tv Mark Steyn GB News November 23, 2022 8:00pm-9:01pm GMT
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welcome along a patch for you. welcome along a patch for you. we have all the fun stuff . the we have all the fun stuff. the famous slogan of the royal mounted police is the mounties always get their man. the british constabulary hardly ever get their man, but they do get you because frankly a lot easier the judge have next nicola second referendum on scottish
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independence is that good for the union all bad and you had this month's boost yet do you like the old jab.7 jab, jab, jab bit jab a jab a jab, a jab, a jab, jab i said the monkey to , jab, jab i said the monkey to, the chimp. god it never, never, neven the chimp. god it never, never, never, never said the to the monkey never, never, never . monkey never, never, never. dhabi abbott, abbott abbott said the monkey to the chimp while the monkey to the chimp while the old jab, a jab, jab goes at the old jab, a jab, jab goes at the 620 rishi rich and chums just signed to on passports as a requirement of international travel and did you think these strapping young albanian lads every night were costing you millions? no, they're you billions . that's richie rich billions. that's richie rich sighs . dosh, kenny jay keane , sighs. dosh, kenny jay keane, alexandra marshall, jamie jenkin johns. and of david starkey are
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here plus of the most important part of the no disrespect to david, but the most part is david's close but he's not as important as you email me , important as you email me, gbviews@gbnews.uk you can tweet me at gb news all. coming up after bethany elsey , the latest after bethany elsey, the latest news . hello. that am bethany news. hello. that am bethany elsie here to bring you up to from the gb newsroom. scotland's first minister says the next election will act as a defacto referendum . it's after the uk referendum. it's after the uk government won a legal battle in the supreme court, preventing a second independ ance vote. sturgeon has accused westminster of blocking scotland's voice from being heard. she says a special snp conference will held next year to determine way forward a so—called partnership in which one partner is denied the right to choose a different
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future. even to ask itself the question cannot be described in way as voluntary or even a partnership at all. the home secretary has admitted the government has failed to control the uk's borders and blamed channel migrants for the overcrowding at processing . overcrowding at processing. almost 4000 migrants were being held at the manston in kent earlier this month . that's more earlier this month. that's more than double its during a parliamentary hearing, suella braverman was asked whose fault it was that that was allowed happen. i'll tell you at fault. yeah. it's very clear at fault. it's the people who breaking our rules , coming here illegally rules, coming here illegally exploited , vulnerable people and exploited, vulnerable people and trying to the generosity of the british. that's who's afraid . british. that's who's afraid. some homeless people have accused the government of prioritising migrants over their welfare . more than 300 asylum welfare. more than 300 asylum seekers have been staying at the metropole hotel on seafront for
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the past year. a homeless group in the city, which includes an armed veteran, have been speaking to these. they say they're living rough on the streets while those who've crossed the channel in boats are put up in a nearby hotel. it's wrong because you're looking at the real homeless they are and with them putting them in and they , you know, from the streets they, you know, from the streets , it's wrong . they, you know, from the streets , it's wrong. in they, you know, from the streets , it's wrong . in other news, the , it's wrong. in other news, the prime minister has appointed a senior lawyer to investigate bullying claims against deputy prime minister dominic raab requested an independent inquiry after two formal complaints made. he says he's confident he'll be cleared of any wrongdoing and ukraine's will address the united nations security council in an urgent meeting later following russian missiles on key infrastructure . missiles on key infrastructure. it says the entire kyiv has been left without power , water supply left without power, water supply and half neighbouring moldova is
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also blackout in southeastern ukraine. a newborn has been killed after . an airstrike ukraine. a newborn has been killed after. an airstrike hit a maternity . the two storey maternity. the two storey building was reduced . rubble and building was reduced. rubble and rescue workers been trying to find survivors . europe today it find survivors. europe today it on tv, online and tv plus radio. this is tv news. now let's back to . to. mark thank you before me, just before it dominic raab being beastly reduces to a quivering lump of . reduces to a quivering lump of. there's a lot of combat action for the annual award for the most miserably failed institution we could give honourable mentions to the royal national institution which is now an aquatic uber for albanian traffickers or the national
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health service which has done a splendid of ramping up its waiting to well over 10% of the entire population of the united kingdom. that's long list. but the good news you mrs. gladys scroggins of 27 acacia gardens , scroggins of 27 acacia gardens, is that you've now moved up from . nu is that you've now moved up from. nu number 7,437,209. oh, no, wait so are you back down to 7,437,210? there's now been in with an even growing toenail that made saying to all european court of human rights is going to come down on the government a tonne of post—brexit zero brexit. sorry about that . oh brexit. sorry about that. oh yeah.the brexit. sorry about that. oh yeah. the annual award for most miserable failed british institution there remains no more comprehend and failed institution the realm than the british constabulary is the land where everything is policed
