tv Bev Turner Today GB News November 21, 2022 10:00am-12:00pm GMT
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good morning. welcome is a monday morning. it is 10:00 in the morning this is at bev turner today on jb . we've got a turner today on jb. we've got a whole week ahead of us. somehow we've got to find reasons to be cheerful and maybe if you. that's the football england are playing 1:00 wales playing around at 1:00 wales play playing around at 1:00 wales play america at 7:00 this evening of course under evening of course all under a cloud controversy cloud of political controversy of rumours abound that we of which rumours abound that we are going to get back into bed with the through a so—called swiss style deal. i'm going to find exactly what that would
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mean and i'm launching my to challenge where we will answer the biggest questions of our time. today, i have a cummings takes on dr. michael is a vegetarian or meat diets healthier a battle of facts that you won't want to miss. papers with the panel of us all coming up after the very latest news news . a very good morning. it's news. a very good morning. it's minute past ten and racy bytes. keeping you up to date. the prime minister is going to address business leaders today amid a backdrop of tax rises and spending cuts in the country which is in is expected to focus on innovation . his speech at the on innovation. his speech at the confederation of british conference in birmingham , the conference in birmingham, the cbi, have asked the government end arguments over brexit and to use immigration to help grow the economy. well, if all those downing street's denials that government could pursue a swiss style with the eu in a bid to see off a potential clash with backing mps . the immigration backing mps. the immigration minister, robert jenrick , says
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minister, robert jenrick, says that couldn't be further from the. i don't know where that story from but it's completely untrue. we have no intention of pursuing that kind arrangement. their respective arguments either way. but we have a settled position now as a country and we reached an agreement the european union in 2019 and 2020. and we're moving forward that basis. of course, they're opportunities now to improve trading relationship as there are to improve our security and immigration relationship the european union. but we're not interested in reopening the fundament or position that we reached with the eu a few years ago . the the eu a few years ago. the shadow treasury minister tulip , shadow treasury minister tulip, siddiq, claims the brexit deal the government's was completely wrong for our country. what we really to do is sort out the northern ireland protocol, get a brexit that really works for our country. of course we need some flexibility from the eu . well. flexibility from the eu. well. those were the five points that keir starmer set out for our brexit deal and is not in
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accordance with what the tories are doing . in the last few are doing. in the last few minutes. england and. wales have announced they will not wear anti—discrimination armbands in their opening world cup matches. today it's after fifa threatened them with sporting sanctions . them with sporting sanctions. well, wales takes on united states in their first match tonight. it'll be the first time in 64 years that wales plays the world cup. english will take iran this afternoon, while england manager gareth southgate has confirmed his players will take the knee before their opening match . a 31 year old man opening match. a 31 year old man has been arrested on. suspicion of murder following the death. two young children in a fire in. nottingham. let's find out more. we go live to clifton now to speak to reporter hollis . speak to reporter will hollis. very good morning. well, what more you tell us .7 yes well, more you tell us.7 yes well, really upsetting for the people that live in this clifton community is still very much a large police here on fair isle . large police here on fair isle. this is, of course , is related this is, of course, is related to a flat fire , a two bedroom to a flat fire, a two bedroom
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flat fire here in cliffe . three flat fire here in cliffe. three people were taken to hospital , people were taken to hospital, including two children. sadly, the police announced yesterday that those two children, age one and three, did in hospital. there remains a in hospital in a critical condition . but the critical condition. but the latest that we've heard from the police, a 31 year old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder. and attempted murder. and while police are investigating, they're asking for respect so they can go through the process of this. but they are also for cctv and footage and what they're describing as, a tragic, tragic incident. well, this on for us there in clifton. thank you . there in clifton. thank you. now, a woman who left the uk join the so—called islamic state when she was, 15 years old will appeal the removal of her uk citizenship . today, shamima citizenship. today, shamima begum fled east london home for syria more than seven years ago. the supreme ruled she wasn't allowed to come the uk to fight her british citizenship case against , the home office after against, the home office after it was revoked when she was
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found in a syrian refugee . she's found in a syrian refugee. she's denied any involvement in terror activities . human rights. activities. human rights. hardeep by health says begum should be treated the same as a british citizen would be. the issue if she's a british citizen, which she has , she citizen, which she has, she holds a british passport or she did hold a british passport , a did hold a british passport, a british citizenship, and should she treated like other british citizens, or should she be sent to a country where she's not born and she hasn't lived in.7 i'm just because the basis her parents came from that manchester united footballer mason greenwood is in court today charged with attempted rape. the 21 year old is accused of assault , as well as of assault, as well as controlling and coercive . all controlling and coercive. all three charges relate to the same woman . he's three charges relate to the same woman. he's been on bail since january but was arrested last month for allegedly breaching conditions . three yellow weather conditions. three yellow weather warnings been issued for parts of the uk today with temperatures expected to drop as as minus four degrees celsius. the met office says ice will
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lead difficult travelling conditions in scotland . heavy conditions in scotland. heavy rain could cause flooding in northern ireland while strong winds will affect south—west england and south , causing england and south, causing disruption travel . the alerts disruption to travel. the alerts are in place until 6:00 today. you're up to date , gb news. i'll you're up to date, gb news. i'll bnng you're up to date, gb news. i'll bring you more as it happens. now back to beth . now back to beth. very good morning . welcome to very good morning. welcome to beth. tennis today on gb news radio, tv and online . it's radio, tv and online. it's winter but england and wales kick off their world cup this afternoon. the players wanted to wear one of armbands in support of gay rights, but they've now been told that they can't. they justify playing in a country that criminalises as an opportunity to make statements, didn't they? they are still going to take the knee before handin going to take the knee before hand in support of black lives
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matter and we've got a poll going to say whether you think that they should be wearing the armbands today. that they should be wearing the armbands today . also the armbands today. also the conservative mp miriam cates addressed the house of commons last week calling for more action to protect from online. it was very powerful statement. we're going to be debating the very important online safety bill. we need to protect our kids. but at what cost to free speech. and today, i'll be introducing my two chart challenge will be answering the biggest questions age biggest questions of our age with cold hard facts. today it's a vegetarian diet. actually healthier than a meat based one with two mega brains who will battle it out. and i would love if you could get involved with our twitter poll. as i mentioned at gb news. should footballers be allowed to play in the warm love armbands at the cup? or your thoughts? please give us at .
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your thoughts? please give us at. gb that i've been back on air since the autumn statement. otherwise known as the acts of national financial self—harm and conservative suicide on conservative party suicide on thursday and over the weekend and i watched incredulous as as news presenters on lesser channels shook their at the budget and offered their poor viewers tips on getting christmas bargain or staying warm hot water bottles instead of switching on the these are very same broadcasters cheered on lockdowns as the infection fatality rate for the under seventies hit 0.1% and the costs of furlough go topped £70 billion. the same journalists who celebrated when the government took everyone out for dinner to the tune of government took everyone out for dinner to the tune of £850 million making jokes about rishi the bogus saying i my thoughts about what can only be an absence of critical thinking. oh stupidity on the part of these the response was so overwhelmingly in agreement. many of you out there must feel it too. we've been taken for a
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ride several times around the block, and we've got no way of arguing about the price on the metre . the highest public debts metre. the highest public debts on record and the highest tax burden . the end of world war ii burden. the end of world war ii with rishi and hunt keen to wave their wallet on the global stage on are seemingly of no interest them small hard self—employed businesses pubs, shops, those who pay small dividends. oh they don't need saving. apparently this was a socialist budget designed to help who not may not you?i designed to help who not may not you? i can't tell who benefits , you? i can't tell who benefits, can you? yesterday 27 leaders agreed to pay back company stations to developing nations whose climates are apparently changed by. all pesky industrial progress . so yet another progress. so yet another scenario which several billions will be paid purely on the nofion will be paid purely on the notion that a disaster has been caused. we did it. the notion that a disaster has been caused. we did it . the science caused. we did it. the science is settled and cannot be questioned. we don't know the bill for that yet. but rishi will presumably get out his
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covid chequebook . you know, the covid chequebook. you know, the one with the name bottomless pit it and will hand over whatever poor country with dubious corrupt officials requests and will any of those broadcasters kowtowed to the politicians dunng kowtowed to the politicians during the scam have woken up yet . will any of them ask them yet. will any of them ask them bigger questions about what exactly is going on and why? because covid it makes no sense all this government parachuted in after the globalist coup of downing street, making us in order to build back better. and if so, can they let know even better ? come here and talk to me better? come here and talk to me . gb news view is no. the questions need answering and i will happily ask them of you. so rishi jezza, where am am . so rishi jezza, where am am. so the football world cup kicked off yesterday. the three lions kick off their world cup today,
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facing iran in the opening game at 1 pm. facing iran in the opening game at1 p.m. wales facing iran in the opening game at 1 pm. wales are facing iran in the opening game at1 p.m. wales are going facing iran in the opening game at 1 pm. wales are going to play at 1 pm. wales are going to play their first game this evening against america it's their first world cup game in 64 years. exciting times for football fans i presume. so let's go now to qatar where our reporter hawkins is waiting us. hi, paul. how you doing doing ? hi, paul. how you doing doing? yeah, hearts. i'll be honest . as yeah, hearts. i'll be honest. as you can see, quite sweaty . it's you can see, quite sweaty. it's approaching 30 degrees here. we're in the quake. it's the markets area in in doha. and look look at the atmosphere. it's fantastic and the breaking news, in case you haven't heard, is that the england and wales students will not those one love armbands so they won't face the threat of a yellow card . there threat of a yellow card. there are implications there because of course fifa effectively testing england and wales as to how strongly they hold on to those principles , but they those principles, but they clearly don't want to take the risk of yellow. that'd be really interesting to see. as soon as the media camp
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interesting to see. as soon as the media cari'm on iran at fi°fl *° q's “- ° '5 :�* ”www, j'i—qagainst 7777777777,” ”7777777777 �*1°“1 1° 15'5 °" °11 "51 11w'mmff zlz'against 175,57.” "w”fw’ fi°fl 11 11's “- ° '1 11~f~1~7~w l1evening,;t ”em?“ "w”fw’ 51na1111'1 11" 1“ "1“ 1�* '\1i1711!evening,10:00 7 51na1111'1 11" 1“ "1“ 11 '\1i1711!evening,10:00 here "7 later this evening, 10:00 here in dark and much we've from from england, cooler we've heard from england, wales fans this wales and iranian fans this morning. find out what not i'm not even going to bother telling where they're telling you where they're from, guys are 1 the guys are you worried about the welsh? no, we're not moving. hang on, gareth bale. no, no , hang on, gareth bale. no, no, we're good. we're good. want to win this two zero. all right, well tell us. tell us. for those who don't know and i don't know tennis about the american team, how good are they? or bad are they? be who they? and who should be who should be looking out a should we be looking out for? a lot european coming lot good european talent coming some in and czech of some arena in and czech of course . yeah. anyone name course. yeah. anyone name anyone? you got it . we're good. anyone? you got it. we're good. i'm to be honest, i'm more of a fake fan, but i'm here, too. i appreciate your honesty. at least in romania. appreciate your honesty. at least in romania . yeah. i'm here least in romania. yeah. i'm here to support our country. least in romania. yeah. i'm here to support our country . they all to support our country. they all get in there. yeah, yeah . are
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get in there. yeah, yeah. are you having a good time in? doha? yeah, it's a good time . it's yeah, it's a good time. it's a blast. pleasure be here. yeah. and as the accommodation means to be. okay. awesome. have you been bothered that you kind of dnnk been bothered that you kind of drink everything here all night? yeah not at all. okay. and your face in? wales there in iran . face in? wales there in iran. your face in wales then england and then iran . england's going and then iran. england's going to be a big game, isn't it? yeah have a definite huge game. yeah. yeah. and i don't know if you've heard but the news is just broken. is that the england wales players we're going to wear armbands in support of lgbt q plus rights and the fifa would have given them a yellow card for that they've now said they're not going to wear those armbands. just wondering armbands. i was just wondering what that what you think about that doesn't bother me. yeah. yeah they should those armbands they should wear those armbands or for it. yeah. yeah. or not to go for it. yeah. yeah. okay just give us a quick rendition then of a song other than us say us. us. is there another i believe than us say us. us. is there anotheri believe i believe we another i believe i believe we will win. i that we will win. i
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believe that we will win. i believe that we will win. i believe that we will win. i believe that will win. i believe that we win. okay, it's marginally better. this is more words in it. thanks, guys. thank for speaking to us. appreciate it. enjoy the tournament. there you go . i've been pushing some you go. i've been pushing some of fans on their songs, to of these fans on their songs, to be honest, and ecuador be honest, mexico and ecuador are fantastic passionate colourful but their songs involve simply repeating the word over and over again and ecuador over and over again. and i'll be honest, actually, i haven't have met many wales and england fans singing , but i england fans singing, but i think they'll be in full voice once. the match gets started, especially the especially the fans. there's something fans. paul there's something about trying about americans trying to talk about americans trying to talk about , which just about football, which i just find entertaining . you need find so entertaining. you need to them lesson on the to give them a lesson on the fact that we say zero. fact that we don't say two zero. they need say two nil. they've got a european i's themselves right into this. got a european i's themselves right into this . it's our game, right into this. it's our game, not theirs theirs . yeah, true, not theirs theirs. yeah, true, but soccer . i've just called it but soccer. i've just called it soccer and was saying i've just done it. maybe that's a subliminal thing. but yeah, football. they didn't actually call it soccer to be fair to
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them. yeah, maybe we should start talking about two nil, but it's there's and it's great. there's loads and loads across the loads of from all across the world. and it's not just the different people, it's the fact that of course, because it's happening islamic for the happening in an islamic for the first time, because it's happening the happening a country in the middle east for the first time, a arabs who are heads middle east for the first time, a the arabs who are heads middle east for the first time, a the qataris,abs who are heads middle east for the first time, a the qataris, who /ho are heads middle east for the first time, a the qataris, who they re heads middle east for the first time, a the qataris, who they simplys of the qataris, who they simply they're still trying to get used to spontaneous chanting spontaneous songs people wearing lots , colourful clothes with , lots, colourful clothes with, their masks and that kind of stuff . and i'm saying stuff. and i'm not saying they're watching in a bad way. they just are curious because this kind of thing doesn't normally yeah, normally happen. yeah, it doesn't happen this doesn't normally happen in this part world. so it's part of the world. so it's really to watch. really interesting to watch. it's a really atmosphere. and the other interesting thing to know there's obviously know is that there's obviously been a of about the been a lot of talk about the fact there's no alcohol it's like social experiment like a social experiment because football synonymous , football culture is synonymous, alcohol. taking alcohol alcohol. and so taking alcohol out of it is making for a really different kind dynamic is at the football have come over the engush football have come over the english and the welsh fans talked to today have said it's
