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tv   Dan Wootton Tonight  GB News  January 2, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT

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nine in all of this week. nine in all of this week . and a happy in all of this week. and a happy new year to one and all in my take it ten in an hour's time my new year's resolution is but i'll be kicking off in style with my big opinion monologue in just a couple of minutes and
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it's a big one to start the year another winter another nhs crisis . the service has reached crisis. the service has reached point of no return. it's to make you sick, prince says he wants to make up with william . but can to make up with william. but can sibling relationships be repaired? have you had trouble with a brother or sister . is with a brother or sister. is blood thicker than water ? we'll blood thicker than water? we'll be asking. tv legend channel four's kim woodburn. the of common sense on this show. four's kim woodburn. the of common sense on this show . also common sense on this show. also should the vaccine rollout be paused over concerns? we'll speak to top mp andrew bridgen who says we must think again. plus, would like to lose a bit of weight and get fit. this yeah of weight and get fit. this year. no better man than . world year. no better man than. world renowned us doctor live from nashville, tennessee bestselling author and youtube sensation dr. ken berry live on the show what a character. that interview might just change your life . might just change your life. lots to get through. but first, someone whose body has always
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been a temple rhiannon jones with the headlines . with the headlines. we . we. vote around miles off the coast . it's understood there were more 40 people on board. it comes as uk and french authorities patrolling beaches together for the very first time. in a bid to stop migrants from making the crossing head , from making the crossing head, health bosses are calling the government to declare a major incident within the nhs over mounting pressure on the service . the royal college of emergency medicine claims as many as 500 people could be dying each week because of delays to critical care. the government says it recognises the pressure faced by
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the nhs. lisa king told gb news her husband would survived if he'd been treated in time. 500 people a week dying in nhs because they were denied the treatment and appointments that needed. what my died from is a very , very treatable. he did not very, very treatable. he did not need to die. he should never have died. and for every one of those 500 a week that are dying , there is a family behind . , there is a family behind. them, there is a husband, a wife, a partner, a son, daughter . thousands of rail passengers will face yet more travel disruption. this members of the rmt and i4 train operators will stage 248 hour walkouts from tuesday friday drivers from aslef will strike on thursday. more 100 national highway workers . england will also stage workers. england will also stage a 48 hour strike from tomorrow
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and south , thousands of mourners and south, thousands of mourners are paying their respects to pele at the grounds of his former club santos. the brazilian football legend dies thursday. he was undergoing treatment for colon cancer. thursday. he was undergoing treatment for colon cancer . the treatment for colon cancer. the three time world cup winner was two. the procession will continue through the streets of his hometown tomorrow, followed by a private family burial . tv by a private family burial. tv onune by a private family burial. tv online under business radio. this is gb news. now it's back to mondo . to mondo. welcome to dan wootton tonight . welcome to dan wootton tonight. it's mark dolan for in big man, and we'll be talking to tv legend at channel four's kim woodburn, the voice of common sense on their show, prince says he wants to make up with william. is blood thicker than we'll discuss that later. william. is blood thicker than
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we'll discuss that later . also, we'll discuss that later. also, should the vaccine rollout paused over safety concerns ? paused over safety concerns? we'll speak to top tory mp andrew bridgen, who says we must think again. plus, would you like to lose weight and get fit this year ? no better man than this year? no better man than world renowned doctor. live from nashville , best selling author nashville, best selling author and youtube sensation dr. ken berry, an absolute character. that's an interview that might just change life. plus, we got the papers at exactly 1030 sharp with full panel reaction with me throughout the show until, 11 are historian , broadcaster and are historian, broadcaster and gentleman town david oldroyd bolts top political commentator, journalist and successful playwrights. emma burnell and tv personnel . it's a and rather personnel. it's a and rather vivacious ingrid harrington now i want to hear from you throughout the show market giving at duke for the next 2 hours. big debates, guests and always big opinions . let's start always big opinions. let's start with this . one another another
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with this. one another another nhs crisis. shocking scenes in hospitals around , the country as hospitals around, the country as scores of amputees gather outside and patients await treatment on trolleys in corridors . the scene scenes have corridors. the scene scenes have been described as dickensian in. but let me tell you this isn't about that virus . covid 19 about that virus. covid 19 simply served as a diagnostic , simply served as a diagnostic, confirming everything we previously feared about the health, that it's not working anymore. things were hardly rosy in the garden pre—pandemic with some of the worst outcomes in terms of cancer treatments in the western world. i'm pleased don't give me any of that. bs about money and underinvestment . the nhs currently costs every household . the nhs currently costs every househol d £31,000 a year and household £31,000 a year and hasn't and has an annual budget of almost hasn't and has an annual budget of almost £200 billion. 13 grand
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a year per household . sadly, a year per household. sadly, they could go private for a fraction of that and many are people are using savings and even borrowing money and getting debt to pay for what the tells them is a non procedure. soon fear the nhs will become like the bbc. a service everyone has to pay for but one. only a fraction of people actually use the nhs demise has been a car crash , slow motion and. it's got crash, slow motion and. it's got nothing to do with the excellent staff within its our doctors, our nurses , hospital, porters, our nurses, hospital, porters, cleaners, the security guards. they are all the best of us . but they are all the best of us. but bureaucratic pen pushing middle managers on six figure salaries and diverse city offices for the most diverse in the world. not so much. take a look this from the royal free hospital in north london . nhs bosses want london. nhs bosses want interview panels to justify why they've hired a white person
