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tv   The Papers  BBC News  February 1, 2019 10:45pm-11:01pm GMT

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these the organised crime that gets these contracts for disposing of waste, it is safer for you to do it and the environment for many ways. at least the problems in many areas, in this country, we are very good at bureaucracy and things like that. if you have these gaps in the processes , you have these gaps in the processes, it is particularly exploited. it is a very provocative image, that mess and rubbish on the street. we think of the winter of discontent of 1979 under the dying days of the labour government, you had millions unemployed, and rubbish on the street, it was a sign of things going wrong. so if he had a no—deal brexit, this is not quite the same,... well this is taking us back. well maybe. let us turn to the mail. i saw this and i was rather confused because i remember starting the new year on a story from the bmj
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along with work of paediatrics of child health saying there is no need oi’ child health saying there is no need or proof that screen time was toxic. this headlight says something very different. the chief medical officer sally says that note that it not need to be a limit on this because it is causing problems for children. the headline is parents will officially told. to be going to get phone calls? saying that youngsters should be limited watching television, video games, and everything. i had a two—year—old and if you want your little girl to be quiet forjust a few minutes, you put on youtube. young that myself, you have to practise you preach.
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rather than concentrating two is a very interesting debate. there was an report that laid out the bear usage joking apart. there was a young father who said his daughter had died because of the watching these on instagram which they talk about here. it is a serious subject that needs to be grappled with, telling you to do that is something else, but i think as young parents, but we do kind of grappled with what is going on, we do not understand the plight of what children are looking at, and we need to worry about the screen time. these headlines are not new. these concerns about screen time, in fact officially we are being told to do it. we see the headlines, we have seen the stories. i wonder if
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pa rents seen the stories. i wonder if parents have got the energy to limit screen time because often you will have argument you just get wiped out doing the same thing over and over and over again. your children a little bit older they are around five. this is the problem. an ipad is kind of a good tool sometimes to look at while you are doing other stuff. i think they are at that age where i can still tell them a little bit what to do. i think with teenagers, this is where it gets more tricky. and you do not know what usage they are doing. and teenagers are using different language online. i think we need a dictionary to translate them sometimes. if we tried to the daily telegraph, no platforming could break the law. what are they referring to is that they are
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referring to is that they are referring to is that they are referring to universities by saying the official guidance is coming out. the government is saying that universities can break the law if they felt upon free speech all campuses. this is no platform story. they were saying that people are being deprived of gone to university campuses and on the basis that some of their views were not aligned with the transgender community, i remember when nick griffin had questioned client to speak. in support, that he was exposed. it seems to me that it always makes sense to debate rather than force them underground. the no flaky sense of the moment that people do not wa nt to of the moment that people do not want to engage with opposite views
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because they are afraid that they will be affected. back in the day, that said you have to be a university or a society, violently disagree, and then you go to a pub afterwards and have a drink. now, as you said, people feel so endangered by it that they feel like they cannot share a platform with people. yes, you are right, it is something thatis yes, you are right, it is something that is infringing on free speech. yes because the university is where he is most aligned to be opened to different societies, cultures, be able to talk about them and debate them. and it is rather confusing to think that this is going on and that they are not allowing it, and once you enter the real world, you cannot cope with other people's opinions. like brexit! it is this idea of snow
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fla ky. like brexit! it is this idea of snow flaky. | like brexit! it is this idea of snow flaky. i noticed that people seem to start from the position of the terribly offended. i think where social media has made that waste or the culture has made a shift, i know iam sounding the culture has made a shift, i know i am sounding beyond my time, the culture has made a shift, i know iam sounding beyond my time, i do not remember it being like this when i was younger. this change with social media, people boil down there opinions to these characters. social media, people boil down there opinions to these characterslj think opinions to these characters.” think social media has heightened the divisions. that is typical of a brexiteer to say it, they are actually addressing the point and have a backjust when a debate in times of thoughts and ideas and words rather than saying that your view is so horrible to me that i cannot share a platform with you.” had a conversation with my younger kid and she said that his boot. and