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very to a normal england or wales so there is less aggro , wales so there is less aggro, less tension, less anxiety and people are more relaxed . paul, people are more relaxed. paul, let me just can you just then like where the where not the players, but where the fans can and can't drink because ? they and can't drink because? they changed the rules, didn't they , changed the rules, didn't they, on the eve of the occasion as to you could drink alcohol and where couldn't . yeah. so at the where couldn't. yeah. so at the moment can only drink in designated fanzone in certain hotel bars and that's pretty much those . pretty much the only much those. pretty much the only places that you can go. so most fans we were speaking to earlier paid about 80 quid for five pints in a carry, a special organised fan event. but as you say, fifa changed the rules two days before the tournament and said you couldn't drink inside the stadiums. the truth is it was actually they were only going serve alcohol within going to serve alcohol within the the stadium and the perimeter of the stadium and not stadium itself. so there not the stadium itself. so there was little of misreporting was a little bit of misreporting over issue and you wouldn't over that issue and you wouldn't have able take the beer have been able take the beer right the stadium 15 right into the stadium 15 minutes the match. anyway
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minutes before the match. anyway i haven't spoken to one fan who said really just all we said it's really just all we can't have drink , that kind of can't have a drink, that kind of thing actually thing can actually the atmosphere better. atmosphere a little bit better. and honest that's what we and to be honest that's what we were expecting when came out here that we wouldn't be able to get yeah, it's just get out. yeah, it's just alcohol. so yeah. so they're not there's no decent real disappointment, i'm honest. and if anything, it's just making for really interesting, for a really interesting, different dynamic where football is related to alcohol. is normally related to alcohol. yeah paul there've been some people saying how women there are in the at the games yesterday that's something that you've noticed a while i mean we've only had one game so far so it's a little bit difficult to judge if i'm honest, we'd have to get more games involved, move us out of the way. as this man in his buggy past, these are our bags. but yeah, we've only had one game, difficult had one game, so it's difficult to be. i have to say. to judge to be. i have to say. well, it seems to be maybe slightly more men than women in the streets and on corniche the streets and on the corniche which water from area and which is the water from area and in it's not it's
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in the zones. but it's not it's nothing noticeable. and, you know, we'll be able to judge better when we see more gas. and i mean like the opening ceremonies, of course, because we have the opening ceremony with a packed stadium and then the itself, there's a few the game itself, there's a few people quite, quite people saying quite, quite noticeable. the local women noticeable. will the local women be allowed to go watch the matches? paul let me say this. this is a cultural education for all of us, isn't it? yeah yeah, yeah. they can go watch the matches as i'm sure they're perfectly entitled to buy tickets as . well so yeah. they tickets as. well so yeah. they can go the matches as well and as say it's about there was little bit of tension about the host culture at that thing too. this influx of people from the world and saw that for example, when we talk about the media, the freedom to report you saw that danish crew, they went viral they were kind of slightly harassed by the qatari. but to be the qatari be fair to the qatari authorities did apologise for that. crew, the that. that danish crew, the relevant permits and accreditation now i haven't
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heard incidents of anyone not having the freedom to report. we certainly haven't experience any sort of harassment. and so there was that initial period where. the host culture has to adapt, visit has to adapt to the visitors that come into their that noise can hear is the tunisia fans you're out guys. yeah yeah . you're from tunisia. yeah yeah. you're from tunisia. yes, of course . who are you yes, of course. who are you playing in your first match tomorrow ? yeah. who? denmark. tomorrow? yeah. who? denmark. denmark just came so easy, so easy that a lot of what you're talking, you're for football. tunisia it is. you oh, my . to be tunisia it is. you oh, my. to be on tv. oh oh, tunisia. and then . oh my explains why radio . . oh my explains why radio. listeners, what we're seeing here is tunisian fans hitting a massive being, very excited even in the absence of much alcohol. it does bring some strange characteristics in people football, doesn't it, paul yeah, it yeah, it does. you don't
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honestly . alcohol what? i will honestly. alcohol what? i will say is for those of us that are used to having, it's not me, but for those us that are used to having thinking ten points, then watching their team for the first they'll be to first time, they'll be able to watch them sober and really get to see their performance. some may quite disappointed may be quite disappointed watching out team plays watching out their team plays now that they haven't got alcohol to kind of crossing over for from for them. so just just from people are just tuning we've people are just tuning in. we've got around the got this controversy around the armbands the players announced they wanted to play in these one love armbands in a lot of them justified going to play in qatar because they were going to use it as an opportunity to make a political is how they got around the judgement actually from outside . now they've been told outside. now they've been told paul outside. now they've been told paul, that won't be allowed to nine countries including england's harry kane, gareth bale of wales have had planned to wear them to promote and inclusion a joint from seven football association said they could not put their players in a position where they could face
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sporting sanctions we're very frustrated by the fifa decision statement read this is hot off the press which we believe is unprecedented. now, this is because if they played them, the sanction would if sorry if they played wearing bans the played wearing the bans the sanction have been yellow card sanction have been a yellow card i right at the beginning and if you get so many yellow cards you then basically can't play in certain match is that i've not got that right they couldn't risk getting more yellow cards. they're not being able to maybe play they're not being able to maybe play in a final. that's absolutely correct so initially it was just going to be a fine which they beat of course quite easily then became a yellow card. pick up yellow card. if pick up two yellow cards, you're then banned the next game. so if harry kane had ahead and worn this armband later, have got later, you would have got a yellow card. then he would have had would have worn the had then he would have worn the armband the next game and he armband in the next game and he would yellow card in would have got a yellow card in that game and then he would have missed third game, which is missed the third game, which is the was we the england, wales it was we were to some welsh were talking to some welsh supporters earlier and they said, said absolutely said, they said we absolutely support an support increases if it's an lgbtq we think style
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lgbtq rights and we think style to the armband then said to wear the armband then said yeah but if he gets a yellow card that in the first card in that game in the first game against usa later a game against usa later gets a yellow card in the next game that england game that misses the england game should armband. should he wear the armband. yeah. shouldn't it's not yeah. no he shouldn't it's not worth taking risk. clearly worth taking that risk. clearly for. this is for. it's but clearly this is this those that that group of this is those that that group of european are at loggerheads european are now at loggerheads with and can now with fifa and they can now question fifa's question fifa. fifa's inclusivity even talks inclusivity even if it talks about being against racism , all about being against racism, all for , lgbtq rights. for inclusivity, lgbtq rights. the countries can now legitimately turn around and say, well, all you because now you're saying if we were an armband, we get a yellow card for it. so you know, it's going to be fascinating. see what the players when. they're put in players say when. they're put in front the after front of the media after the game. could be the game. it could well be the question that's asked straight after england iran match later. yeah course this is yeah and of course this is before even the fact paul before we've even the fact paul that england playing iran a country which effectively been supporting gender apartheid for a few decades now currently the most extraordinary political .
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most extraordinary political. rumours that there are 15,000 protests. those who are fighting for women's rights in prison in iran and also several that have murdered have lost their lives . murdered have lost their lives. there's a big question as to whether we should even be iran in the first place. isn't it ? in the first place. isn't it? have you heard about this suggestion , that when british or suggestion, that when british or iranian players get a goal that they celebrate by miming, holding up the hair and cutting the hair, which has been the statement of iranian women. do you think something that we're likely to see possibly? i'd be surprised i it if we see it from the british players i haven't heard that that's what they're going to do . but that is going to do. but that is something that the iranian players been doing behind closed doors. domestic . so back doors. iranian domestic. so back in iran, they've playing behind closed doors because the government is worried about crowd is that that congregation of people anti—government protests so the matches have been played behind closed the players haven't been celebrating the gold instead they've been
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pointing to the sky or, as you say, mimicking cutting their hair . i think say, mimicking cutting their hair. i think you could well see the iranian players celebrating a goal in that if they score. i don't know about the british players, it is fascinating . players, but it is fascinating. the issues and political the social issues and political subplots to this , given you've subplots to this, given you've got one side who wanted to wear armbands supporting lgbtq+ people and then you've got the other side who are who are fine . we think going demonstrate in certain ways about women's rights in their countries. it's almost like the football is taking a little bit of a backseat to you know what's a bit sad paul as well just think what is quite disheartening is that traditionally sport has been a way to bring people together particularly football you know we often put aside our differences and boy, do we need to put aside our differences in the world at the moment. we put aside our differences and sport meant to be a catalyst for bringing together in celebration of something really quite pure . of something really quite pure. and as much as i feel these are important issues in and of
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themselves, the more we talk it, themselves, the more we talk it, the more i'm wondering it be interesting for you whether you hear this from the fans as whether it should become a completely apolitical environment again . yeah, some environment again. yeah, some some fans do think it's but i see what the younger fans we're talking to earlier they were really unhappy fifa for putting the england players in that position in that position by sanctioning them with yellow cards instead of a fine so there's certainly there's never been massive amount of love for fifa so be interesting to see how how the support for football's world governing body what it's like after this but yeah football absolutely an inclusive sport if you know if you're not bothered about being a football fan brings people together there were here that don't speak anyone else's languages and they just shout players at each other players names at each other come against rooney beckham against england rooney beckham but that's that's and last night there was we're in the workforce at the moment it's quite busy but the evenings this is pikes
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people are just kicking footballs around doing up with with play with other people from other nations. don't speak other nations. you don't speak language. you probably can't even to them, even three words to them, but you kick a ball around you can kick a ball around together it brings people together and it brings people together. have together. yeah, well, do we have any the temperature is any idea what the temperature is going the time going to be like by the time england to take the pitch this afternoon, 4:00 your time, 1:00 our time. i can see you. you've got a bit of a dab on already there. pull you wiping your top lip. what's it going to be like by 4:00? cooler yeah, i know . i by 4:00? cooler yeah, i know. i must apologise for my, my perspiration, but basically you're very quiet little res . you're very quiet little res. it's kind . it's going to be it's kind. it's going to be about 30 degrees. it's there now. it's going to be very, very hot. when england play iran later, you would have thought the iranian players would probably be more acclimatised, although in all those players to play although in all those players to play in europe they could be equally tough for it's not equally tough for them. it's not going fast paced, it's going to be a fast paced, it's going to be a fast paced, it's going quite and the going to be quite slow and the by time wales play, which is by the time wales play, which is at 10:00 local time, will at 10:00 local time, it will be at 10:00 local time, it will be a little cooler, low a little bit cooler, low twenties, 25 degrees, much more
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for the bucks. it's going to be a game for the a really tough game for the england given heat that england later given heat that they'll be playing in, although as we've been hearing the stadiums are meant to be extended. so it's really going to put that air conditioning to the you mean, the test. what do you mean, say used be conditioning. oh, used to be air conditioning. oh, they covered no , they're not they covered no, they're not covered. no, they're just they're pumping cold air. they're kind of enclosed but there is still a gap at the top and.then there is still a gap at the top and. then there's cold air pumped into the stadium to try and the ground temperature and keep the ground temperature and keep the ground temperature a cooler. but yeah, a little bit cooler. but yeah, it would have been in actually when played ecuador last night, but a night time game so but it a night time game so probably made much of probably they made that much of a at irony a difference at the irony because i know that they built didn't they. they built the brand new stadiums. this is the most expensive cup in history. am right in thinking am i right in thinking they didn't any stadium , didn't really have any stadium, built scratch built them all from scratch about seven stadia that they about? seven stadia that they built from scratch . yeah eight built from scratch. yeah eight stadiums in total. some of them were already there. it's slight misreporting that it's one of
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the most expensive world cups in history because . if you include history because. if you include the infrastructure development building roads , airport building roads, airport terminals , the metro system, terminals, the metro system, brand new runs through doha. thenit brand new runs through doha. then it become one of the most expensive hook ups in history. the qataris have always been keen to that they were going to build that infrastructure and that having the world cup just means spend a little means had to spend a little bit more. so the spend so some disagreement outlay disagreement over, the outlay and define the outlay. and how you define the outlay. but certainly a lot of money has been spent trying make been spent in trying to make this cup logistically this world cup logistically possible, about the possible, given it's about the size qatar, it's about size of qatar, it's about size of anglia. there's an of east anglia. and there's an extra million people on of extra 1 million people on top of 2.8 million in this 2.8 million people in this country. and also, it's one of the shortest cups . it the shortest world cups. it hasn't world this hasn't been a world cup this short 1978. so packing all short since 1978. so packing all those games and all those fans , those games and all those fans, the media that's reporting as well as people who live there making sure qatar can still function over short period. function over that short period. it's logistical challenge. it's a logistical challenge. yeah, it really is. well paul hawkins, there is nobody who has safer hands to talk the job news
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but was in a sense through the whole thing over the next few weeks. thank you so much going get some shade go and get a cool cold drink paul hoc is that out in doha right after break. we're going be through some going to be going through some of stories of the of the biggest stories of the day my fantastic panel. day with my fantastic panel. also waiting on rishi sunak. he's going a at the he's going to give a talk at the cbi moment now. cbi conference. any moment now. see you .