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over from ethnic minorities . over from ethnic minorities. meanwhile, today we're told the nhs is set fiercely compromised by gender ideology. according to government's outgoing soar on violence against women nemko, ali said , the health service ali said, the health service appears to be seriously compromised by an ideology that is diminishing the rights women and girls. the report quotes a february 2021 letter from bristol nhs trusts then chief executive evelyn barker, suggesting that patients cannot always be guaranteed intimate care from of the same sex . in care from of the same sex. in words. a bloke calling himself a woman can handle exam men and treats a naked woman girl in a hospital setting. that's progress it. and then there's the pandemic. a two and a half year period in which nhs through
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in my view, failed covid policies is signed its own death warrant. unlike other health systems in western europe , most systems in western europe, most notably sweden, of course the nhs became , the national covid nhs became, the national covid service , curtailing access to service, curtailing access to cancer diagnosis and treatment, for example as well as other far more serious illnesses than covid like type two diabetes and heart disease . the legacy? well, heart disease. the legacy? well, cancer affects all ages . unlike cancer affects all ages. unlike covid. you have, for example a young mother, that must now say goodbye to her children because . she wasn't able to get that lump out during the pandemic. meanwhile, chief medical , the meanwhile, chief medical, the lockdown loving professor whitty, is he still thing has warned of a surge in heart related due to a lack of treatment and medication over the last three years. well that's a surprise. this current self—inflicted nhs crisis we're told today by the chief of the
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royal college of emergency , royal college of emergency, adrian boyle , is claiming up to adrian boyle, is claiming up to 500 lives a week. the kind of figure that would have created hysteria back in the day . but hysteria back in the day. but now no one bats an eyelid. the excess deaths in this country are eyewatering. and they will continue . but if it's not covid, continue. but if it's not covid, they don't care. that's why the establishment media and the politicians aren't even talking about it. the covid overreaction is the greatest in the history of the nhs . for a virus nasty, of the nhs. for a virus nasty, yes, but non—fatal to most focusing as it did on the very old and those with co—morbidities. old and those with co—morbidities . and i'll take no co—morbidities. and i'll take no lectures from high profile media, medics, nhs gp's and consult today's on tv with book deals and hundreds of thousands of followers on twitter who are shrieking about the current situation . well, i agree with situation. well, i agree with them. it is a what's happening and i'm deeply worried about
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patients and, about what nhs staff currently going through with horrifically long hours and conditions. i'd start by the way, by getting of those useless masks in a hospital setting. i was in an hospital today. masks in a hospital setting. i was in an hospital today . the was in an hospital today. the staff were incredible as usual and they kept taking their masks off just to get their point over covid at its very worst . but covid at its very worst. but it's those same high profile, high profile medics , tv and on high profile medics, tv and on the radio and on twitter who are so concerned now. well were the cheerleaders of lockdown and the nhs is ridiculed as focus on one disease. you can't have it both ways. during the pandemic were being pinged on their phone and made to stay at home for two weeks because they'd be near someone that had covid. they didn't necessarily covid they've been pinged because they were near someone had it. you near someone that had it. you work hospital. what do you
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work in a hospital. what do you expect? sense of ill doctors. ignored the ping and went into work anyway. but thousands didn't crazy policies like doctors nurses self—isolating without symptoms are why we are where we are right now . china where we are right now. china this week offering the latest proof that virus won't be stopped and never as they wrote back on their bonkers zero—covid . the nhs just on life support. the last have been given and it's the last have been given and wsfime the last have been given and it's time start again. the nhs staff are the best we have and. they've been heroes. but in its current form it's not working . current form it's not working. on the watch of the nhs , we've on the watch of the nhs, we've got a waiting list of 7 million people. we've got ambulance drivers and nurses on strike and we've got an even higher for a service that's getting worse by the day . the nhs isn't even the day. the nhs isn't even about public health these days in, my view. it's just in the pockets. big pharma as it seeks to prescribe medication rather
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than prevent serious through lifestyle changes . obesity is lifestyle changes. obesity is the elephant in the room and that's what's bankrupting western health systems, especially our own. given the fact that obesity is a gateway drug to cancer, dementia , type drug to cancer, dementia, type two diabetes, heart disease, kidney joint damage. and so much more. you'd think that be the focus of their work , but it is focus of their work, but it is not. it's my view that if you fix obesity, you fix nhs because almost any ailment you can think of is related in one way or another to . our waistline. it another to. our waistline. it was even being reported today that police officers are being measured up . xxl uniform and a measured up. xxl uniform and at overweight to catch . it's a fair overweight to catch. it's a fair cop that's been replaced by it's a fat cop you go and dan a burger king or mcdonald's now i love the nhs and its people. i
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don't want an american system which costs twice as much and is twice as bad. i don't want to have to produce a credit card if i break my leg but the nhs is broken and it's all of its own making. asleep at the wheel as lifestyle related illness exploded type diabetes wasn't a thing years ago and it's signed up to, in my view, failed insane covid policies which one of the world's top medics professor jay bhattacharya from university of stanford in california has called the biggest health mistake in history. it's to make you sick for the new year. i want a nhs. it's time to amputate the whole thing and start again. pass me the saw. i'll do it myself . without i'll do it myself. without anaesthetic . it's just anaesthetic. it's just a
