tv Headliners Replay GB News December 3, 2022 1:00am-2:01am GMT
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. the infection, a rare neonatal and care units are among a list services that will be protected from in the build up to christmas the royal college of nursing has also announced that chemotherapy , dialysis and chemotherapy, dialysis and paediatric intensive will not be impacted . other services will be impacted. other services will be severely reduced for members of the action in england , wales and the action in england, wales and northern ireland are set to industrial action on december the 15th and 20th. gb news understands that health officials are dealing with new cases of diphtheria at the ftx migrant processing centre in kent, the cases were discovered among the more than 2000 channel migrants who've arrived on small boats in recent days . gb news boats in recent days. gb news has obtained exclusive images from inside ftx , revealing some from inside ftx, revealing some of the poor conditions are living in official have told us they believe those positive for diphtheria contracted it while living rough . france sajid javid living rough. france sajid javid has become the latest mp to announce he won't standing at the next general election . the
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the next general election. the mp for bromsgrove was health secretary until july of this when he stood in the tory campaign. prime minister sunak says he's sad to see him his good friend go stepping and stepping back from politics and that's it. a pro—moscow conservative, mr. javid said, serving the government has been the privilege of his life. the rmt has held urgent talks with the government in a bid to halt strikes planned the christmas period. general secretary mick lynch met scotland's minister yesterday. the pair have urged westminster to intervene in the network rail pay dispute . network rail pay dispute. transport secretary mark harper said he wanted to work with the r.a. and the employees in good faith. resolve issues, mr. lynch said talks will continue over the weekend . tv online and dab+ the weekend. tv online and dab+ radio . this is gb news now it's radio. this is gb news now it's back. headliners .
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back. headliners. hello welcome to you. headliners i'm your host andrew doyle tonight i am joined two fantastic comedians to isla, cassie and nick dixon. let's take a quick look first at tomorrow's headlines before . we tomorrow's headlines before. we dive straight into them. we're going to go with the daily mail first, and they are leading with lockdown linked to surge in lockdown linked to new surge in strep a with a big picture of matt hancock and his pandemic diaries, which are being serialised there as of today. the daily now alert after a strep kills six children. we're going to go to the i weekend which has a uk brexit. regrets are growing and then the guardian this is exclusive. apparently half a million homes are missing out on bill help. and warning as six children die of strep a. that's story that's coming up again and again. we're going to be talking about that in just one moment. the front of the leads with russia the ftse leads with russia gathers shadow fleet of oil tankers and. also javid held talks with pimco as former
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chancellor looks to life beyond politics and then the mirror now tragedy of a kids. that's that story . again, we're going to go story. again, we're going to go on to the times which leads with nurses will walk out of cancer and awards and daily express leads with harry warned inflict more pain and its point of no return is of course in the wake of the trailer for the new netflix documentary about harry and meghan. and finally, the daily star, we've got a problem with our chip glasses and those were your front pages pages . were your front pages pages. okay, we're going to kick off with a saturday's daily mail front , sir. jailer, what have we front, sir. jailer, what have we got .7 so on the front page of the got.7 so on the front page of the daily mail, got? so on the front page of the daily mail, what the press is whether you're a fan, a foe. everyone who lived through covid must read. matt hancock says jaw dropping pandemic diaries . and dropping pandemic diaries. and then underneath that , sadly, six then underneath that, sadly, six children die from the infection in uk, lockdown has been linked
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to a new surge in strip . so to a new surge in strip. so before we go on strep, i can ask about this. hancock i mean, there he is in blazoned on the top of the daily mail, big photograph. it does feel a little bit his obviously on little bit like his obviously on his appearance celeb . his appearance in i'm a celeb. he's behaving exactly like a person who's been on i'm a celebrity do think he celebrity toes. do you think he actually during the actually wrote these during the pandemic or is he got a ghost—writer to sort of frantically run something off in time christmas ? does time for christmas? it does feel a bit you know. i might be really cynical. yeah it's a bit convenient, isn't it? i know. i mean, after not apologise , it's mean, after not apologise, it's quite really . you know, quite shocking really. you know, they're not they're not that he's not he's he's bringing out the diaries, but he's refused to apologise. he's only apologised for the affair. well people apparently him now. mean apparently like him now. i mean came he, in the came third didn't he, in the jungle. think they felt sort jungle. i think they felt sort of him how. i only watched two episodes back with my episodes back to back with my friend when was over by friend when she was over 60 by the comedian and the end of the comedian and basically was like he was on basically he was like he was on a short you know, just a short in, you know, just walking through the thing walking through the water thing like like just normal he's like just like just normal he's got emotions. it was like he
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got no emotions. it was like he was with the humans to was living with the humans to see and have human see how to behave and have human interaction. i think like interaction. and i think like for someone who works out quite a i'm sure he'll be quite a lot, i'm sure he'll be quite flattered the idea being flattered at the idea being compared to arnold schwarzenegger. you schwarzenegger. nick, have you got negative or got any feelings negative or positive matt hancock? positive about matt hancock? i have. thought he live have. i thought he would live happily addressing he happily addressing now. he talked affair they call talked about an affair they call it, is french term. he's it, which is a french term. he's saying an affair the saying you had an affair of the heart. very romantic. heart. it's all very romantic. it's that's not really what it's like that's not really what we england. you know, we do in england. you know, we're romantic more about we're not romantic more about duty late queen duty and as the late queen christine and so and the thing is he keeps asking for forgiveness he's for forgiveness but he's asking for it but hasn't actually it but he hasn't actually repented, to my knowledge, really, more really, he should focus more on the then he'll the repentance. and then he'll naturally okay. naturally the forgiveness. okay. well i mean, maybe well let's look. i mean, maybe you also has on the front you might also has on the front that the lockdown linked to this new in a and this new surge in strep a and this story is dominating basically new surge in strep a and this sto ofis dominating basically new surge in strep a and this sto of the)minating basically new surge in strep a and this sto of the front ting basically new surge in strep a and this sto of the front covers. sically new surge in strep a and this sto of the front covers. now,i all of the front covers. now, this tragic story. this is really tragic story. there's six young children there's been six young children . i mean, don't know if . i mean, i don't know if anybody at home, you guys, but i was actually seeing it flash up on my timeline a strep because i was thinking almost look that andifs
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was thinking almost look that and it's like article tomorrow. yeah it's extraordinary yeah so it's extraordinary what he blaming on to he died they're blaming it on to the constant lockdowns the having constant lockdowns for children but they don't sort of state i did that that you see it you see why they're it did you see why they're blaming lockdown i think because the immune system like the immune system is like any sense slower immunity due sense it's slower immunity due to a covid it says it quite clearly there so even the papers are admitting now lockdowns know have all these terrible unintended costs and this is one of it's just another of them. so it's just another it's another cost of lockdown. do such an do you mean it's such an unnatural experiment keep unnatural experiment to keep up on of you don't on home? of course you don't pick immunity. you you pick up same immunity. you you don't exposed germs. and don't get exposed germs. and obviously know that's a point of view that might be shared not shared, but one of things shared, but one of the things you've to look out guys you've got to look out for guys is you got children of a is if you have got children of a certain age, is the which a sore throat fever skin irritation and they say that if it's called antibiotics will sort it quite quickly but they six children sadly have already done you're right those two data to point out that people do need to be able to look at this quite
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clearly. this is a manifestation of this disease which is fatal. yeah. and people need to look out for we're going to go out for anyway we're going to go on the front page of on now the front page of saturday's what are they running with a with nick. they've got half a million missing on million homes missing out on energy so obviously energy bill help so obviously the government's given this energy bill help is the question of how it's actually how it's actually going practically actually going to practically happen where it's happen and this is where it's going so with going wrong. so people with pre—payment a big pre—payment metres have a big problem says the problem and it says the 2 million people are on million people who are still on prepayment metres, which it says are the poorest people, the country. is because country. which is weird because my one on my my last flat had one on my i didn't realise i amongst the didn't realise i was amongst the poorest it doesn't surprise. poorest but it doesn't surprise. and problem is and then the other problem is vouchers. there's these vouchers, but people get vouchers, but people can't get them. to go missing. them. they seem to go missing. they call it they don't they call and it takes on the phone. no one can find happened to find out what's happened to them. missing in the them. they go missing in the post like no two people just post or like no two people just haven't claimed these things. and it's very weird because, you know, rishi know, back in february, rishi sunak's was going to sunak's said he was going to support household during sunak's said he was going to sup winter. household during sunak's said he was going to sup winter. we 1ousehold during sunak's said he was going to sup winter. we allsehold during sunak's said he was going to sup winter. we all meant during sunak's said he was going to sup winter. we all meant to �*ing sunak's said he was going to sup winter. we all meant to get the winter. we all meant to get 400 so was before andrew 400 quid. so was before andrew quid. got some. quid. but i have got some. however, i do make it difficult you because if you don't