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i'm rosie, right? keeping you up to date on giving news. now, the prime minister is going to address business leaders very shortly amid a backdrop of tax rises and spending cuts in the country. we should say that it's expected to focus on innovation. in his speech the confetti of in his speech at the confetti of
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british conference in british industry conference in birmingham. the cbi have called on the government to end argument over brexit and to use immigration in to help grow the economy. it comes, of course, just days after the chancellor, jeremy hunt, unveiled just days after the chancellor, jeremy hunt, unveile d £25 jeremy hunt, unveiled £25 billion of tax rises in his autumn statement as the prime minister starts speaking, we'll bnng minister starts speaking, we'll bring to you here. england bring it to you here. england and wales will not where the one love anti discrimination armbands in the opening world cup matches today after fifa threatened them with sporting sanctions . wales will play the sanctions. wales will play the united states in their first match tonight and be the first time that wales have played in 64 years. england will take on iran this afternoon. their manager , gareth southgate, has manager, gareth southgate, has confirmed his players will take the knee before their opening match . manchester united match. manchester united footballer mason greenwood has been bailed after appearing in court charged with attempted rape. the 21 year old is accused of assault as well as controlling and coercive behaviour. all three charges relate to the same woman . a
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relate to the same woman. a heanng relate to the same woman. a hearing will take place in february next year with a trial date set for later in the year. a 31 year old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder following the death of two young children in a fire in nottingham. fire and rescue were called to a flat in ferrol , called to a flat in ferrol, close to clifton in the early hours of yesterday morning. the children, aged one and three, were treated at the scene for smoke inhalation, but later died in hospital. a woman in her thirties remains in a critical condition. you are up to date on your tv online and dab+ radio. now let's head back to beth . now let's head back to beth. good morning. it's1033. now let's head back to beth. good morning. it's 1033. this is good morning. it's1033. this is bev turner today on gb news. now, let me introduce you to my panel this morning. i am very pleased to be joined by the man who should be on every single show gb news. in my opinion
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show in gb news. in my opinion liam halligan, our business and economics got economics editor. we have got joe wood well. joe wood here as well. television personality, businesswoman, freedom fighter. i would also add to that joe, after the last two years and also i am very happy to say leyla ruas is here, the original football is. why you hate football is. why do you hate that, leyla? no, i love active duty. is absolutely fine. duty. it is absolutely fine. yeah. i love being the yeah. no, i love being the original footballers wives. just to , she wasn't married to be clear, she wasn't married to be clear, she wasn't married to a footballer, she did to a footballer, but she did play to a footballer, but she did play . no, no. to a footballer, but she did play. no, no. amber to a footballer, but she did play . no, no. amber amber. play. no, no. amber amber. sorry. chardonnay number would have loved football as wives is appointment viewing in my in my house so we've got you'll kick in a softly a martini with the first light we did the story of the cake is all i'm sorry that was not deliver . the cake is all i'm sorry that was not deliver. i'd like to say i've got that much creative input. i don't. well cup football. do you like football? i love football. yeah i played a lot of football in my life. quite a fan . it's a strange quite a fan. it's a strange world cup isn't. not so. paul hawkins did really well. yeah the reporting from from from doha it's obviously very very
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hot we're playing all the engush hot we're playing all the english are playing iran at 1 english are playing iran at1 p.m. english are playing iran at1 pm. today wales are playing the us of course. yeah 7 pm. i suppose to focus on wales for a little bit because of course we tend to focus on england more just because it's a bigger nation. the last time wales played in the world cup was in 1958 and they got to the quarter finals. they did really well and they lost to the eventual winners, brazil, but they only lost one nil. and guess who scored the goal? no idea. pele we is when pele really we know pele is when pele really burst onto the scene in 1958 against the welsh naturally compliments of the welsh team. afterwards, on how well they did and of course, yeah, england will be the focus of most of the broadcast media over the next few weeks in the world cup. but i'm not welsh actually. i'm from an irish background. as you know, the public of ireland on their northern ireland, on their their northern ireland, on their the scots aren't there . when the scots aren't there. when i was growing up, it always was growing up, it was always the of the world cup in the scots of the world cup in 1974 and 19. some say i wouldn't
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ask if you remember that course. chivalrous it, but it's a shame that all the home nations aren't there. and indeed the republic of ireland aren't there. but at least the welsh are there alongside the english. and i hope do really well. we've hope they do really well. we've got all this controversy, obviously bubbling around, all of football. of this football. we've got a twitter poll running, actually asking input whether asking for your input on whether you be you think the players should be wearing love armbands. wearing these one love armbands. they've told that they they've just been told that they can't, but should they do? a lot of justified going of people justified going right. the footballers said, we know. we know it's bit morally we know it's a bit morally dubious, we're going go dubious, but we're going to go anyway to anyway because we're going to make statement and they make a statement and now they can't statement . does can't make that statement. does it put them in an impossible position, you what position, do you think? what would you do if you would what would you do if you were them? well, i think when in rome do as the romans do, and i think they should go by the rules of the country . i mean, rules of the country. i mean, fifa must have paid such a lot money to be paid from qatar. such a lot of money. so i think they just have to , you know, go they just have to, you know, go by the rules . but of course, the
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by the rules. but of course, the rules there are that it's illegal to be gay . and now the illegal to be gay. and now the players are saying we want to make a statement about the fact that we support homosexual rights. and they've said no , you rights. and they've said no, you can't do it on these two, unlike to kneel, but they're still going to kneel for black lives matter . yeah. layla, what do you matter. yeah. layla, what do you think? look, i think if it's if it was in support of lgbtq, then go ahead and wear it and take the fine. if it's a protest against the human rights laws in qatar, then what are you doing there in the first place? boycott. you know , boycott the boycott. you know, boycott the world cup . that's the way i see world cup. that's the way i see it, because , you know, you know, it, because, you know, you know, the only way i can justify us being there is that we're not there with a, you know, not in spite of it, but because of the rights. so we're going to sort of put a spotlight on these human rights, but then we played in russia in 2018, which i almost you know, it's just we've
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had to do olympics. we had beijing 2008 summer olympics. we had the olympics, the winter olympics in china this year as well . do you olympics in china this year as well. do you think we should just make sport apolitical ? just make sport apolitical? like, i think a lot of us miss those tackling a lot of sports fans are going to look at this and with the with the best will in the world. and of course, every everybody wants people's rights but of rights upheld. but a lot of sports fans are going to be thinking, crikey, wish the thinking, crikey, i wish the middle all season middle class chatter all season was football alone. was just leave football alone. it's about sport. sport it's about the sport. and sport bnngs it's about the sport. and sport brings whatever brings people together. whatever the politics, it's not just a case of a fine. if harry kane was this armband, he's going to get yellow card every time he wears it, which means he'll actually, even if he gets no other yellow cards, because they'll accumulate two yellow cards games against iran cards in the games against iran today. cards in the games against iran today . and the americans on today. and the americans on friday. then they'll miss the england wales game. i mean, you're actually messing with the sporting outcome. yeah and you know, obviously i wish qatar was
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different as i've travelled in the middle east a lot . but we the middle east a lot. but we got to put this in context . the middle east a lot. but we got to put this in context. i'm going to be absolutely slated for saying this, but it's just a fact a lot of the rest of the world will be looking on in the west thinking this is really west and thinking this is really hypocritical west. hypocritical of the west. and, you know, let's just point out where we were when england won the cup 1966. the world cup in 1966. homosexuality illegal in the homosexuality was illegal in the uk. course uk. yeah of course that's changed. course it's for the changed. of course it's for the better it's changed . you better that it's changed. you know i think very , very few know i think very, very few people in the uk would say they don't want that though. some would. yes but the vast majority of people wouldn't . and i think of people wouldn't. and i think a lot of the rest of the world will look on this as a western moralising , which is to take moralising, which is to take nothing away from, you know, the cause that it's espousing. i do have to , you know, just finally, have to, you know, just finally, i'd say for a lot of players who are slightly iffy about going to qatar, i think the rules about the armbands so quell their conscience so little. yeah. so i think there's a lot of hypocrisy here on both sides. it does seem
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to have been resolved. harry kane won't be wearing the one love armband. i think the england team will be wearing this sort of, you know, collective armbands that have been approved by the eu. and can we get on with football we just get on with the football player? yeah i know. i i know. layla. right. something again may seem trivial . twitter may seem trivial. twitter actually has a big impact in terms of communicating messages around the world. elon musk is now in charge. what's happened ? now in charge. what's happened? well, 99% of the racist tweets have come up in the last day or so , have not been taken down . so, have not been taken down. and we can sit here and blame musk for it. but to be honest, as a brown muslim female , i've as a brown muslim female, i've had racist islamophobic tweets headed at me since, you know what, ten years i think i've been on twitter. so i've had it back then . i think kamala harris back then. i think kamala harris was like personally threatened and had racist tweets and very little done about it. i mean, you either, again, boycott and be quiet and just don't get involved or, you know, i just
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feel that there's not a lot of energy. people don't care enough about these racist tweets. it's not. and it shouldn't be this community where you can hide behind technology an abuse behind technology and an abuse people. but you deal with people. but how you deal with it, how do you sort of you know, i don't know. i don't know. well, he obviously elon musk went and asked twitter whether donald trump should be allowed to have his accounts back . and to have his accounts back. and there we go. so he said, should we reinstate former president trump? and 51.8% of people said yes . no was 48.2. but that had yes. no was 48.2. but that had over 15 million votes. now, sadiq khan came out, joe, and said, this is disgusting. there's no way to trump should be on twitter with that sort of mouth piece. what do you think ? mouth piece. what do you think? should he be there or not? yeah i think he should be there. i think we have a choice whether you want to be . no, look at it. you want to be. no, look at it. and react to it . and i used to
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and react to it. and i used to quite enjoy trump's crazy tweet . yeah, i used to think they were hysterical . they had some were hysterical. they had some nerve . just i were hysterical. they had some nerve .just i mean, i found it nerve. just i mean, i found it entertaining. yeah. and i suppose that's . but, you know, suppose that's. but, you know, it does harm people . some people it does harm people. some people get really badly affected by what they read about themselves on twitter. yeah. and you know, as you said, they hide behind an anybody who's way for anybody's in the public eye on twitter, you have to have quite a thick skin. liam me anyway, don't you tweet and engage in that. but is it a triumph for free speech with trump being back? i think it is interesting that the twitter poll was 50 to 48. pretty controversial . yes, pretty controversial. yes, voting split because we've got just from a uk perspective, look, whatever you think about trump, the bloke was elected to be president of the united states. he still has an enormous mass voter base across the uk . mass voter base across the uk. yes, he's not to the you know, the kind of chattering classes types. some of them think he a lot of his tweets are are a bit
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near the bone . they're they're near the bone. they're they're not. and they are . but he was not. and they are. but he was elected and it's weird to throw him off a platform just because the kind of overwhelmingly democrat supporting big tech thansisin democrat supporting big tech titans is in there, flip flops and there's t shirts with a complex attached dodging schemes don't actually like the guy. of course he should be on on twitter. i'm slightly more reticent about kayne west being back on twitter. the us rapper style, because some of his tweets have been serious, going a bit crazy and systematic, very anti—semitic . and so he's anti—semitic. and so he's returned to twitter with the hebrew word shalom , which many hebrew word shalom, which many jewish people will find completely provocative and even incendiary for him to use that word . i think a lot a lot of word. i think a lot a lot of people just use very, very controversial tweets and possibly trump to a degree as well, just because they know broadcasters like us will talk about them. and it gets them in the eye. going to the public eye. i'm going to interrupt for now, guys, interrupt this for now, guys, but not anywhere but you're not going anywhere this we're to this morning. we're going to cross to the