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coincidence that i'm dressed as a medic . what's your view ? a medic. what's your view? gbnews.uk i'll get to your opinions shortly, but to that, our journalist opinions shortly, but to that, ourjournalist and political our journalist and political commentator david oldroyd , tv commentator david oldroyd, tv personality and broadcaster tarrant and top political journalist and playwright . emma, journalist and playwright. emma, let start with you. do you think the nhs needs a rethink ? i think the nhs needs a rethink? i think yes. i know the problem we have at the moment is quite a lot of it is to do the big rethink that happenedin it is to do the big rethink that happened in of 2012 where we assume as lots of parts of the nhs there bad at talking to each other. it was a massively imposed change on nhs from the top met lots of resistance and we didn't. the two both sides of that argument got things very wrong . first of all, the impact wrong. first of all, the impact wasn't immediate . everyone went, wasn't immediate. everyone went, oh is fine, what are you talking about? so then things went down
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gradually. and of they got run down and run down and run down. and then when we did hit a crisis point, the nhs wasn't up it. there are important things we need to do and we do need to reform the nhs. but that has to be done not as a something be done. panic, panic, panic, change, change measure, but actually in partnership with those who work for it, who those who use and those who need it. and i think we need to be really conscious of thinking what we need and how we get there in such a way that everybody can be happy , both with the change and happy, both with the change and with the journey of change, rather than simply throwing up our hands and saying is wrong or everything , go back to how it everything, go back to how it was or nothing. can be done. i think that so much of the problems with these things is that we react rather rethink does need a rethink. david oldroyd yes, and needs a rethink entirely from the ground . the entirely from the ground. the simple point about the nhs is that the model does not work for
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britain in 2022 and the biggest problem of all, with our national reaction to this, is that where i'm willing to admit this, there is a nostalgia the nhs about its founding ethos and about what it was to those people who first benefited from it. this is entirely understandable when you look at the standards of life. in 1947. however, we have on greatly. we have expanded enormously as a country. the amount that we now need to pay just to keep the nhs rolling, never mind to pay for people's care and to give them the medical care that they so desperately need that they are written . you know, as british written. you know, as british citizens , it is their right to citizens, it is their right to have is possible to be given under the current funding system. no other country in the world, no other sensible country in the world thinks that you can pay in the world thinks that you can pay entirely out of taxation for a health system. now there is a big problem here for the people within their own minds and for the politicians who seek to represent constant represent them is this constant national debate about we need more grown up politicians, we
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need a more sensible national debate is particularly prevalent. boris johnson prevalent. when boris johnson is prime through prime minister and got through his premiership sound bite his premiership by sound bite politics and know, this is politics and you know, this is followed from blair onwards politics and you know, this is follopeople from blair onwards politics and you know, this is follo people up m blair onwards politics and you know, this is follo people up with air onwards politics and you know, this is follopeople up with soundbites that people up with soundbites and instead of coming up with real the question the real policy the question the british people and that they must put to their elected representatives is . are we representatives is. are we willing have as a nation willing to have as a nation a serious, sober about the nhs about the fact that it does not work and about the fact that because it does not work, people are dying. we need look at other european nations, germany, france, switzerland belgium, all of these nations have public private health systems . they all private health systems. they all have better health outcomes than we do. and nobody is denied health care. well, i agree if the nhs doesn't choose change, change chosen for its change will be chosen for its angry the clock's angry apologies the clock's against us. is the nhs running out of time? is running of time, but it doesn't have to collapse . but we need to sort out the middle management because that's the money is just haemorrhaging . and we to look at really look
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at the health of it. and get that sort of sorted out . that sort of sorted out. millions with preventable disease . millions with preventable disease. ingrid millions with preventable disease . ingrid mean. exactly. i disease. ingrid mean. exactly. i mean 4 million people have type two diabetes of friends , mine two diabetes of friends, mine family members. it's incredibly shocking. anybody but type two diabetes is predominately an illness that does not need to exist . exactly. and you said exist. exactly. and you said that didn't exist 50 years ago. look at all the allergies that we've got as well. you in the nhl cereal. you said today i was in and it shows for the few days ago we talk because i know you say we're running out of time. we'll talk about because i we'll talk about it because i was i can see even was alarmed and i can see even from that experience where money could have been saved just that night on me alone. well, there you go. i tell you what we'll do. we've got the papers at exactly 1030. and already the nhs is making headlines. so we'll cover experience ingrid of the nhs just this week and let me know your experience . what is
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me know your experience. what is your appraisal of the nhs pandemic? mark at gbnews.uk i was an nhs hospital today. i got a great great service. it was a chin lift and the back. oh no, it's not a good service at all. look at all that. i'll show you the results later in the show lots more to come. we'll be discussing the vaccination programme with mp andrew bridgen, we must think bridgen, who says we must think again, next we'll asking is again, but next we'll asking is university a waste of time ? see university a waste of time? see you into .
