tv Headliners Replay GB News December 1, 2022 5:00am-6:01am GMT
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. asked by prince repeat. asked by prince william's godmother where she really came from . lady susan really came from. lady susan hussey then challenged her after she told her she was born in the uk and is british. kensington palace says the comments were unacceptable and it was right for her to step aside with immediate effect . more than immediate effect. more than 10,000 ambulance workers have voted to strike nine troughs in england and wales. month unite union is the latest to announce staff walkouts . they're joining staff walkouts. they're joining thousands of . ambulance thousands of. ambulance technicians and paramedics who are also set to walk off the job. all the strikes will head national rail as well as other train operators . more than 100 train operators. more than 100 eurostar staff will stop work. the announcements follow today's action by university and college union members and postal workers . the government has asked police the use of 400 cells to house prisons prisoners because of overcrowding . prisons
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of overcrowding. prisons minister damian hinds told employees that it's been an unfair entered increase in the number of over the last few months . he says it's partly due months. he says it's partly due to the criminal bar association's strike over the summer, which saw more people on remand . hsbc will close 114 bank remand. hsbc will close 114 bank branches across uk. it says the comes as remote banking in popularity with app users almost tripling 2017. the bank has also seen a decline in footfall since the covid pandemic. it plans to invest tens millions of pounds, updating its remaining branches , a major of an experimental alzheimer's , has shown for the alzheimer's, has shown for the first time that early stages of the disease can be slowed. scientists after 18 months, the stored progression by 27% compared with patients a placebo. however warn as the medicine works , the initial
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medicine works, the initial stages of the disease most won't benefit unless a revolution in spotting it it . and fleetwood spotting it it. and fleetwood mac singer songwriter mcvie has died at the age of 79. her family said she passed away peacefully this following a short illness . the band stevie short illness. the band stevie nicks has paid tribute to her, calling her my best in the whole . wo calling her my best in the whole. wo this is gb news now it's over to headliners . headliners. hello, welcome headliners. i'm simon evans. i am joined by the big dogs of headliners leo kearse and nick hickson . i'm not kearse and nick hickson. i'm not there in the snow. let's take a look . thursday's front pages , look. thursday's front pages, shall we.7 we look. thursday's front pages, shall we? we have the daily mail first with meet and greet that
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sparked a royal disaster. we will be covering that story very shortly. daily telegraph with strikes on every day until christmas hooray! the i uk playing with fire after covid jabs u—turn scientists big garden leads with revealed percent of england's water firms in foreign hands and. ministry of justice requests use of 400 police cells for prisoners. the financial has brussels and yellen turn up the heat on over twitter . the times leads with twitter. the times leads with godmother quits over racism row at a picture of the sadly departed mcvie from fleetwood . departed mcvie from fleetwood. and finally the daily star with a heartfelt plea to telly bigwigs from whole nation. take one for the team. fans tv switch to ensure three lions win . well to ensure three lions win. well those were your front pages . those were your front pages. have a look at them in some more
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detail . so we begin with the detail. so we begin with the front page of thursday's mail. mail and the web. one story dominating yet important story is the queen's lead in, we think, the 83 year old palace aide who said where, are you from. to a black in the palace, which is the worst and most horrific thing that anybody's ever done? i mean, how deep should we bury? woman she's already been forced to quit job. enoughis already been forced to quit job. enough is not enough. it's not enough. we should burn effigies. can we string her up by wire? it's too much. i mean, she's cranked up the length of the mall. think that the official mall. i think that the official that original punishment that was the original punishment it kind of for some it for that kind of for some sort of indiscreet right. sort of racial indiscreet right. her ankle to ankles to the back of the skull and hold up them all the ability. oh, really. all to the ability. oh, really. yeah, yeah. yeah, right. yeah, yeah. i didn't that. why didn't know that. that's why the road pink. really? yeah. road is pink. oh, really? yeah. so you can wash off the blood stains afterwards. right. okay yeah. she. she said she
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yeah. i mean, she. she said she has her boss of has to charity work. her boss of a charity where are you from? and she's been forced to quit. prince william or king william , prince william or king william, he's called now has come out and condemned or said that unacceptable . but what's unacceptable. but what's interesting is, you know, she said where are you from to this 7 said where are you from to this ? it's this woman who's born in london . yeah, raised. raised in london. yeah, raised. raised in london. yeah, raised. raised in london. so you know, is british. and obviously , you know, it's and obviously, you know, it's unpleasant . it must be unpleasant. it must be unpleasant. it must be unpleasant being asked where you're from, i guess where i'm from quite a lot. i'm from scotland in case anybody wants to but but notice even to know. but but i notice even when not wearing when you're not wearing traditional scottish traditional ceremonial scottish dress yeah this woman nkosi dress. yeah but this woman nkosi nkosi fulani she violated but she runs a charity called sister's space that caters for women of african caribbean heritage. so how she cater for those women without asking them where they're from, you've got to validate they're from. she can have no possible knowledge, understanding or conception what it is to have african, caribbean heritage. clearly, she has no
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grasp of those issues. yeah. i mean, some some people would say that just an elderly that this is just an elderly showing interest in someone showing an interest in someone and interest their and showing interest in their history heritage as history and their heritage as you you would as you know, as you would do, as you know, as you would do, as you a lot times. and those you do it a lot times. and those people would be racist . and people would be racist. and there are there are two things which i think you probably you in there anyway. but in our briefing, there one that she briefing, there was one that she was apparently dressed full, very traditional of very obviously traditional of canbbean very obviously traditional of caribbean stroke, african regalia, very beautiful, big headdress, floral dress and so on. so obviously coming to gear. yeah. and then also there is a description of how when she discovered african dancing , she discovered african dancing, she said her life changed when she joined an african dance group as a teenager to hear africans with strong learn about the food and the drumming touched my heart took me to a place i'd never been. all of which is fine, but suggests she does feel some sort of connection to some where she's from. yeah. as it were in. some in some sense. other than the charity she runs about women
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helping women with a connection with that heritage with our history. so know to then see the asking their heritage and history as some sort of vicious hate crime just seems like a nonsense . be but maybe maybe hate crime just seems like a nonsense. be but maybe maybe i'm just a terrible person. well, that's but also both can be true at once. i mean, look , it's at once. i mean, look, it's a shock to me that anyone at buckingham palace is out of touch , and i'm surprised they touch, and i'm surprised they even have a look. they should watch the crown. exactly. but get learn about get back, touch, learn about themselves. 1990, did learn themselves. 1990, they did learn about they didn't and about things they didn't do and it is it's obviously potentially rude and offensive to keep asking them where someone's from who what the intention who knows what the intention was. resigning issue. i was. is it resigning issue. i question the sun quite and question that the sun quite and it was called being 83 it was called policing being 83 might a result also perhaps might be a result also perhaps that was prolonged it was prolonged racism which i found a weird phrase. the sun had an better phrase in their version of article. the who of the article. the person who was quoted the lady was quoted, perhaps incorrectly, saying perhaps incorrectly, as saying the fact that it was done just
