgery. eye cataract surgery that wasn't provided . that wasn't provided. >> and, where he lived, and he was here for a month , and so was was here for a month, and so was he, sorry if this is a trivial detail or could be meaningful. was he blind? >> no, i don't think he was blind. he was just. i think he just had issues with his eyesight. >> okay. >> okay. >> and he was here, i think, for a month. >> and this terrible tragedy happened. i don't know anything about. there's a photo of one of them, you sort of dressed in the uniform of scumb machete murderers everywhere . murderers everywhere. >> so it's a it's a sort of, nasty kind of laughing type thing. is that the suggestion then? they've kind of got this idea of, like, what it would be like to be. no, i think they're just they're just evil little. yeah. scrotes. they were known to have knives in a machete. >> people knew they had this.
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but it's weird that no one did anything. this was last november in wolverhampton. they were known to sort of go around with them, so i don't know why nothing happened. >> they weren't part of a drug gang or a machete. murders are often sort of gangland killings, aren't they? but this is just. >> yeah, it's just just random evil. >> oh, well, thoughts and prayers obviously. the guardian. nick. yeah. >> the guardian has the tories rafe plans to give sunak set of demands if manifesto falls flat. so they're giving it one last try. so the idea is, if sunak amazing manifesto doesn't quite turn it around for him .jenrick turn it around for him. jenrick and, jenrick and braverman are saying i delivered that with a straight face. >> jim mcmahon. >> jim mcmahon. >> braverman are seeing it as a chance, according to this piece, to sort of come in and with more tough measures. they want tough on the echr, tough on immigration tax changes that they want, whereas sunak is going to try and head that off by being a bit tough on the echr, though not that, you know, he's already said we would we would not let them stop rwanda, but he's probably going to go slightly further with the
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language. according to the telegraph. and we definitely wouldn't let them stop it and things like that. >> so i mean, i suppose the big question, and it's been discussed earlier this evening on this channel, is whether or not this election, i mean, is lost by all accounts. anyway, i think it's something like 40 to 1 against or something you can get now you've got it labour seat. but yeah, but whether in theory such an election would be won from the centre, or whether his bigger concern is to try and bnng his bigger concern is to try and bring reform voters back into the fold. >> yeah, i think it's i said this yesterday, but i think it's really it's an election for the future of the tory party. >> that's what the real any excitement is about. >> i mean, it's a bit ridiculous. >> he, he, he's saying he could still win back voters and it's like back from what? yeah. this is his first election. >> yeah. that's true. yeah yeah. and, and he's he's three leadership elections away from an actual general election . well an actual general election. well i mean he every everyone else has also decided that he doesn't want to be ruler anymore. he doesn't want to be leader anymore, wants to go to california that he's called an early election so he can get his kids into school, that that's the kind of gossip i mean,
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there's nobody in the country who thinks that he has any sort of future plan for the tory party, is there? >> no. and even if he i mean, after the election, there's no one that would seriously think he'd stay around. no, it's just a question of whether he goes now or in a few weeks. >> i have heard of people saying, you know, he could leave. he could actually resign as leader. i mean, that seems absolutely. i thought maybe cameron would come in when i watched all those pictures of cameron dominating the d—day celebration. >> maybe they'll parachute cameron in. >> that would be such an extraordinary kind of like fulsome call. it would be a great five act drama. >> would you rule out that cameron being the next leader? >> i wouldn't i wouldn't rule it out. i wouldn't have him as the favourite or even the second or third. i think at the moment it's penny and kemi isn't it. and then and then possibly farage of course, there's always that kind of party where the cameron's allowed to do it or something, but he'll find a way the last time. i mean, we had a foreign secretary in the, in the lords before that was carrington who resigned over the falklands invasion. that was the last one before cameron. i don't know when. i can't believe a prime
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minister in the last. >> i just can't believe sunak even brought him back. >> oh, it was kind of madness for me. >> he's one of the worst prime ministers we've ever had. but that's that's not getting to it. who? >> sunak. no, cameron. >> sunak. no, cameron. >> cameron. okay well, i mean, i think he was pretty good, except for the one terrible miscalculation that he made from his own party as well, arguably, like, you know, i never thought i'd say this, but i agree with josh, although not like below the waterline. yeah. the somebody i saw, i went to some people talking today and they pointed out that, if he were to win this time, the tories, i mean, obviously they're not going, but if they were to win, that would be the fifth election in a row as well. and that is, i think would be unheard of since the early 19th century that any party had won. so it was always going to be an extraordinarily. but having said that, got rid of the guy that won all the seats. yeah. and from such a huge majority. so anyway, moving on. there's nothing else on the guardian you want to mention. not really. no. okay, the front cover of the times. josh tories offer lower taxes and help. >> for home buyers. and it's just it's always a bit strange when the party that's in power
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sort of offers this stuff. >> yeah. and you're just like , >> yeah. and you're just like, why weren't you doing it? >> you had 14 years. >> you had 14 years. >> yeah. why weren't you not building more houses? why weren't you, as they say here? >> cancelling the stamp duty for first time buyers. >> notice how much you look like bill nighy. oh. it's gone. oh, really? like it's like. it's like you're on the front page in the background, so all of these, you know, lowering taxes. well taxes have been put up under your government, so and also , your government, so and also, can i say help for home buyers. >> there's a very easy way to provide help for home buyers. get out of the way of house builders. just just like stop making it so difficult to get planning permission .just making it so difficult to get planning permission . just allow planning permission. just allow people to plan whole new towns easily . but every time they easily. but every time they instead kind of come in with like financial boosts . we'll pay like financial boosts. we'll pay the first 5% of your mortgage doesn't help home buyers. it distorts the housing market. and somebody somewhere, you know, somebody somewhere, you know, some financial rising interest. >> pick it up. cut red tape. >> pick it up. cut red tape. >> yeah, absolutely. >> yeah, absolutely. >> and you've got immigration. you've got the sort of worrying about the newts or whatever when