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you to cope because if you don't if don't like great on if if you don't like great on if you're going to be in that bucket where you'll get the vouchers and you don't vouchers and stuff and you don't know how them. yeah, know to how process them. yeah, you be helpful to kind you it would be helpful to kind of explain how or just of explain perhaps how or just remind can get remind people that they can get this i, i don't this because i think i, i don't think everybody understands how work do so because work i was able to do so because i missed out on something which now going to go towards now is going to go towards council because out council tax because missed out and oh i see. but it's and i'm not. oh i see. but it's just i suppose it is just, you know, this is a new system that's been implemented. they haven't before. no, maybe haven't it before. no, maybe they successfully they haven't successfully conveyed information they haven't successfully convey
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i don't do the i'm thinking by the disabled but now they're going it. yeah it's going to keep it. yeah it's awful i've i've looks awful i've i've i've avoid looks i'm new building so naturally i'm a new building so naturally hot you know they got the hot anyway you know they got the new it's boiling a new spec it's boiling hot it's a small flat in the summer small flat market in the summer and in the summer. it's and horrible in the summer. it's locked at 38 degrees. yeah, but in winter i wear in the winter i just wear a fleece just, just tough out. fleece and just, just tough out. but of it is really tough but a lot of it is really tough yeah. absolutely horrible going to move on now to the i what have we here this the front have we got here this the front cover ice agenda they cover the ice agenda are they running okay so we've running with okay so we've got the england versus the football england versus senegal of main senegal and never sort of main story the uk brexit regrets story is the uk brexit regrets regrets so growing so this is really a surprise people who voted brexit are you know kind of like questioning where it went. i mean, because we were we were sold on on an idea brexit was you know it was sold to individuals and what they thought was important them thought was important to them and said it was going and they said it was going to hurt little but then it hurt a little bit, but then it would be worth it it hurt a lot. it still hurting. i've had an childbirth and this is quite painful comparison doesn't it. st i mean do we really know
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mean. my feeling is we won't know whether brexit was positive or negative economically. we're ten down the line. ten or 15 years down the line. we midst of a cost of we are in the midst of a cost of living crisis and international recession. just blame recession. we can't just blame everything brexit, can everything on brexit, can we? it's it's think to not it's very it's i think to not even acknowledge is partly a brexit vote. i think is a it's a folly. i think, i hear this a lot like you can't blame it on brexit that's nothing to do brexit that's nothing to do brexit we've had pandemic not well had this one we had two years however now the years of however now and the billions you know do billions of pounds you know do we not regret now because we're in this to not having great in this to be not having great relationships with the eu. it's not now down not helping us right now down for to you even for migrants to you know even food like energy . yeah but food food like energy. yeah but i don't agree because think i don't agree because i think you us ultimately you know, the us ultimately keeps that an keeps approving that it is an authoritarian body mean now it's trying push through trying to sort of push through draconian anti free speech draconian and anti free speech measures know i mean, measures you know i mean, i think principles like that are important than extra money but you disagree. what you know, we can disagree. what do nick? as you do you think, nick? as you say now, attacking musk, which now, attacking elon musk, which is shocking. they say is shocking. oh, they say they're twitter. they're going to ban twitter. oh, pathetic. it's oh, it's pathetic. it's
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disgusting. but look yes, they saying one seven leavers saying that one in seven leavers saying that one in seven leavers say what remain what say that now what remain what a no it doesn't say no show where it doesn't say where from. it's where this comes from. if it's yougov, we to question it. yougov, we have to question it. but know. so that's possibly but you know. so that's possibly true. it says no true. but then it says no to rejoin and so i think if there was a real appetite for this, keir be saying i keir starmer would be saying i mean he's, saying the opposite. so i think people actually so i think most people actually want move on. the thing want to move on. the one thing i do agree with it says just 15% of leavers brexit has of leavers believe brexit has a positive on migration. positive impact on migration. yeah, solved yeah, clearly it hasn't solved any immigration problems any of our immigration problems so that that but i respect people's on both of people's views on both sides of this wonder suggested this but i wonder suggested whether really nick says whether is really as nick says is really appetite to is there really an appetite to go through another six months of debate whether should debate about whether we should rejoin then have vote rejoin eu and then have a vote and three later, and then three years later, things are going wrong? people are another are like, let's have another vote could be vote to out again. this could be back and forth forever. no, i mean, i know don't deutsche mean, i know i don't deutsche cannot what cannot possibly go through what we through to brexit we went through to get to brexit the first place. however, i just think do to question that think do need to question that maybe know talk maybe there a you know they talk about hard maybe there about hard brexit, maybe there is let's pull back maybe not is a let's pull back maybe not so like you know, you
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so brexit like you know, you want stick with the guy or want to stick with the guy or swiss style although although not wrote was not that i wrote that it was weird it wasn't. he said, we're going this swiss style going to go for this swiss style arrangement the eu. then arrangement with the eu. then a few days later i said, oh, actually i'm not going to do that starmer that and quit. keir starmer said, we're absolutely going that and quit. keir starmer sa do we're absolutely going that and quit. keir starmer sa do that. absolutely going that and quit. keir starmer sa do that. so solutely going that and quit. keir starmer sa do that. so i»lutely going that and quit. keir starmer sa do that. so i don't going that and quit. keir starmer sa do that. so i don't i going to do that. so i don't i honestly don't that is going to happen that is a bit happen because that is a bit a fudge, isn't it? ultimately i don't know if voters will probably full of like probably still be full of like swiss full of holes and swiss cheese full of holes and it though. it stinks. nice cheese, though. no cheese. think it's i think it's going go it's delicious. i'm going to go on the front page of the on to the front page of the daily star. course, they're daily star. of course, they're covering the important stuff. yeah. because they always do. i mean always the pulse mean they're always on the pulse are come with are they. they've come with we've problems with our we've got big problems with our chip in blankets chip alatas pigs in blankets crisis ruin december and crisis to ruin december 25th and then call crisis. yeah then they call it a crisis. yeah it a crisis. i wasn't totally it is a crisis. i wasn't totally where made because dad's where i made because dad's a chef, i've been spoilt or chef, so i've been spoilt or something so i wasn't aware that this was christmas anyway. this was christmas fair anyway. really? kids. we really? well, pick on kids. we didn't have a baby baby. didn't really have a baby baby. i'm going well, i've i'm going to make. well, i've missed. that's tragedy i'm going to make. well, i've mithat. that's tragedy i'm going to make. well, i've mithat and that's tragedy i'm going to make. well, i've mithat and ahat's tragedy i'm going to make. well, i've mithat and a little tragedy i'm going to make. well, i've mithat and a little personally of that and a little personal tragedy we've also got a 22%
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increase in the general christmas dinner. the cost of it. yeah, you know that it. yeah, because you know that due and know on due to inflation and you know on a which is barely a side, andrew which is barely related it's just related but it's just interesting you the data interesting did you see the data after revelation after following the revelation that a minority that christians were a minority in country people were in the country people were already saying we should rethink. i'm saying, i'm rethink. so what i'm saying, i'm yeah, yeah. just see that article. diversity article. yeah. diversity champions need to rethink champions say we need to rethink christmas. andrew your chip is now expensive, now however expensive, because next year, christmas be next year, christmas will be banned. won't be doing banned. well, i won't be doing them vegetarian them because i'm a vegetarian i will enjoying roasted will be enjoying roasted parsnips. i think is parsnips. oh, which i think is the ethical corn duvets or the most ethical corn duvets or maybe corn and that would work. what think about this, what do you think about this, sajid? mean, apparently sajid? i mean, apparently every single item on the traditional christmas increasing at single item on the traditional cihighers increasing at single item on the traditional cihigher than increasing at single item on the traditional cihigher than inflation,easing at single item on the traditional cihigher than inflation, not|g at a higher than inflation, not just turkey cranberry sauce. we're talking even brussels here, sprouts they come for the sprouts. yeah, i'm going to speak. how. oh control isn't it. it's personal name for the chip. a lot. we said nothing . i mean a lot. we said nothing. i mean i don't know. are you does bother you particularly can't people find an alternative isn't this a good opportunity? well, good opportunity? think. well, let's box. let's think outside the box. maybe turkey. maybe it's not about turkey. maybe it's not about turkey. maybe it's about chip
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maybe it's not about chip alatas. i think there's alternative birds you can have. there think has to there are i don't think has to be i mean, we ever eat be turkey. i mean, we ever eat it once year. kitchens are on it once a year. kitchens are on the christmas table. that's what i say. i'm so sure that i would say. i'm so sure that they would want to sacrifice themselves become the themselves to become the national christmas time. national dish at christmas time. but why it always but why not? why is it always turkeys? someone decided, turkeys? just someone decided, yeah, because there's yeah, yes, because there's nothing about nothing in the bible about eating turkeys. yeah i don't even turkey because even get turkey anymore because now no, we should now people. oh, no, we should have or something. said have beef or something. you said turkey so there's and turkey is dry so there's and it's an anti wound. i'm on the pro turkey side. you're the. pro turkey side. you're on the. okay, want once again i want okay, i want once again i want it christmas yeah, it on christmas day. yeah yeah, yeah. people yeah. actually most people i know like turkey. they know didn't like turkey. they just obliged to eat it. just feel obliged to eat it. that's it for part one after the break. more west's descent break. more kanye west's descent into alex jones, jones's into infamy. alex jones, jones's descent bankruptcy, descent into bankruptcy, and nick , his hair at nick dixon, his hair out at society's descent into degeneracy . i'll see you in 2 degeneracy. i'll see you in 2 minutes .