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in the open front of people in the open in front of people on a day should be on a day when we should be working violence against working towards violence against women . and fact if i'm that women. and in fact if i'm that good cause. simon and that's my problem freudian slip she is on record as saying herself as fulani that she believes meghan was subject domestic violence when she was in the royal . so when she was in the royal. so she has kind of got a history of believing that the royal family is deeply, fundamentally racist . but i guess when you look at things, you can see you wanted to see if somebody asked you a question you can project whatever you want onto question. i get all time i've i used to get all the time i've spent a year sort of gap here but later in my but a bit later in my mid—twenties i came back, mid—twenties when i came back, everyone convinced was everyone was convinced i was australian had a bit a australian and i had a bit of a tan and i picked up the accent i guess a little bit, you know, where you're really from, like kangaroos, cricket. and kangaroos, but it cricket. and if no would always go for if i said no would always go for south african, which i, i like that i of i was more yes, i like to laugh as a south african because you're bit scary. because you're a bit scary. anyway that's i think that's as much as we need to get out of
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the daily panel you've got the telegraph's front page nick strikes every until christmas strikes on every until christmas is their main story so some nice depressing news before christmas walk out to the stop trains post buses driving and cash handling didn't see the last coming i mean it says it says rail workers teach a security driving exam examiners and removal payments officers. i'm to rural payments officers. i'm to rural payments officers. i'm to rural payments officers you know that's when you know it's a really bad strike. i didn't even really bad strike. i didn't even really know that was. is it like an old post office lady still know? oh, they just go give her the story. no idea. but. but it's very important. yeah. and they've confirm dates with they've yet confirm dates with whether it will definitely happen, but they can have to give two weeks notice. but it's not good. and of course people are defaulting their normal position sunak is criticising saying his union saying he it's his union paymasters. well, simon clark tory saying you know what tory mp is saying you know what about self—defeating about the self—defeating inflationary is the inflationary spiral is the obvious flaw the wage price spiral thing and he's saying that if the unions don't come to their senses , the government
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their senses, the government will have to push ahead with minimum service legislation, which do have, which france and spain do have, whereby keep some whereby you have to keep some minimum know minimum going. we all know that's big deal. the tube that's a big deal. the tube strikes just grinds to a halt. it's mayhem so i think something like be reasonable. like that would be reasonable. but about the but if we're talking about the country to a halt, country grinding to a halt, if driving go driving instructors go on strike, well , free up traffic, strike, well, free up traffic, be to get where you go and you won't be stopped by some 17 year old in 12 miles an hour. yes, a short. that would be a positive, but less beneficial, like a beef product. people haven't thought of verbal payment of it before. verbal payment officers will be hell without . officers will be hell without. the rural payment officers, they may offset by just a foil protest just as well. i think we're coming up to them a bit later on. we if we got anything else on on the front page that we should look at, well, there's migrants could be held at ftx for up to four days. there's mouldy missed to hotel. mouldy missed calls to hotel. yeah how detect downtime. yeah and how to detect downtime. that's done that's interesting. have we done now the i leo with covid now anyway? the i leo with covid jabs. yeah and they've also they've also got a tributes to
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fleetwood legend christine mcvie. yes i actually played mick fleetwood , an itv drama. mick fleetwood, an itv drama. look, fleetwood mick fleetwood mac . that was exactly the stuff mac. that was exactly the stuff that was a microaggression you say that was i was told basically you've got there is . basically you've got there is. a have a great tribute that that was was her name because was married to john mcvie . they're married to john mcvie. they're all money to each other they're all money to each other they're all i know, holly. q all money to each other they're all i know, holly. 0 but carried his name. i think they've divorced by now but she was married to him and that's what the name of the band was. mick fleetwood v they were named fleetwood mac v they were named after section after the rhythm section usually. which no usually. yeah. which is of no relevance her. was, she relevance to her. she was, she was wasn't she. she was but was good wasn't she. she was but they were all she had. songbird as my favourite song which she wrote absolutely beautiful . wrote so absolutely beautiful. chris now that's chris noonan album. now that's on premium , the £5 a month. on the premium, the £5 a month. she's 79 though. i mean, that is to me when people you know that i've just assumed are still
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pretty much in the right place of life , turned out to be that of life, turned out to be that very old. yeah. yeah, i guess she was maybe a little older than stevie nicks and lindsey buckingham when were they were they younger. think. and they were younger. i think. and her were older the her were the were the older the original. well first name original. yeah. well first name banks that they to banks before that they used to be bluesy band at one be more of a bluesy band at one point they had three guitarist. yeah they had a one that was just a slide guitarist. how bluesy then it became bluesy they were. then it became much pop they went on. much more pop as they went on. peter a lot, yeah. yeah. peter green a lot, yeah. yeah. so he was one of the greatest to me. very strange he did me. he was a very strange he did not cope anyway. too many sleep rabbit talk rabbit holes aside. let's talk about yeah, talking about the covid. yeah, talking about the covid. yeah, talking about dying. so about old people dying. so apparently is playing apparently the uk is playing with after covid with fire after the covid jabs u—turn. scientists warned u—turn. scientists have warned so apparently planning our so apparently our planning our own isn't enough. we've own isn't good enough. we've just assumed assume that just sort of assumed assume that covid going away and maybe covid is going away and maybe natural immunity is kicked in and over so we don't have and taken over so we don't have and taken over so we don't have a proper plans in place for new in rolling out vaccines and developing new vaccines. i this is true keeping them has been warning about this for some time now she's like now and she's not like financially benefiting from
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she's them. one of the she's one of them. one of the things people in the news isn't. yes, exactly. yeah. well, it's there's did a plan last there's we did have a plan last time we just threw out time when we just threw it out the completely and then the window completely and then decided everyone in the decided to lock everyone in the houses. that was part the houses. that was never part the plan. do we even listen bands plan. so do we even listen bands and managed to still do and we managed to still do the roll anyway i'm not so roll out anyway so i'm not so it's a big deal and also it's such a big deal and also the well we can the vaccines well we can question efficacy, but question the efficacy, but i don't know what we're allowed to say. i we really need new vaccines need things vaccines because i need things not exactly. i love not to take. exactly. i love them things not to take. but them all things not to take. but greg here, it's quite greg clark here, it's quite interesting, i interesting, says that i hesitate use the hesitate to use the word forgotten because seems to be forgotten because it seems to be and a mystery to me. it seems and is a mystery to me. it seems to been deliberate. so it's to have been deliberate. so it's funny that he's now that conspiracy about the conspiracy about all the so—called anti—vaxxers so—called anti —vaxxers he's saying deliberately saying we've deliberately our vaccine but it doesn't seem particularly yeah, particularly likely. me yeah, it's you're it's ridiculous and you're right, conspiracy theory right, the conspiracy theory turn on a pin. i mean we've all noficed turn on a pin. i mean we've all noticed the, that the reporting, the, lockdown in the, the lockdown protesters in china. yeah. as a distinct flavour the flavour from the way the lockdown protests this lockdown protests in this country but it country were described but it seem bit silly to me. i don't seem a bit silly to me. i don't intend to share your vaccine scepticism, speaking, we