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cross live now to the confederation british confederation of british industry in industry annual conference in birmingham, minister industry annual conference in birmisunak , minister industry annual conference in birmisunak , speaking minister industry annual conference in birmisunak, speaking, minister industry annual conference in birmisunak , speaking, is1inister rishi sunak is speaking, is a valued institution in this country a powerful voice for country and a powerful voice for business . sorry, guys, we're business. sorry, guys, we're wasting time. and let me thank all of you because i know things are tough right now . you rightly are tough right now. you rightly want to know what you can expect from me . you saw what mattered from me. you saw what mattered to me as chancellor with policies like furlough acting, with empathy in the national interest . above all, being bold interest. above all, being bold , decisive and radical . now let , decisive and radical. now let me tell you what i want to do as prime minister i said on the steps of downing street that i would put stability and confidence at the heart of this government's agenda and last week, we did that with a plan to
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grip inflation and balance the books. i said i would bring fairness and compassion to help the most vulnerable , and we've the most vulnerable, and we've done that to not just with recording crises and pensions and welfare and help for people's energy bills, but by controlling inflation . because controlling inflation. because the best way to help people is by stopping mortgages , rents and by stopping mortgages, rents and food prices from spiralling out of control . re—establish of control. re—establish teaching stability is the critical first step, but there's so much more we need to do . i'm so much more we need to do. i'm not just here to solve problems. i want to build a better country where we get inflation down and grow the economy , where we cut grow the economy, where we cut nhs waiting times and improve the quality of care, and where
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we invest more in schools and give every child a world class education and i'm critical to achieving all this is innovation . that's my theme today . and . that's my theme today. and a defining focus of this government . i summed times worry government. i summed times worry that when people hear the word innovation and all they think of all the latest gadgets a smarter watch, better tv or faster car . watch, better tv or faster car. but to me , innovation is much but to me, innovation is much more about new ideas, new ways of doing things that drive economic and social progress. the product of creativity and ingentu the product of creativity and ingenuity , and what roosevelt ingenuity, and what roosevelt called bold, persistent experimentation . i want to lead experimentation. i want to lead a country where that mindset and that culture of innovation
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permeates every aspect of what we do , whether it's at the heart we do, whether it's at the heart of our economic policy and at the heart of our vision for pubuc the heart of our vision for public services . the question is public services. the question is , how do we do that ? first, we , how do we do that? first, we need to harness innovation to drive economic growth. second, we need to embed innovation in our public services, especially our public services, especially our nhs . third, we need to teach our nhs. third, we need to teach people the skills to become the great innovators . first, growth. great innovators. first, growth. now tony, you've rightly challenged us to be ambitious for growth. well there's one factor, above all, that drives growth over the last 50 years. innovation was responsible for around half of the uk's productivity increases , but the productivity increases, but the rate of increase has slowed
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significantly since the financial crisis . this financial crisis. this difference explains almost all our productivity gap with the united states . so how do we fire united states. so how do we fire up the innovation engine ? well, up the innovation engine? well, we believe that the very act of creativity and exploration is its self. a reward . so it starts its self. a reward. so it starts with government investment in bafic with government investment in basic science and research in a challenging time when we are making difficult decisions on pubuc making difficult decisions on public spending. and last week's autumn statement , we protected autumn statement, we protected the budget for research and development . at £20 billion. development. at £20 billion. almost a fifth of our entire capital budget, the highest level of r&d. this country has ever seen . and we're investing ever seen. and we're investing in high risk, high reward research . with the new advanced research. with the new advanced research and invention agency .
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research and invention agency. but more important than what government does is what you do . government does is what you do. it's private sector innovation that really drive growth . now, that really drive growth. now, you would expect me to say that i'm a conservative, but it's true . and that's why the autumn true. and that's why the autumn statement cut taxes to encourage larger companies to do more research and development. it's why we want to allow businesses to claim r&d tax relief on pure maths and cloud computing . and maths and cloud computing. and it's why we're absolutely committed to using our new brexit freedoms to create the most pro innovation regulatory environment in the world. in sectors like life sciences , sectors like life sciences, financial services, a.i. and data . but any credible strategy data. but any credible strategy also needs to support fast growing businesses. those firms disproportionately responsible for our future growth . turning for our future growth. turning million pound businesses into
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billion pound businesses and turning billion pound businesses into turning billion pound businesses int 0 £10 turning billion pound businesses into £10 billion companies will create good, well—paid jobs for the british people . but too the british people. but too often those firms can't access the finer ends they need. that's why we're radically reforming the regulation of our insurance and pension sectors as well as our listing rules to release a flood of new funding for exciting, innovative businesses . and we'll need to go further . . and we'll need to go further. but this isn't just about what large businesses and financial markets can do. we want to support small businesses to innovate, to on every high street , in every market town, street, in every market town, every day. we rely on brilliant local businesses from the greengrocer to the dry cleaner to the local plumber. we should be ambitious for their future too. the real prize is
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supporting them to innovate, and that's exactly what we're doing with new initiatives like help to grow and made smarter. so make no mistake, our most pressing task when it comes to growth is stability and controlling inflation. but that will never be the limit of our ambition . the more we innovate , ambition. the more we innovate, the more we will grow . and we the more we will grow. and we have a plan for both . now, have a plan for both. now, second, we also need to create a culture of innovation in our pubuc culture of innovation in our public services . now, i grew up public services. now, i grew up in an nhs family. it's in my blood . and as your prime blood. and as your prime minister , i will always protect minister, i will always protect an nhs free at the point of use. and that's why in a budget where we had to make savings overall, we had to make savings overall, we didn't cut the funding for health and social care . we health and social care. we increased it by £8 billion. so
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let no one ever doubt our commitment to the brilliant men and women who work in our nhs. but our ambition for our country's most important public service cannot be measured solely by the money we spend , solely by the money we spend, but by the quality of care every patient receives. we all want it to be easier for people to see their family, gp . we do want our their family, gp. we do want our loved ones waiting so long for ambulances or for the operations they need , but better care they need, but better care requires innovation . now, in requires innovation. now, in part, that means new drugs and new technologies . and this new technologies. and this country should be proud of how we are leading the way , not just we are leading the way, not just with the extraordinary covid vaccine, but with robots assisting surgery , doctors being assisting surgery, doctors being trained with virtual reality headsets and drones transporting prescription medicines to patients in remote locations and medical technologies like these
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are only the most visible form of innovation . but we also need of innovation. but we also need to radically innovate how we do things . to radically innovate how we do things. that's how we will really improve the quality and speed of care and make the money we invest in the nhs go further . to do that, we're opening community diagnostic centres to deliver millions more tests , deliver millions more tests, checks and scans close to home and without having to arrange multiple appointments . and our multiple appointments. and our new elective surgical hubs will offer hundreds of thousands of patients quicker access to the most common procedures . but we most common procedures. but we need to go further still. we want to give patients genuine choice about where and when to access care . and those choices access care. and those choices need to be informed by radical, transparent c about the performance of our health care system . we're also making sure
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system. we're also making sure the nhs has the workforce it needs for the future with the right number of doctors and nurses in the right places as well as thinking creatively about what new roles and capabilities we need in the health care workforce of the future. when it comes to the nhs, we all share the same ambition to get everybody in the country the best possible care free at the point of use . but to free at the point of use. but to deliver it . we need to be bold deliver it. we need to be bold and radical in challenging conventional wisdom , and that's conventional wisdom, and that's what we will do . now, third, what we will do. now, third, there can be no innovation unless people have the skills to innovate. that starts with our schools. so last week we announced an extra schools. so last week we announced an extr a £2 billion in announced an extra £2 billion in each of the next two years, but funding is not enough . there is funding is not enough. there is no responsive city as prime minister, but i feel more deeply
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than how we develop a truly world class education system, giving every child in our country the best chance of life and preparing them to enter a rap changing world. the times were right to challenge us about what that looks like, and we are asking ourselves radical searching questions about the curriculum because young people need to enter the modern economy equipped with the right knowledge and skills . and about knowledge and skills. and about technology , because we want to technology, because we want to help children engage and learn better and save teachers time . better and save teachers time. we also need to end once and for all this mistaken idea that learning is something you finish. 18. so we will also deliver our lifetime skills guarantee to help people of any age retrain and acquire new skills . i age retrain and acquire new skills. i believe age retrain and acquire new skills . i believe in the very skills. i believe in the very core of my being the education
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is the closest thing we have to a silver bullet in public policy . it is the most transformative thing that we can do for our people. something you as employers know all too well and i am determined to get this right . but to i am determined to get this right. but to make this i am determined to get this right . but to make this country right. but to make this country a true island of innovation , we a true island of innovation, we also need to attract the best in the brightest from around the world. so we will unapologetically create one of the world's most attractive visa regimes for entrepreneurs and highly skilled people . and one highly skilled people. and one of the areas we need to be most ambitious is al artificial intelligence, because this isn't just the new technology . it's just the new technology. it's a general purpose technology like the invention of the steam engine and the computer chip with the potential to transfer form every aspect of our lives. so we cannot allow the world's top ai talent to be drawn to
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america or china . that's why america or china. that's why building on the ai scholarships and master's conversion and courses i instigated as chancellor, we are launching a new program to identify and attract the world's top 100 young talents on al . let's build young talents on al. let's build it . and they will come. and more it. and they will come. and more . let them come. and they will build it. but we must be honest with ourselves . part of the with ourselves. part of the reason we ended the free movement of labour with to rebuild public consent in our immigration system . if we're immigration system. if we're going to have a system that allows businesses to access the best and brightest from around the world. we need to do more to give the british people trust and confidence that the system works and is fair. that means tackling illegal migration . and tackling illegal migration. and that's what i'm determined to do
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. so to conclude , innovation . so to conclude, innovation matters. it matters because it creates more jobs , higher wages creates more jobs, higher wages and better opportunities for people . it matters because it people. it matters because it improves our schools and nhs . improves our schools and nhs. and over the long term , by and over the long term, by boosting growth and creating more productive public services , innovation is how we will cut taxes for people and businesses . that's why i'm placing innovation at the heart of my governing agenda . and despite governing agenda. and despite the challenges we face, i'm optimistic about the future. because the golden thread of our national story has always been innovation . the idea that what innovation. the idea that what yet to be discovered is surely even greater than all that's come before . i want the united come before. i want the united kingdom to be a place of learning , discovery and imagined
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learning, discovery and imagined nafion learning, discovery and imagined nation of potential , realised nation of potential, realised and ambition fulfilled. that's how we'll improve the lives of all our people. and as your prime minister , that's what i'm prime minister, that's what i'm going to do . thank you . okay. going to do. thank you. okay. think you just joining us. that was the system right there who is addressing the confederation of christmas industry annual conference , i think is going to conference, i think is going to take some questions. thank you. i think we're going to take some questions media as questions from the media as we start the bbc . thank you, start with the bbc. thank you, prime minister simon jack, bbc news . we know that chronic news. we know that chronic labour shortages and weak post—brexit trade are holding economic growth back. you've heard this morning businesses are saying we need looser immigration rules and closer ties in our biggest market, the eu. are you listening to them?