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except crime . if your car's except crime. if your car's broken into , there's not a broken into, there's not a culprit to be found . if you miss culprit to be found. if you miss genden culprit to be found. if you miss gender, someone on a six man social media swat will be at your door in the public tends assume that when you call nine, nine, nine and get redirected to the answering machine at the central customer service centre on rock roll . it's because the on rock roll. it's because the constabulary are off doing their beloved precision macarena routine at the lincolnshire pride parade or the ballymena festival . the most embarrassing festival. the most embarrassing headune festival. the most embarrassing headline line in the history of british journalism from the lincolnite . look at this lincolnite. look at this headune lincolnite. look at this headline police impress crowd with dance at pride. i seriously doubt whether . there is a word doubt whether. there is a word in that headline that is true. nobody's impressed the macarena. it's a dance for people who can't dance try doing it on strictly and see len goodman or darcey bussell make of it
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nevertheless . after i mocked the nevertheless. after i mocked the lincolnshire macarena on, this channel, the police service of northern ireland rose to their defence by doing their own macarena in support of their brethren . lincolnshire no look brethren. lincolnshire no look at that . oh my word. that's the at that. oh my word. that's the that's in derry all londonderry. it doesn't matter whether you say derry or derry because on a small island riven by centuries of sectarian and division finally both came together to agree that the psni totally suck at dancing royal ulster constabulary so we like about them are they could do mean paso doble the black and tan could do a possible foxtrot even the royal irish can stab. it was renowned in the 19th century for its mazurka but these god awful police macarena is not small thing they symbolise gone wrong
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with british policing as poms former chief superintend scotland yard said this show just a couple of months back only , 1.3% of just a couple of months back only ,1.3% of all just a couple of months back only , 1.3% of all recorded crime only, 1.3% of all recorded crime even leads to a summons to a court , never mind a conviction . court, never mind a conviction. we know that that 1.3% is overstay rated because the met and other forces are massaging the figures by not recording a lot of crime . the crime clare up lot of crime. the crime clare up rate in the uk is now all but statistically undetectable so it's not like a community institute tution letting its hair down and doing some club footed macarena. it's a totally fair old institution that's it's way miles from its mission and macarena is way of the plods putting algorithmic flat feet one side of the scales of , the one side of the scales of, the culture war, particularly with respect to transgender activism
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, british police have rubbish , , british police have rubbish, rubbish when it comes to burglary, rape grooming gangs. albanian prostitution rings. but they're on it in seconds, if it involves women with penises as you know these days huge numbers of women are hung like stallions and apparently that's the way the coppers like it so that's what they the whole day investigating . in september , investigating. in september, kelly j. kane, founder of group standing for women , went to standing for women, went to brighton for a rally called let women speak. two months later, the sussex police telephoned she an allegation against adam about an allegation against adam about a hate so we do actually need to speak to about that mr. as part of our investigation and yeah so what we do need to do we need to get you to come down to brighton ideally so we can have this voluntary interview. mm and when you say hate crimes specific ,
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you say hate crimes specific, what hate crime would it be . what hate crime would it be. because i think to be a hate crime that has to actually be a crime that has to actually be a crime . so what is the hate. well crime. so what is the hate. well is the hate attached to . i'm is the hate attached to. i'm going to read out so it's the crime is use of words or behaviour to stir up hatred on, the grounds of sexual orientation . so you're basically orientation. so you're basically it's going to be a voluntary interview. so the story is well and so you know, if we're not in anything against you you can bnng anything against you you can bring a solicitor you if you'd like and it's just so we can bottom out your side of what's gone on. oh your side of what's gone on. oh your side of what's gone on. oh your side of what's gone on and all you have to do is give up a day to travel from wiltshire to brighton with solicitor kellyj kane joins now what and what is this all in reference to because as i recall from your event in it was in the
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trans activists who were masked and rather menacing in their masks who disrupted event . yeah masks who disrupted event. yeah they did i mean a baby was called a and a fascist and sworn at but that one of the local labour staff members so yeah the trans activists are terribly badly behaved like to intimidate women. there were a few arrests one of the people arrested not necessarily on the terror side, but certainly shouting at women had a bag of knives. so and everything i said , i had a everything i said, i had a policewoman about two metres away from me so she could every single word i said . this is a single word i said. this is a phishing exercise . this is phishing exercise. this is because trans activists men who call themselves women, think that they can silence women by any necessary. and that includes using the police. this is my fifth time i'm having the police wanting to talk to because i'm