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scepticism, but speaking, we invested and invested a lot of money and world sciences knew we had world class sciences knew we had an you people think an edge. you know, people think in they do, but with the in britain they do, but with the vaccines and i mean they just they have kind of just allowed it to drizzle the of it to drizzle out the bottom of the basket this is not the basket plus that this is not thing yeah, people thing anymore. yeah, people are getting doesn't getting it, but it doesn't matter. wouldn't even have to matter. i wouldn't even have to be covid. they could have just, you vaccines, you know, rolled out vaccines, loads could have loads of stuff. it could have been business. but it's been a great business. but it's other stuff in other things, people need vaccinating against. exactly. one. exactly. yeah that's a big one. pam brooks. yeah monkeypox is called and it's called m fox called now and it's called m fox . fox, isn't it? that was a yes . you say . well, people . anyway, . you say. well, people. anyway, we finish this section with the what else. the daily take one for the team nic. yes this is about basically football superstition. so england have a win ratio . their matches are win ratio. their matches are shown on the bbc. if 75. but itv a mere 13. so they're saying look, let the bbc show it against its match against senegal on sunday so that we can
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win . and there is something in win. and there is something in this because we used to worry about when we're watching football matches. and my suddenly came in the room we could switch suddenly like lose it goes and i still partially blame it for the argentina loss in world cup so in 99 in the world cup so football get very football fans get very superstitious point superstitious so they do a point here i we need to do here i think we need to do everything we can definitely were robbed in game as well incident. yeah appalling incident. oh yeah appalling decision you mean we the sol campbell campbell was campbell go oh campbell was shocking. what happened shocking. is that what happened to i really feel to him twice. i really feel sorry for he struggled with mental health that. mental health after that. talking football from talking about a football from ages that's radio, you ages ago. that's radio, you know, football game from a know, a football game from a bonng know, a football game from a boring football this week. boring football from this week. it's one from you it's a boring one from 24. you can't feeling, though, that can't help feeling, though, that if from itv to bbc if we were to from itv to bbc for the senegal game we be like using all our jokers a bit early jermaine i think. oh yeah and we be senegal euro. oh that one back for france again. but parfait and because we're going to need some we're going to need all the superstitious if you just show them all on bbc that
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would be covered yeah if that's true okay that was it for the front pages i feel we've given them a comprehensive look over coming up after the break, we'll be behind headlines be delving behind the headlines , not get nick , trying not to get nick cancelled process for cancelled in the process for a couple little .
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and welcome back , headliners. and welcome back, headliners. with me, simon evans and leo kearse and nick dixon . so we go kearse and nick dixon. so we go to thursday's telegraph to kick this section with suella braverman being complimented on her classical style. but she wrote that so of robyn's migrant speech, like rivers of blood, says senior, met. this is neil basu, who is worried about her choice of language ej. the people have been very with the language over this and the of invasion and so on seeing her language yeah yeah and i that probably actual thing happening is more important. let's address
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this. firstly mean enoch this. so firstly mean enoch powell. enoch he was a bit of a moderate lib . it came to the moderate lib. it came to the numbers in hindsight sort of actually underestimated immigration. but you immigration. but whatever you say powell , he say about enoch powell, he everyone thatcher to tony everyone from thatcher to tony benn to tony blair has said this guy a genius in terms of iq guy was a genius in terms of iq spoke languages. i don't think anyone's really suella braverman to justin she's to him that level. justin she's not as good. she's not as smart as i think everyone would admit that not. as good a houseman scholar. yeah, exactly. but difference is now he he does talk about what he's saying that in the past he his parents parents were attacks based on race because of things enoch powell has said and not said genuine question do things that inflame tensions and of course obviously they do in some cases you cite the obviously you could cite the obviously hitler could modern hitler you could even say modern things waters saying things like maxine waters saying push trump supporters or push back on trump supporters or the blm riots being encouraged by certainly you can by the media. certainly you can make argument make the argument that the inflammatory can lead inflammatory rhetoric can lead to certainly to violence. i can certainly accept but when accept that. but when you compare to current compare it to the current situation government, situation with government, the key difference she's tackling an
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illegal migrant problem that just has just about everyone has a problem we need to problem with and says we need to tackle it's way as tackle it's in any way as incendiary so i think it's a bit silly but one thing that she said which i do you know you know my views are roughly in line with yours but she did say this quite bizarre thing that she of sending them she dreamed of sending them sending those crossing sending the those crossing the channel rwanda not channel illegally to rwanda not not thought was a it not that she thought it was a it was unfortunate but necessary was an unfortunate but necessary deterrent anything. but that deterrent or anything. but that she to have some of she seemed to have some sort of take degree , i think was a it take degree, i think was a it was odd language again. that again was where the iq comes , again was where the iq comes, but also where there's a language matter that much she's called an invasion is important for guy. let's justice for this guy. let's justice to finish but does it also finish on my but he does it also to being woke he says he says you know you'll all happily be called so can see that called woke so we can see that this we know is sort of side this guy we know is sort of side on. i think it's a bit much on. but i think it's a bit much comparing poverty power also comparing poverty power and also language because language is important because she's she's making these great rhetorical gestures , one to send rhetorical gestures, one to send them rwanda and all kind of them to rwanda and all kind of stuff. but she's not it and the tories aren't doing it. they've
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stuff. but she's not it and the toriesinren't doing it. they've stuff. but she's not it and the toriesin poweroing it. they've stuff. but she's not it and the toriesin power for, it. they've stuff. but she's not it and the toriesin power for, for they've stuff. but she's not it and the toriesin power for, for 12 ey've stuff. but she's not it and the toriesin power for, for 12 years, been in power for, for 12 years, give or take, and they're not going to do what they do, do as the they talk tough, like every government even keir starmer right now saying know he's right now is saying know he's going to you're going to crack down on illegal he's going down on illegal and he's going to know also limit legal to you know also limit legal migration doesn't impact migration so it doesn't impact you prices and wages migration so it doesn't impact you things prices and wages migration so it doesn't impact you things like prices and wages migration so it doesn't impact you things like that.3s and wages migration so it doesn't impact you things like that. but1d wages migration so it doesn't impact you things like that. but he nages and things like that. but he won't do it and the tories aren't doing the leads that run the country. the mass immigration. it the country. the mass immigration . it pushes those immigration. it pushes those pnces immigration. it pushes those prices up. they want property, it provides labour for their businesses . so it's throwing businesses. so it's throwing kindling on the isn't it? essentially it's not. it's not building it up with solid wood. it's just keeps the flames burning a little bit brighter in the short term. yeah, it does that there is there's been a total by year by year for over 20 now. yeah but they 20 years now. yeah but they will, suella will come out and see these, these you the incredible things and but you know which, which inflame some people and reassure others. but we're nothing is being done now.