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well big reaction to my big opinion monologue. i believe that the nhs reached the point of no return. i don't want an american system at the moment. patients are not being served and the staff are going through hell as well . this from hell as well. this from richard's mark major and bold reform is the only way to turn around the nhs oil tanker, not throwing more cash into the endless weightless, wasteful . endless weightless, wasteful. it's a bottomless pit of inefficiency. it has to change. i'm sick of it being beyond criticism, says richard. john says mark, focus on obesity is absolutely . you should know that absolutely. you should know that the average doctor has had no more than hours of training in obesity in their entire medical
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course. it's a total scandal . course. it's a total scandal. and i believe approximately 75 billion of the cost of the nhs relates to obesity. co morbidities well, if you want to lose a bit of weight, do stay tuned because. at 945, we're joined by legendary us dr. ken berry live from nashville, tennessee . and he'll be talking tennessee. and he'll be talking weight loss and i think he's got a great, great. so do stick for that one. however, i've to say, june's not happy. mark, how dare . fat shame, people absolutely disgusting . well, look, june, i disgusting. well, look, june, i appreciate your point of view. no fat shaming from where i'm standing. i believe that we live in a toxic food environment. i think we're all eating the wrong food and the whole country has to have a conversation about how we feed ourselves. i'd go back to farmers feeding us rather than supermarkets and big food companies. but jane, i appreciate your comment. and i do. i do hear what you're saying. alastair, hi mark. happy
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new year. the nhs radical surgery to remove the inept ticks tick box managers. their saved overweight could be used to deploy more doctors, nurses and nursing support staff. well, look , get some more of your look, get some more of your emails shortly . always emails shortly. always compelling stuff. market gb news uk. but middle class teenagers are choosing apprenticeships over degrees because they want better value money. that's according to a graduates employer chairman of, an accounts and consultancy company kevin ellis has said a rising number of school leavers were opting for apprenticeships over university education, fearing the high level of debt. so it begs the question is university a waste of time to debate ? i'm a waste of time to debate? i'm delighted to welcome ethnographer and academic a good friend of the show, dr. lisa mackenzie , and also delighted to mackenzie, and also delighted to welcome author and columnist, tv
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and radio presenter. welcome author and columnist, tv and radio presenter . quite welcome author and columnist, tv and radio presenter. quite a talented lady. i'm not going to lie emma wolff. so we've got lisa and emma, we're just going to get the line them. now, it's an important debate because tony blair was very keen to see over % of school leavers attend university whilst he was minister. was that a laudable policy or did it set a lot of people for a full . lisa people for a full. lisa mackenzie we've got the line to you. mackenzie we've got the line to you- happy mackenzie we've got the line to you. happy new year. what's your on this? of course, you are a top academic yourself. well i am an academic and a happy new yean an academic and a happy new year, mark. and happy new year to everybody on, gb news. it's great. see you on the 2nd of january. and so want to look have a look at this sort of statement. the doj's report today and where it's come from. it's come from a report that was done a december by the sowetan trust. and it is absolutely sort of suggesting that some young people are looking
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apprenticeships. however it is a bit misleading with the with the headune bit misleading with the with the headline which says the middle class are looking for apprenticeships because . it's apprenticeships because. it's almost suggesting like the middle class are looking for apprenticeships as plumbers, electricians , when actually the electricians, when actually the apprenticeships that they that thatis apprenticeships that they that that is on offer actually something called a higher degree apprenticeships. and that's things like a media organisation and an accountant and in legal firms . so there are all these firms. so there are all these sort of higher degree type apprenticeship gigs and middle class students are absolutely looking towards those . however, looking towards those. however, what was so interesting saying is the in these sort of very lucrative high degree apprenticeships, which does get you into higher paid job without , all that debt working class students are getting through. so the same old argument is
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happening again and again. so is university a waste of money? probably not for i suppose , of probably not for i suppose, of poor middle class people because they're used to spending sort of nine grand or 15 grand a term. private school . and then they go private school. and then they go to university and i've said many times what you get at university is much more than education. it's the social networks , it's it's the social networks, it's the cultural capital. so for some groups , people, some groups, people, universities still . so it was universities still. so it was that money. however the leaving university would fit with a 50 grand debt for a working class student that may not have all got those networks and may only just get a marginally betterjob just get a marginally better job out of it. i think the universal i mean, personally, working in a universal for 20 years, the higher education system completely broken . emma wolf completely broken. emma wolf i believe that all young people should have access to higher education, but it doesn't have to be in a red brick building