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an activist and i'm an accidental activist. i'm some sort of dyed in the wool. yeah activist. you just finds a brand new cause, but i was interviewed under caution for six tweets back in 2018. that same year was interviewed again. you comments youtube at the behest of susie green . i was arrested and put in green. i was arrested and put in the cells for actually having a political meeting during lockdown and then i had to police at my house only a few months because i was being under ward about and now we've got this. yeah it's, it's great to know that the police don't investigate burglary don't investigate burglary don't investigate grooming gangs but they will investigate people who say mean things about. they will investigate people who say mean things about . why are say mean things about. why are the police like i they they i can't i, i really can barely express . my contempt for the express. my contempt for the british police these days. but why is it that no matter how
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many politicians warn to stop waste thing time like this they have decided that the priority of british is trans gender activism . well because they've activism. well because they've captured ideologically by stonewall with the stonewall diversity and inclusion which they pay handsome sum my own police force spent they pay handsome sum my own police force spen t £10,000 on police force spent £10,000 on that in the last years. and i can tell you, issa they don't feel any safer . so it's really can tell you, issa they don't feel any safer. so it's really i think we've got into a culture in this country more generally not just the police, so that you would expect the police to be immune, overt signalling as opposed to doing something. so if i say i'm running a council and, i don't necessarily have lots of access people with disabilities to come to work , disabilities to come to work, but i can put a pride flag up and i can tell everyone that i'm and i can tell everyone that i'm an inclusive, even if i have a
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absolutely no intention of making some people in my locality have an easier to coming in. i'm being employed by me . but as j.k. rowling me. but as j.k. rowling a supportive tweet for you pointed out, these people advertise saying how kind they are are actually the kind going around. marr and breaking up event and this is there's something disturbing about the way the forces of law enforcement have taken one side in i mean they're harassing you this lady on the telephone on to you basically threaten to she said, oh, it's voluntary you to come to brighton but if you don't come voluntarily. we're going to have you arrested. so it's meant the point is to make an example you so that 10,000 other people who might happen to agree with decide they're just going to keep their heads on this . yeah keep their heads on this. yeah i think i think it is partly that i think often in these situations there's some people
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with nefarious and there is a lot of incompetence and stupidity and that that seems be what is happening mostly for the police force so that my organisation for women we did a survey of a big research project all of the police forces the country and there is not that differentiates a female officer from an officer who calls himself a woman not so that will mean in places in that police force or in the role of a police officer if they have to . a officer if they have to. a female suspect, for example , female suspect, for example, they have to be the female officer. it might not be a female at all. and the reason that that is happening is because the government is gutless. the government won't make decisions on this . they make decisions on this. they leave it to the police constable and the police. police constable or rather the chief of police is not going to put itself risk because he might lose his job. yeah, no , you're right about yeah, no, you're right about that. we did . thank you very
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that. we did. thank you very much, kelly. jay, let us know because we'll will be back with you if these at the sussex police do decide to send a team to you because this thing has out this thing has gotten out hand now it's a complete of sir robert pails and tire legacy a british policing he said the police the public and the public are the police this is terrible. we did ask the chief of sussex police join us. that would be a lady joe shiner who becomes the latest chief constable to decline to appear on show. there she is. there's constable shine it. we're trying to collect the entire set i think west mersea was the first to decline to appear on this show. andy freeman of sussex police did though respond . we are aware of though respond. we are aware of a record of a call between a police officer and individual in relation to an investigation in.
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brighton from september , the brighton from september, the individual was asked to assist with our enquiries by attending a voluntary interview. we reviewing the matter and will liaise the parties involved directly. if you're in sussex now and you just looked out your window and there's some ne'er do breaking into your this is what you lousy police are preoccupied . up next, we'll get your reaction. gb news, gbnews.uk and the judges say no to . another the judges say no to. another scottish referendum so the scots can stab hillary. i'm going to be macarena ing off into the sunset. any soon. david starkey is here on that and we have my favourite alexandra marshall . favourite alexandra marshall. what is it, my 12th. 14th, 17th favourite welshman jamie jenkins , both standing by. don't touch that. now what. coming right back.