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and i tend to agree with you that i think he is he's he's quite pleased to be regarded woke but he uses that term as. it was sort of six years ago. it has been sort of i suppose, down or distorted its in its terms now he says this is a letter to issues of racial and social injustice. but i know that's what people think it means now, is it exploiting victimhood, exploit in these leaver issues , exploit in these leaver issues, your own social or financial gain ? and indeed, from a police gain? and indeed, from a police perspective, it's about rebranding cars with rainbows and so on. yeah, you know, that kind of stuff. anyway should be aware that. leo story with aware of that. leo is story with thursday's telegraph stop oil not quite stopping traffic it will just stop marchers that were marching in london and the police didn't them because they said they weren't obstructing the highway so they made no arrests at the protest . but with arrests at the protest. but with the police, with one police officer saying they're walking down the highway and we're facilitating them, they this is this is the actually helping just the foil block. i mean,
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they see they're blocking it because they're moving. but i'm if i'm in an ambulance trying to get to hospital and i don't want to be moving at that speed, i don't know be walking at the maximum speed a vegan can walk up. i want be going, you up. i want to be going, you know, 60 miles hour in an know, 60 miles an hour in an ambulance it's ridiculous it ambulance so it's ridiculous it just one officer said just shows one officer said they're anything wrong they're not doing anything wrong at minute. they're not obstructing highway. it's obstructing the highway. it's still the police still i'm know the police trolling police officer trolling another police officer said is the traffic said. the problem is the traffic can get past when the opportunity arises it's a proper grey look we just had this bill passed that was supposed allow the police to crack down on protest. everybody was worried it was going to be too authoritarian , allow them to, authoritarian, allow them to, you know, crack down on things to harshly yeah, why aren't they using it and the one instance where it would actually be a goodidea where it would actually be a good idea where these people are disrupting everybody's and they're also , they're they're also, they're saying they're also, they're saying they're continue doing they're going to continue doing it to they're it and they're going to they're also to continue damaging also going to continue damaging our they they're going our when they say they're going to no. and which to slash artwork. no. and which you is moving on from from
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you know is moving on from from just splashing soup on it. so far of the artwork they've far most of the artwork they've splashed actually had glass splashed has actually had glass in of damage has in front of it. no damage has been at all. but perhaps been done at all. but perhaps feel that's lessen the impact they'll just stage they'll go that's just stage one. it looks as if one. yeah. well it looks as if they're down the highway and we're them we're facilitating them and that's word and that's the perfect word and perfect because perfect image because they're facilitating they facilitating them because they secretly not so securely secretly we're not so securely agrees these people. but agrees with these people. but this i say we should this is why i say we should designate them terrorists. designate them as terrorists. i mean, the coning, he's mean, this guy, the coning, he's the has here the spokesman, has said here quite he's that quite clearly he's warned that they'll to escalate they'll continue to escalate unless government meets unless the government meets demands. that demands. i mean, doesn't that sound or whatever sound a terrorist or whatever word we use? but certainly that's you know, surely we can. i think we should designate them as racist then something will have to be fired from their job. well, this story next from thursday . some may actually thursday. some may actually explain why they're not so keen to arrest them . yeah, uk jails to arrest them. yeah, uk jails are full and taxpayers will need to pa y £400 a night for every to pay £400 a night for every police cell to house violent cons. so obviously this is going to people. so last there were
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82,839 inmates locked up in england . wales, the total number england. wales, the total number is understood to have now topped 83,000 around 1500 extra cons were banged up in the past two months alone, so yeah, is this probably the prisons are full. it's another thing that's falling apart and in our country they're blaming the pandemic delay and the barrister strike action . it's another thing that action. it's another thing that perhaps we could solve it. they were less people in the country or bring about the death penalty. don't know. just penalty. i don't know. just there's another one i hear. i and i should be in prison. that the thing thing with so the thing the thing with is so of these people, especially the new rise in prisoners is from prisoners on remain. so they're they're waiting for trial so these could be innocent people and this is because barristers haven't been processing the cases because this backlog and because the i mean i remember this kind of story cropping up back in the eighties? i did a law degree. it was one of the main things we did then about criminology. the prisons weren't adequate know, adequate then. i don't know, they built more. i mean, those
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nightingale they built more. i mean, those nig pretty.e they built more. i mean, those nig pretty quickly to say maybe out pretty quickly to say maybe they have been repurposed they could have been repurposed like them like think to build them quickly. we like huge big cells with , very old fashioned kind of with, very old fashioned kind of architecture for these, but all they really need is the ball and chain . put them under house chain. put them under house arrest with a with a 50 kilo weight around the ankle and they won't be given of it. i will say those houses are and put them in a field. yes, exactly. spent a field. yes, exactly. i spent the night in a police cell the night in a in a police cell about, oh, 30 years ago. i think it must be this orderly in covent garden. and it was at night i would have been quite chuffed because know covent garden well it probably would close. did not go for andrew because with the facilities and whatever a proper whatever it wasn't even a proper lucy you that prison food the stuff get in the jail cells where they just not the proper prison those stuff it laughs prison but those stuff it laughs but it's like a armouries there have you all in prison then because it's coming out. no nick is the only one with a clean record. it's basically like the dirty dozen. this shell thursday's now we used to regard
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for water with suspicion now it's coming out of our taps, it seems. yeah apparently more than 70% of the english water industry is in ownership. i thought it tasted funny. so foreign investment firms, private equity, pension funds and businesses lodged in tax havens owned more than 70% of the water industry in england, according to research by guardian. the guardian list is of seeing this is bad, but this is just diversity and business ownership, which is funny . it if ownership, which is funny. it if you find out that 70% of london , 65% of london is now foreign occupied it. yeah that was yesterday's and that was that was people like so but this is front page story who is the ship going to approve this evil racist being northumbrian water suppues racist being northumbrian water supplies nearly 3 million people in north—east england is ultimately owned by the cayman islands. registered siki hutchins and holdings, the business empire . lee hutchins and holdings, the business empire. lee in hong richest individual. so a great for being rich cashing do suit
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the simulation increasingly just taking the michael i notice that blackrock have got percent of it as well. they seem to be the conspiracy theorist they say well there's been through a black rock filtration system . it black rock filtration system. it is disturbing. this could almost make me a lefty and say let's nationalise water. you find out, i mean, china owns, 8.7% of thames water and qatar , another thames water and qatar, another bit of something. and i have it. how much of the banksy do we own? that's what going to question and the us owns owns most of it 17% overall. so it is it does give you a weird it it does give you a weird feeling this is the thing about it it does give you a weird feelingis his is the thing about it it does give you a weird feelingis it'sis the thing about it it does give you a weird feelingis it's all1e thing about it it does give you a weird feelingis it's all well ng about it it does give you a weird feelingis it's all well and bout it it does give you a weird feelingis it's all well and good globe is it's all well and good while are work and then while things are work and then suddenly putin has a war and gas pnces suddenly putin has a war and gas prices change someone else got all it's a bit all your water. yeah it's a bit disturbing, it? mean disturbing, isn't it? i mean and, think the big and, you think about the big short michael burry says short when michael burry says that has yeah. and that he always has it. yeah. and he's now solely in he's investing now solely in water. guy that predicted water. the guy that predicted the 2008 crash, he sort of thing. if something happened with mind with water, i wouldn't mind owning our owning some of it. you our country our hands and also country in our hands and also it's a free market. it it's not a free market. it doesn't really suit privatised
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ocean know, to ocean because, you know, to change waters yeah to change your waters yeah got to move a move house. yeah. it's a nonsense, isn't it? like trains the rest and i do remember i'm old enough remember actually old enough to remember actually worked those worked on some of those flirtations thatcher flirtations when thatcher privatised the great nationalised we nationalised industries and we always all always did the propaganda all everyone's earn a everyone's going to earn a little of gas, bit of little bit of gas, little bit of electricity within weeks. everyone them off everyone had flogged them off yeah by france yeah the ruling by france and it's this france it's a british gas this france almost immediately and as it says here only set structure says here the only set structure is complex it's , so opaque is so complex it's, so opaque and no one can figure out who actually it. oh, actually owns some of it. oh, well , that's all for part two well, that's all for part two after break. we have the after the break. we have the virtues schools our virtues. private schools run our roads, bumper offer, and leo will be . which one of these will be. which one of these would get the hump ? oh remember would get the hump? oh remember her? or will it be number two? let's see in a philosopher comes .