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and called a university . and called a university. absolutely. and i completely agree with lisa that basically apprenticeships, it's not being you know, it's not being the sort of the boy doing the chair legs, the in the coffin to studio and then working his way up to master. it's not doing the plumbing or working in a factory. it's basically. these are what we used to call these are what we used to call these are paid training at a company with the offer of then a very lucrative or a pretty lucrative job. so but i agree with you, mark, as well that i think higher education, what in whatever form it takes, whether, you know a sort of traditional academic degree i did, or whether it's more vocational , it whether it's more vocational, it depends whether you have a specific career in mind. it depends whether you want to be a medic. you want to work in the law, someone like that, or you want to faff around . i did and want to faff around. i did and study english literature for three years and learn how to speak old english and all sorts of things and end up and
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goodness knows what of profession, but i think higher education in some form , i.e. education in some form, i.e. after school that you leave home that you away from mummy's apron strings . you learn how to pay strings. you learn how to pay your how to work a washing machine , how to cook a basic machine, how to cook a basic meal , how to machine, how to cook a basic meal, how to get drunk, how to fall in love, how to have your heart broken, how deal with life outside of school, the safe environment of school that you have a space where you do that hopefully with some kind of study in mind. hopefully with some kind of study in mind . and you do that study in mind. and you do that for a couple of years before you knuckle down into the world of work because goodness knows we're all going to be working until we're about 95 these days, probably with covid and obesity and who knows what else in this miserable world. so yeah i think some form of higher education whether that's mostly spent in the pub or wherever is really really important but not sure about these so—called apprenticeships you're right having your whole life in it you
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know that's the i'll never get oven know that's the i'll never get over. rebecca oh. stephanie and john, you've done thin a big jim was a unit, let me tell you . was a unit, let me tell you. lisa, lisa , much of this is lisa, lisa, much of this is about class and what are tony blair's attempts to get young people into universal an attempt to tackle class division . yeah to tackle class division. yeah i mean the whole the new labour agenda was social mobility that was what the whole new labour's agenda about it was about you know pre—school said you know, we're all middle class now but i'm the attempt so get 50% of young people into university with a social mobility attempt. however that has not worked he's failed because has happened is with the amount and the enormous amount you know the middle the minute that the working class in any numbers started to go to university the phased out to go . so what we've got is we've got the students university with
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£50,000 worth of debt which they have to pay back when they're only earnin g £21,000, which is only earning £21,000, which is not a graduate. that's not a graduate wage. not a graduate. that's not a graduate wage . £21,000. but do graduate wage. £21,000. but do have to start paying that back £21,000. and so what we've got is we've got a situation where we've got a of people who can leave and parents are paying off that debt for them . and then that debt for them. and then you've got other groups of people, working class people who do not get that support . and at do not get that support. and at the same time as they're trying to find work, trying to buy a home, they're also having to pay off this enormous debt . well, off this enormous debt. well, the univ at the education system, as it works today is actually not working anybody. it's not working for lecturers. it's not working for lecturers. it's not working for lecturers. it's not working for students. it's not working for students. it really needs a proposal that mean i'm with you . i think the mean i'm with you. i think the energy and education is a precious thing. however what starts to happen if you start
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charging that 50 grand students to believe that they're going to get some sort of job at the end of it? that's going to pay that off. so therefore, education then is all about education it's about getting a job and actually you lose that. you lose the education bit from the university . it then becomes your university. it then becomes your body , a piece of paper to give body, a piece of paper to give to an employer , rather than to an employer, rather than having that three years of education. and emma wolf, you've got a young son and he will at a certain point be a school . what certain point be a school. what if he says to you mum, i'm not going to get myself into tens of thousands of pounds worth of debt. thousands of pounds worth of debt . there are courses online debt. there are courses online i can learn about engineering from youtube and i can get to work quicker . well, he's already quicker. well, he's already learning about engineering , but learning about engineering, but not from youtube, and he's not allowed online. and he's never going to have a phone ever. he's never going have never going to have a television. he's never going to be any technology ever. be allowed any technology ever. no kid. i think the world i
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think the world has changed a lot. i you know, degrees the whole academic course thing universities were invented decades ago and the world is such a different place. they were invented before technology , existed before remote working virtually any kind of technology the internet. i'm not talking about the universities like oxford and cambridge that were invented centuries ago but the traditional course the way it's only just been sort of at the edges and then modified and then changed through covid and stuff. we've actually. and i know we've never actually. and i know you've talked about you've just talked about reforming the nhs, so we can't universities into the is universities as well into the is way much in this country to way too much in this country to reform needs reform reform everything needs reform but i do think that the traditional three year course residential is probably a busted flush. it probably isn't going to last not until ludo is 18 or whatever. so the likelihood is that his age in 17 years time will be it in a completely different way. probably nothing like the university that we went