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you're whenever you're trying to build anything, then you've got the fact that you've got a lot of older voters voting tory nimby type voters. yeah. but there's any number of reasons why it didn't happen. but as you say, it does look absurd trying to do it at the last minute. well i mean, it has for decades now, and i'm among them. >> but, you know, the only like, thing we have left to cling to is that our the unearned worth held up in our tied up in our equity. >> there's a, there's an interesting story which goes beyond the immediate politics that we're going through at the moment, which is about how there was this diet plan put forward about five years ago. and the lancet journal. yeah. and the idea was it was a called a planetary health diet. so it was meant to be good for the environment, good for individuals. it was basically lots of nuts. it wasn't like not going vegetarian. it was like eating just a little bit less meat and eggs. okay. and the people who have been on the diet and adhering to it are living a third, a less, a third, less likely to die of, early disease. so it shows that, you know, a good diet. this could be a win win situation here. wow. >> propaganda. >> propaganda. >> it's immediately come in michael mosley barely cold and
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somebody stepped in. but that is interesting i will say nuts are fantastic but it's so moorish. you have to lock them away. so many people can't eat them to various degrees. >> well, some people diets there's a peanut allergy that peanuts are not technically nut. >> they're a p i c they're nut peas. >> a lot of people can't eat nuts and beans. this thing is like you just eat loads of nuts and beans. it doesn't work for a lot of people. meat is still the king. >> oh yeah, me, it's fantastic. but you know, that is a reality. a lot of people now have have trouble with it. it's probably better they eat nuts than just kale. i think. i don't know, is that a medium ground? no. >> nuts is very masculine. yeah >> nuts is very masculine. yeah >> anyway, finally, the daily star. nick. yeah. the star of air we go for euros, which is a pun as you said, because it's in germany. >> i can't believe it's crept up on me. it's the 14th of june. it's kind of. i don't feel prepared. i don't feel ready. no, but i suppose we'll all get into it when it starts. and these sort of amusing irony that these sort of amusing irony that the star is noting is that even the star is noting is that even the germans want england to win, which might be putting it a bit
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strongly. but the point is, they love harry kane now because he's the star of bayern munich. >> are okay spanner in the works. and he does have the look to be fair as well. doesn't he. right. he could fit in. >> he could play for either. yeah yeah maybe you can take a few. maybe it could swap the penalties. that would be nice at the end. >> well you want to be very careful. of course that ended the career of more than one, talented and promising comedian. but the, the penalties and the euros. what the, we've had two good competitions in a row, haven't we? i don't really follow football. we've been in two finals or a semi—final and a final. we went out in the semi in the semis to the penalties and that was that was in the euros. and then finally the world cup. >> to my final. >> to my final. >> it's really hard for me to remember we were in the finals of the euros. that was it. >> yeah. and we lost the penalty. yeah. it's very hard for me to remember recent ones. if you ask me about italia 90, i'm like, yeah, yeah, yeah, totally. >> i'm reeling off stats, but then the closer they get, the more of a blur they become. all played out. did you ever read that great book about do you want to talk about what's happening in batman this week? well, that's taken us up to the break. sadly, that's
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front pages dealt with coming up with lib
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welcome back to headliners. i'm simon evans, still joined by josh howie and nick dixon. we kick off this section. josh, unusually for us, so early in the program with the funny pages, specifically the lib dem manifesto in the mail. >> here we go. us style cannabis shops, return of eu freedom of
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movement, free social care and a 9.4 billion tax raid on bankers and the super rich. ed davey launches lib dem election manifesto before heading off to ride a roller coaster which he's now famous for doing these ridiculous stunts. this is the first manifesto from a major party, and, they've picked out some sort of highlights there . some sort of highlights there. what they've left off that list is the recognition in law of, non—binary , which is a made up non—binary, which is a made up identity essentially , and as identity essentially, and as i said online earlier, but you might as well recognise these unicorns or whatnot. >> but that does feel like that's quite central to lib dem. >> well, i was going to give a little , a little, hot take here little, a little, hot take here in, in that and i believe i have some insight. last election, 2019, i was very heavily campaigning for the lib dems as a member because i was trying to get labour out in my area, the anti—semitism, i was all in on them hanging out a little bit, a little bit with lynne, lynne featherstone , who was the former featherstone, who was the former
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mp in that area, who had been the originator of the, same sex marriage bill. even under the coalition. and that was really their sort of pride and joy of their sort of pride and joy of the coalition. what the lib dems feel like they achieved . and she feel like they achieved. and she pushed that through. i think this is just a personal theory that she she's obviously very proud of, that kept on going on about it. i think that a lot of this stuff is her and the rest of the party thinking wrongly, that the taoiseach a+ is the next step in that thing when it's not. it's a totally separate thing. so i think that's why they've doubled down on it. it, you know , they're on it. it, you know, they're meant to be the sensible party and it makes them look incredibly stupid. >> what do you think about these other measures, nick. >> well, the big one and it says it's buried four pages from the end is that they want to go back into the eu single market. yeah, they've always been very pro rejoined. so they're going to alienate people with the policy. josh was just talking about. but they kind of voted. they're probably looking at it, maybe doesn't care. it's a sort of it's a sort of somebody who might vote labour who wants to rejoin the eu and they'll vote