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welcome to headliners. let's go to thursday's mirror now. private schools attended by senior tories avoided paying vat as . indeed, have all other as. indeed, have all other private schools attended by senior is . private schools don't senior is. private schools don't pay senior is. private schools don't pay for that. it's not that they want to set it. yeah, it's upsetting labour, sir keir starmer told the prime minister to end the tory scandal of massive tax breaks for private schools which are able to escape paying schools which are able to escape paying vat and the fees due to the charitable status . the charitable status. apparently this private apparently this top private schools avoided charging apparently this top private schools avoided chargin g £65 schools avoided charging £65 million in vat on their fees last last year due to being charities people who send the kids to private have paid for a state education because they pay tax, the income tax and all the other myriad we pay and pay a lot of it as well because they tend be rich supporting the nafion tend be rich supporting the nation and then they don't even use the state education that they've paid for we've paid for a place in a state school. they're not even using it and they even more for a place, a
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private school. so really they're they are being charity. they're supporting kids and they're not even being a part of it. i mean, some people have some serious people posited a different system like the sort of health systems that are be a sort of voucher based system. so you a certain amount of support from the state every time you have a child, they might say, well, it would cost the state four grand a year to educate that we'd give you that child. we'd rather give you four grand of your voucher you can spend that and get a free education a state school or. education in a state school or. there'll schools which there'll be other schools which offer education for grand offer an education for 12 grand a and your full grand will a year and your full grand will go see what i mean? go towards it. see what i mean? that's interesting. yeah that would actually. would would actually. so that would give lot money rich give a lot more money rich people. and also people. yeah. and it also create which think would be useful which i think would be useful and valuable sort of middle tier you something closer to the old grammar schools i suppose. know instead being either eye instead of being either eye wateringly or free, wateringly expensive or free, rather like a little bit of a postcode lottery. well, there are some good ones, but you just don't. and go off the
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don't. and they can go off the ball very quickly if wrong head sort of comes in or something. know. and of course the other thing that is mentioning in this story that private education, story is that private education, there export business there is a big export business in country, especially for in this country, especially for an foreign students , an awful of foreign students, especially the especially east asian at the moment the british education moment, the british education system is very high reputation in korea and so on. in china and korea and so on. there's a new money. there's a lot of new money. think it has pushed prices up? yeah of the a lot of the yeah a lot of the a lot of the best and famous were best and most famous were opening and out opening branches and out offering and all offering a schooling and all these sort of things. it's a it's a big export business to we wave schools. yeah certainly this seems more like a tax rate to me than an attempt to do anything serious education. anything serious for education. you get from the you used to get some from the registry which is fine but surely this will hit those relatively well—off relatively less well—off people who private schools who can go to private schools and have to move and then they'd have to move into kinds education. into other kinds of education. the still be able the ricci's will still be able to pay for it, seems to me anyway. i mean, yeah, you mentioned grammar schools. what available when we got rid of grammar schools now, you grammar schools and. now, you know, of pointing know, they're sort of pointing out tories out all these top tories have been private schools and of been to private schools and of
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course because we got course they have because we got rid of grammar and the rid of grammar schools and the one and the one person one person and the one person have been to a composite liz person. what they did to her didn't very that it's didn't last very long that it's very thursday's guardian very true. thursday's guardian now seems that super now nick it seems that the super rich now nick it seems that the super fich have now nick it seems that the super rich have yet another rich and i have yet another thing common distrust thing in common a deep distrust of the charity sector. yes uk super less than decade super rich less than a decade ago chief. so yeah, ago says charity chief. so yeah, the idea is this is from all on the idea is this is from all on the phrase and he's saying the incomes have grown by 10% in real terms amongst the top 1% from 2011 to 2019. and yet the typical donor nation has fallen by a fifth to just £48. a and he kind of looks at why and. then he interestingly points out that evenin he interestingly points out that even in top 1, the generosity of the top 20% is far higher , which the top 20% is far higher, which is kind of the pivotal principle action. 80% of the top 1% are not contributing meaningfully. so it's kind of that. so it's inevitable he, i suppose, to that potato principle, which go ahead and explain. well, yeah, you've got the greatest, which is sort where all the is sort of where all the resources tend end with resources tend to end up with like whatever. you've like the 1% or whatever. you've
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got potato principle which got the potato principle which states that 80% of results come from actions or things from 20% of actions or things like it's of like that it's sort of inevitable. observed inevitable. so observed something happening that was probably across all probably happened all across all times and across all sectors that 80% of the of the donations are coming 20, although within that still the in general the percent are giving less. i wonder if it tracks with the declining christianity which has beenin declining christianity which has been in the news lately. you know, people are just getting less people worried less. oh, are people worried they'll they'll the money they'll they'll need the money for economic crash or for the coming economic crash or recession? not sure . i mean, recession? i'm not sure. i mean, if the super , you can if it's the super, you can assume that they probably that they're not too worried about not having much money. it not having that much money. it may be it is one of those things where it to become what do they call a like a visible call it like a like a visible like a virtue kind of thing, which they used to do. yeah, like a virtue kind of thing, which the( used to do. yeah, like a virtue kind of thing, which the riched to do. yeah, like a virtue kind of thing, which the rich useddo. yeah, like a virtue kind of thing, which the rich used to yeah, like a virtue kind of thing, which the rich used to have , yeah. the rich used to have these big gala and all the rest where they parade. the where they could parade. the fact they're giving to fact that they're giving to charity. they've seen charity. but no they've seen as gosh maybe we need to gosh yeah. so maybe we need to bnng gosh yeah. so maybe we need to bring back. but the bring that back. but the guardian of saying that guardian is sort of saying that super people are becoming super rich people are becoming less charitable. i think it's more of reflection the
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more of reflection on the charities. charities are becoming stopped becoming awful. i stopped giving. to giving. i used to give to amnesty international for decades to amnesty decades of giving to amnesty international. i stopped international. and i stopped because awful because they became an awful charity there criticising charity there were criticising they were criticising alexei navalny they were supporting just the oil even though, you know, just oil were silencing artists by covering up. there's artists by covering up. there's a very article, red west. i recommended some second piece of this about how all seem to drift leftward quite quickly, you know, quite like really the robert conquest theory van in particular seem to be saying there should probably be a lifetime like a 20 year span, and then they get taken over by the government, you know, something like that because they can they can become really anathema most people are anathema to most people who are wealthy their their tastes. wealthy in their their tastes. anyway, to now from anyway, nick to you now from thursday's metro seems bbc thursday's metro seems the bbc is struggling connect with is struggling to connect with lower income audiences . no that lower income audiences. no that can't true. it also we are in can't be true. it also we are in a bbc , bbc urged by ofcom do a bbc, bbc urged by ofcom do more to connect with lower income audiences and i love ofcom. can i just say quickly to