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to. i still remember the day when i got this envelope , the when i got this envelope, the doon when i got this envelope, the door. it was a letter from the student, what they called student, what they called student loans company . and it student loans company. and it said, you've paid final instalment that was it. that was my final and. i was about 30 and i paid off my final. i think was 100 quid a month and it out of the blue and i've just given up on ever paying it back i thought that would be forever. i'll always that that would be forever. i'll always tha t £90 a month going always that £90 a month going out because i had no no help from my parents at all. and yeah, one day about years later, i paid it ended you do you do realise that money well spent emma, although there were lots of books behind , i won't of books behind, i won't speculate on how many of them you've actually read the bernie broadcaster emma wolf, over which you gain . she's read all which you gain. she's read all of them. well, an outrageous slur also thanks to dr. lisa mackenzie as well. i'm in so much trouble. what do you think is university a waste of money
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mark@gbnews.uk. i've just mark@gb news.uk. i've just received mark@gbnews.uk. i've just received an email from an old university friend called big jim who wants wants me meet him at the inn in swiss cottage and watch this space coming up. would you like to get slim, fit and lean for 2023? very often that question is an empty. but take my word for it. dr. ken berry, live from the united states. it's worth hearing he delivered for his patients . i'm delivered for his patients. i'm a huge fan, so don't miss that interview. we've got the papers at 1030. but out next we've got conservative mp andrew . he's the conservative mp andrew. he's the covid 19 vaccine killing people see .
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in three i'm committed tominey join me on gb news on sunday morning for a politics show with on tv radio and online gb news the people's channel britain's news. channel very much looking forward to camilla tominey on sunday mornings at 9:30 am. that is going to be event tv. it's marked down an end for dan wootton. all of this week. let's talk about health, shall we, given the huge of the covid 19 vaccine rollout with concerns about side effects and efficacy, is it time to offer boosters
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only to the most vulnerable groups a policy that has been adopted in denmark and norway, for example ? or do we stop them for example? or do we stop them altogether ? here's the altogether? here's the conservative mp bridgen addressing a house of commons committee just before christmas on this very issue. what we do know is that those people who've questioned the efficacy or safety of the vaccines have generally been to cut down council . and that's why this is council. and that's why this is so important . council. and that's why this is so important. i council. and that's why this is so important . i don't claim be so important. i don't claim be any sort of expert, but my degree a long time ago was in genetics behaviour and biochemist and science works by challenge. and what we do is that these the science behind these vaccines has not been allowed to challenge . well, i'm allowed to challenge. well, i'm delighted to say that the conservative mp for north leicestershire, andrew bridgen joins me now. hi, andrew . hi, joins me now. hi, andrew. hi, mark. happy new year. and i
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would have thought it would be a happy new year for you if we pause the vaccine rollout . yes, pause the vaccine rollout. yes, i'll go into . the evidences is i'll go into. the evidences is huge age and it's growing daily that there are considerable adverse events associated with those who've taken vaccine . some those who've taken vaccine. some of them have sadly resulted death . what we do know now is death. what we do know now is that these treatments are not normal in the traditional sense . they're actually gene therapies as admitted by pfizer and moderna in filings to us lawsuits . they are novel lawsuits. they are novel treatments. we know they gone through the normal testing you'd expect for a medical treatment. they were rushed out in 12 months and no one can tell you what is going to happen after two, five or ten years. so you would have expected that given that they haven't been through all the rigorous testing we'd normally expect that there would be a very and demanding scrutiny
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of all the side associated it with the vaccine rollout . and with the vaccine rollout. and what we've seen is, is a yellow card system is monitored by the mhra and they themselves admit that probably only representing possibly 10% of all the adverse and even that's at nearly half a million reports since the vaccines were rolled out. so, yes, i'm for the government to suspend the rollout of the vaccines . i'm calling for vaccines. i'm calling for a detailed analysis of the adverse events . and also, if we want to events. and also, if we want to use these novel treatments, we really do a risk assessment based on benefits harm for each each age group of people and of course, now that the mhra have approved these experimental vaccines for use on children and i'll children but they're actually babies to down six
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months who are at no risk at all with a healthy from the virus itself . i think this with a healthy from the virus itself. i think this is time to draw a line in the sand . draw a line in the sand. however, andrew, we've heard figures that 3 million lives have been saved . the jab and have been saved. the jab and surely this has been the most tested vaccine in history considering many billions of people have it and they're absolutely fine . well, that that absolutely fine. well, that that that science says that they've saved all these lives. that's called modelling. modelling is the lowest form of evidence for scientific research and an in a lot of that, is this more science fiction than than science fiction than than science fact what we do know by reanalyse pfizer's own research data that they used when they were developing this treatment that at least one in 800 people who take that vaccine will have a severe adverse event . and we, a severe adverse event. and we, you know, it's one in 800