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welcome at gb news is the people's channel so let's channel what the people have to say i think we wanted to know what you a woman was that's what that's what we kind of you know inflation the ukraine was all too complicated but maybe we can figure out what a woman is. william says mark should studied more during his biology class science is crystal clear in defining for i think that was my reference the police having a thing for all these bp nest women that apparently the united kingdom now is it 93% of women are hung like i think there's still three or four non bp nice women i think there is one on an outlying shetland island. i think there's another up near the giant's causeway. i don't know where the is. so you might meet her in the part tonight, if you like. the old fashioned kind
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women. many people do these women. not many people do these days, of course . phil says, do days, of course. phil says, do we need asking this? we need to keep asking this? a woman is a grown female . i think woman is a grown female. i think that that's that there's something that should make that into a song. nothing else. a female male. my other half. nothing else can apply. i'm getting sick of whacko with a penis. who think they should go into the women as they identify as a woman ? a skirt. into the women as they identify as a woman ? a skirt . and david as a woman? a skirt. and david says if you to transition into woman, it's because you're not a woman. and lee says someone with a womb , not a penis very hard to a womb, not a penis very hard to beat. bateman doesn't have all these pregnant men now. all the men have wound us. all the women have penises , all the men have have penises, all the men have wombs. it's fantastic . i give it wombs. it's fantastic. i give it another six months and we'll have changed sides and all this nonsense will stop the uk supreme court. not an institution. i a lot of time for
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some modish thing , but the uk some modish thing, but the uk supreme court has ruled that sturgeon's ministry in cannot hold another independence referendum without westminster's permission. the decision was unanimous yes. that's why they didn't take a lot of time over it and the judgement a lot of cut and pasting from a canadian supreme court decision on quebec's secession the eminent historian dr. david starkey is . historian dr. david starkey is. david nicholas wouldn't be doing if she didn't think the union were in some way vulnerable in a way that it hasn't been for a long time . that's right and she long time. that's right and she also a point and we shouldn't dismiss what nicholas sturgeon says because it's that of awfully grating voice that yeah drill voice. but she made the reference to and she talked the right of a free people to determine their future . the
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determine their future. the trouble is, the blair government you've just mentioned now gave exactly that right . only the exactly that right. only the people of scotland were invited to vote devolution. and what were promised they were promised parliament. now in or scots a pardon is the assembly of a free people . it is the sovereign people. it is the sovereign assembly of a free people. so the very in which labour brought new labour, what want brought about devolution effectively can see nationhood and political identity to scotland . so in one identity to scotland. so in one sense sturgeon right to say that's actually an name because it's vitally to the point you only use the word parliament if it was the parliament of a sovereign that's what the word means that's what the word means in english scots. i mean it's the key, it's the key to the whole separation and into dominions of the british empire and the moment at which canada
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becomes fundament utterly self—governing. and you can conceive of a canadian nation is when you get a parliament. i mean the full independence from the crown, full control of the foreign policy comes much later. but that is that the parliament is the core or no is a core of conservatism . it goes back to conservatism. it goes back to the middle ages . it's how we the middle ages. it's how we expressed as a nation. and again it's i mean, just getting away from scotland which gets boring all this is what brexit about it's it is that fund mental nofion it's it is that fund mental notion or indeed the american thatis notion or indeed the american that is driven to the peculiar political voyage of the english speaking , which is this idea of speaking, which is this idea of self—government through a represented native assembly, black hold it. the scottish parliament didn't he, because he thought if you if you let them have the names of these things then they notice they haven't actually got the real i mean it's a bit like the rest of blair's government which was
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which was which a complete playing with words unfortunately words . and why are we using words. and why are we using words. and why are we using words ? words have consequences . words? words have consequences. and of course, the other thing that was was the point about devolution that , extraordinary devolution that, extraordinary now rightly forgotten figure donald dewar , father of the donald dewar, father of the nafion donald dewar, father of the nation who cares wallace when you've got know donald dewar, he thought it was a political fix he assumed that devolution would destroy scottish nationalists . i destroy scottish nationalists. i mean deranged the degree of political silly . innes mean deranged the degree of political silly. innes but mean deranged the degree of political silly . innes but the political silly. innes but the other thing, and i think again now taking this serious that it is not only the whine of nicholas sturgeon that is so offensive to the ear , it's if offensive to the ear, it's if you're still wondering by way what a woman is, then nicholas david starkey . nicholas sturgeon david starkey. nicholas sturgeon yes . or indeed it's what is what yes. or indeed it's what is what call cards that have that squeak annoys when you refuse to put your seatbelt on. i get that that but but the point about is
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the affectation of victimhood i mean this seems to me to be as who was born just south of the scottish border is has always very interested in scots history . it is it is a shame to the scottish past the scots were not victims no 1707 scotland wanted membership of a greater britain for access to the british. and what the scots do. they were the leading they were generally speaking the most the most forceful the best educated imperialist everywhere you around the world, everyday , the around the world, everyday, the only banking system in canada is scottish . the crazy thing about scottish. the crazy thing about when they quote that supreme court judgement from canada is that if you talk to a quebec secessionist the scots are the guys who had oppressed his people in quebec for generations. so this idea that they're they're the oppressors in canada but the victims in the
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british isles is deranged it's deranged but it's again it's a kind of corruption i think that consumes when they get this this violent display to the sense of nafion violent display to the sense of nation . i mean, one of the one nation. i mean, one of the one of the problems, i think in scotland is that you had a very distinctive sense of scottish nationhood. remember the person who invents the idea of scotland and the bagpipes of kills balmoral the whole lot is walter scott , who is a passionate scott, who is a passionate unionist . scott, who is a passionate unionist. but it scott, who is a passionate unionist . but it was essentially unionist. but it was essentially it's like scottish expression in canada why you have highland regiments in this. it's a cultural expression, right . cultural expression, right. whereas what she's tried to do is to turn it something much more central european in. i'm being serious. this is it. germanic it's is in other words the kilt dab on st as shifted into something awfully like
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leather and i once i once i once made let me tell you joke because it's a very good one. i pointed out the i'm we're really going to get it we're going to get a police call after this one but just wait. is the resemblance between scottish nationalism and indeed the party think it they both have a symbol of a twisted cross they both a single diplomatic document that destroys them union or the treaty at best sign and finally course the elderly aged male supporters are very fond of exposing their knees so och you but i'm being okay but don't don't try goose stepping in a kilt the neighbours going to like it let me come at it. in fairness to nicholas sturgeon then let me come at it. the no, let me come at it the other way is britishness on its way .