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welcome back to headliners. i'm andrew doyle and joined tonight by two very reasonably priced comedians. a cash and nick dixon . we're going to comedians. a cash and nick dixon .we're going to jump comedians. a cash and nick dixon . we're going to jump straight .we're going to jump straight back into it with saturday telegraph now. and i'm afraid things have gone south for west . can you justify this behaviour? nick wow so this is kanye west now ? collier of kanye west now? collier of course. the telegraph is dead naming him suspended from twitter by elon musk for inciting violence quote. now what he did was post a rather unfortunate post of a swastika inside a star of david as you do so i thought we going to show it screen show. no no not a great thing to tweet and he was suspended based on the idea that he's inciting violence. now although it's a distasteful thing. i do question how it's inciting violence. that's my question. and i suppose that upendsifs question. and i suppose that upends it's certainly drawing a very unpleasant connection
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between ism and judaism , which between ism and judaism, which yeah. you know, which could be argued that. but surely if you're going to have i musk has said he's not going to have a complete free for all on twitter you know there are going to be some. well his apology must you know there are going to be some i'mll his apology must you know there are going to be some i'mll hisure ology must you know there are going to be some i'mll hisure whetherlst you know there are going to be some i'mll hisure whether this pass. i'm not sure whether this is sight or not. he's getting is in sight or not. he's getting around it by saying it's inciting violence, thus it's covered first amendment, covered the first amendment, which already caveats about fighting if you fighting words. and so if you think inciting violence, think it is inciting violence, that's. but musk is that's. question but musk is doing a little of a fudge because he's talked about how twitter to for twitter is going to be good for the the middle. yeah, the 80% in the middle. yeah, you're going of the you're going to get rid of the far left and the far right. in fact. it's not actually true because the old the far is still on there. whereas stefan molin, you, jones you, milo lawley, alex jones have actually have all off. so it's actually not an equal field. what musk is doing lieu of an actual policy, even prefer the even i much prefer him to the previous dictatorship because it's a relatively benign one. yeah. going by the yeah. he's just going by the seat his doesn't this seat of his pants. doesn't this just it's a really job just show that it's a really job for take over twitter for going to take over twitter and any kind of and implement any kind of moderation they're moderation policies. they're always struggling always going to be struggling is going hard because going to be really hard because for that you can point
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for every that you can point out, suppose he's out, i mean, i suppose he's thinking he's personally invested bit because elon has supported in the past. supported kanye in the past. yeah now each other yeah that may so now each other about it's tricky but about it it's a bit tricky but you know this is why you know ultimately this is why i'm of view that i'm sort of the view that twitter just shouldn't censor at all we can just as users all and we can just as users block all people that we block all the people that we find would be find objectionable would that be the spend all day the solution? you spend all day blocking? i do find a lot blocking? i do. i do find a lot of people have. yes, a lot of videos the book with all the videos in the book with all the time spend blocking . so time you spend blocking. so maybe someone to it maybe we need someone to do it for. no, think we the you it for. no, i think we the you it to be the user's experience. but i do accept illegal criminal activity , child , images of activity, child, images of violence, terrorism . yes, of violence, terrorism. yes, of course they have to be there. they're already illegal, but really unpleasant. really distasteful unpleasant. offensive racist things. offensive things, racist things. i just block those. i mean, going back to, you know, this was this was on he was on alex jones's with you jones's podcast with you obviously about obviously we would talk about later you know not exactly later so you know not exactly he's not mixing with the people, in opinion, because obviously in my opinion, because obviously we're going to thinking we're all going to be thinking differently. what he differently. and also he what he posted was offensive to jewish
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people and i think that's what you going to do if people are going to be offended. this this is not cool. that is inciting like when you're talking to a group of people but also he a sick individual he's not well. he's well. and think we he's not well. and i think we have take that on like this. have to take that on like this. this is on the same part. those who say they've heard voices and kill children jesus have kill children and jesus have been the mohammad's, been telling to the mohammad's, been telling to the mohammad's, been the district, been telling the district, telling to whatever. nick telling him to do whatever. nick well i want to raise one. i question that not well. he obviously went august jones obviously went on august jones and said a of insanely offensive things. thought was things. one thing i thought was interesting, to interesting, you see think to this went said he this you went alex jones said he liked hitler which obviously but but kind of but infowars is a kind of a wacky show so it's interesting that diana went bbc one and said that diana went bbc one and said that did more than harm. that mao did more than harm. isn't an equally isn't that kind of an equally statement on an even more mainstream? yeah. i mean, i don't think that in any way justifies kanye west, but i think what is interesting that does that for does do is it suggests that for some have overlooked some we have overlooked the horrors maoism in the horrors of and maoism in the past, are surely on a par past, which are surely on a par with and in death toll alone. diana has gone big. with and in death toll alone. diana has gone big . that and diana has gone big. that and
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also . yeah, yes. as bizarre as also. yeah, yes. as bizarre as it was, he said, well done, some good things. whereas i haven't said mao's done more harm the good since he went even further she's extreme a figure she's far more extreme a figure and debate is worth and i think that debate is worth having comes to having but but when comes to china think when can will china i just think when can will they stop he's saying these really horrible things supporting hitler or suggesting at least that he liked and all the rest of it. now he's tweeting this horrible image of a swastika start? i mean, you know, suggests an know, and this suggests an escalation maybe elon musk is thinking, look, where's going thinking, look, where's he going to is just to go? because this is just getting out , acting friend getting out, acting as a friend and this some kind of and thinking this some kind of sort intervention. maybe sort of intervention. it maybe he a kind of his friends can do that have an intervention for him. one raving him. well from one raving lunatic next, jones lunatic to the next, alex jones goes bust in the guardian. what's all about? okay, so alex jones files for bankruptcy , jones files for bankruptcy, $1,000,000,000 sandy hook court ruling just sort of recap the sandy hook school there , a sandy hook school there, a massacre back in 2012 to some of the 1428 people died. yeah and
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alex jones basically lee, you know this conspiracy theories spread saying that it was all a hoax. he said it was a government so yeah it was it was it was front for yeah it was just something else and it was with actors i think he said actors. yeah. and as a of that i mean the story does go on to sort of say how how it's affected individuals. you know, something that somebody had that that somebody had someone we on their son's grave, which is and, you know, one of the teachers was basically told that they were to be raped. it was i mean, it's just horrific that the fallout from his he did was. so he's been fined and he was fined for defamation. and he. right. and of course, he and of course, did he specifically particular specifically target particular and parents and all the of it or is this a more broad sense in which he created the conditions within which these unpleasant things occurred? nick, you were following one. just got following that one. he just got carried . he started talking carried. he started talking about these