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because in eight weeks, because pfizer followed those patients for eight weeks after after they took the vaccine. so any side effects that come out later night weeks wouldn't have been picked up in that study. and that's one of the many holes in the research. so when you actually look at the big farmer's own data , this is not farmer's own data, this is not rigorous. it's not rigorous data at all. it has been exposed, but at all. it has been exposed, but a lot people have taken the vaccines for various reasons. some of them, unfortunately, were mandated take the vaccine. so i think that's a very dodgy of law given the harms that they're producing. but it's time to actually look at this data around these expert of treatments . andrew, why are you treatments. andrew, why are you a voice in the house commons? what do you know that the others don't ? and well, i'm hoping that don't? and well, i'm hoping that they've had time, colleagues have had time to digest information . the christmas
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information. the christmas break. i'm hoping that when we come back in january that colleagues will have looked at the data themselves. i think a lot of people have taken the experts opinions without looking at the raw data themselves. there's a lot of information out there. there's a lot of sources for it . it's there. there's a lot of sources for it. it's all there. there's a lot of sources for it . it's all backed there. there's a lot of sources for it. it's all backed up by science . the esteemed science. the esteemed cardiologist, a c science. the esteemed cardiologist , a c malhotra science. the esteemed cardiologist, a c malhotra , has cardiologist, a c malhotra, has been passing me an awful lot of information. yeah degree a long time ago was in political science. it's easier to read papers if you have that background, but in a common sense tells you that there's something right about all of this and. the silence from the mainstream media only only can that feeling that something not about it is, quite honestly it reminds me exactly same way for the for the first five years of my investigation into the subpostmasters scandal over the honzon subpostmasters scandal over the horizon system for the first five years i couldn't get a single newspaper or news outlet to cover that story . but
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to cover that story. but ultimately it was a huge scandal all the way from and the united states. my to the conservative mp andrew bridgen thank you andrew . let me tell you that the andrew. let me tell you that the hra are very clear that the vaccines used in the uk have met all of their highest standards for safety and effectiveness . for safety and effectiveness. and they say that the number of yellow card received so far is not what was expected. vaccine effectiveness has changed over the course of the pandemic but they're still effective against hospitals zation and death . so hospitals zation and death. so say the top medical authority teams in the land but your view are you concerned about vaccine you delighted you had it. let me know i'm triple vaxxed but . i've know i'm triple vaxxed but. i've got to say i was always against vaccine tyranny and vaccine mandates . vaccine tyranny and vaccine mandates. let me be clear that what andrew bridgen has is his view and his alone. but what's yours? market gb news uk next would you like to lose some weight? a legendary doctor the remarkable doctor. ken live from nashville, tennessee. you won't want to miss that? it's an interview change your interview that just change your
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life. you .
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in three. my in three. my take at ten monologues coming in just a few time. my new year's resolution is for the country, but a new beckons and thousands are joining and starting diets. but what is the best way forward for a healthy and happy 2023. let's head to the united states and the world renowned medical physician, dr. ken berry, m.d. renowned medical physician, dr. ken berry, md. a health practitioner in tennessee, a youtube sensation with over 2 million subscribers. and the author of the bestselling book lies doctor told me medical myths that can harm your health. dr. ken, very happy new year and welcome to gb news. thank you . welcome to gb news. thank you. delighted to speak with you again . great to have you back on again. great to have you back on the program what do we need? ken to start eating to get lean in
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2023. how do we lose weight . so 2023. how do we lose weight. so the key to losing weight is to fewer carbohydrates and definitely cut out all the simple carbohydrates immediately today. simple carbohydrates immediately today . and then for many people today. and then for many people they have to cut out even the more complex carbohydrates because in reality, many the complex carbohydrates are starches. they're long of sugar that are holding hands. and when you start to chew them up in your mouth before you even swallow them, they break up into sugar. swallow them, they break up into sugar . and when you eat the sugar. and when you eat the sugan sugar. and when you eat the sugar, it raises blood glucose level, which raises your insulin, which is a fat storage hormone to burn the fat that you've already stored on your body. you've got to lower your carbohydrate intake that's going to lower your insulin level, that's going to make it possible for you to burn the stored fat . for you to burn the stored fat. i see and these carbohydrates as say are not just sugar but starchy vegetables , potatoes,
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starchy vegetables, potatoes, fruits like tropical fruit, bananas , grapes, mangoes and bananas, grapes, mangoes and course bread, rice and pasta and those sorts of foods . those sorts of foods. absolutely. and i think most of your viewers know that eating a diet of sugar and crisps and coca—cola that's bad. you're going to get fat eating that. but the false choice , many but the false choice, many people, they stop eating that and they say, okay , going to and they say, okay, going to start drinking lots of fruit and i'm going to start eating lots of whole grain bread and i'm going to start eating lots of fruits . that's just as going to start eating lots of fruits. that's just as bad going to start eating lots of fruits . that's just as bad that fruits. that's just as bad that that's not going to help you with with burning stored fat at all, which most people when they say, i want to lose weight, what they really mean is i want to lose fat and way to do that lose fat and the way to do that to your insulin down to get your insulin level down in the way to do that is to eat a very, very low carbohydrate diet, whether a ketogenic diet or overnight becoming or key to overnight becoming very or a carnivore . also very, very or a carnivore. also very, very or a carnivore. also very, very popular . very or a carnivore. also very, very popular. okay. so we're not