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let me come at it the other way is britishness on its way. i didn't see british. british snus not so long ago , you know if you not so long ago, you know if you had, if you were had an australian passport 50 years ago it said british passport australia it they were the british nation in the pacific . british nation in the pacific. that's shrunk it shrunk to these islands southern ireland went a century ago the irish free state is it is it not truly just shrinking further and further ? i shrinking further and further? i don't think there's ever been a british nation the systems understand we are a unite kingdom of different nations . kingdom of different nations. britain has always been 1707. it's always multinational british is essentially a term for export you're british abroad , your scots, your english, your welsh , irish at home, which is welsh, irish at home, which is why the first year we're celebrating those interested is celebrating those interested is celebrating football. the first internationals were between
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england and scotland . right. it england and scotland. right. it was. and it's a new labour thing this a very and particularly a gordon brown thing. there's an attempt identifying a peculiar british nation . in the 1990 is british nation. in the 1990 is going right through to brown's as prime. the historians who tried write about it invented like linda colley. it never worked for one single, and they increasingly important group immigrants call themselves british. what in other words, they buy into the notion of identity as non cultural identity as non cultural identity simply as a matter of legal status. right. and what then about something like rule britannia, britain's never, neven britannia, britain's never, never, never shall it tiny moments in the 18th century when you play but again the word britain you laugh at it it's ancient britons it's wound you know but the ever cold they know
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it isn't it. nobody called themselves and what goes on under a kilt? no this is like what not to wear it's woad kilts out by a fashion. this model . out by a fashion. this model. yeah, yeah . i don't know how we yeah, yeah. i don't know how we off with a perfectly sensible little supreme court judgement and we wound up climbing into woad and late eighties and. thank you very much, david. it's always good to see you. the world's leaders are back in. their dreary little provincial capital for a few days, taking a break from oldest, established, permanent floating crap game of international summitry. last week it was both the in bali and cop27 at the luxury egyptian resort of sharm el—sheikh down and can't keep them straight. it doesn't matter because the final communique into and very disturbing alexandra marshall chair on that and then the statman jamie jenkin swings by lots of good stuff still to come see you in a minute.
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we talk regularly about the nightly of so called seekers on southern show they get put up in hotels at your expense . so far hotels at your expense. so far this year more than 2000 strapping young fellows have arrived. i think there's a couple of and elderly men amongst them but basically nine out of ten are strapping young fellows and that's more than all other years on record combined as jamie jenkins formerly of the office for national statistics , office for national statistics, puts it, the whole tell bill this year for these guys, steady on now, it's going to be between and a half billion pounds and three and a half billion pounds , £2 billion, three and a half billion pounds , £2 billion , £3 billion. , £2 billion, £3 billion. a
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billionaire billionaire . pretty billionaire billionaire. pretty soon you're talking about real money . jamie is here with us money. jamie is here with us again. i mean , is these are again. i mean, is these are really extraordinary that we're now blowing through on this, aren't they . yeah and if you aren't they. yeah and if you think what is two and a half billion meanwhile when liz truss tried to cut the top of income tax doing kind of her failed promise it as the minister there was absolute uproar and that was around two and a half billion pounds cost of doing that so pounds the cost of doing that so yeah just students so yeah just to students so basically if we're if we the official version the market's decided liz truss to go because of a two and a half billion tax cut. but when you give two and a half billion and put up a bunch of albanians in hotels , the of albanians in hotels, the markets are cool with that it seems to be the way mark is with liz truss it was more a case of where have to explain how are you going to pay for it but the markets don't seem to worry about well are you going about well how are you going to pay about well how are you going to pay for and half billion pay for the two and half billion now? why are we in the position that we were in? you've talked
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about 40,000. if about we've had over 40,000. if we way things are we carry the way things are going, we'll hit about going, we'll probably hit about 53,000 across the 53,000 coming across the channel. slightly down to channel. that's slightly down to what thinking what we were thinking happen a couple and the couple of months ago. and the only reason for the only thing that seems to be working to reduce numbers is the reduce the numbers is the weather. seen few weather. so we've seen very few coming so far. coming over november so far. we've many days. there's coming over november so far. we'vezero many days. there's coming over november so far. we'vezero comingiays. there's coming over november so far. we'vezero coming across1ere's coming over november so far. we'vezero coming across because been zero coming across because of the weather. but you can blame them. people are coming but can't of divorce but you can't kind of divorce the fact that the government and the fact that the government and the service be at the civil service sort of be at fault this as well, mark, fault for this as well, mark, because you of all the because if you think of all the people came across 20, 21, people who came across 20, 21, around right. around 28,000 people, right. recent out that 4% recent numbers came out that 4% of applications have been of those applications have been processed. so if basically you're talking nearly 27,000, 26,000 people. so just just it's just to stick with the math on that that basic only means they only process assessed a thousand of the 2021 intake. yet and so presumably this year the 5350 5000 you say will be coming over and if they only process another thousand. and if they only process another thousand . and that's 54,000