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about you had all these conspiracy theories. he got carried away, thought son didn't happen. off happen. he started mouthing off about obviously about it. and obviously mad people like that people will do things like that off back it. very off the back of it. it's very unfortunate. he has apologised many, many times and he this case meant destroy him and case is meant to destroy him and we're about a billion we're talking about a billion though. would though. one point would talking about something about 2.3 trillion or something crazy. is to completely crazy. the idea is to completely destroy because destroy him because he's a political opponent. why political opponent. that's why i've it is , even i've always thought it is, even though, he's though, you know, he's apologised but though, you know, he's apolajised but though, you know, he's apola terrible but though, you know, he's apola terrible thing but though, you know, he's apola terrible thing to but though, you know, he's apola terrible thing to say. but was a terrible thing to say. but i've always this case was about taking out a political and i still did. but as we saw on the program, alex jones across relatively moderate relatively as a moderate nice. that's about context relatively as a moderate nice. th'iss about context relatively as a moderate nice. th'is making about context relatively as a moderate nice. th'is making jonesout context relatively as a moderate nice. th'is making jones look ontext relatively as a moderate nice. th'is making jones look sane. he is making jones look sane. i mean incredible. next in the times the mermaids are back and something smells fishy . i see a something smells fishy. i see a formal inquiry launched into transgender charity mermaids as the charity commission has launched a statutory inquiry, which is a much more serious type than the previous , and that type than the previous, and that because of newly identified issues, perhaps like mermaids , issues, perhaps like mermaids, pure evil, maybe about governance management. so yes, it's good that there's an
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investigation mermaids happening now. i don't know why. i mean, my hope is that they just shut down. it is the kind of what they're doing. they send things like chest flattening devices to 14 olds wishing to 14 year olds wishing to transition not to tell transition and try not to tell their mean, these are their parents. i mean, these are their parents. i mean, these are the of organisation we're the kind of organisation we're talking mean are talking about. i mean there are all sorts reasons why an all sorts of reasons why an investigation mermaids investigation into mermaids is long mean, least long overdue. i mean, not least because i it used to quite because i it used to be quite sane mermaids. it to like if you go back yeah but you go back go back yeah but if you go back sort of ten ago they were sort of ten years ago they were sort of ten years ago they were sort saying to parents sort of saying to parents look most who most children who are experiencing this gender dysphoria, out it dysphoria, they will out of it through puberty calm down. it's going okay. when susie going to be okay. when susie green woman who took her green in this woman who took her a child thailand to have the genitals removed suddenly that you indication you have to affirm indication that says the that young person says in the wrong affirm it. put wrong body just affirm it. put them drugs, sterilisation, them on drugs, sterilisation, medicalisation of kids absolute scandal. is not child abuse. scandal. how is not child abuse. okay obviously they've okay so obviously they've offered breast binders to children a parent's wishes as a breast to which is would good now not let a 14 year old wear corset to you know make their
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way smaller or football induced to make their feet smaller. we wouldn't them to do that. so how have you allowed young girls a 14 year old chest bonded with you've been consulting the parents. i mean, so controversial but and yet and yet what i don't understand controversial but and yet and yet withis don't understand controversial but and yet and yet withis don't utheretand controversial but and yet and yet withis don't uthere was no about this is that there was no scrutiny was no criticise scrutiny there was no criticise you major companies like you had major companies like starbucks sponsoring mermaids , a starbucks sponsoring mermaids, a columnist at the guardian cheering on. and all the while prince harry, harry, emma watson , this is and i'm sure in ten or 15 years time, those people are gonna look back to think, what on earth were we doing? they're going to look more mad than kanye west going to is completely well is he completely insane. well is he dementia the dementia dementia now. yes. the dementia is it's completely say it's always completely glad always completely sick. i'm glad you yeah. okay. we're you said that. yeah. okay. we're going on now to. slavery going to move on now to. slavery reparations the telegraph reparations in the telegraph because an interesting because this is an interesting oh this is an interesting oh yeah this is an interesting story phoney story so kind phoney a californian slave descendants could receive up to $200,000 in compensation and it's the first state that's ever to pass a law
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which companies hates for the slavery. and also it's quite it's a kind of say that would be pepper reparations operation reparations relations reparations relations reparations because it just wasn't slavery. but coming down from slavery just in areas where i institute it, they're saying that each descendant should receive more than $200,000. that's that's an incredible amount that going to cripple the economy . yeah. i mean, it's economy. yeah. i mean, it's mainly it's the so—called law from 1945 pave the way for officials to seize property destroying black communities closing hundreds of businesses and displacing thousands which is not true so it is all true and they have had a lot of because they've been poor areas they don't have the infrastructure that is available to their white counterparts and there has horrific crimes committed against black people. so i think this this is actually a small drop in the ocean compared to what i would say statute is that's absolutely and i think the implications
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redlining and the way that you had segregated housing back in the mid—twentieth century has meant that black people live in those today are materially poorer than what they would have been. poorer than what they would have been . there is a case there, but been. there is a case there, but but isn't nick, isn't there an issue that when you start down the of reparations where on the road of reparations where on do you when do i get reparations for my family massacred? for my family being massacred? andromeda happens andromeda what what happens where you do, but only where it stop? you do, but only because made especially. because where made especially. yeah, . where does yeah, you're right. where does it because been it stop? because everyone's been enslaved some point. oh, that, of course, is one sympathises. you've to america under you've come to america and under these horrible conditions of course big course it's been a big disadvantage absolutely and it's good democrats to good for the democrats to acknowledge the party acknowledge they are the party of that of slavery. they're the that imposed laws. they're imposed jim crow laws. they're the were the ku klux the ones that were the ku klux klan. to that out klan. so it's good to that out there well. but the obvious there as well. but the obvious problem, as you say, is, well, one, how will it be managed and how afford california's how you afford california's already mess? huge already a mess? these huge homeless encampments and more people away, people just move away, presumably they're going it's presumably they're going if it's going come from move going to come from tax, i move to texas think it's an to texas you think it's an unquantifiable sujata you unquantifiable it sujata you know start because know once you start to because how calculate who is owed
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how do you calculate who is owed what far up agree there's what how far up i agree there's a how do calculate a problem how do you calculate however that that there has to be something done to compensate for trauma is for that because the trauma is still carried through thousands for that because the trauma is sti generationsrough thousands for that because the trauma is sti generations .�*ugh thousands for that because the trauma is sti generations. it's thousands for that because the trauma is sti generations. it's going ands for that because the trauma is sti generations . it's going tojs of generations. it's going to carry on through just like india, pakistan, partition. you know, that stays with know, if that that stays with you and for someone who's not been through that they cannot speak for those people and say well, you know you're talking crap because this will now i'm not say that everyone. not say that for everyone. i mean everyone has ancestors that have been oppressed know have been oppressed but you know this what i'm hearing this is this is what i'm hearing quite a lot recently it's like everyone's something everyone's through something everyone's gone through something. well if these people are gone through are saying they've gone through something, then maybe that we should and out should listen to them and out what it is that they actually want. maybe they just want better housing. they just better housing. maybe they just better. they better. maybe the truth they want some each want to integrate some each other want to other as i just they want to underground. don't they underground. i don't they should. offered what should. they've offered what they've so that's like they've offered. so that's like something that they've come up with themselves. yeah. yeah okay. our okay. in america. so our politics, got to we've politics, we've got to we've got to on. that's part to over to move on. that's part to over and join after and done with join after the break for robots holiday sex and
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welcome back to headliners . welcome back to headliners. first look through the next day's . we're going to jump back day's. we're going to jump back into it. saturday's independent now this is a scandalous. balenciaga creator if he says they need to look to not to put children and hardcore bdsm in the same photos . i mean who knew the same photos. i mean who knew oh my gosh . i didn't realise oh my gosh. i didn't realise that was a lesson. we all need to kind of knew that was i mean, the headline is balenciaga corrective. don't tell them no apology. omid ad scandal. and he says need to learn from this one they blaming the photographer at first i mean we should probably clarify for people watching you don't know but then thiago company advertising company who issued advertising photographs with children holding teddy bears in bondage