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lib dem strategically in certain areas. but they've got various things in their hand. they've got something about the military that's not do you not think social care. >> it's quite interesting , i >> it's quite interesting, i mean i don't as a throw of the dice. i can understand why the lib dems would go. we're the only party that would look at rejoining the eu because there's probably, like a sizeable constituency for that. but it is quite funny. it's come out literally the day after the eu has lurched so far to the right or europe anyway. >> yeah, exactly. that is the amusing irony of it. >> but yeah, but the question is for me is like, what impact are they really going to have? first of all, they're going to be fighting blue wall seats. that's going to affect the tory vote. yeah. and also, is it the manifesto really is like can it nudge the other parties one way or the other. yeah. because obviously none of this stuff's really going to happen. >> i mean, ed davey is a personality. the major taint on him is the post office scandal, i suppose. but other than that, he doesn't strike me as quite as i thought. >> you going to say the women clearly having a penis? that's the other thing. >> no, i think actually like, he's no worse than starmer on. that's just, that's been that's just like a virus that's gone through 90% of humanity lately. even penny morden has a pretty
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incredible story. >> his dad was died when he was four. yeah. he you know, his mother, he seems like a more authentic, you know, conceivable than some of the ones they've had, you know, of late. >> that, strange woman. >> that, strange woman. >> the one thing i will say, it's impressive. he goes around and gets on all these roller coasters. that's the bit i really couldn't do to do the speech. >> you know, you've got to jump on a roller coaster and whitewater rafting. yeah, on a lilo. >> and, you know, anyway, it's going to escalate. >> yeah. the times. now, nick, we have two reasons why the gains of the hard right this weekend make europe an attractive holiday proposition this summer. oh, yeah. >> this is euro falls to a two year low against pound as eu reels from elections. so as you alluded to there all these elections in europe changes happening of course change and instability never great for markets. but there's a specific thing which is investors are concerned about le pen's interventionist economic policies. that's what it says here in the times. it is the times . but, here in the times. it is the times. but, so yeah, here in the times. it is the times . but, so yeah, they're times. but, so yeah, they're worried about what this will mean for the future of the euro. it's great that we're not in the euro, of course, so we can celebrate that once again. >> i've always find that. i
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mean, it's not unfamiliar, but eu reels from elections as if it's an exterior, as if it's an external force . it's as if it's external force. it's as if it's some something that has happened to it. it's a manifestation of people within the eu demonstrating they're dissatisfaction with existing. >> yeah. i mean , the sense, as >> yeah. i mean, the sense, as it says here, the central liberal and socialist parties still have the majority. yeah, within it. but it's just the potential for the future. and obviously people invest in markets. >> it's 1931. markets. >> it's1931. luckily markets. >> it's 1931. luckily we're not at 33 yet exactly. >> but it's also interesting how the times article says here gains made by the populist. right. yeah. it's interesting the times say the populist right, as opposed to the far right, as opposed to the far right, which would be in the guardian. >> yes. well, that is the thing, isn't it? is where you put the centre and then everyone frames it around that you're absolutely right. >> it's more, more silly when they're saying far right when it's running all of europe. i mean, yeah, is hitler back? it's people like meloni who really pretty moderate. she's actually betrayed people on the immigration thing. le pen, i don't think she's far right. and
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she's actually got that young guy as the front of the party. anyway. who else is there? there's a spanish guy we're going to get on to, but none of them are far right. >> i suppose what happens is, again, the famous phrase, yeah, yeah, well, there's the afd. >> some people say are far right, but but the famous thing about, you know, you campaign in poetry, you govern in prose and, and there is also, i think the far right has a particular tendency towards that, doesn't it, in terms of, you know, anti i mean trump arguably did that. >> you know, there was a lot of talk about walls and what have you, you know, and deportations very little. >> meloni did it and she talked about g.k. >> meloni did it and she talked about gk. chesterton and the family and stuff. and then she gets into just another politician. yeah over to spain now, in fact, josh with the telegraph , it sounds like they telegraph, it sounds like they found their javier milei or possibly their cicciolina . yes. possibly their cicciolina. yes. >> what nick was alluding to. yes. spanish spanish influencer with no manifesto. he wins 800,000 votes and an eu seat. actually, i think he's got three eu seats. yeah, yeah, he used to be part of the lib dems this is the first time lib dems have won something for a while. technically, whilst he was living in leeds. but yeah, he's a maverick influencer and they
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sort of compare him to trump because they say, he's, he's accusing spain of being run by criminals, the corrupt and paedophile rapists. so that's a bit trumpian, but actually, he seems a bit more farajii, in that he's also talking about, he refers to belgium as a failed state of islamists, imported prostitution from people smugglers and disgusting food. so he's not someone who's just going to hold back. he's doing the pros. yeah. and but the question is, of course, he's doing the poetry, but i don't know what prose he has, and he doesn't know what prose because he's just kind of he's got in now and he doesn't. i mean, farage didn't really have a manifesto when he got into the eu, did he? >> he was just a thorn in their side. he just stood up and accused them of being corrupt and time wasting and, you know. >> yeah, well, that's what's so interesting about it, is that people are still voting for these people in lieu of an actual manifesto. i mean, look, look at reform. now. they've done a press conference today. they're getting it together. but you know, these these people don't really have the infrastructure, the sophistication or even the policies . but people are so sick policies. but people are so sick of the progressive, liberal