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well, i think the country's number one priority right now when it comes to migration is tackling illegal migration . it's tackling illegal migration. it's stopping people coming here illegally on small boats across the channel. because when people see that happening, it undermines trust in the system. it doesn't seem fair that people are able to break the rules. and that's what i am absolutely determined to fix . now, i want determined to fix. now, i want to be honest, it's not a simple problem to solve. we can't solve overnight. but i am determined to reduce the number of illegal migrants coming here. we started making progress on that. my conversations with president macron enabled us to conclude and you deal with the french to help us better police the channel help us better police the channel, put more people working together with the french in france. but there's more work that we need to do , and the that we need to do, and the country should be reassured that i will tackle this as one of my highest priorities. and if we're doing that, then i do believe that we can that it's right to ensure that the united kingdom
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is a beacon for the world. best and brightest from around the world. you heard me talk about that in the speech. i want to make sure that we can win the global race for talent and i'm unapologetic about wanting to deliver system deliver an immigration system which highly competitive for which is highly competitive for the best and the brightest. and that's deliver . but i that's what will deliver. but i think most pressing priority think the most pressing priority right tackling illegal right now is tackling illegal migration. and that's what i'm determined to fix next. itv i promise . determined to fix next. itv i promise. harry hilton from determined to fix next. itv i promise . harry hilton from itv promise. harry hilton from itv news. we've heard the director of the cbi say that there is a shortage of workers at the moment and we need a new deal on immigration. last friday, your chancellor jeremy immigration. last friday, your chancellorjeremy hunt, he said he wants see the vast he wants to see the vast majority trade barriers with majority of trade barriers with the eu removed. how are you going to change our relationship with the eu on legal immigration and on trade in order to boost growth to so many businesses at this conference? say they want to see. well, thank you. i think on migration, i'd point back to
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what i've just said, harry, but on trade, let me be unequivocal about this. under my leadership , the united kingdom will not pursue any relationship with europe that relies on alignment with eu laws. now i voted for brexit. i believe in brexit and i know that brexit can deliver and is already delivering enormous benefits and opportunities for the country . opportunities for the country. migration being an immediate one where we have proper control of our borders and are able to have a conversation with the country about the type of migration that we want to need . we weren't able we want to need. we weren't able to do that inside the european union. at least now are in union. at least now we are in control of it when it comes to trade. means that we can open trade. it means that we can open up country the world's up our country to the world's fastest growing markets . i've fastest growing markets. i've just from g20 in just got back from the g20 in indonesia. talking about indonesia. we're talking about signing cp where we've got some of the most exciting , fastest of the most exciting, fastest growing economies in the world. and we can become a part of that trading bloc. that's a fantastic opportunity for or indeed
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opportunity for the uk or indeed regulation . and you've talked regulation. and you've talked and tony's talked about growth. you've talked, you've heard me talk innovation. well, we talk about innovation. well, we need regulatory regimes that are fit for the future, that ensure that this country can be leaders in those industries that are going to create jobs and the going to create the jobs and the growth the and having growth of the future and having the freedom to do the regulatory freedom to do that an important opportunity that is an important opportunity of brexit and that's my agenda. and i'm confident that that agendais and i'm confident that that agenda is not only right for the country, but can deliver enormous benefit for people up and down the uk in the years to come . next the times . thank you, come. next the times. thank you, prime minister. alex ross from the times. given the rise in corporation tax next year, will you commit to increasing investment allowances such as the super deduction scheme, which the likes of the cbi and other business leaders want? well alex, i completely agree about the importance of unlocking private investment.
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it's one of the things that's held our country back over the past few decades. and if we want to be serious about driving up growth, then we need to unlock more private investment, not just in r&d that talked about just in r&d that i talked about in speech, but also in in my speech, but also in caphal in my speech, but also in capital. something i've spoken about past. so that's why about in the past. so that's why we're the we're so pleased that the chancellor , in spite of the chancellor, in spite of the difficult decisions that needed to be made, was able to make permanent investment permanent the annual investment allowance. now at a very allowance. now that at a very high level of £1,000,000 and what does that mean ? that's what does that mean? that's essentially expensing . for essentially full expensing. for 99% of british businesses . 99% of british businesses. there's nothing like that that i think exists in almost any other advanced economy . it makes it advanced economy. it makes it incredibly easy and tax efficient for companies to invest in new equipment, new machinery, new plant that can drive up our growth, drive up our productivity. and that's why it was right that the chancellor did that. but it's also right that we continue to look at that and see that we do everything we can, whether it's through the tax system otherwise, to tax system or otherwise, to support you to keep support all of you to keep making in the future
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making investment in the future growth country . and next, growth of our country. and next, bloomberg . thank you, prime bloomberg. thank you, prime minister. lady bird and bloomberg. over and over, we hear critical voices coming from the business community about the conservative government's performing course. are you still prepared to say explicitly that the conservative are the party of business ? do thank you. yes, of business? do thank you. yes, unequivocally . unequivocally. unequivocally. unequivocally. and you heard in my speech it's important that government creates the conditions for stability , for making sure that stability, for making sure that we tackle inflation. but that's just the foundation. now, all of us collectively need to build on that foundation . and what my that foundation. and what my role is, what the government's role is, what the government's role is, what the government's role is, is to ensure that we can unlock all of the things that we want you to do and what you will want to do, whether that's investing more in new machinery and equipment and automation, and whether it's investing in r&d to create the products and services of the future, expanding into new markets. ultimately, it's
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business that creates the wealth, the jobs that this country needs. it's not government that does that. and i think you've seen from my track record as chancellor that i stood by all of you. i stood by business because i knew how important to our country. important it was to our country. i how important it was to i knew how important it was to safeguarding jobs and safeguarding people's jobs and their livelihoods. my their livelihoods. and that's my track your chancellor track record. as your chancellor and rest assured that as and you can rest assured that as your minister, will your prime minister, i will continue on that legacy continue to build on that legacy and we make this and ensure that we make this country one of the most exciting, dynamic places for businesses small and large , businesses small and large, anywhere in the world. that's my ambition. that's what i want to deliver for you. and i think we made a very good start on that last week. but there's lots more that we can do. next, prime minister, going to have a minister, we are going to have a few questions . i've few business questions. i've stolen the first one. i'm really sorry. was praising your may's sorry. i was praising your may's lecture earlier this year , and lecture earlier this year, and in it you talked about the uk, not a competitive tax regime compared to our competitors on innovation, skills and capital allowances. thanks for stealing
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that question, alex. tell me, do you think we now that competitive regime for incentivising skills innovate in an investment or is there more to do? well, those are exactly the right three areas to focus on.and the right three areas to focus on. and thank you for your kind words about the maze, tony. but i talked about capital people andideas. i talked about capital people and ideas . and i think many of and ideas. and i think many of you think about your businesses in a similar way. and it's in a in a similar way. and it's right our tax but right that our tax regime, but also our regulatory regime supports all of you in delivering and those three areas. definitely areas. so we're definitely making progress. as we just talked about a full expensing for 98, 99% of uk businesses , for 98, 99% of uk businesses, million pounds permanent. nothing like that exists anywhere else as far as we can tell. enormous support for the vast majority of businesses in this country to invest more. i think that is not just competitive. it's probably the most competitive tax regime for investment find. you investment you can find. you talk r&d. the chancellor talk about r&d. the chancellor increased research and increased the research and development expenditure credit, the tax relief for large company
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r&d, early in the r&d, significant early in the autumn statement because . as you autumn statement because. as you know, innovation drives future growth and productivity, but it's not enough just to increase the rate we want to make sure that our tax regime keeps up with the way that all of you actually conduct research. and what we'd heard from life sciences there's sciences companies that there's more cloud more investment in cloud computing do drug computing and data to do drug discovery that wasn't covered by our regime . so we now want to our regime. so we now want to make that our regime does make sure that our regime does cover it's cover that. again, it's something the majority something that the vast majority other countries done other countries haven't done yet. it gives you the yet. so i think it gives you the confidence you and all of confidence you need and all of you that take seriously you that we take this seriously and keep delivering it. and we'll keep delivering it. but there's always more to do. this budget its autumn statement. that was the first step. pre—condition is step. the pre—condition is stability inflation stability and tackling inflation . but we didn't stop there even last . we started to deliver last week. we started to deliver on a longer term ambition to make this as make sure that this is, as i said, the most attractive place for of you to invest in for all of you to invest in capital people and ideas capital and people and ideas anywhere world. i'm anywhere in the world. and i'm highly confident that can highly confident that we can deliver and a deliver that. and that's a powerful everybody. powerful message for everybody. now that was rishi
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now we have right that was rishi sunak at the cbi annual conference in birmingham, where the liam halligan , what can only the liam halligan, what can only be described as a sort of lipid and a thrill at the idea of innovation and rescuing from innovation and rescuing us from all our woes. i don't think all of our woes. i don't think the british public feel that. yeah, pretty amazed at what yeah, i'm pretty amazed at what i watched. we've just had i just watched. we've just had an autumn statement that raised the tax this to the the tax in this country to the highest since the second world war. we just had an autumn statement that raised corporation on many small corporation tax on many small and medium sized firms to the firms that generate the growth absolutely jobs that run the british economy . and it's gone british economy. and it's gone up from 19% to 25, taking 6% of the margins of small, medium sized enterprises . there are sized enterprises. there are some exemptions that have been hammered during lockdown. i am amazed that not in the speech or from any of the journalists questions . no. when asked about questions. no. when asked about why you why are you raising taxes so much when the economy is already in recession and you're going to drive the economy even more in 2017?