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get that out of the way. yeah of course. mean, the bbc makes course. i mean, the bbc makes stuff for london. lefties like them, know, they've got them, you know, they've got a huge chunk population, huge chunk of the population, middle, whatever call middle, whatever you call it, brexit they basically brexit or that they basically don't not don't like, and they've not really serious effort to really made a serious effort to neutral. they did it neutral. i mean, they did it just recently on just a story very recently on the midterm elections. it was interviewing election denier kari all those kind of kari lake and all those kind of people get a bit sick it so you could get say endless examples and warnings and they've ignored warnings this ofcom have this before because ofcom have said past look said in the past look your comedy output doesn't match the rest your output and i've rest of your output and i've just yeah, does. it's just gone yeah, it does. it's great. here they do sound great. but here they do sound like actually trying to like they're actually trying to address that address because it's found that people, socioeconomic people, lower socioeconomic groups the groups are less engaged in the rest the population, less rest of the population, less satisfied portrayal satisfied with their portrayal in programmes and they agree. they disagree with statements like the bbc provide provides a broad of content and things broad mix of content and things like bbc are like that. so the bbc are actually worried about it's actually worried about and it's not clear they're not quite clear what they're going but it seems going to do yet, but it seems they trying address at they are trying to address at least the bbc don't do enough to actually employ people from lower brackets up here, lower income brackets up here, don't really go for talking for
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an hour about the online safety bill so you know pretty serious stuff you go to some sort of expertise got paid 50 quid i'm going to say it why am i only getting paid 50 quid? they said we don't want to influence we don't provide any bias. i'm like this this is making me biased. i mean severe the producer was mean how severe the producer was getting salary the who getting a decent salary the who you the taxes and you know because the taxes and everything you're absolutely everything but you're absolutely right that right a lot of people say that that the big blind at the bbc that is the big blind at the bbc they're very keen on ensuring that there is diversity race that there is diversity of race and gender sexuality and so and gender and sexuality and so on. actually classes on. but actually classes ironically . yeah the one that is ironically. yeah the one that is lies the bottom we're all lies at the bottom we're all kind not you on it though kind of not to you on it though i sunday morning live the minute give you 100 quid gave me nothing follow emails nothing so follow up emails i just up in the end i was just gave up in the end i was like are like a bad comedy like these are like a bad comedy book. i got it off you and they know taxes. i got the cheap both ways. so the idea i've actually worse you are the bbc more worse than you are the bbc more from we have from thursday's it now we have crypto bankman—fried crypto billionaire bankman—fried who is more cryptic his political donations it seems yes so this crypto billionaire
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remember a couple of weeks ago this exchange and trading this after exchange and trading host down and you know tweeting up to $20 billion is just sort of vaporised vanished and also he's giving money he donated millions like $40 million to the democrats right before the midterm elections . and then this midterm elections. and then this whole thing collapsed afterwards. well, now he's come out and he said he funnelled dark money to the republicans. so this is you money that wasn't publicly i know as a as a political donation because it would have been bad pr for him. right. that's what he says. he says the reason was not for regulatory reasons, it's because reporters freak f if do need to republicans they're all super liberal and didn't want to have that fight if . well none us that fight if. well none of us do. i he has quite do. i mean he has quite bracingly actually after bracingly honest actually after the event. i'm not should at this i want to see some receipts there's a big this very harmful to democrat democrat is to to the democrat democrat is to have this money basically being fraudulent fraudulently obtained then syphoned into the into their pockets. but he was
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unregulated read a bit in one interview where he was just going, oh yeah, all that crap. that's just we say, you know, if we don't really that he has know this woke people nobody this all woke people nobody actually believes this nonsense it's like being in communist russia we have to work crack on we've got couple of more stories to from the world cup area to come from the world cup area back to thursday telegraph . back to thursday telegraph. nick, saudis have made a tempting to a goat. yeah it's like. well, yeah , this is one. like. well, yeah, this is one. although offered 150 million per season by saudi club al—nasr and i've heard it's actually 173 million a year and he's agreed , million a year and he's agreed, according to the daily mail, is close to signing. so you'll probably know he did explosive interview on a rubbish and now he obviously looking for a move and now of course he's leaving monday night he was rumoured to have had a ,350 million offer from saudi club. before that he didn't take because of course he wants play league wants to play champions league football. he wants to still break records it looks like break records but it looks like now there may not be any clubs really infirm he may actually consider years
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consider this offer. 37 years old. it's pretty old. right. so it's pretty usually end of a top usually like the end of a top flight even you're he's flight career, even you're he's superhuman. he always needs and although he's astonishingly fiercely scored great golf fiercely scored a great golf portugal didn't the other day but apparently this mean 150 but apparently this i mean 150 million a year i lose a little bit but that would be exceptional even within top flight football in terms, right? yeah. oh, yeah, yeah. well, when i was the highest paid in the world, he's 500,000 a week. world, he's on 500,000 a week. i think he was so think at the moment he was so united. we put him to united. we put him up to 3 million a week, roughly just by my calculations. the point my calculations. but the point is he would then become their mascot for, a world bid mascot for, a world cup bid themselves, right, yeah, themselves, is that right, yeah, i that's an element i think that's partly an element of yeah. saudi of it as well. yeah. saudi arabia next world cup. i arabia having next world cup. i mean, to get mean, it would start to get a bit silly wouldn't it. but they got loads of money the most those but it seems to revolve around you going say. around what were you going say. well that question like well just that i question like whether was really whether whether it was really true was democrats kind true it was the democrats kind of narrative. yeah of control the narrative. yeah but looked at the of but then i looked at the list of people it was meant to be and there were a lot of rhinos, there were like a lot of rhinos, mitt romney. so i believe maybe
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actually wasn't maga people actually it wasn't maga people he he to he was going know he trying to the was trying to get the the he was trying to get the republicans way he republicans back to the way he wanted it. that makes away from the world cup now ismail as news of a more traditional qatari competition. the competition. yeah so forget the football also hosting football qatar is also hosting the cup so some the camel beauty cup so some pictures. this is pictures. yeah and i this is racist it's actually it's racist but it's actually it's actually so the event takes actually true so the event takes place at the camel meat museum club in sharjah , near a head . club in sharjah, near a head. nailed it. the winner of the competing category , female competing category, female camels were milked and the owner of the one producing the most milk was rewarded with 20,000 qatari riyals . that was five and qatari riyals. that was five and a half thousand dollars . this is a half thousand dollars. this is goodin a half thousand dollars. this is good in a week is that the actual not the most beautiful camel. let's just a random picture of a camel from the do have lovely eyes though know if it is if it's human or if it's like human beauty pageant is probably going to be won by a trans cow or a horse with a strap like, you know, is this for the bronze winners? said, i
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can't describe my feelings because . this female has an because. this female has an audience like the audience, the world cup, like real madrid or united names, teams. so united names, two club teams. so those are the they all do like this camel world cup because it probably less virgins again there's less kneeling, no vr, there's less kneeling, no vr, there's lineker or neville to there's no lineker or neville to put up with me on the ground. that's yeah they do they that's true. yeah they do they take the camels the prize it's a bit off i fear having a beach parade in which the contestants also get milked milked like just well that's it for part three i think we're through now. yes. we've got coming up love actually took a diversified boyfriend for higher i wouldn't take there would be success if they wore crop tops i think maybe so we'll see you in a couple of minutes. you're right.