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global elite. call it whatever you want. it's the excesses and just failures of it. they're so sick of it. when you literally call your party as this guy has the party is over. you're you're a youtuber or something like, and you're and you can win because the disgust is so great and so this is why we're heading for big change. all these changes in europe, they're not like you say, they're not the big change, but they're just hints. and they might be neutralised, but they're hints that it's the whole thing is falling apart. >> but it's a technological change as well. there's now the youtuberin change as well. there's now the youtuber in cyprus. he's got through and there's a one. is it the medium as much as the message here, i'd be worried that all the politicians just get on tiktok and keep their same policies because it says here, yeah, they must modernise and listen to the people. >> someone said, but listen to people is the key part. more than being on tiktok. >> but the problem is that tiktok is on youtube. they listen to algorithm. yeah >> and then that's well, we had that with trump. i mean, trump in 2016 was a twitter election. you know, that wouldn't have happened without twitter. >> what do you think of, the suggestion that macron has he's called this, election now. and some people are saying that, well, i think in fact, the consensus that he's doing so
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because he thinks, marine le pen's was it not called the front national anymore? is it is it called, something else anyway, something else for us. reform national rally. national rally? yeah, yeah. he thinks that once they're inside government , they'll be exposed government, they'll be exposed as having no manifesto, no policies, no plans, no no structure, no competence. but but they but as long as they're outside and able to just barrack, they will continue to gain in popularity. >> and he'll have two years still as leader. yes, exactly. presidential elections , which is presidential elections, which is probably a very sensible gamble, but that feels like this is the sort of thing that's happening on this front as well. >> these people will get into the eu now and then the people. >> but there's the other idea. people get to use the eu vote as a protest vote. and when it comes down to when it running their country, yeah, they tend to sort of coalesce together against those parties. >> that's true. and it's odd in that regard, isn't it? because traditionally in this country as well, we always use by elections and council elections and so on as a protest vote. and, the problem with the eu was it was perceived to be too powerful. it essentially neutered and castrated our government, our
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parliament. and yet at the same time to use that as a protest vote. >> well, it's i guess it's less immediate. yeah, well, here's a little twofer in the independent nick that even the most vaccine hesitant of old geezers must surely see as a bargain. yeah, this is a combined covid and flu vaccine. >> could be approved for use on nhs by next year. it's quite fascinating because you're you'll be sort of immune to a virus and a political phenomenon. they're just putting the two things together. so it's , new data from clinical trials held by covid vaccine creator moderna suggest combined jabs provoke a higher immune response than separate single jabs. so it doesn't say if you have to get multiple multiple boosters. i mean, to me, i skim it anyway because i'm not not taking these things anyway. >> no, never would i think anyone over a certain but my wife tried to get me to take the flu vaccine. purely anecdotal, but the one time i took it i felt ill afterwards and i'm statistically that is apparently very rare. or maybe even. but i don't like it. i don't think it's for people in their late 60s who might still be at risk. >> but the thing that frustrates me is this. this article in the independent here is they talk about like 1300 people are
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filled right now with suspected covid patients and they're going it's like with hospitalised with covid. it's like hospitalised from covid. can we please this is years ago now. can we stop playing these silly little word games and talk about who is actually there? because covid has brought them down as opposed to they just happen to have covid and they're 20 years down the stairs with covid. exactly >> somebody i was talking to somebody earlier this evening who's had whooping cough that's back. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> yeah i thought that was gone decades ago. and you're not supposed to get vaccinated against that at a birth or something aren't you. yeah. >> so yeah, it was on the headunes >> so yeah, it was on the headlines a few weeks ago. everything is back. >> they're all back. >> they're all back. >> it's on trend. >> it's on trend. >> the old man is back again. scott walker. josh, statistical survey from the runnymede trust in the guardian. let's hear it anyway . anyway. >> well. i mean , the stuff is >> well. i mean, the stuff is valid. it'sjust >> well. i mean, the stuff is valid. it's just what what you're going to take from it. please. more than six times more likely to strip search black
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children , and this is also in children, and this is also in the same study that shows that police forces in england and wales are ten times more likely to search black people now, ten times more likely to search them, and six times more likely to strip search, strip search. yes. yeah, which is a significant escalation . it has significant escalation. it has to be said. >> yeah. so, the question is here is then you've got the police kind of saying that they're trying to justify every time that they do it. and they're one of the policies that was looked at was that everything had to be put up to a senior officer of an inspector to do it, which sounds very sort of before you get the strip, you need a specific permission. yeah. and a strip could also just be like a sort of a not not necessarily a full body tap down. but this is all because of that, that 15 year old schoolgirl who was strip searched years ago, though, wasn't it? i don't think so. it wasn't it? i don't think so. it was like two, two years ago. maybe one years, 1 or 2 years ago. okay, and it was pretty shocking. brutal. horrible. >> yeah. i mean, the big the big
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room is, is how does this map onto the statistics of how often they find weapons? >> right. exactly. that's what's left out. unless i've missed it. that's what's left out of the article. yeah. so without that, it's the it's the per capita question. yeah. so the whole thing is meaningless. i mean, you know, of course it's unpleasant to be targeted with a search, but it's left out. yes. do they. there's caught someone here. chief executive of the runnymede trust says strip searching is a is a invasive, etc, and it's been racialized disproportionately. but we don't know from the article if it is disproportionate because we don't have the proportions in the same way that, for instance, if it were to emerge that ten times more, more young men are searched than young women , i searched than young women, i think very few people would say, well, that's outrageous. >> you should, you know. >> you should, you know. >> and the other thing is, it's intended to save black kids lives as well. >> yeah, including young black lives in particular. that was i mean, that was a very shocking statistic that emerged in the aftermath of the racial reckoning in america in 2020. the absolute spiking of black homicides. right. but black victims, you know . yeah, yeah. victims, you know. yeah, yeah. >> and we've seen it over here actually, there's been a decrease in stop and search and we've seen knife crime go up.