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gean holding teddy bears in bondage gear. yeah and i mean also there was a photograph which featured a document which if you zoomed in was a sort of pro paedophilia document. this is dodgy stuff. and then and then balenciaga blaming the photographers and they sue the they were going to sue the photographer the photographer and the photographer and the photographer well photographer was saying, well there's done there's no way would have done this go ahead from this without the go ahead from but and this creative but yoga and now this creative director is no we need to director is saying no we need to learn. yeah need to learn. well yeah right need to learn. well yeah right need to learn. why did not learn. but why why did you not know lesson. i mean, even like you 15, 16 year olds will know this. we don't need this. surely we don't need to learn this. anyway, he's learn this. but anyway, he's basically to he's so basically he went to he's so upset this. he's so sorry upset about this. he's so sorry that he an apology on instagram what took instagram people what it took to instagram people to take the debates with to to take the debates with a picture the vapours when do picture of the vapours when do we taking instagram and we start taking to instagram and i you on instagram i now nick you on instagram would you would you use it as would you so would you use it as a conduit for apologies you would look that wouldn't be doing like this doing anything like this that's the mean guy is so in the thing mean this guy is so in a way ironic cause he's a way it's ironic cause he's saying to learn this saying i need to learn from this and listen which is not what people say when they cancel by woke no, it's not woke people. yeah no, it's not true. this he
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true. but in this case, he really does permission. he should it already. as should also know it already. as we've absolutely we've said, it's absolutely insane. should using insane. no one should be using kim kardashian's in this pathetic half apology, but she's like, it goes like, i want to see how it goes because you're going to lose money. she made a lot money out of needs it. of them. she needs to stop it. this it was the wrong this guy saying it was the wrong artistic choice. no, was artistic choice. no, it was disgusting. he also just before this apparently said, i don't have convince or explain have to convince or explain things got a bit things anymore. so she got a bit arrogant as as being arrogant as as well as being a bit i thought this was okay bit sad. i thought this was okay yeah. i haven't seen anyone bit sad. i thought this was okay yeahis i haven't seen anyone bit sad. i thought this was okay yeahis behind|ven't seen anyone bit sad. i thought this was okay yeahis behind balenciaga anyone bit sad. i thought this was okay yeahis behind balenciaga on one bit sad. i thought this was okay yeahis behind balenciaga on this who is behind balenciaga on this one like i think left and right a unanimous about this is i don't how i don't know how don't know how i don't know how this allowed to happen. this was even allowed to happen. and he said he no and the fact that he said he no longer to explain the longer has to explain to the fashion industry what he's doing, wonder if that's what they gave carte blanche they did that gave carte blanche and and you know, this and then and he you know, this is like, you a joke. is like, well, you like a joke. if you need to explain then if you need to explain it, then it's really hit them all it's not really hit them all crazy. telegraph crazy. these telegraph now a theological revelation all seems a bit does your what's this this is a fascinating history of jesus trans so—called. that's not the not me saying that's the telegraph sort telegraph headline. so it's sort of that reason of of going after that reason of
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controversy about this guy, joshua this joshua heath. they did this bizarre seminar claiming that this body, body, a trans this body, jesus body, a trans body, going all body, they're going through all this artwork through this sort of artwork through history. either been history. this this either been artists putting in little heretical, reading heretical, things or reading into because there's some into it because there's some bizarre. but by the way, even before this heath guy made this claim there was a guy just a few months earlier from bloomsbury baptist called , simon baptist church called, simon woodman, claimed jesus woodman, and he claimed jesus because says that he'll because he says that he'll gather up jerusalem like a modern gathering her hands, that that means jesus himself a occasions in the bible. and he also cited fact that he washed feet as that's normally a woman's role so that he's transgender himself. he's saying . oh are you suggesting that there is something quite reactionary conservative about the lobby's view of gender stereotypes? am in that second example and i'm but i'm also suggesting it's a disgusting attack on christianity from , attack on christianity from, these weird woke saboteurs within isn't it just a bit bonng within isn't it just a bit boring you know it's so obvious that they were going do this kind of thing but why do a evensong service in, a church?
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yeah, that's probably not the right audience in the right place. mean, obviously can place. i mean, obviously you can interpret of those interpret all any of those mystic you know, mystic depictions, you know, years later. can, you know, years later. you can, you know, you interpret it way. you can interpret it in way. but, you we put our gaze but, you know, we put our gaze on it from today's show backwards. not backwards. that's fine but not when to faith. the when it comes to faith. the think it was it is just it's going to offend a lot of people. there was a time when they were saying black. i'm saying that jesus is black. i'm more to believe that more likely to believe that because the area he grew because of the area that he grew up in, that he might black. up in, that he might be black. but some are offended by but some people are offended by that, can racism. that, that you can call racism. i wonder if they saying that trans now so if you don't mind saying no he's not saying well then you're being transphobic just trying to be deliberately provocative fine. provocative and that's fine. i do a problem with people do have a problem with people interpreting religious even in a sacrilegious, blasphemous way. we laws. we don't have blasphemy laws. that's point that we don't have blasphemy laws. thatis point that we don't have blasphemy laws. thatis quite point that we don't have blasphemy laws. thatis quite a point that we don't have blasphemy laws. thatis quite a banal, that we don't have blasphemy laws. thatis quite a banal, boring, this is quite a banal, boring, trendy interpretation that i think is boring anyway. but also to it in the church is an odd to do it in the church is an odd one. i started realise is one. i started to realise is there to be said for there something to be said for not letting your prophet? not letting draw your prophet? that's starting that's what i'm starting realise, because this comes realise, because all this comes from i'm from drawings of it. so i'm thinking, thinking
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thinking, i'm thinking that's very should move very really. well we should move on can it telegraph on now. can it telegraph now. robots over sujata. what robots taking over sujata. what on my god. so you know on earth. oh my god. so you know how i feel about. i know if you mean to write, do not give machines power we the machines the power we are the masters machines and masters of the machines and machines our masters so machines are our masters so cambridge for cambridge robots ask humans for help the road so help in crossing the road so just you some context. just give you some context. these four wheeled delivery robots used by robots that are being used by food company right . robots that are being used by food company right. this food company set right. this company glasses company just get my glasses on so vanity. they basically say we're go to the we're delivering go to the traffic light and they've been asking humans to help . that's asking humans to help. that's one. what do you know? robots still us. they still need us. yeah and delivering shopping to residents without the expense of the usual . residents without the expense of the usual. but residents without the expense of the usual . but they're residents without the expense of the usual. but they're coming across problems . and the people across problems. and the people said that they've seen them , you said that they've seen them, you know, like. but they're asking help effectively . they sent help effectively. they sent sentient beings. help effectively. they sent sentient beings . yes. like in sentient beings. yes. like in that film. so it's actually quite scary. i think it's terrifying yeah. they're asking a bit use thank you. so it looks kind of like r2—d2 but yeah you're just it asking for help