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all right. welcome back to headliners . get back to all right. welcome back to headliners. get back to it. we've got a final stat to get through. thursday's guardian . through. thursday's guardian. they are banging on about what else diversity actually . yeah. else diversity actually. yeah. richard curtis says lack diversity in love actually makes me a bit stupid. and he's certainly right about the last part because he's this is a film from thousand and three now everyone's now saying it's not diverse enough but of course in 1997 with blair is when immigration spike in the country. so 2003 was a very different country it just wasn't as diverse so you represented the country as it was at the but it's like 1984 now we have to go back and say, no, london was always this diverse. we have to pretend was past. and pretend there was no past. and there's all these bizarre there's been all these bizarre hit against in the hit pieces against it in the media. person said it was media. one person said it was like a ukip ethno state and that's i mean, richard that's mad. i mean, richard curtis said it thank curtis said it said thank society is changing, my film is boundin society is changing, my film is bound in some moments to feel out of date. the lack of diversity makes me feel uncomfortable and a stupid. uncomfortable and a bit stupid. why? does it might to why? why? why does it might to why? there's an irish dad in the bar.
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well, there you go. the film liam neeson in it. i actually haven't seen it full confession but will watch after but i actually will watch after this. if you do if you this. i mean if you do if you make movie i mean is make a movie i mean there is definitely a lack of diversity they all which you curtis they are all which you curtis you know they are from drawing from that very you make a from that very if you make a movie pretty thousand one the twin still be we twin towers will still be we don't filled with shame don't go on filled with shame because the twin it's just how things then things are things were then things are different that different enough that was that was from the title was where it came from the title love actually that was it was it was was a rebuke to the was a it was a rebuke to the idea there is know that idea that there is know that there's much irresolvable there's so much irresolvable hatred in the world. i hatred in the world. yes, i can i one last thing to retract i say one last thing to retract that. look because a walkman and it came from era when a movie it came from an era when a movie was just movie. you were was just a movie. you were trying a good movie. you trying to make a good movie. you weren't a people about weren't just in a people about politics. yeah, we had to politics. yeah yeah, we had to think of all the issues. the film it film too, to pick one, it wouldn't be the lack of diversity, fact that it diversity, the fact that it glorifies in terms glorifies stalking in terms of the doorstep. i mean, somebody should warned the police. should have warned the police. yeah, he yeah, yeah that was true. he also made hill think also made notting hill think earlier where that earlier than that. where that
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really a diverse really was a diverse neighbourhood you saw neighbourhood of which you saw no whatsoever. he no examples whatsoever. so if he wants to about a film which wants to talk about a film which you more you have more more self—flagellation . so i would self—flagellation. so i would the first eight times they are what is the latest student union tyranny in the of despotic tyranny in the home of despotic authoritarian overreach. so a couple a of weeks ago stirling university the student union decided to ban on campus. i went to stirling university to be honest . need to stirling university to be honest. need some b—vitamins to stirling university to be honest . need some b—vitamins the honest. need some b—vitamins the students there. but the students who actually led the ban now been subjected to verbal abuse. so two of them have been called names or whatever. and one student, imogen maitland . so see student, imogen maitland. so see that this are just a foil for me. so she also a note pinned to the door of there. she's obviously non—binary as well. yeah they are privately rented in stirling the note read dear vegans stop forcing veganism on uni. i don't force eating a £30 mcdonald's or mcdonald's of big,
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tasty and wrath of the day . you tasty and wrath of the day. you i assume you also appreciate it. if i made you an all meat diet, so don't force a zero meat diet on us that doesn't sound like abuse to me in that sounds extraordinarily polite sounds like reason yeah good advice i mean these are students who have not developed prefrontal cortex is which say comes in around 25. they're not rational and they're forcing other people to eat their diet, which is not which have been proved to be not healthy. they're going to get no testosterone, gradually testosterone, going to gradually become wing and become even more left wing and soy and it's just it's soy based. and it's just it's not healthy and you can't force wasn't very mean it was wasn't on a very i mean it was 55% know people have this more 55% i know people have this more than you know if you're than brexit you know if you're going force to going to force people to actually their actually change their diet, think and feels like it should be overwhelming. people care about so came about brexit so they came to this just like when i this is just some like when i was university i didn't go was at university i didn't go vote in anything i didn't even know you could vote in student unions took to wouldn't this stuff to sterling if stuff you going to sterling if you thinking no you were thinking about it. no what totally to sterling is what was totally to sterling is that is a terrible university
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that it is a terrible university i wish i'd known that i wish i wish i'd known that before i went to any of before i went apology to any of my former professors. you've you've early you've overcome your your early stall obstacles here you are stall and obstacles here you are you've risen to broadcast tv. you know, it was also probably have your face on that is probably one of those on the of the alumni they up in the student union that's the lords of other people but who the most famous student ian banks. oh yeah, yeah . can see why you yeah, yeah. can see why you didn't make the wall if he's got two pen names as well that cover most of it mirror online and sense that this could be a new income for you mate. possibly posing as acceptable boyfriend material women who are embarrassed about that, that's going to a woman woman dating a 20 years older, considers hiring a fake boyfriend to fool her parents . there's an 18 year old parents. there's an 18 year old woman. she talks about a couple of states away so inevitably it must be america but yeah she met a 40 year old man but she's want to tell her parents so she's thinking hiring actor thinking about hiring an actor to fake boyfriend but to pose as a fake boyfriend but she that a little