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definitely make the fiscal situation even worse? basic question in economics and they're reminding all about europe and innovation. this is the thing we had to question, that this is why ladies and gentlemen, you've watched gb news because watched these news because we watched these sorts with a very sorts of occasions with a very different very different different and a very different eye, had bbc eye, because we had the bbc there asking business , hey, there asking business, hey, i want looser immigration rules want a looser immigration rules and want to go back in the eu and we want to go back in the eu . itv had a similar question . and itv had a similar question where sitting going, that's where sitting here going, that's not what's concerning is it not what's concerning us, is it 7 not what's concerning us, is it ? what we what were you thinking when were watching that? when you were watching that? well, i don't like him anyway. i'm sorry , don't apologise. i'm sorry, i don't apologise. you're here for your opinion. he he's too connected to wef , he's too connected to the wef, my liking and i. i just say all this innovation. he's talking about it pushing us towards a digital id and you can tell what he well is saying. he's not really he's not really hiding in plain sight anymore . i think plain sight anymore. i think what you mean, jo, when you say thatis what you mean, jo, when you say that is connected to the wef, it's the idea that there is a globalist movement of which rishi sunak is no doubt in
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lockstep with a lot of people who have ambitions to us who have ambitions to make us one planet one big one big planet with one big government, potentially government, a potentially one big , no. where it ends, big army, no, no. where it ends, really. and the that technology is make such is going to make a tech such a big place in our lives that it will control us. layla that's kind of we're so frightening . kind of we're so frightening. but to be completely honest with you, beverley i absolutely detest the man. so whenever he comes on, either switch off and i know it's really bad practise but i switch off the tv or i just completely switch off because i, i just can't bear his policy is what he stands for. he's just not my cup of tea . so he's just not my cup of tea. so i try really not to engage in it because i do it does me really angry and there's not much that i feel that i can do about this. that's what the most that's the most frustrating thing. you're so right. that's the problem, liam, because you liam, isn't it? because you mentioned how mentioned green grocers. how important greengrocers are. well, your obsession with well, how is your obsession with artificial intelligence and technology going to help ? what technology going to help? what to see even less about the common man? this is what you
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know what he know about the common man out that's just common man out there that's just trying make you know, this is trying to make you know, this is this a this is a shame, i this is a this is a shame, i think, for rishi sunak and for the because do think, the country, because i do think, you got the makings you know, he's got the makings of a decent prime of being a decent prime minister. i do think his story is a pretty incredible story. he's not from huge amounts of money, obviously. he's massively wealthy but it is a sort wealthy now, but it is a sort of, you know, a british dream story. his parents came here. they worked they they worked hard. they sent their kids great school. their kids to a great school. and obviously a very, very and he's obviously a very, very bright guy. so i hope this week that he had high hopes for him . that he had high hopes for him. but i'm really disappointed , ed, but i'm really disappointed, ed, that he seems to have just imbibed this kind of, you know, orthodox view of how we run things, particularly how we run the economy. now certain people will be screaming at the television , oh, but the mini television, oh, but the mini budget crashed and burned all the rest of it. look, the liz truss and kwasi kwarteng are being vilified for policies that were overlooked that were more right than wrong. yes bond market went nuts in my view that
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was more to do with what the bank of england was doing at the time and the fact that the presentation and timing of their policies was all wrong and they didn't them they didn't explain them and they should the office should have included the office for responsibility and for budget responsibility and all of it . the lesson all the rest of it. the lesson from truss and kwarteng is to take the markets with you and explain what you're doing and maybe go more steadily rather than trying to upend everything at once. the lesson isn't to junk the whole idea of economic growth to raise the tax burdens so high that many squeezed middle of ordinary families now are worried , even more worried are worried, even more worried than they were this time last week about thinking. according to rishi sunak, it's all going to rishi sunak, it's all going to be fine because we're going to be fine because we're going to spend billions on innovation and technology and artificial security. you know what that means you? any other world is means to you? any other world is completely unconnected, right? get tell what get in touch with. tell me what you why you give you think. why would you give gbnews.uk? cup campaign gbnews.uk? well cup campaign starts today . we are facing we starts today. we are facing we england are facing iran in the opening game. want to clock wales and england have also
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announced they are not going to wear these anti home pro homosexual rights armbands. we say that one love in that opening world cup matches today. fifa threatened them with sporting sanctions . was this the sporting sanctions. was this the right call ? let's go live to our right call? let's go live to our next to report a theatre combo who is outside a fans zone in birmingham is. who is outside a fans zone in birmingham is . the atmosphere birmingham is. the atmosphere picking up their fire. what are going be taking a bit of a going to be taking a bit of a longer lunch break today, do you think, to come down there and watch the match . will come . we watch the match. will come. we have not got theo's audio , have not got theo's audio, unfortunately . right. we're unfortunately. right. we're going to we're going to go to jeff moody. jeff moody is our gb news southwest of england. reporter jeff , let's see if we reporter jeff, let's see if we can hear you this morning. where are you? what is the atmosphere like build up to this like as we build up to this controversial game and well, i've switched sides . i'm now i've switched sides. i'm now supporting wales and i've come
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to treorchy at the to the lion pub where it's a big deal. they're getting ready for a wonderful evening. let's bring in the assistant manager, sam . in the assistant manager, sam. hello. hello. this is a big deal for wales, isn't it ? yes. you for wales, isn't it? yes. you know, it's the first game that we played for this euro's first. so in 64 years and we are super excited. we've got around 200 people coming in tonight to just watch the first game and then obviously as it goes on and on, hopefully we win and it should get busier and busier as it goes on, which is super exciting. you're not a football fan yourself? no, i'm more of a rugby sort of fan. i guess that when you called them the euros, i guess you football fan, they know rugby is my thing. you know, i love the rugby and so but how important do you think it is for the welsh to be in the world cup after 64 years of watching on the sideline ? it is watching on the sideline? it is lovely to see you know, like all
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the crowds that come in, you can see like that the passion they've got. you know, if we score and they start scream, score and they start to scream, then a really good then it's a really good atmosphere to be around and it is really nice to see the community together and community come together and be sort one cheering wheels sort of one cheering on wheels and to be welsh. and to be proud to be welsh. yes, is. it very good. proud yes, it is. it very good. proud today. we are very russia. absolutely. i you absolutely. what i hope you enjoy the tennis and i'm going to be here throughout the day talking to people as we gear up to the big match tonight. now back to you. jeff, i was just thinking, well, not only does it look absolutely lovely in the pub there and you make me just want go spend tonight want to go and spend tonight watching even i'm watching football, even i'm not that about football that bothered about football just be in a pub. but just so i can be in a pub. but i was just occurring to me and i was just occurring to me and i was watching that this is was watching you that this is actually just what the hospitality industry needs at the we the moment, isn't it? we need people be going out, buying a people to be going out, buying a pint, plate chips, pint, buying a plate of chips, whatever it is, and supporting these industries as well. these these industries as well. these these . oh, these businesses. oh, absolutely. so many people have stayed away from the hospitality industry right from the
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beginning of covid. a lot of people still nervous about out in big crowds. people still nervous about out in big crowds . so an event like in big crowds. so an event like this really should get people out of the houses on a very wet and windy day to come down and to mix with other people and to share their country on a fantastic. thank you, jeff and joe your day. we will probably speak to you tomorrow to see how it went. we're going to see if we can speak to theo now theo chikomba is hello theo you are there outside a fans zone in birmingham. what happens in a fan's phone ? good morning . fan's phone? good morning. hopefully you can hear me now. we had a small issue of technical difficulty, but we are inside our linear springs here inside our linear springs here in birmingham and they're expecting hundreds of fans here. fortunately, we are inside no outside because weather is outside because the weather is terrible morning. but you terrible this morning. but you can probably see over my right shoulder, people here shoulder, people are here already. you are asking people taking the day off today. and yes, it does look like they are today around 11:00 this today as around 11:00 this morning and already nearly 100
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people here just in front of me and behind me as well. atmosphere is going to lively atmosphere is going to be lively here this afternoon, expecting a couple hundred people for the england and iran game in terms of football itself, england are ranked fifth and iran are 20th in the world. so it's going to be an interesting match. world rankings aside, anything can happen. it's a world cup and lots people will be buzzing for it here today . okay. thank so it here today. okay. thank so much, theo. down there, no doubt will be enjoyed. a fantastic occasion at 1:00. regardless of how you feel about the politics. thank you, theo . a lot of you thank you, theo. a lot of you have been getting in touch to let know what think james let me know what you think james has said. focus on on the field, not says the not politics. nicola says the players on their players should focus on their job, which is to play football. i'm pleased hear the i'm pleased to hear the announcement. that announcement. this is that they're wear they're not allowed to wear these love armbands. these one love armbands. and john says, a football john says, i'm not a football fan. if i'm not favour of the fan. if i'm not in favour of the armband or bending the why armband or bending the knee, why don't players just get on don't the players just get on and play the game? a lot of you agree with that, from now agree with that, that from now on be on the football
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on we should be on the football and letting the and they should be letting the politics away to one politics just fall away to one side the couple of side for the next couple of weeks. let me know what you think. tv at gbnews.uk we've got a panel, the panel will be back in december. got twitter in december. we've got a twitter poll don't forget poll going as well. don't forget asking the players asking whether the players should these armbands asking whether the players s1these these armbands asking whether the players s1these views these armbands asking whether the players s1these views are these armbands asking whether the players s1these views are anythingmbands asking whether the players s1these views are anything to�*ands if these views are anything to go imagine you'll probably go by. i imagine you'll probably say they shouldn't they say no, they shouldn't be they shouldn't involved in shouldn't be getting involved in at all. should players be allowed to play while wearing the armband that is the one love armband that is also me what also visible? let me know what you plenty more you think. we've got plenty more to after the the to come after the break. the panel talk through some panel will talk us through some of favourite stories of their favourite stories today. i will see you in today. and i will see you in just a moment.
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about the things that get him excited in terms fixing the excited in terms of fixing the economy. pleased to be economy. i'm pleased to be joined morning. liam joined this morning. liam halligan joe is halligan is here. joe what is here? and we was also here? and lately we was also here. now first story we're going be talking about is going to be talking about is shamima . okay, this is a shamima begum. okay, this is a name that is a house hold name. of course, she ran away to join isis was 15 years old. it was 2015. that long ago she was in syria. she married one of the terror groups, fighters. she found out she was pregnant in a detention centre in 2019. her citizenship was revoked. she's back in court now. she's appealing over the removal of her uk citizen ship forjoining her uk citizen ship for joining the islamic state . so let me the islamic state. so let me come to you, layla . how do you come to you, layla. how do you think this girl should be treated now by the. i think it's absolutely vile the way that we've treated her. she was an she was a baby. i mean, my daughter's 15 and, you know, six trafficking, human trafficking . trafficking, human trafficking. we can't fight for these things . and then when it happens in our own territory, we're responsible for her. we can't just follow her off to syria,
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afghanistan or to wherever you know, we want to. she's she's we created her. and whether she's a monster or not, we've created it. and we need to take response ability for her. if you remember there was the three of them that were taken out at this time. khadua were taken out at this time. khadija sultana and mira abbas. they are both believed to have lost over in syria. lost their lives over in syria. joe, your take this ? i joe, what's your take on this? i think say she was being think they say she was being shamima was being groomed for two years before she went. so when she was 13, how can a young girl have any if she's being groomed , have any say is just so groomed, have any say is just so sad . i think we ought to really sad. i think we ought to really see what sort of state mentally she's in now and see if she's if she's in now and see if she's if she's really has been radicalised or not. was she lost? i mean, she lost three children. she's given birth to level three children. i mean , level three children. i mean, she's not going to be let's face
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it, liam, she's not going to be that stable emotionally. one might say she very much wants to come home, do you think we should letter this often ? she should letter this often? she she's become a symbol, hasn't she's become a symbol, hasn't she ? her story's taken on it. she? her story's taken on it. she's become a symbol of whether we are a soft touch when it comes to allowing people to live in country who have who do in this country who have who do not have our best interests at heart. yes. she's also become a symbol we being naive symbol of are we being naive when the extent to when it comes to the extent to which young being which young people are being radicalised online , particularly radicalised online, particularly young from asian young people from asian backgrounds who may have sympathy with certain sort of geopolitical outlooks . it's geopolitical outlooks. it's incredible that she was only 13 when she was groomed. she was only 15 when she left to go to syria . i mean, where's she going syria. i mean, where's she going to go if she's not a british citizen? she's of pakistani heritage, but she was born in the uk, she grew up in the uk and the extent to which is radicalised, i think does speak
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very badly towards the uk. we've, we've turned a blind eye to the extent of online radicalisation, de—radicalize . radicalisation, de—radicalize. well i've known i, i come from a muslim background and i was living in india, i came back in 2000 when it was really rampant , the whole, the whole kind of radicalising of young male and females , and there are so many females, and there are so many kids that were, you know, 17, 18 that had no, no, no sort of stance in life, had no hope. and that's who they targeted. i would say, 89% of those have complete slightly moved away from are living normal lives are paying from are living normal lives are paying their taxes. you know what they have even though as the father of daughters i'm i have a lot of compassion towards young woman being misled by, you know, older men who haven't got her best interests, in part , and her best interests, in part, and actually want to use her as some kind you know, slave and kind of, you know, slave and have obviously harmed her in many ways. on the other hand, right , there are parts of the uk
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right, there are parts of the uk where there is a lot of radical ization going on. i think the there are parts of the uk where, you know, local laws are seem to be sharia laws by certain populations . i think we populations. i think we shouldn't have no go areas in the uk. i think british law should apply everywhere. if you're if you're in deployment to the and i think modern muslims have to speak out more about this but is why should we speak out more ? it's you know, speak out more? it's you know, you don't speak out about everything that i don't know what background you anything that ireland does why is it for me speak out you'll find the me to speak out you'll find the irish community in britain of which i'm proud member, spoke which i'm a proud member, spoke out a lot about ira terrorism . out a lot about ira terrorism. yes, i don't know. everybody does it. i'm saying it's not down us to make a speech down to us to make a speech about let me put it like this. i don't think i think, you know, i think being culturally oversensitive should stop us and our law enforcement authorities andindeed our law enforcement authorities and indeed our community more broadly from calling out where there is radicalisation going on