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>> yeah i think most parents certainly would probably take those odds would they. that you know what i mean. like the chance that your child might be stopped and searched but less likely to get stabbed? i don't know, though. luckily i've live in hove. that is it for part two. coming up, we have welsh mining, retroactive diversity initiatives and bieber overreach war reconsidered. see you in a couple of
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okay. welcome back to headliners telegraph. now, nick and dare i say it, this latest diversity initiative in the history of welsh mining really is the pits . welsh mining really is the pits. >> it is indeed it's wales tells its national coal museum to find historical injustices, to teach, find them , find me them. now find them, find me them. now there aren't any. find them. it's kind of ridiculous . batman, it's kind of ridiculous. batman, villain of wokeness. find them, so it's absurd. so this is the big pit national coal museum , big pit national coal museum, and they they want a decolonised view that recognises historical injustice. all the usual rubbish we're used to seeing now. and it wants them to tell the story through the lens of black, asian and minority ethnic people's experiences in wales. and it says fine material with links to ethnic minority history, even if it's not obvious. it literally says such connections may not be obvious. it's one quote. another quote is the new curriculum is not based solely on facts. so facts are out just find me anything about a black miner. if you in wales and the insane thing is, there's plenty of
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social injustice in mining. >> i mean, it was absolutely brutal along class lines, exploitation . yeah. i mean, it's exploitation. yeah. i mean, it's all there. it'sjust exploitation. yeah. i mean, it's all there. it's just the element of race that's missing. >> well, no, i mean, why didn't they bring, sort of blackface into it? >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> that works. >> that works. >> interrogating your whiteness. yeah. >> you've got to find it coming out of the pit covered in soot. >> i watched a thing, a couple of days ago. you know, it was the anniversary of, 1984. and being published. and so there was a documentary about orwell and before that, one of the things he did was go down the pits. i think it was in durham. he went down, or maybe it was on the road to wigan pier or one of those things. he spent a few hours and he his description of it is really extraordinarily vivid about just how unbelievably it was. >> yeah, it was incredibly grim. >> yeah, it was incredibly grim. >> yeah, it was incredibly grim. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> but this showed this is a part of a policy , part of the part of a policy, part of the labour devolved government there that have pushed through. it's like, yes if it's relevant. yeah. of course this is interesting stuff. yeah. but don't just force it into a well i mean there are you, you could even do if you wanted to
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conceivably create a museum of mining around the world. >> let's look at opencast silver mining in peru. let's look at you know, coal mining in pennsylvania, which very possibly used people of colour. i don't know, you know, but there's you could do that, right? you could create like a who were the different miners around the world? i remember richard burton talking about mining because his father was a coal miner in south wales. and apparently it's the same seam runs under the atlantic and re—emerges and is mined in, in in america. and there are american and welsh miners, you know, have a kind of like yeah, they have a kind of pick it up. yeah. >> what you just said then is far more interesting than anything that would be in there just immediately. >> they should just get richard burton's voice as i to do it. >> you're not going to you're not going to boycott the big pit museum. >> i already am, i already am. >> i already am, i already am. >> sounds like a good burger though. independent. now, josh, this headline was going so well until on his offer. yes >> so reform candidate says uk should have taken hitler up on his offer of neutrality instead
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of fighting nazis. and this is a candidate for yes for the reform party. this guy called ian gribben. yeah. who's standing in, and, yeah, there's it's not just that there's a bunch of other stuff, a bunch of, arguably quite misogynist stuff, but the what, what's not just shocking for me about apart from what he's said , is also the what he's said, is also the response of the reform party, which is to kind of try and pass it off as just kind of comments that had some truth to them. he was also dissing, churchill and, and it was and it's just like, look, we get it. there's a snap election, lots of parties and the greens included have, you know, have put forward some people who weren't given the proper due checks. so just own up, put your hand up and kind of and then you think he should be excluded for that. yeah i do yeah. >> everything he said there peter hitchens has said yeah. >> yeah. well perfectly. >> yeah. well perfectly. >> for instance, it's a perfectly it's a mainstream view that in the 30s it was also, as
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he says himself, the mainstream view in the british establishment, lord hastings. but he's not talking about in the 30s, literally seconds away from being churchill . from being churchill. >> that's, that's that was in the 30s before the rise of hitler . now, you know, it did hitler. now, you know, it did happen. and arguably it was one of the uk's greatest moments. >> or it was a catastrophe which which led to vastly more millions of deaths than stopping nazis. >> i don't think to the sensationalist context , as you sensationalist context, as you say, it's a normal historical view. yeah. just watch darkest houn view. yeah. just watch darkest hour, the establishment were all of that opinion. obviously, the prime minister was of that opinion until replaced by churchill. so it's not that controversial. it's back then. and the idea is that churchill will destroy the british empire and, you know, gave it over to america unnecessarily . it's not america unnecessarily. it's not that controversial. they're trying to make it. he's not saying the nazis were a good thing. >> we should have just let them run. right. it's a quite a different proposition. >> it is that and the other thing on women, it's a tongue in cheek as he says, article. i mean, he says men pay 80% of tax, women spend 80% of tax revenue on aggregate. as a group, you take from society. let's less complaining please.