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thousand. and that's 54,000 added to the 27,000. i mean, pretty soon we're going to have equivalent of edinburgh or cardiff or belfast staying in hotel bills. and that's the way things are heading now. suella braverman were saying today found it. we're finding it even difficult now to book accommodation. well of course, you've got all these people coming over. remember when they they can't work until they over they can't work until they've gone through the asylum system . if you've got 96% of system. and if you've got 96% of people made application in people who made application in 2021, not processed, you're going to be waiting those you think of it in terms of backlog, they've got to do those first before they even get the 50,000 that they do this now it that they do this year. now it doesn't look like these numbers are time soon. so are slowing down time soon. so you're to be going you're going to be going from 53,000, maybe 60, 70, 80, 90, any of those next year . and if any of those next year. and if this on, you're right, this carries on, you're right, going huge numbers. and going to have huge numbers. and where are you going to put them? we've already stories we've already seen stories your covering are covering mark you know these are total lodges and total the travel lodges and i would say i've stayed in them
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fine but we are talking some premium places for five star places that people are being in and on the news today, you've seen people in blackpool for over year where you've got over a year where you've got homeless people british people stuck street just that stuck on the street just that on the bulletin there's actual the news bulletin there's actual citizens the united kingdom sleeping rough on the streets and the hotels are full of people who arrived in the last couple of weeks but to look at it the way the bbc and the guardian do they think the is that we are not people efficiently enough . well if you efficiently enough. well if you can only process a thousand people a year and say you've got 50,000 coming this year , i mean, 50,000 coming this year, i mean, the cost of hiring you basically . to the cost of hiring you basically. to capacity by 50, how how is that remotely feasible ? well, the remotely feasible? well, the government are talking as bringing in some private companies start doing the process. and so you've been
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covering serco, so maybe maybe serco are putting them up , maybe serco are putting them up, maybe serco are putting them up, maybe serco will be asked to look at the kind of process in them as well. it'sjust the kind of process in them as well. it's just to be a good business model. if you're one of these private companies, they're coming in, they get paid to put them places and then them up in places and then probably paid to look after probably get paid to look after tomorrow. mark and i'll be i'll tweet tomorrow. maybe tweet about this tomorrow. maybe we next or so we we can discuss it next or so we get the latest figures on which countries coming now. countries they are coming now. right figures, we right in the last of figures, we did albania become the did see albania become the biggest nationality to start. we probably get even probably will see that get even for the latest figures . but i for the latest figures. but i suppose one of the silver linings with regards the linings with regards to the hotels we all have noticed in hotels is we all have noticed in the albanians that the some of the albanians that are over are vanishing. are coming over are vanishing. so to go in so they're not costing to go in the because just the hotels because just vanishing, they're not coming through. legal ports, through. the legal ports, they're over they're coming through over the channel they're coming through over the channel, vanishing channel, they're vanishing and now got to now costing. but you've got to be that's that's great be careful. that's that's great news. albanian ads are news. the albanian ads are vanishing in. well, let's just see . many vanished albanians. see. many vanished albanians. can a society . take you know,
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can a society. take you know, when it's these big nights, when the weather's and you get a thousand people coming, you know, the exact better than i do. but that's roughly the number of born in england and wales that day. i think that's 2100 or something like that. babies born england and wales in a typical so effectively you're increasing population . 50% just increasing population. 50% just from the guys on the southern shore that that is correct. and obviously we've also the kind of what you would class legal immigration to put on of that and the old project about 200,000 on top of that so this is a critical issue. you've raised . good point with the raised. good point with the boost there, mark, in the we do have a critical problem in this country are not having enough births to actually sustain the population to population the long term to actually pay the for all these people who living older but people who are living older but all these people coming over migrant boats helping the migrant boats aren't helping the matter can't go migrant boats aren't helping the mat'work can't go migrant boats aren't helping the mat'work in can't go migrant boats aren't helping the mat'work in the can't go migrant boats aren't helping the