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openly. yeah, in this , i mean openly. yeah, in this, i mean we've overblow tellingly, broadly successful multicultural nafion broadly successful multicultural nation despite the problems that we have and obviously we have problems of being naive to say that we but multiculturalism and can only be sustained and have consent if more radical elements are called out and the danger here is that in showing compassion towards shamima begum, we may be seen to be going soft on radicalisation of our young people that's going on in person in the uk and some might naive about that . i think might naive about that. i think it's an everywhere problem . i it's an everywhere problem. i think we probably what we probably all agree on is that there is a radicalisation problem in this country which we, the authorities have not been strong enough on clamping down we need to be down. i think we need to be really careful that people don't jump really careful that people don't jump who no doubt jump onto this girl who no doubt did terrible but was 15 did a terrible thing but was 15 when she left. and i remember in 2015 thinking, well, she's she's aduu 2015 thinking, well, she's she's adult enough to go to battle . adult enough to go to battle. it's enough to just not know if
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they had then had a 15 year old. and then i realise that 15 emails think they know everything, i know absolutely nothing. and she was still who was right, groomed from was right, who was groomed from the three. think we the age of three. so i think we have be i thank it's okay. have to be i thank it's okay. i think we can support shamima can brought back here possibly be brought back here possibly used us understand used to help us understand how this use for this happens right use her for some good cooperate with her. collaborate, work out how that happened. still think happened. you can still think that okay to live in that it's not okay to live in a country in which people are allowed radicalised while allowed to be radicalised while still her back the still welcoming her back to the country. welcoming is possibly a little exaggeration, but allowing let's allowing her back right. let's move a story, layla, move on. this is a story, layla, which eye, isn't it? which caught your eye, isn't it? this the head teacher. this is about the head teacher. she's the lady she's head teacher of the lady eleanor a school in west eleanor hall, a school in west london a handbrake , and london had a handbrake, and she's been saying that we need to more females qualities to have more females qualities in workplace. i wonder what she means that. well, she. what she says is, you you your you know, you're a better leader with those female qualities, which is like empathy, patience , etc. but like empathy, patience, etc. but that stuff we've known all along
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anyway . i that stuff we've known all along anyway. i mean, that stuff we've known all along anyway . i mean, you know, anyway. i mean, you know, i wouldn't know how to be any male know leader. i'm a woman . how know leader. i'm a woman. how can she . that's so weird . i say, can she. that's so weird. i say, well, well, i suppose what she's saying is and i do like if she, what she's saying is let's celebrate her difference, i'm all right with that, liam. let's just let us acknowledge that women stereotypically . women stereotypically. absolutely. but have absolutely. but we have different qualities in the workplace. the male also think workplace. the male i also think that she's saying is that that what she's saying is that we sort of man, we we don't have to sort of man, we don't have to burn up in order to get ahead. we can be what you know what who we with . so know what who we are with. so you mimic women. you you have to mimic women. you have halligan playing have to be liam halligan playing on natural role as they say in the football field. we i don't man up like a woman , says man up like a woman, says heather hanbury of lady eleanor hall, a school in west london . i hall, a school in west london. i think what she's saying is that, you know , smart women, they can you know, smart women, they can get ahead , they can do whatever get ahead, they can do whatever they want. and clearly we do
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need more female representation in this country. again, actually does pretty well in terms of our politics. a number of our mps you had three female you know we've had three female prime ministers sure prime ministers i'm sure there'll many, more in there'll be many, many more in our collective lifetime . but i our collective lifetime. but i think what she's also saying is that women have to put themselves forward as well because they have got qualities like empathy , they like like empathy, they like reasoning and so on. i mean , reasoning and so on. i mean, let's let's be clear. they also have downsizers if we're going to stereotype of women are more empathetic, imminent, empathetic , well, let's do the stereotype of yeah, when women be of yeah, when women can be really towards each and really catty towards each and they can twitter explodes ladies. so what's i don't want any stereotype is blown as it was both ways and of course in my life experience of course women in are more empathetic and they more are more likely to seek compromises and they've got better soft skills . absolutely. better soft skills. absolutely. they have . but the you know, the they have. but the you know, the stereotypes work by twice. men
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also have quite a lot of those things. i agree . a lot of things. i agree. a lot of businesses don't go for that. but the workplace is often it is still the workplace is predominantly very male. it is terrible today. it is still 100 down there. but how you female members are on the ball, it is only on the other hand and again i tell take my life and my hands are saying this while there are lots of who want to run lots of women who want to run companies and be ceos and be on board members, there are a lot of who don't. yeah, and of women who don't. yeah, and this generation of this is a whole generation of women. some of you know, this is a whole generation of wom they ome of you know, this is a whole generation of wom they want )f you know, this is a whole generation of wom they want to you know, this is a whole generation of wom they want to have you know, this is a whole generation of wom they want to have their know, they they want to have their kids and they want to take on a more traditional and they more traditional role. and they what to talk about it what they want to talk about it to, their friends are on the media because they they'll media because they think they'll be insulted. there's a lot be insulted. there's also a lot of don't want to do of blokes who don't want to do a lot parenting. so the women lot of parenting. so the women often don't have often find they don't have a choice to stay home. but my choice but to stay home. but my generation of men unrecognisable be different from their from their fathers and unrecognisable difference. you're so you're so right. i enjoyed that, guys . right. i enjoyed that, guys. thank you so much. yeah. just let you go i want you to have
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that one later. i i'm going to be asking in just a moment what diet is actually better for you? a vegetable or a meat based one? this conversation always sparks a debate. we're going to be getting stuck into it after your morning with rosie . morning headlines with rosie. good morning . it's 1133. morning headlines with rosie. good morning . it's1133. i'm good morning. it's1133. i'm rosie, right? giving you up to date on gb news. the prime minister says re—establishing stability is the critical first step as he sets out plans to stabilise the uk economy. addressing business leaders at the confederation of british industry conference where she said he was placing innovation at the heart of his government agenda. he told delegates controlling inflation was critical to improving living standards and to putting the economy on a stable footing for the future . i'm not just here to the future. i'm not just here to solve problems . i want to build solve problems. i want to build a better country where we get
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inflation down and grow the economy , where we cut nhs economy, where we cut nhs waiting times and improve the quality of care , and where we quality of care, and where we invest more in and give every child a world class education. manchester united footballer mason greenwood has been ripped jailed after appearing in court charged with attempted rape . the charged with attempted rape. the 21 year old is accused of assault as well as controlling and coercive behaviour . all and coercive behaviour. all three charges relate to the same woman . a hearing will take place woman. a hearing will take place in february year with a trial date set for later in the year. a 31 year old man has been arrested on. suspicion of murder following the death of two young children in a fire in nottingham. emergency services were called to a flat in farrell , close in clifton in the early hours of yesterday morning. the children , aged one and three, children, aged one and three, were treated at the scene for smoke inhalation, but later died in hospital. a woman in her thirties remains in a critical
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condition . nottinghamshire condition. nottinghamshire police says it will do all it can to get justice. the mother , can to get justice. the mother, 20 year old female, is in the critical condition and appraisal with a this time. critical condition and appraisal with a this time . detectives are with a this time. detectives are working around the clock, working around the clock, working very diligently to try and piece together this inquiry and piece together this inquiry and i'm pleased to confirm that and i'm pleased to confirm that an arrest has been made. these inquiries will not stop because i detectives will keep an open mind and we will turn every single stone to make sure that this family justice. i'd like to reassure the local community that we will have visible patrols in, the area, and hopefully that will offer reassurance. and if anybody has any information, please come forward. on what i want . any information, please come forward. on what i want. number two, the force control room. even if you think it's not worthy than it is important to us. so we can either confirm or deny or chase's enquiries . so deny or chase's enquiries. so for me, just to offer reassurance to the community ,
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gb news. good morning. you are watching listings at best tennis today on gb news. you've been sending in your views to me about the world cup. we were asking whether you think that the players should be so kind of politically engaged, they're going to take they're still going to take the knee lives matter knee for black lives matter before they're before the match. they're playing obviously, playing around. obviously, that's because that's controversial because of the the the uprising there at the moment. and it's in qatar. nigel the uprising there at the monit1t. and it's in qatar. nigel the uprising there at the monit was nd it's in qatar. nigel the uprising there at the monit was definitelyqatar. nigel the uprising there at the monit was definitely aitar. nigel the uprising there at the monit was definitely a mistakeel said it was definitely a mistake to give the world cup. to give qatar the world cup. having that, have we having said that, have we forgotten and not so long ago, lgbt also illegal in the lgbt was also illegal in the west what halligan west is what liam halligan mentioned time moves mentioned earlier. a time moves on, so qatar we on, hopefully so well. qatar we all agree that racism and
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homophobia should. homophobia should always be tackled. however, i think the taking of nasir rainbow laces wearing of armbands achieves very little. if sportsmen and women if these sportsmen and women really believed in what they espouse, be espouse, then they wouldn't be in qatar . your host you learn, in qatar. your host you learn, you keep views coming out. of course we've got that twitter poll going on as. course we've got that twitter poll going on as . well, at the poll going on as. well, at the moment to say whether you do support players making support the players making political or not political statements or not right are new a new right now, you are new a new venue segment here on bev turner today. now it's a debate that always sparks a nice kind of attitudes about what we should all be doing, because this section is a two chart challenge. this is what i'm going to get to experts and they're going to answer the big issues of our time, not from an emotional point of view, but purely from a factual point of view. and the question today is what is actually healthier? what diet is actually healthier? is it a vegetable korean or a meat based diet? and so i am delighted to say that i'm joined
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now by ivor cummings , a now by ivor cummings, a metabolic researcher and co—author of eat rich live long, and dr. michael gregg, a physician and founder of the non—profit nutrition and facts .org. gentlemen good to see you and thank for joining me on the to chart challenge . we believe to chart challenge. we believe in free speech and good, healthy, rigorous debates here on gb news. i've a i'm going to start with you. tell me why is a meat based diet healthier for the human body right a lot, beth? well, i'll just say first, my views reflect the of my enormous network of doctors and metabolic and nutrition science. so it's not just me. so the reality is that meat based diet is a nutrient dense and the proteins , inmates and animal proteins, inmates and animal foods are way more bioavailable right to humans. the part of it is our evolution came from eating meat. so to get us decent protein and 40% of americans in a recent study are not reaching the target that target's been raised. so it's worse than that.
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and the bioavailability of proteins is around a half to a third off of animal foods. so we have a huge problem developing world, a massive problem. almost none of them are getting their required protein and vitamins and animal foods are solution, even acknowledged by who, although not pushed very hard. it's acknowledged that meat, fish and eggs and nutrient dense foods are required for the anaemia and protein deficiencies across the whole planet. so a vegetal dairy and diet is doable and i have many vegetarian friends and joel can a vegan cardiologist is quite famous. how however to acknowledges that you need to get your supplements and need to be very careful with and need to be very careful with a diet that's missing animal. foods acknowledges that . thank foods acknowledges that. thank you, ira. dr. michael greger i've a cummings has friends are vegetarians he even has some i'm sure a vegan but they're not as healthy as him, are they ? are
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healthy as him, are they? are unfortunately . my look the unfortunately. my look the number one killer of british men and women is heart disease. there's only diet ever proven to reverse the progression of heart disease . that's a plant based disease. that's a plant based vegetal green die if that's all for a plant based diet could do reverse the number one killer of men and women should not be the default diet until proven otherwise. and the fact that can also be so effective in preventing reversing other preventing or or reversing other leading type leading killers like type two diabetes high blood pressure diabetes and high blood pressure would to make the for plant would seem to make the for plant based eating simply overwhelming people aren't dying of deficiency diseases . when's the deficiency diseases. when's the last time you heard of someone having protein deficiency beriberi, plague or scurvy? no are dying of excess of diseases of excess of excess saturated fat and cholesterol . the fat and cholesterol. the healthiest diet is one centred around whole plant foods . you around whole plant foods. you might look good , but inside your might look good, but inside your heart is not doing so well as a
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burger holic . well, burgers are burger holic. well, burgers are okayif burger holic. well, burgers are okay if those. no, we kind put into them if they're just real meat . but i into them if they're just real meat. but i think dr. burger there is referring to the ornish study and i have many good copy ologist friends including dr. agatston, who invented the agatston, who invented the agatston score and basically those studies are dismissed . those studies are dismissed. they're based on grainy kind of images. they're not really solid science at all. so it's been demonstrated by professor jeff pollack and many others in, human studies, that a low carb , human studies, that a low carb, high fat animal based, largely diet can dramatically lower blood fats in diabetic people and that just show something on the screen. if i could be at liberty to do so and it's in reverse unfortunately. what you'll see the blue line collapsing and the pink line rising up to the right over years and essentially about reduction in red meat consumption shown over the last 40 years. and the explorer of
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type two diabetes insulin resistance, which drives most heart disease . so to be honest, heart disease. so to be honest, this isn't rocket . we've lowered this isn't rocket. we've lowered our nutrient mates and we've explored that our chronic disease, including as per dr. grey or the cardiac disease is the biggest killer. it's insulin resistance driven on a whole foods animal based diet with plant foods kind of help counter this catalyst raphe go on then. michael that's a very convincing charge that i've a cummings brought to the occasion. do you have a chart that can beat that 7 have a chart that can beat that ? my chart was , all the diseases ? my chart was, all the diseases that are lower rates in vegetarian and so beyond the heart is low rates of cancer and dementia and in fact i've out of the out of space also lower gout on on dr. dean ornish heart disease reversal study was published in the most prestigious medical journal in the world, the lancet out of
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great britain. i feel like i'm talking to a earth are here, but it's even worse than that. i mean, if you want to go around talking about like lizard people or something, you just get or something, you can just get dismissed a crank. but what dismissed as a crank. but what you're wing could actually you're spew wing could actually hurt people . could kill people . hurt people. could kill people. but michael, your chart was rubbish. it wasn't even a chart. it was just a load of words written down on piece of paper written down on a piece of paper in green, felt pen. i was in a green, felt pen. i was going on the science , isn't it? going on the science, isn't it? a lots things have changed a lots of things have changed over the last few decades. that's what's called ecological evidence since the lowest rung of evidence . the fact that, you of evidence. the fact that, you know , population consumption has know, population consumption has gone up or down versus disease rates. what we want are interventions , randomised interventions, randomised control studies where you can actually prove you can reverse the leading killers of britain's with a healthy diet that is a diet centred around plant foods reducing one's intake of meat, dairy and junk. i've become his last word to you . okay, doris. last word to you. okay, doris.