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from the sponging gender is not that serious. it's a kind of a clarkson esque piece. >> he's clearly taking the mick. >> he's clearly taking the mick. >> he's clearly taking the mick. >> he's also talking about putin, saying he's shown the maturity. we can only dream of. >> yeah, but that was before the that was before the invasion. this is the thing. they take things out of context and out of time. it's a similar thing. i'm not saying exactly the same, but i remember and you can take a view as to whether or not it was unforgivable either way. but the most notorious of donald trump's, recorded overheard , you trump's, recorded overheard, you know, the in the hollywood thing where you can just grab them. yeah. >> billy bush weekend. >> billy bush weekend. >> that was from ten years before he stood . but my wife before he stood. but my wife right into the middle of his of his term in office, understood that to have been recent. yeah. well within within his election campaign, this is the thing i think you need to understand. this is not like he's not been on the campaign trail saying by activists, if elected, i will, you know, but i don't think that makes any difference. >> that certainly with the trump thing like that, it was ten years or i think it makes a huge amount of difference. >> he was working and he was working for the kind of guy he was. yeah, but so does everything we know about
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clinton. >> so it's the kind of guy, but a kind of activist to try and destroy people on this channel, these kind of people. so you have to take it with a large pinch of salt. and also lefty parties say worse things than this. often, often, sometimes they shout them upon election. if we think about the green party. so it's, you know, i just think, is it that. >> well, no, no, i'm saying that i just think there's hypocrisy here where they've calling out, we can't call out the green party and various things that their people call them out. no, you call them out and not call this out as well. >> no, they can call it out and then reform can go. well, i think it was a mainstream view. >> they have they have got rid of various candidates and they'll probably take it on a case by case basis. and they're weighing this one up seeing what happens. >> i don't understand this mainstream view. it was a mainstream view. it was a mainstream view. it was a mainstream view in the 30s. it's not a mainstream. no, no, no. >> there are plenty. some historians say it's not. that's the point isn't it? there's some historians say this. >> let me make it clear. it's not my view. i think it would have been wrong because the balance of power would have shifted. but it was it didn't prevent you know, the horrific i mean, we, you know, it was the bloodiest war in history by a long measure. all the millions of jews that died in the camps, none of that would have been, you know, none of that was
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prevented by britain. so he's not saying, you know, luckily, britain stepped in and consequently the germans, you know what i mean? so it's a more it's a more nuanced historical position than i think is being presented either in the newspaper or you're suggesting . newspaper or you're suggesting. i don't think he's like pro—nazi. no, i think he's saying that churchill is elevated to an unreasonable extent, you know, as somebody who got it right when all the british establishment did, calling churchill arguably the greatest britain abysmal. >> i don't know, it's not someone i want to vote for. no, no, i'm not suggesting you vote for them. >> i'm just saying i think it's i think it's i mean, if, say, the green party had put forward somebody who had said something similar about churchill, i think i think the right would be going, oh my god, look at this lefty calling churchill abysmal. >> and i'm just saying, let's not be hypocrites about it, that's all. >> no, no. well i agree, let's not be hypocrites , another plank not be hypocrites, another plank of the woke takeover falls in the i news. now nick has, thornaby f.c. no less revert to men only teams. >> yeah it's england star leeds outrage after thornaby f.c. scraps all women's teams. so it's thornaby f.c. there in
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stockton on tees. and they've basically looked at it and said we can't afford to have a women's team. so something's got to give to ensure the future of the club and that's what we're going to get rid of. and the argument against is, well, this is a successful women's team has been winning all these things and therefore you're evil. and you've based it on gender rather than purely sort of financial calculation. that's the claim against. but it's sort of known that women's football doesn't make much money at the club level, isn't it? but i don't know the all the ins and outs of this case. well, no, absolutely. >> it is interesting how quickly women's football has become economically viable at a certain level , but i suspect at a lower level, but i suspect at a lower level, but i suspect at a lower level, absolutely. a lot of clubs are struggling to survive at all. yeah. >> this is these are not professional football players, and they're talking about it as almost like a social thing or helping with mental health. that's all great. yeah. and, and but at the same time someone has to pay for it. yeah and it seems like the club is struggling anyway with its. well i guess you would argue it would be its prime remit of why it was first created, which was men's football. and it seems like they've had to drop something. now, if someone's going to step
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in and pay for the necessary staff to keep the female team brilliant. but if you have to make cuts, i guess it's on the other hand, some of their sponsors are now withdrawing sponsorship because they've dropped. >> yeah, but yeah , again, maybe >> yeah, but yeah, again, maybe that's why it's ended up in the papers. maybe they're hoping somebody will pick it up. that's part three. dispatch. part four alone remains microplastics get literally everywhere. and fat shaming ballerinas. we'll see you