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and can't even cross the road basically they keep to across the road, then they go what is jordan pieces about? object perception. turns out be much more one things more complicated than one things because how we because it's to do with how we perceive utility perceive the utility of the object. it's a chair because object. we it's a chair because we think it is a chair. it it can be used as such whereas a machine necessarily figure that out. is it from out. yeah, but far is it from a robot asking for directions to a robot asking for directions to a robot annihilating the human race. oh about ten race. okay. oh it's about ten weeks. no hang on. in some weeks. no, no hang on. in some cases of robots introduced into city in recent weeks have been seen side avoid , avoid seen to one side to avoid, avoid growling dogs and talking yet because that means if they can feel like the dogs are going to attack them, it's not long before they're going to kong. no, going to no, because they're going to work attack the dogs work out. let's attack the dogs before the dogs attack us. that's yeah, scary that's gang up. yeah, scary stuff. we're going stick stuff. and we're going to stick with now. matt with the telegraph now. matt claims human. nick, is claims he's only human. nick, is that that that accurate. i think that technically is true. yeah. he's defended his covid insisting he's only human. said he's only human. as i said earlier, he cites an affair fair. the cur saying it. he's saying he's it was romantic. he was love, which is used
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was in love, which is used this argument this his argument before this is his lover that he basically lover that yeah he basically broke lockdown lockdown rules that set but stands up he that he set but stands up he says everything is pandemic record there's a good record it was there's a good honest explanation for every decision which obviously decision which we can obviously highly question and from the start been weird thing start it's been this weird thing where initially where people are initially people were saying we don't like that he broke guidance but that he broke the guidance but we're with affair but we're fine with the affair but what with neither was what was fine with neither was he keeps saying why he it he he keeps saying why he it especially i forgiveness especially i want forgiveness for mistake i made the for the mistake i made the failure of leadership the end failure of leadership at the end of when in of the pandemic when i fell in love jean and broke the love with jean and broke the there's this very weird thing i became asking for forgiveness but asi became asking for forgiveness but as i said but i don't believe as i said earlier, actually earlier, that he's actually shown because he . as shown repentance because he. as bad that, nick, i mean, bad as all that, nick, i mean, there's demonisation of there's a lot of demonisation of and you know, he is human you know, did fall in love and it know, he did fall in love and it does a bit like, can we does feel a bit like, can we just guy a break some point just the guy a break some point say my friend sean was on the jungle show he got treated jungle show and he got treated so badly just kissing dancer so badly just kissing a dancer on show where everyone kisses a dancer . and on show where everyone kisses a dancer. and so people cheat dancer. and so many people cheat on show it's called on that show. it's called a curse. and was even married. she
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was he was treated so horrifically hancock what he horrifically so hancock what he did was a lot worse and he's treated probably roughly the same look, i'm same. i'm not sure. look, i'm not saying we have to demonise it, but saying that the it, but i'm just saying that the way get forgiveness not way you get forgiveness is not just want just repeatedly i want forgiveness. actually forgiveness. it's by actually showing he's by some showing tradition. he's by some sort of repentance. and then people naturally you people will naturally tell you what forgiveness. maybe not take the 400 k that you got on that for the purpose. i think it was 400 k and he said he's giving some it to charity. we don't i'm not going to be giving a tenner. how about giving all of it to charity? you went on there for the money. what was it for a property to pay your very lengthy divorce proceedings. but you to say sorry. you didn't want to say sorry. any things that you did any of the things that you did that affected of other that actually affected of other people? don't have people? well, no, i don't have any to jane. that may any sympathy to jane. that may be he'll give be if he's watching he'll give that yeah do that. that 400,000. yeah do that. i think saturday's daily star and sex is banned sex outside marriage is banned on surely there's on holiday. surely there's a better way to stop people using hotel basic this is hotel towels. so basic this is in indonesia, a sex outside marriages banned in holiday hotspot also this is
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hotspot and will also this is just this is the stinger applied to tourists. wow so we used to know that we used to like you know that we used to like you know majority muslim countries sort of like making rules for their, you know, people that. and there , if you if you do and over there, if you if you do have an affair outside of wedlock , have sex outside of wedlock, have sex outside of wedlock, have sex outside of wedlock, you are flogged . in wedlock, you are flogged. in fact, was a couple of fact, there was a couple of them, hancock, sorry. sorry them, matt hancock, sorry. sorry for my hancock. yeah. matt hancock looking know hancock you're looking at know he could have sent you the jungle oh so jungle in indonesia. yeah. oh so bafic jungle in indonesia. yeah. oh so basic this these new look nila , basic this these new look nila, was it going to affect the industry the tourism industry because you guys just cancel your swinging if you're going to go to one of these, what do you do in of principle? because, you know, every country has its own cultures, its own laws, and they are in this that are sensitive in this that actually, go and visit actually, if you go and visit another country, you probably should abide by the laws that should abide by the laws of that country. fair enough. country. that's not fair enough. yeah, and think yeah, i agree. and i think especially country, qatar, especially in a country, qatar, where a bit hypocritical where we are a bit hypocritical because criticise but we because we criticise but we don't criticising everybody else but you know, different countries laws countries have different laws
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that's their that's fine, that's their country however, can't country. however, you can't impose as , as sex, you can't impose it as, as sex, you can't have no sex thing. well, i have a no sex thing. well, i mean, surely like holiday . not mean, surely like a holiday. not many married when many people are married when they mean, they go to marriage. i mean, that's people go on holiday, that's why people go on holiday, isn't it. yeah, well, i'm what it is. against the sort of it is. i'm against the sort of brutal floggings obviously . brutal floggings obviously. right. because i've read right. right. because i've read up of some it's up on some of it and some it's pretty nasty, as you'd expect up on some of it and some it's prettratesty, as you'd expect up on some of it and some it's prett rates of as you'd expect up on some of it and some it's prett rates of floggingsexpect up on some of it and some it's prett rates of floggingsexpe�*the with rates of floggings but the actual of a no sex before actual of a of a no sex before marriage law i actually think is reasonable . i prefer at the reasonable. i prefer at the first kind of societal norm like we to have that long we used to have not that long ago it was generally ago where it was generally frowned we frowned upon as we are a christian society and that was frowned upon. that would be my preference. lieu of a law preference. but in lieu of a law i'd is not a second best as i'd say is not a second best as long it's not, we think it's long as it's not, we think it's a that you can only have sex a law that you can only have sex with. but not with because with. yes, but not with because you yourself. no, you are saving yourself. no, i just i think least the just think i think least the best societies i think we our now proving what happens if now is proving what happens if everyone's allowed, just do what they it's basically they want. and it's basically completely degenerate. you completely degenerate. have you not more and more getting more and more conservative as years by conservative as the years go by state. telegraph state. next in the telegraph free speech at universities is
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at but it has like this at risk, but it has like this for quite a hasn't it. and this is the. yeah education of the bill, free, the freedom bill, the free, the freedom speech is now being speech bill is now being weakened and our weakened by the tories and our if i recommend that at king's college in cambridge he's saying this is a problem yeah well you face is on the whole so yeah the bill's been weakened our men who this he did an event with helen and all the students freaked out because they're morons other because they're morons and other people college people of the actual college professors people freaked out as well must've freaked out. so he's saying yeah the problem with this it's weak and that it leads to a kind. there's a complaints procedure which will take and you have to appeal take ages and you have to appeal . really, it needs to be the norm. it to enforced norm. it needs to be enforced a norm. it needs to be enforced a norm. people might think norm. so people might think there's paradox enforcing free there's a paradox enforcing free speech, but not really, because that's we do. michael that's what we do. michael knowles talked about in his we have something speech have something called speech standards. conception of free speech really a standard. so speech is really a standard. so we impose it. otherwise we need to impose it. otherwise all chaos you know things well otherwise free speech falls away. they're also saying that, you people are you know basically people are going to exhaust every