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mat'work in the first can't go migrant boats aren't helping the mat'work in the first place. go migrant boats aren't helping the mat'work in the first place. so and work in the first place. so the really does to the government really does to get of it what get a grip of it and what they've done thrown more money to france. it seems to the more money give france, the more money you give france, the more migrants over the migrants to come over the channels doesn't seem to channels of it doesn't seem to be good business model be a very good business model for. money to for. us we're giving money to france, giving to france, we're giving money to rwanda, money to rwanda, we're giving money to albania to make albania more agreeable. i mean, good luck with with that so it's but and now we're giving money again to france so we'll be giving more money, i take it to and to albania. i mean what what at some at some point this is this is going to crack it's going crack the health service. it's going to crack social services. the stumbling are going to be people. young people can't get houses, can't get flats, can't get bedsits because of all the people arriving night. well, i think the first thing that's going to crack is probably conservative party. this is going be one of the biggest problems for them in the next general. and if they don't get a
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grip on it and soon it doesn't seem to having a grip on the seem to be having a grip on the voters will be voting with them and, probably kicking them out. whether sort is whether starmer can sort is another question. again, do think people understand the logic arithmetic here logic of the arithmetic here that in you that you led in 27,000? you process thousand of them. you led in 55,000, you process a thousand of them. you let in 75,000. you post. i said, how do they understand the ruthlessness of the of the arithmetic here. no and i don't think enough's been shown kind of showing on this government and the civil service this because if they are if process them faster some would argue they do process them faster. you may more people to come yeah, yeah . there's a come out. yeah, yeah. there's a chicken egg and chicken and the egg here and they to solve this they do need to solve this problem. we haven't seen any problem. but we haven't seen any proper solution here, mark. no you're me. thank you're telling me. thank you very jamie. always very much, jamie. it's always great to see you. we have ms. alexandra marshall from austria earlier standing by. don't go . earlier standing by. don't go. we're coming right back .
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the covid feels very 20, 20, don't you think, around a story from today's new york post, quote, masks and social distancing should be mandated or encouraged in public to protect people from impulsive , long people from impulsive, long covid, according to a new report commissioned by the us. department of health and human services, long covid. but yemen is back on its covid stand now and forever. last week, g20 leaders rishi rich, jacinda trudeau, joe biden signed on to a very disturbing idea a global digital vaccine passport , a pet digital vaccine passport, a pet project of the world health organisation . so any old album organisation. so any old album in can walk into your country, but you will need the state's permission to leave this benighted land . alexandra benighted land. alexandra
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marshall from the spectator down under joins us. alexandra this was one of those sort of conspiracy theories, things just a few months ago. but actually, if you read the communiques of these global summits now , they these global summits now, they were actually galloping ahead with this digital identity thing very fast . well, i actually very fast. well, i actually wrote a very large takedown of digital identity last year, a very early in the year last year . and people thought i was a conspiracy theorist, that i'm like, no, this is in legislation. it's actually written in australian legislation, passed by a federal liberal government, which is conservative for those who i'm following along. and now we've had the new labour prime minister, we call him airbus. albo has signed on to this new digital idea along with all of your guys . you know, they so your guys. you know, they so worried about the climate change . they parade around in private jets and so now they want to track us, not them. just us. yes we digital. i do . yeah, it's we digital. i do. yeah, it's
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very weird because they're not even hiding it. they go and they hold these summits in bali and sharm el sheikh down. they never they never hold it in cloncurry, say no offence to your fair town in the in the outback and queensland which i think it's queensland. but they, they neven queensland. but they, they never, they go to these exotic resorts and announce plans to prevent any of the rest of us going to these exotic resorts . going to these exotic resorts. and yet at the same time people have a lot of people seem willing to put up with being told where you can go and where you can fly and what you need to do to board the plane . people do to board the plane. people are going along with it on. they well , it's always a swiss ski well, it's always a swiss ski lodge or some kind of pacific island resort where these things are taking place. as you say, they never slumming it anywhere with the peasant class . but what with the peasant class. but what i find is most people don't believe it's true. it's not that