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and welcome back to headliners. for what i believe is our final section. josh. worrying news now about microplastics and semen. although i suppose it would be even worse the other way round if there was semen in the microplastics. >> oh, i think this way around is pretty bad as well. >> it's bad, i don't know, maybe this is the worst way. yeah, yeah, we've covered this before. >> microplastics found in every human semen sample tested in study. this is 40 semen samples. to see how many times i can say semen samples . semen samples? semen samples. semen samples? >> sounds like it's actually a bad word . bad word. >> so i'd like to apologise for josh saying seaman's character in pugwash. >> captain pugwash. >> captain pugwash. >> seaman simon says able semen samples. eric. well, as it was, and but there's a few things interesting. first of all, they did it on healthy men undergoing a pre—marital health assessment in china . wow. so i didn't know in china. wow. so i didn't know they had a premarital health assessment in china . that's assessment in china. that's something that i don't know what they test. they test their semen , semen samples. and, the other
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thing is that is this the end of humanity , radiation? humanity, radiation? >> that's the second point, is it? >> that's the least we number one, i just thought the first one, i just thought the first one was quite interesting. but just in case that's. yeah and they're talking about the question in the first one is, is it optional or is it, is it become a society wide thing? yes. yeah, it sounds like it's not, optional. >> if you're a particularly possessive father, i don't want you marrying any young man who got plastic. >> plastic in your. yeah but it's leading possibly to sperm deformities. also to lack of viable sperm count. yeah. so. and it seems to be accumulative. so there are issues. i mean, like i said, is this going to be the end of humanity and where is it coming? >> it's not just coming from drinking like water. >> they say even breathing polystyrene packaging , it's just polystyrene packaging, it's just in everything. >> plastic bags, it's kind of ruined my pure blood thing as well if i'm full of microplastics. but you know what? i saw this meme. you know that spider man meme where they're both pointing at each other? yes, it was three. spider man's pointing each other, and it was like my father, full of lead, my grandfather full of
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asbestos, me full of microplastics . to every microplastics. to every generation you get full of some rubbish that ruins it. >> that is absolutely true. >> that is absolutely true. >> but our reproductive, abilities go down led mainly deleterious to iq, i think. >> what was the other one? >> what was the other one? >> i don't know, my grandfather was the other one. >> your grandfather? >> your grandfather? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> that's why the asbestos. yeah. that was your lungs, wasn't it? whereas microplastics. i don't, does it. it definitely interferes with sperm count. but does it lower testosterone as well as in terms of your general feeling of being masculine? yeah. yeah. >> no, it doesn't say anything, but i know people that, you know, on that kind of bro science stuff. >> people say don't handle receipts because that's one of the things it comes off right. receipts. you know, that kind of sticky paper. yeah. there's a kind of chemical on there that people think you shouldn't get onto your skin, that will get into you and low your testosterone playing with receipts. there's a guy called doctor yusuf smith. i think, who is a quite good. he's not actually like a gym bro. he actually like a gym bro. he actually provides he creates, onune actually provides he creates, online programs that allow gym bros to sell their services. so he's like a meta bro. but he did a thing. it was a very
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interesting where he tried to avoid all these, what do they call them? the endocrine disruptors . disruptors. >> yeah, exactly. >> yeah, exactly. >> he went for a fortnight. he was like, oh my god, there are so many. yeah. it was just like, you dig down and there's like a neurosis. >> i don't want to give myself. i've already got so many. >> thank goodness i've reproduced already, nick times now. yet another field, literally a field where being a psycho has certain advantages. >> yes, but like comedy, malevolent traits could be key to athletic success. experts say they looked at 300 athletes, including swimmers, triathletes, including swimmers, tri athletes, cyclists including swimmers, triathletes, cyclists and they found that a lot of them are high in dark triad traits, which you probably know is narcissism, psychopathy, machiavellianism. i've given the dark triad test to women on dates as a fun. you sell it, you find out so much it's quite fair. >> i ordered the cocktails. yeah just first date is the time. >> and i came out as lighter than average. josh will be surprised, but the nation won't be. but some of these women. very dark and they're high in anyway. and the point is, athletes can actually help them because these these characteristics are considered considered malevolent in social settings, might help them be a
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winner in athletics, and they're already more likely to think of themselves as superior. apparently so it just kind of very in—keeping. although there's a problem with the coach also has these traits , and then also has these traits, and then he doesn't get on well with the athlete. they both have them. yeah, it's a bit like how psychopaths can do well in business and stuff. as jon ronson proved in the psychopath test or suggested improved. >> well, i'm ultimately there was a great book, but ultimately he came to the conclusion it's a very murky territory, isn't it? really? it's a very almost. >> but if you if you've seen the michael jordan doc documentary, it's brilliant. it follows their season there. it's like their fifth season. >> he's not a psycho. right. well, no, he is he. >> yeah. he's got all his he's he's he's he's got exactly these characteristics. he's incredibly , driven and a bit manipulative and competitive. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and he like, manipulates other players and he also manipulates himself. yeah. it's really, really interesting . really, really interesting. >> but i guess if you're playing a team, he's ruthless on the football field. >> if you're playing a team sport at speed like basketball, you can see how understanding dynamics between people. what about talking about athletes? i mean , maybe that's just my head.