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going to have to exhaust every other avenue they have other avenue before they have recourse should be the recourse to. those should be the default than something recourse to. those should be the deféhave than something recourse to. those should be the deféhave to than something recourse to. those should be the defé have to appeal something recourse to. those should be the defé have to appeal som i thing recourse to. those should be the deféhave to appeal somi mean, you have to appeal for. i mean, to there is a real problem to do. there is a real problem here. i gave a talk that here. i mean, i gave a talk that same college, king's college, the after helen joyce was there. luckily was talking about john milton cared and they milton and no one cared and they weren't and trying weren't banging drums and trying to but helen joyce to shut me up. but helen joyce had people gathered outside, students the students who wanted to see the talk be smuggled in talk had to be smuggled in because so of because they were so scared of being seen by these protesters. this is not the right ethos for universities. this awful. universities. this is awful. this absolutely awful this is absolutely awful happening university. happening in the university. i remember to remember years ago, i trying to get a with just after get into a talk with just after post fatwa for salman rushdie . post fatwa for salman rushdie. and to literally like , and we had to literally like, you know, given to this you know, be given to this before phones secretly be before mobile phones secretly be taken. and we said that's taken. and we all said that's not a way this is not this should not be happening in the university. you think need university. so you think we need this not this legislation and not a watered weakened version watered down, weakened version of legislation? we we of the legislation? we need we need speech and need to keep free speech and that's okay that's it for that's it. okay that's it for part three. so join us after the break for a buffet, bandits a sigma males and a very different kind of facemask. sigma males and a very different
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welcome back to the final part , welcome back to the final part, headliners. we're taking you through saturday's newspapers, genius , big dog . nick's cv says genius, big dog. nick's cv says all these . but are you a sigma all these. but are you a sigma male ? and what does the metro male? and what does the metro have to say about this? well, it's hard for me to answer, andrew, because it says in the article you can't claim to be one because it's such a great thing to be that you're being arrogant you claim be one. arrogant if you claim to be one. but this story is in but know this story is in because our producers thinks i am one and that's why it's ended up hit me so the sigma andrew up it hit me so the sigma andrew is male but is like is an alpha male but with different qualities with some different qualities that thinking more that deeper thinking and more emotional an extroverted emotional they're an extroverted introvert on introvert and they like to be on their but they also their own. but they also comfortable being outgoing an extra like me telly, even extra bit like me on telly, even though an introvert normally though i'm an introvert normally
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they're prepared to carve their own me but they'll own path me again. but they'll drop if someone they drop everything if someone they call care about is in need. call they care about is in need. like i talk to my like trying to save marriage. so me but save a marriage. so much me but i'm allowed to say it to i'm not allowed to say it to you. kind of new type you. so it's a kind of new type of the other one it says is it's very self—aggrandising to define yourself you're yourself this way because you're almost saying you're perfect. it's meeting and it's like meeting someone and telling them what your iq is. you have done this. i've done it. mine's one, two, it. well, mine's one, two, three, seven, a nick's three, seven, which is a nick's a male. are you a male a sigma male. are you a male what do you i'm a sigma what do you know. i'm a sigma sigma female. and also i'll say i'm also an alpha female. yeah i am very strong. i also, you am very strong. and i also, you know, i'm very comfortable to pick to pick one pick one i'm going to pick one day. a comfortable day. i'm a comfortable but i sigma type you're sigma type theta. you're a stigma. i don't like this sort of ranking people the greek of ranking people by the greek alphabet think it's very offensive just because i just use words like confident use other words like confident and iifs and i don't like i it's terrible. anyway, we're going to move daily star now move on to the daily star now and a trend that sees using menstrual blood as part of their skincare that's bound to skincare regime that's bound to leave the leave few people red in the face, isn't it? oh, here we are. well i think women are
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reclaiming their wombs. that's what i think is happening in the face of all the mongering. such a theory that men should asking is called menstrual master and masking is a trend that's where women are applying period to their face and to proclaiming now you i'm i'm all about like you know, like recycling killing that it's the cost of living and everything. i draw a line under see bodily fluids like you know like drinking urine. we seem to do that . no, no, no, you don't. do that. no, no, no, you don't. you can we that's that's waste product using discharge as a perfume , an aphrodisiac. and perfume, an aphrodisiac. and love perhaps in a recent no one is taking it back because didn't the victorians used to use drops of blood as a kind rouge on their face to kind of make themselves look more glamorous everything is similar. no this themselves look more glamorous evlike1ing is similar. no this themselves look more glamorous evlike ing is similar. no this themselves look more glamorous evlike i thinksimilar. no this themselves look more glamorous evlike i think you.ar. no this themselves look more glamorous evlike i think you putno this themselves look more glamorous evlike i think you put it this themselves look more glamorous evlike i think you put it onis is like i think you put it on his mouth again and it's like a mask and it's supposed to make your complexion clinical products that that. do. products that do that. we do. but cost of so you know, but it's a cost of so you know, maybe try it using
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maybe we should try it using other things like i know other things like this i know i mean there's a lots of living issues.i mean there's a lots of living issues. i don't want to sound like i don't want sound like like i don't want to sound like a misogynist. just i don't a misogynist. ijust i don't think is where are think this is where you are because it here women are because it says here women are doing i'm going support doing this. i'm going to support my sisters they're doing this my sisters if they're doing this and think it's all right, and they think it's all right, that's any women that's fine don't know any women do knock yourselves do it. then knock yourselves out. say most women out. but i would say most women are not you know i support those now sajid is right because it says quite unfortunate that says it's quite unfortunate that the brainwashed the patriarchy has brainwashed us disgusting beliefs us but these disgusting beliefs about and you about a man's face and if you don't put men's clothing your face you are face under it, you are a patriarchal misogynist. are you saying it well? no. saying i should do it well? no. if you know, i've got to if you you know, i've got to make sure we can see. it would be this is on tik tok be weird, but this is on tik tok inevitably. first of all, second point it says more more point it says more and more women started make use women have started to make use of fear, but and more of their fear, but more and more single women, that's the bit that may say that come this that may say that come out this it's gross also did you see it's gross oh also did you see the video it and it does not look like that doesn't that is not looks something not not that it looks something not that's going to that's not video i'm going to watch think i think i move watch it i think i think i move on now to saturday is time they
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say money grow on trees, say money doesn't grow on trees, but they wrong? let's but are they wrong? well, let's ask tree hugger, ask our resident tree hugger, nick yeah, it does, nick dixon. oh, yeah, it does, because a uk provides because it's a uk provides hundreds of pounds benefits hundreds of pounds of benefits a year report . so this one these year report. so this one these funny articles where it's saying that trees they capture climate heating reduce air heating co2, reduce toxic air pollution slow flow of pollution and slow flow of rainwater. it's like it's only sunny where modern people discover trees good. know discover trees good. you know what it's taken us like what i mean? it's taken us like experts discovered what experts has discovered what people known but people have known forever. but yes, an interesting yes, there is an interesting part. you save money by having trees and it reckons the value of woodland trees ranges from of no woodland trees ranges from 1.4 to 3.8 billion a year, depending on the methodology used. because of all these things do do with c02 and things they do do with c02 and so on. so it's actually only the trees look nice, but it's saying have non woodland little have these non woodland little groups urban areas groups of trees in urban areas and and it'll actually and so on and it'll actually have financial trees have financial benefit trees are the the well the lungs, the world. well i agree. love trees i'm a fan of agree. i love trees i'm a fan of trees. in fact, i have decided i want to be buried like with a tree going out because you can be a little foetal. it's be in a little foetal. it's going to cost a fortune maybe to do that. sounds very buddhist.