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she says but that seems a little crazy. there's some crazy. so there's some self—awareness there. and she told it was funny to and told me it was funny to and showed a picture of some showed them a picture of some random. kind funny random. she seems kind of funny to reality is i'm not to me. the reality is i'm not going to go out with an 18 year old before i get emails, but, you know, really in reality you know, really in the reality i'm prefacing but the i'm prefacing it with but the reality men often older men reality is men often older men do young women do go out with young women because. have to acquire because. men have to acquire some sort of status success. women don't no women famously don't want no scrubs just how it scrubs and that's just how it goesit scrubs and that's just how it goes it takes little time now goes it takes a little time now frowned society frowned upon in society and cool creepy isn't it just creepy but really isn't it just fairly normal? maybe not this, but don't know exactly how. it but i don't know exactly how. it all but with the all started. but with the internet sort internet dating being the sort of prevalent now in which of prevalent mode now in which people meet one another, it feels likely me. if feels more likely to me. if anything might end up anything that you might end up with with age with somebody who's with an age gap. created a before you gap. just created a before you met yeah met met catfishing. yeah they met onune met catfishing. yeah they met online as probably saw online as you probably saw journalist still their journalist who still got their previously their previously you know their photo above the fireplace you know little while later a lot of people public when people now in public life when you the image of them you see the image of them and then actually them then you actually meet them i mean say i'm better mean people say i'm better looking in even, but looking in person even, but that's rare. sorry, leo, do
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that's very rare. sorry, leo, do you want to say. oh, i was just going say i mean, it's going to say i mean, it's borderline a bit bit creepy. borderline a bit a bit creepy. a ,40 going out with an borderline a bit a bit creepy. a ,40aioing out with an borderline a bit a bit creepy. a ,40a bitg out with an borderline a bit a bit creepy. a ,40a bit t00|t with an borderline a bit a bit creepy. a ,40a bit too much. an borderline a bit a bit creepy. a ,40a bit too much. in borderline a bit a bit creepy. a ,40a bit too much. i mean, that is a bit too much. i mean, big lastly, when you get big tip. lastly, when you get onto thursday now burning onto thursday now the burning issue of the day, should women dress like strippers at work depends i depends if they're strippers i guess of that well guess but outside of that well earlier the new earlier this month the new new york twitter to ask york took to twitter to ask people they deemed people whether they deemed appropriate for crotch talks to be in workplace. the be worn in the workplace. the thing the tops that stop thing they're the tops that stop and yeah right so and your belly. yeah right so you the of kind you know the kind of fun kind spice girls yeah and it's spice girls it yeah and it's like people divide i mean like if people divide it i mean this basically the this is basically the journalists bothered journalists can be bothered write an article so he's got some tweets and them in a some tweets and put them in a random and pasted them. random copied and pasted them. yeah. yeah. a nonsense yeah. and yeah. it's a nonsense as people it's right. as some people say it's right. some it isn't. some people say it isn't. i mean, think it probably mean, i think it probably genuinely is a an issue for the to resolve you . see leo was to resolve you. see leo was saying before the show all women should wear it. but yeah, people people here people people it says here people claimed women shouldn't wear crop work because crop tops to work because they're hired for their brains. it does on the job, doesn't it? not presumably , you
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not hooters presumably, you know, i'm many of know, i mean, i'm so many of i don't know this people hired simply their of bit simply for their sort of bit ability their domestication ability for their domestication . are they just for behaving appropriately ? it's our company, appropriately? it's our company, men women speaking of which, men and women speaking of which, nick, finally we got our last story of the day, quantum wormholes. is in thursdays wormholes. this is in thursdays independent. i'm you can independent. i'm sure you can adequately explain going on here. is expert here. yeah, this is my expert area physicists create holographic wormhole inside quantum computers are scientists have created holographic have created a holographic wormhole inside a quantum computer for the first time oh good the wormhole theoretical good the wormhole is theoretical the way it's they didn't make actual rupture in space and time so worry about that and basically if you don't know wormhole course wormholes wormhole of course wormholes famously bridges across space time connect to otherwise remote parts the cosmos so they've done that in a simulation of wormholes donnie darko atoms and all that sort of thing. you know what i said, darko different things. everyone is here from science fiction. so really do exist, they think. but they've never actually found one, have they? theoretical one. they? the theoretical of one. theoretical think would
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theoretical hologram think would exist in quantum computers . i exist in quantum computers. i mean, many more words exist mean, how many more words exist can you get there ? but quantum can you get there? but quantum computers do exist now. they are happening, right? i think they really do right. i created really do exist right. i created one my hologram vision world one in my hologram vision world andifs one in my hologram vision world and it's in a sort of shoe box, and it's in a sort of shoe box, a hold on, a i don't understand how. even a hologram. quantum mechanics like that. so that probability you understand we do understand that that's that's the idea that things aren't how if they managed make computers out of that i mean is does he say it's probably this is you know, what are you going to do? your taxes will go it's probably about 500 quid. yeah, yeah. apparently, quantum computers can a can solve an equation can at a can solve an equation which is what computers do basically. yeah. you saw incredibly quickly because they're not going through each step of the process just doing they're not going through each st all)f the process just doing they're not going through each st all atthe process just doing they're not going through each st all at once 'ocess just doing they're not going through each st all at once and s just doing they're not going through each st all at once and oh, st doing they're not going through each st all at once and oh, okay,1g they're not going through each st all at once and oh, okay, i'm it all at once and oh, okay, i'm coming to it. but that is not you know, it's not absolutely accurate all of the time because, you know, quantum exist in a state of flux they can they
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can exist in two places at once. so they have to teleportation. right that is there that's coming up has happened that does happen now. quantum teleportation quantum yeah. yeah yeah. theoretically a real, real apple will happen . the real apple will happen. the real world believe. yeah yeah. do world i believe. yeah yeah. do have a cheese sandwich then i'll be impressed. think we've sorted that all tonight folks. that that's all tonight folks. thank leo and thank you to my guests leo and tune in at the same time tomorrow, andrew doyle. we'll be in this seat. he'll be joined by leo kearse and josh howey , the leo kearse and josh howey, the one relatively tame we allow that so it's been a pleasure. i say goodnight .
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queen elizabeth's lady in waiting resigns over racist questioning to overshadow prince william's so—called super bowl moment . good good morning. at moment. good good morning. at 6:00 on thursday, december the first this is breakfast on tv news with isabel webster and andrew pearson . here's what's andrew pearson. here's what's leading the news this morning. so prince william's godmother lady susan hussey has apologised after she repeatedly a black guest at a buckingham palace reception where she was really from. a spokesperson for prince william who's currently in boston for .
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