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mean, maybe that's just my head. so they mean team. because if you were a sprinter, would it matter? i mean, you've got to be dnven matter? i mean, you've got to be driven and focused and yeah, it's swimmers, triathletes and cyclists that is fairly solo isn't it? >> so it's interesting. >> so it's interesting. >> it says it suggests it aids people who are doing these more solo sports. >> yeah. right. >> yeah. right. >> but like i said , >> but like i said, ruthlessness, selfishness and manipulative behaviour, michael jordan was exhibiting a lot of it and seemed to sort of readily admit in some cases, this was part of the reason for his success. wow >> amazing. >> amazing. >> and also the incredibly profitable trainer deals as well, i expect. >> well, that was, i think, his mum that was a good film as well. sycamore gap the nike the nike movie is that called queen jordan or something? no it isn't, but they should have been the queen of jordan. >> yeah, sorry , male. now i'm >> yeah, sorry, male. now i'm trying. i've just got her picture in my head. lovely. isn't she, male now? josh? unbelievable now they are saying ballerinas can't be obese. this is just body shaming off the scale, isn't it? >> it's disgusting. ballet director carlos acosta, doubles
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down after pupils at top dance schools accused teachers of body shaming them over their weight, as he insists, dancers have to watch their shape and the reason they have to watch their shape, he says, is because poor, weak old men can't lift up big, fatty ballerinas. that's the gist of it, but it is quite interesting that they don't call it losing weight. they, they say lengthen out, they lengthen out. >> can't say. >> can't say. >> they can't say they're not allowed to say that. >> i might say lengthen. >> i might say lengthen. >> yeah. say, you know, if you've been thinking about lengthening out . lengthening out. >> oh well that's a great note to end on. the show is nearly oven to end on. the show is nearly over. let's take another quick look at tuesday's front pages . look at tuesday's front pages. we have the daily mail. britain's 12 year old machete murderers, the times stories offer lower taxes and help for first time buyers. the guardian tory right plans to give sunak set of demands if manifesto falls flat. the express up the workers pm promises £0.02 cut in national insurance. the metro read alert and finally, the daily star. here we go for the
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euros. those were your front pages and that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, josh howie and nick dixon. i'll be back tomorrow at 11 pm. with josh again and leo curse if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. otherwise thank you very much for your company. have a pleasant evening. good night. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers , sponsors of boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hi there and welcome to the latest update from the met office for gb news. still some showers around during the next 24 hours, but also a few clear spells and under starry skies. tonight temperatures will fall . tonight temperatures will fall. it's going to be a chilly one for june. we've got this northerly airflow and within those northerly winds we've still got some showers, especially for the north and the east coast, 1 or 2 inland elsewhere. but many of the inland showers will ease overnight, leading to plenty of
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clear spells, especially in the south and the west, where we've got clear spells temperatures dipping to 7 or 8 celsius generally , but a little lower generally, but a little lower than that in some sheltered spots , and as a result, the spots, and as a result, the potential for a grass frost first thing in 1 or 2 places. however, despite the early june chill in the air, it's going to be a bright start to the day on tuesday. plenty of sunshine for southern england, parts of wales as well. in between the showers . as well. in between the showers. showers also affecting parts of northern ireland, especially towards the west , but plenty of towards the west, but plenty of bright weather away from those showers and again thicker cloud further north. a few showers running into the north of scotland and the north sea coast of england. but during the morning, what we'll see is the cloud build more generally across the uk and showers will again develop fairly widely . you again develop fairly widely. you could get a shower just about could get a showerjust about anywhere, but the most likely areas for frequent showers will be northern, central and eastern england , where those showers england, where those showers will be heavy at times. it's
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going to feel cool here as well. 12 or 13 celsius on that north sea coast, but where we've got mostly dry weather towards the southwest 17 or 18 celsius not feeling too chilly into wednesday morning. again, a cool start to the day . plenty of start to the day. plenty of bright weather. first thing a few more showers develop across eastern england. elsewhere, it stays mostly dry as a ridge of high pressure builds in that leads to a settled end to the day on wednesday, but it's only ahead of the next batch of rain moving in for thursday and fri day. >> friday. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsor of weather on
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leading the news today, the
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prime minister returns to the campaign trail asking for forgiveness as he prepares to launch the conservative party manifesto , participated in manifesto, participated in events both in portsmouth and in france, and having fully participated in all the british events with british veterans, i returned home before the international leaders event. >> that was a mistake and i apologise for that. >> labour is pledging to tackle the crisis in children's health, promising 100,000 new dental appointments. we'll be speaking to shadow health minister wes streeting just after seven sir davey taking journalists on a ride as he launched the liberal democrats manifesto auto with a bang scandelous strictly as star dancer giovanni pernice is axed following growing allegations of threatening and abusive behaviour. >> more parents want their children to learn life skills such as cooking and economics . such as cooking and economics. are our schools actually doing anything to prepare children for
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the real world? after seven, we'll be

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