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yeah. of like yeah. and then you of like buned yeah. and then you of like buried a foetal position and buried in a foetal position and the out of you and the tree grows out of you and that's would buried if that's would it be buried if anybody can do like a, you know, like a fundraiser? that's actually beautiful. actually quite beautiful. crowd funding. yes. crowdfunding. yeah, do yeah, crowdfunding. could you do it that happens to me. can it if that happens to me. can you it on twitters? you stick it on your twitters? it it just helps it does, but it just helps family out. funding my family with it out. funding my foetal tree burial. burial. yeah. why can't i have that because can have because then you can have whatever am not here whatever you want. i am not here to. no, no, absolutely okay, to. no, no, absolutely no. okay, that's not. i'm just going to be buned that's not. i'm just going to be buried sea, i think. oh, buried at sea, i think. oh, maybe. yeah, that's quite interesting. anyway, i'm going to now to the daily to move on now to the daily mail. charge for mail. can we charge for christmas dinner? this christmas dinner? oh, this is great, yeah. so great, isn't it? yeah. so there's a there's a woman . my there's a there's a woman. my sister's asking everyone to buy £20 for christmas dinner, and i don't to so this is don't know, to react. so this is in the family, this 20 quid for the christmas is 20 quid for christmas dinner. i don't think this is a terrible thing. no i mean, this is this is an outrage to sister who took to mumsnet where obviously desperate housewives reeking of chardonnay and regret go to cry. so she's
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saying, you know, what should i do? they think this is terrible there's mixed reactions to this are saying that this is a you know this is really like crass another saying well actually the cost living because it all cost of living because it all goes to the cost of living, goes back to the cost of living, does everything is does it? everything is justifiable. cost of living. justifiable. the cost of living. you do of goodwill you can do this of goodwill i mean, it doesn't look good if you have family christmas you have your family christmas lunch, them a lunch, then you give them a bill. you just you can bill. no just you just you can just over the money. just transfer over the money. but can i just say, having dinner parties and i have them like year around christmas like every year around christmas for costs just for six people, it costs just over pounds just over hundred pounds just for me to set i can imagine if to set up a i can imagine if you're doing the christmas trimmings and just we know that's going be really that's going to be really expensive. so is it so unreasonable? been unreasonable? i we've been brought go somewhere brought up never to go somewhere empty handed. so when i go to my sisters, everybody along, we all bnng sisters, everybody along, we all bring so we bring some things. so all, we all so i think all make something. so i think this not far it is very this is not far from it is very different though that's totally fine. if someone else fine. you get if someone else makes does it or makes the trifle or does it or they bring things whatever we normally that if normally have it does that if it's a charging 20 quid it's not
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a restaurant jeremy that's a really way to visit. we really weird way to visit. we actually charge really weird way to visit. we actually explicitly charg really weird way to visit. we actually explicitly cwould y £20 is when although i would pay £20 to argument my to avoid an argument with my brother about trump because that's every christmas. the yeah, i just think yeah, i just. i just think ruins the atmosphere, it? the atmosphere, doesn't it? i mean, spirit of the mean, surely the spirit of the meal, kind of seem to meal, you kind of all seem to just don't give each other just like, don't give each other gifts that year or something. we'll all the money the we'll put all the money into the christmas so we're christmas dinner. oh, so we're already santa. already doing secret santa. that's yeah, that's really annoyed. yeah, because one person because nobody, any one person and kids presents. and only the kids get presents. now, angry. i just now, i'm really angry. ijust don't like them. well, next yean don't like them. well, next year, christmas will banned, year, christmas will be banned, so nick's so enjoy it now, nick's prediction. we'll see if that comes year. finally, comes true next year. finally, we're to go to saturday's telegraph is it okay to steal items from a hotel buffet i mean i've been standing wrap from the gb news stationery cupboard for so i guess we better ask nick that. so it was well yeah this is a this is a think piece really about whether you nick the little, you know, piano, chocolate, whatever these chocolate, whatever from these these buffets and as it is a grey area because you sort of paid anyway if it's all inclusive. i grew a in a inclusive. so i grew up a in a rest on which couple of
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rest on which had a couple of rooms don't condone never rooms i don't condone never steal from small or small hotels but imagine you're in a budget chain and so frequently chain hotel and so frequently are for the buffet are and you paid for the buffet and there's questions and there's lot of questions that aren't being used. that aren't really being used. the can you one the question, can you pocket one for what i'm for lunch? and that's what i'm asking, was the difference between scoffing your face then in you have in there, because you can have as as want from the as much as you want from the runway putting stuff your runway or putting stuff in your pockets, to which pockets, you like to which i suppose, , it is within the suppose, yes, it is within the cost of what paid for the room, but only eat it within that but only you eat it within that designated period. is that designated time period. is that every moment? i just used designated time period. is that ev do moment? i just used designated time period. is that ev do whenent? i just used designated time period. is that ev do when i|t? i just used designated time period. is that ev do when i did i just used designated time period. is that ev do when i did gigs i just used designated time period. is that ev do when i did gigs andt used designated time period. is that ev do when i did gigs and all;ed to do when i did gigs and all that. there was nice woman who that. there was a nice woman who would keep those. i did would she keep those. i did offer to offer them to us later she'd have sort stored, she'd have them sort of stored, you the breakfast she you know, from the breakfast she said it was, i don't want this, which quite nice in a way. which is quite nice in a way. you've thought other people. but it it theft really, it is. is it theft not really, is it's all inclusive. is it? if it's all inclusive. i didn't realise it was. a theft thing never it seemed, i just thing i never it seemed, i just thought you take it for life. thought if you take it for life. no, no. i thought it was second age. but i could eat the seconds later. next shift, which. later. my next shift, which. no look, if we don't
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look, i think look, if we don't have rules in society, we have anarchy. and i think you've got to say that breakfast and to say that is breakfast and lunch is lunch. and this food is being for your being provided for your breakfast, lunch. breakfast, not for your lunch. mean mean, you mean what else? i mean, you could take the whole lot from meals for months. i'll eat breakfast so why can't? breakfast later so why can't? i have now and then have a little bit now and then a little bit of break because little bit of a break because you just you violating all the all rules all social all the rules it's all social norms be playing norms you'll be playing menstrual on your face menstrual blood on your face next having my bread next and having a treat my bread some yeah because people are watching the show if they've just won't know what just kind they won't know what you're yeah was you're talking but yeah that was a but sounded just like a cool but it sounded just like weird speech they said weird hate speech and they said to this is what i just to worry this is what i just obsessive blood. obsessive menstrual blood. i think going to go to think if you're going to go to a hotel if, you're going to pay for the breakfast to have the buffet, as breakfast. buffet, keep as breakfast. that's view. i just that's my point of view. i just think i, i don't people think i, i don't like people stealing like the soaps. stealing things like the soaps. and even theft, and that's even theft, is it? that's definitely fact. if you're of those you're like one of those travellers, just breakfast travellers, just the breakfast is pretty grim anyway isn't it. exactly. never them that exactly. i never told them that i movenpick in dubai. i was at movenpick in dubai. that's that's that's a five star. that's incredible yeah. incredible pocket that. yeah. you know. yeah but
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you got you know. yeah but you're going to pocket you're not going to pocket tickets the plane. no. tickets on the plane. no, no. anyway that's all we've got time for been andrew for tonight. i've been andrew doyle. my wonderful doyle. thank you to my wonderful guests, dixon and seiji guests, nick dixon and seiji takahashi. see takahashi. we're going to see you, tomorrow night you, of course, tomorrow night at every night at at o'clock and every night at 11:00, we take you through the next newspapers for headliners. hope lovely weekend. hope you have a lovely weekend. see tomorrow. farewell .
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oh good evening i'm on as porter in the gb newsroom tv online and debbie , this is. in the gb newsroom tv online and debbie , this is . gb news. it's debbie, this is. gb news. it's been confirmed . six young been confirmed. six young children in the uk have died from a strep a the uk health security agencies, they're
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investigating after a rise in rare invasive strep with five deaths of under tens england since september . deaths of under tens england since september. a child also died in wales year. health officials say . they've seen officials say. they've seen a slight rise in cases strep a which can cause scarlet the deaths and serious complications from the infection . chemotherapy from the infection. chemotherapy and dialysis are among a list of services that will be protected from in the build up to christmas the royal college of nursing has announced that critical care unit , neonatal nursing has announced that critical care unit, neonatal and paediatric care will not be impacted . other services will be impacted. other services will be severely reduced. members of the rcn , england, wales and northern rcn, england, wales and northern are set to take industrial on december the 15th and 20th. gb news understands that health officials aren't dealing with new cases of diphtheria at the ftx migrant processing in kent. the cases were discovered among the more than 2000 channel migrants who arrived in small
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