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isaid no kid and she said that his boot. and i said no that is an opinion, what do you think about it? is almost as if you are not a lot to be nasty or say something controversial. you note no platforms or children it should be good. lets i finally said the daily mirror. you have mixed feelings about this. this is the story of the campaign of the organ donor bill going through the final stages of the law, which seems to me that if you die you to opt out and not giving your organs. the natural thing is that it is not to save lives and you want to support it. my slight concern is that i feel like not the states old my body when i die. when i die, the state can say that we are going to take your organs and use them to help other people, which is fine, but i think
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this is a badge that i do not want to be particularly a part of. what happens next? i could be wrong, but i have a sense that this is a real fundamental change in the states relationship to us as a society. i am not sure if we have thought about the kind of philosophical applications. i got to the end of the mirror because i wanted to find out how to do it. i feel odd about it. i know that is not the right thing to date the next day. i would have to have a real think about it. imight have to have a real think about it. i might have to bite the mirror tomorrow. john and only thank you so much. i will see you later at 1130. do not forget that you can see all of the pages online. it's all there for you — seven days a week at bbc dot co uk forward slash papers —
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and if you miss the programme any evening you can watch it later on bbc iplayer thank you to my guests 0wen bennett and john crowley. we'll all be back for a slightly longer look at the papers at 11:30. but for the moment, goodbye. hello there. snowing into the week with disruptive snow across southern britain, which is slowly easing down to the course of friday night, takes us to the course of friday night, takes us into the weekend. it is looking quieter. a few showers across northern and eastern areas. plenty of dry weather with crisp winter at such hype thought that cold air travel south reaching the peninsula. this ridge of high pressure builds in to kill many of the show was off later on. we will start the weekend
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but the risk of ice. it could cause disruption early saturday morning at across southern england as well. the winter he showers continuing northern and eastern scotland. a much better day across the coast and towards wells with plenty of sunshine. much of the country will see winter sunshine, but it will be another cold one. a brisk bracing northerly winds. he could to see one 01’ northerly winds. he could to see one or two showers northerly winds. he could to see one 01’ two showers across northerly winds. he could to see one or two showers across the western coast of wales, a dry clear and cold night to start on that sunday morning with widespread frost, a risk of ice or two showers have been following. sudden change as we head into sunday, we have a small area of low pressure which will move up the atla ntic low pressure which will move up the atlantic and bring cloud and also rainsa atlantic and bring cloud and also rains a northern ireland, a little
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bit of wind—chill. it will reach the height ground of scotland, mainly in the hills. for the south, largely rain. in fact, the hills. for the south, largely rain. infact, centraland the hills. for the south, largely rain. in fact, central and eastern parts will stay dry and bright throughout the day. it is going to be another cold one. as he headed to my day, we will see significant area of low pressure moving through the atlantic. this will bring a spell of windy weather. gail's across the irish sea coast. about a pretty heavy rain that will move through, again with some snow with the high ground of scotland. it will be followed by blustery showers. temperatures will be up a degree or so. temperatures will be up a degree or so. the area of low pressure moves away, brief rates of high pressure with that next area of low pressure showing its head on tuesday. we will start chilli and bright under northeastern parts of tuesday, but it turns webster, claudia, across
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western areas, again some snow with a high ground of scotland. temperatures in belfast in central and southern parts of wales, where in double figures. a bit milder. wednesday, we still have atlantic influence with south—westerly winds. across central and eastern parts, we should see plenty of sunshine, but there will be some shower read burst of rain. to purchase and double fingers across the south, we are looking at values above the seasonal norm. throughout the week, it looks like the atlantic will be bringing us more like the atlantic will be bringing us more weather systems. south west systems, outbreaks of rain, let's call next week with even milder spells across england and wales. areas of the pressure will bring wet and windy weather. we should see a little bit of snow across the northern hills. this is bbc news. i'm lukwesa burak.
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the headlines at 11:00: heavy snow causes hundreds of schools to close across wales and southern england and more snow is on the way. millions of commuters face nightmare journeys — some places are hit with several inches of snow and drivers are told not to travel. it's very picturesque, i'm sure, but being here in the traffic stationary for nearly five hours now is not a huge amount of fun. dramatic footage has emerged of the dam collapse last week in brazil that left more than 300 people dead or missing. in a landmark verdict, the mother of a 3—year—old girl has
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