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they agree with it or they think it's okay. they they actually don't quite grasp that this is going to be a thing. and my favourite part about ivan allegation, which i presume is the same as yours, because we both copy pasted it from the world economic forum is that it says that this digital idea is going to keep us safe from covid. i'd love to know how they're going to justify that, given that vaccine passports, which was the little trial run of digital id, didn't do much goodin of digital id, didn't do much good in the whole. keeping us safe from a virus scenario . so safe from a virus scenario. so there's a whole lot of stuff that's never tested. you never hear a journalist actually question a politician like we've had an election going on right now in our state happening on saturday. and there has not been a single question to the premier about what's going on. no one, no one is interested in no one's to talk about it. no. and that was actually probably the most tyrannous jurisdiction in way in his majesty's dominions during these last three years. you're
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talking about victoria, but you're you're right. the vaccine passport . the fascinating thing passport. the fascinating thing about it is the vaccine doesn't work. but the passport supposedly will. i mean, i don't even know how people go along with this stuff anymore. you're supposed to everyone here, the world leaders, the guys like joe biden gets the covid coming and going . jacinda trudeau gets the going. jacinda trudeau gets the covid coming and going. no matter how many times he's boosted. but we somehow we're still supposed to go along with the idea of vaccine. passport votes. if some if some guy in the english midlands wants to go and lie on a beach in greece. let me tell you how ridiculous it is. so we had vaccine, passports. we dropped over $100 million developing something that it was never going to work. and we had outbreaks in passport protected gyms, for instance . protected gyms, for instance. and they turned around and blamed the unvaccinated who were locked in their homes at the time for the outbreaks and their
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vaccine. passport protected gyms. now, this is what digital id is going to be like. they say it's virus safety protection. and i can tell you, if you look at china digital identity and digital tyranny , where your digital tyranny, where your phone becomes the government's ability to stalk you, has never kept a single person safe. what it does is enable the government to become this big brother persecutor. they say things like, well, i see you've been to a couple of mcdonald's this week. that's in violation of your carbon credit allowance. so we're probably going to lock you out next server state. out of the next server state. and digital i.d. and this is where digital i.d. leads and it's absolutely leads to. and it's absolutely crazy. and people have to understand not conspiracy understand it's not a conspiracy theory. this stuff is in your legislation and it is coming next year . yep that's true. it's next year. yep that's true. it's all about the control. it's all about the control . the covid is about the control. the covid is whatever it is, but the control is forever. that is that's that's the variant that will last until the end of time. thank you very much, alexandra.
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always great to see you. we're going to stamp it out, i think titch says titch says , what do titch says titch says, what do you do at 8 pm. on friday as well? wait a minute, 8 pm. monday to thursday. i'm right here. so 8 pm. on friday. i like to relax by hanging upside down in my bondage dungeon with my favourite dominic tricks. wait a minute. i my favourite dominic tricks. wait a minute . i don't think my favourite dominic tricks. wait a minute. i don't think i'm supposed to say that on television, am i rugby mad? should we remove taxpayer funding from universities so that disrupt and block free speech? create a victim culture for perfectly safe students , and for perfectly safe students, and force totally alien concepts such as critical race theory as fact on students. yeah, there's no reason why taxpayer should be funding in dr. a nation centres and this is why my old colleague from the spectator in the telegraph, boris johnson, is such a nincompoop . there's a guy such a nincompoop. there's a guy who, if you pull up quotes from his about african names and
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mohammedans and whatever. his about african names and mohammedans and whatever . all mohammedans and whatever. all through the decades yet he got to be prime minister and he's banned. he presided over a funding system where basically the culture of free speech in which he prospered is to be crushed down. wooden is here to wallop your wednesday. no lack of free speech with dan what you got then mark that's what you get up to at 8 pm. i'm like, oh my goodness, what are you doing dunng my goodness, what are you doing during my show? my god , i'm during my show? my god, i'm going to test your culture knowledge. do you watch the chinese pseudo the biggest game show around? well, if i've got a treat for you, the beast . mark treat for you, the beast. mark gilbert. jordi my superstar panel tonight . okay i'm going to panel tonight. okay i'm going to stay tuned for that . i shall stay tuned for that. i shall forego the late night bondage dungeon session . that's all with dungeon session. that's all with dan best show on late night telly. stay safe. stay free. monday, thursday on gb news. it's bev turner today from 10
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am. we're going to be here for a.m. we're going to be here for you. itv news , family to keep you. itv news, family to keep you. itv news, family to keep you up to date, but also make you up to date, but also make you smile. the guy went from puberty to adultery and i can't wait to bring a few of my own opinion. i have no time for cultural totalite arena, so we'll engage in passionate but always polite debate with your thoughts and opinions at the centre of this whole monday to thursday 1012 on tv, on radio and online .
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no spin , no bias, no censorship. no spin, no bias, no censorship. i'm dan watson . tonight, the i'm dan watson. tonight, the name of the game is up for scheming sturgeon as the supreme court sensationally ruled , she court sensationally ruled, she cannot hold a lawful second referendum without westminster's permission. but will that stop her deranged independence push ?
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