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diet his decades old story based on a handful of people and it's been ripped left, right and centre. i won't even give it dignity . but centre. i won't even give it dignity. but i'll just centre. i won't even give it dignity . but i'll just show one dignity. but i'll just show one more thing. universal city of washington. a full review, and basically red meat is not a health risk. so it was anti science and junk science that said it was the reality is now full review and we've known this for ten years red is nutrient dense healthy eggs are a super food . you should have a balanced food. you should have a balanced amino four diet with high neutral density and the science now as clear as day, the red meat kind of scam saying it's on the healthy was absurd. we evolved via access to dense meats. no work there salt would question that it's a reality. gentlemen thank you so much for kicking off the chart challenge. i will let to our viewers get in touch with me. i decide who they thought was right. all in good spirits of debate. thank you
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both so much . ivor cummings both so much. ivor cummings there and dr. michael, both so much. ivor cummings there and dr. michael , let both so much. ivor cummings there and dr. michael, let me know what you think and do you think a vegetarian diet is always healthier than a meat based one? and also, did i mention that there's a world cup on film in motion sweet on film in motion to sweet caroline . world cup is complete caroline. world cup is complete without a proper soundtrack to get into football spirits. get fans into football spirits. and in east yorkshire , a new and in east yorkshire, a new anthem has been recorded with hopes that it will become the unofficial soundtrack to england's tournament. unofficial soundtrack to england's tournament . anna riley england's tournament. anna riley has the story . england's tournament. anna riley has the story. to england's tournament. anna riley has the story . to watch it on tv has the story. to watch it on tv to is way too hot for me for me . well goodness you know we used to never get back to a. that's what i call it but i potato . what i call it but i potato. move over and three lions are what i call it but i potato. move over and three lions ar e £4 move over and three lions are £4 spuds by the tight tops is the new world cup anthem to be released. the was masterminded
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by east yorkshire footie fan gavin west and it was shot in and around his hometown as 11 and around his hometown as 11 and he has hopes for its success . the song is basically a light hide football song , a lot of hide football song, a lot of these new football songs, and they was to be very laddish. so we thought we'd create something a little bit more light—hearted, a little bit more light—hearted, a bit more family less. i more potato. potato we was originally going through what kind of like a english dish vindaloo has been done, obviously. so i was thinking chips and we didn't like nothing wrong with it, so i was like potato and potato stuck from there. so we got an bodrum battery involved and because he's a must must have a much better fan . i was kind of like better fan. i was kind of like thatis better fan. i was kind of like that is a little bit surreal and a bit random. carolina cup and ghana there as well. but just some band scousers. it's complete mish mash . many local complete mish mash. many local cast and crew involved in the production with the new and
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featuring prom and the lights. it's been really exciting and created a real buzz the place it's really put live and on the map and it's been just such good fun really to have it here and from whether or not his world cup anthem will become a chart topper, gavin has high hopes england's chances . i think england's chances. i think england's chances. i think england are really good choice , england are really good choice, a good chance that i think they've got the best chance of that for quite a long time. but. and who knows? it's a funny organ , so come on, england and organ, so come on, england and as gavin was saying, pate so potato ana riley gb news 11 . oh, potato ana riley gb news 11. oh, right . thank you for staying right. thank you for staying with us. it is monday morning. we've been looking at the world cup. we've been looking at what rishi had to say at the cbi conference. there's a story which also caught her eye this morning about working on the moon. were all bit sick of moon. we were all a bit sick of country right now, are i country right now, are we? i think that seems like a lovely, brilliant idea. which is going to moon. well, the
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to work on the moon. well, the cold is so everyone's cold war is back, so everyone's talking space travel talking about space travel again. they this is a story about, howard. who who? he's the head the us agencies orion head of the us agencies orion lunar spacecraft program and the autonomous rocket . as we speak, autonomous rocket. as we speak, it's 98 metres long. it's currently heading for the moon. it's going within 60 miles of the moon. it's not actually landing. right. it's designed people, but it hasn't got people in it. it's three kind of stuffed dummies, like crashed test, test, test dummies. test, test, test, test dummies. and it's going to travel 1.3 million miles on this round and take 25 days before crashing back into the pacific . and when back into the pacific. and when it re—enters the earth atmosphere, i love this stuff when it re—enters the earth's atmosphere, it's going to be going 25,000 miles an hour. crikey and the temperature on its heat shield as it reinforces the atmosphere is expected when it crash down before splashdown off the coast of san diego. it's expensive to me. 2800 degrees centigrade . but that's in the
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centigrade. but that's in the next ten years. they're to say that people are going to be working on. yeah. working for how many days ? 20 to be like the how many days? 20 to be like the jetsons to mars. just like this earth. apparently, we could be able to live on the moon for lengthy periods . according to lengthy periods. according to this nazareth the clangers you'll make here. how would you? yeah, apparently , when they see yeah, apparently, when they see this orion , this artemus rocket this orion, this artemus rocket took off with a historic day for human spaceflight . if there's no human spaceflight. if there's no humans in it, not bothered and, then we're all going to apparently be living on the moon. what i said to one second. it's like a holiday home, really, isn't it? you go off the summer thing to do basically is debating, though it's still fascinating . well, i think you fascinating. well, i think you have to be very worried. i reckon aliens are on the moon . reckon aliens are on the moon. you're a big alien fan, aren't you ? huge. didn't you have you? huge. didn't you have encounter? yes, i. a ufo in brazil . a proper ufo , a drink brazil. a proper ufo, a drink been taken? no definitely.
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everybody asked me that. no, no, i'm really pushing for this. what did you say, isaac ? well, what did you say, isaac? well, my ex—husband said, joe, get out here . come and see something here. come and see something weird in the sky. and it was about 11:00 at night. this is ronnie wood from the rolling stones. yeah he he hadn't been drinking or imbibing at most. he'd been drinking , but then so he'd been drinking, but then so i came because we were packing. i came because we were packing. i was packing. we leaving next day, cat, the kids and day, the cat, the kids and i went out and i saw this craft with lights coming down onto the sea without a doubt . and i stood sea without a doubt. and i stood there and ronnie ran into his glasses. and as i watched it, it lifted up, went to the right, and then shot across the sky. speed i'd never seen. and i stood there , went, oh my god , stood there, went, oh my god, i've just seen a ufo. it so, so . and you've never had anybody from that of the world be able to explain it in geographical place? no. so the next day we get on the plane to go to back to sao paolo and we pick up the
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papen to sao paolo and we pick up the paper. it ufo invaders and hundreds of people had seen the same thing . so i knew i was mad same thing. so i knew i was mad and it was never explained . and and it was never explained. and since then i've been completely obsessed. you host a podcast about it where you interview people about stories of extraterrestrial life . people extraterrestrial life. people that i've interviewed have said there are definitely aliens on there are definitely aliens on the moon. we are not alone on the moon. we are not alone on the on the moon as well. so presumably, if these guys are up there , they're going to find out there, they're going to find out . one of the astronaut said something like, they're watching or we're not alone. oh, you know , years ago. so, i mean , , years ago. so, i mean, wouldn't they be there ? they wouldn't they be there? they might be some sort of treasure there. but we've we've come so far, though, it's not i have no thing i have nothing so far fetched. obviously this space tourism now , the big question tourism now, the big question for me is whether not the state should be paying for space travel or if we should leave it to the sort of tech giants and the billionaire to leave it to the billionaire to leave it to the beach. yeah, it to the
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the beach. yeah, leave it to the billionaires. it's a billionaire sort playground, i might sort of playground, i might offer. to offer. i'm not expecting to becoming the space becoming a real the space race, though. expanding. though. it's expanding. we got rockets from newquay rockets taking off from newquay in quite soon. well, in cornwall quite soon. well, they can go , but they cannot they can go, but they cannot monetise it. they aren't going to become a i don't know, almost not a vertical rocket. it's spacecraft that strapped spacecraft that are strapped conventional airlines, but yeah. do conventional airlines, but yeah. d0 uk conventional airlines, but yeah. do uk stocks. yeah, the uk has got space programme. obviously india's got space programme . india's got space programme. space programme. let's just touch upon this story before before go. we get the end before we go. we get to the end of this is a play that david of the this is a play that david tennant a and he plays the tennant is in a and he plays the lead role. it's cecil philip taylor's the place called good in the west end and he plays a good gym. it pays a good german man who's basically become seduced by ism. now, audience members have been told that, well, they've been given little stickers when they arrive at the theatre to put over the cameras, their phones, they don't take a photograph of him in a uniform. oh come layla. as an actress oh come on, layla. as an actress , you find the story a bit baffling that they don't want a
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photograph of the finished. yeah, of yeah, i mean, i kind of understand it, but i just think it's, you know, it's just interesting kills. yeah. i mean, look, this racial stereotypes in in theatre and in film been i mean, i've experienced them. i've said to a lot of work because of them and until and unless you take a stance you know you look at aladdin and these you know just sit there they all come on you know the whole thing has to change. i think there was play that was taken down in the uk. this is the aladdin panther. yeah. the christmas panto that been christmas panto that has been hit this as well. it's in the hit by this as well. it's in the village of anstey, wherever that is . oh, it's the dorset corner is. oh, it's the dorset corner of dorset and they're playing aladdin and it's been cancelled because apparently the chinese laundrette work has been chopped up and wishy . they said it was up and wishy. they said it was cultural stereotypes and they've just cancelled the whole thing. and apparently as loads of kids have their scripts and have learnt their scripts and everything, out of everything, we've run out of time, name of the time, change the name of the wishy chop chop wishy washy and chop chop apparently, nope, it's apparently, but nope, it's too much stereotyping . we much cultural stereotyping. we can't begin unravel all of
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can't even begin unravel all of that in the 2 seconds i've got left on the show. thank you so much, layla , jo and liam for much, layla, jo and liam for keeping me company today. we were asking on the twitter poll whether the british british players i'm to call them that engush players i'm to call them that english welsh players. i should be wearing the one love armband, the final are in. 31% of the final results are in. 31% of you said yes should be allowed to wear the armband . and 69% of to wear the armband. and 69% of you say no. they should not be allowed to wear them. right. i will be back . morning. coming up will be back. morning. coming up next, tv news date with mark longhurst. in fact, i'm going to see you this evening. so i'm sitting in for michelle today doing dewbs& co from six. but if i don't see you, then see smart. hello, i'm aidan mcgivern from , hello, i'm aidan mcgivern from, the met office. it's been a soaking start for of us. soaking start for many of us. and heavy rain moving north and that heavy rain moving north eastwards through rest of eastwards through the rest of the showers following and the day. showers following and very strong wind arriving into the southwest after the rain clears. two showers, low pressure, a couple of low pressures in charge at and it's
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this low that's pushing the rain through and also developing some tightening i suppose that towards the south—west system strengthening winds. the risk coastal gales , 55 to 65 mile per coastal gales, 55 to 65 mile per hour wind gusts, perhaps even more exposed parts of cornwall along with some lively showers . along with some lively showers. the wind, though, helping to push rain through. so it push the rain through. so it does brighten up the does brighten up for the southwest. pushing into southwest. the rain pushing into northern north, central northern ireland, north, central and eastern parts of england to the that, some the north of that, some sunshine, also a few showers sunshine, but also a few showers feeling cold the north, six feeling cold in the north, six or seven degrees and also feeling cold. well, we've got the band of rain, 6 to 8 celsius now. continues across now. the rain continues across northern through the day northern ireland through the day . that's there's some . and that's why there's some sensitive sensitivities here with the wet weather we've had recently and a rain warning in force. eventually overnight force. but eventually overnight , conditions , the , showery conditions, the persistent wet weather again got that strong wind in the southwest, frequent showers here and the showers of a wintry nature across parts of the northern ireland. so some seasons now, especially over higher parts now the rain and, snow showers in the far north
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tend to affect the north and the east of scotland as we go into tuesday day. and they'll also be further showers towards the south—west. but in between a cold and frosty start in places , some fog patches, but actually plenty of fine weather around for tuesday afternoon. sunny spells much brighter day certainly for northern ireland wales midlands. certainly for northern ireland wales midlands . and as wales into the midlands. and as we head into the tuesday evening , any showers around coastal areas, continue for areas, they'll continue for a time before eventually easing but it's wet and windy for the northern isles and again that's rain falling as snow of the high ground. now the rest of the week stays very changeable. further spells of rain and showers and a strong wind .
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