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eating the carbohydrates and i know you're not a fan of the vegetable, those seed oils, that sunflower oil, rapeseed oil, that kind of thing. i think you want us to eat butter and real fats. absolutely. animal fats are the fact that human beings have been ingesting for millions of years. they have been proven safe by the evolutionary method . nothing has been safer for human consumption than animal fats, butter , lowered bacon fats, butter, lowered bacon grease sheet, lard , any kind of grease sheet, lard, any kind of animal fat that what the human body craves, what it needs it's nutrient dense and it's good for you . okay. and i guess a bit of you. okay. and i guess a bit of extra virgin olive oil might hit the spot as well. so you've said what? we can't eat. can what we eat. give me give me a few foods that are on the menu on your so if you were to adopt a ketogenic diet that would be a diet with half of your plate covered with
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some form of fatty meat that would be chicken or or duck with the skin on. that would be a steak with the still attached that would be minced. that was 7030 protein to fat eight and then you would add some, some very low carbohydrate vegetables like brassicas, something like that you might season with some garlic or some onion and then you might have a few nuts and a few berries for dessert if you wanted to go as low carbohydrate as possible. that would be a carnivore diet. and you cover carnivore diet. and so you cover the entire plate with fatty red and eggs always the yolk . well, and eggs always the yolk. well, this is great. know i can briefly exercise can that help and if so, what kind ? so and if so, what kind? so exercise is great for the human bodyin exercise is great for the human body in hundreds of ways, but the research is very clear that it's a terrible method for weight loss. and so of your viewers who have joined the gym , the new year's resolution to lose , they should probably now lose, they should probably now hopefully they're still under
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the statute of limitations can cancel that account before their credit card is charged. now, if they want to build muscle, then continue with the gym, lift the weights. the gym , a method weights. but the gym, a method of weight loss , a complete waste of weight loss, a complete waste of weight loss, a complete waste of money money, brilliant stuff can get alerts my viewers to your products . first of all, the your products. first of all, the bookis your products. first of all, the book is out now and you're allowed to have a title like this because you are a top physician yourself. but the book is called lies my doctor told me , which is busting many medical myths. and of course, you talk about your own amazing weight loss journey as a result of the advice just given me and my viewers. and what's the can so people can find out more about what you do do dr. berekum very simple. well what a way to start. the doctor can . lovely to start. the doctor can. lovely to have you on the program. please return. i feel betterjust return. i feel better just talking to you let me stress that if you're to change your lifestyle or your diet do
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consult your gp first. lots more to come, including the papers and next up, my take it ten. it's my resolutions for the next yeah it's my resolutions for the next year. so you should .
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it's mark dolan tonight. and for wootton all of this week a very happy new year to one and all. prince harry says . he wants to prince harry says. he wants to make up with william . but can make up with william. but can sibling relationships be repaired? is blood thicker than water . have you repaired? is blood thicker than water. have you had trouble with a brother or a sister? we'll be tv legend kim woodburn , the tv legend kim woodburn, the voice of common sense on this show . we'll also have tomorrow show. we'll also have tomorrow morning's front at exactly 1030 sharp with full panel reaction . sharp with full panel reaction. and despite 2023 being so young, we'll be getting the panel's britain's. and union jack is of
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the year so far. my take a ten is on its way. it's my new resolutions and it's a lively one. i wonder how many that you be agreeing with. but first, the headunes be agreeing with. but first, the headlines rhiannon jones. be agreeing with. but first, the headlines rhiannon jones . mark, headlines rhiannon jones. mark, thank you. your top stories from the gb newsroom. and we start with some breaking news . the with some breaking news. the foreign office has confirmed two brits are among the four people killed after , two helicopters killed after, two helicopters collided mid—air in the australian state of queensland. three others were critically injured in the collision that took place near the seaworld theme park at around 2 pm. local time. queensland police says initial information suggests one of the helicopter was have been taking off and the other had been landing when they collided . the first channel collided. the first channel migrants off , the new year migrants off, the new year arrived at dover today. gb news
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can reveal that dozens of young men picked up from a small boat around nine miles off the coast . it's understood there were more 40 people on board. it comes as uk and french authorities patrolling beaches together , the first time in together, the first time in a bid to stop migrants from making the crossing . health bosses the crossing. health bosses calling for the government to declare a major within the nhs over mounting pressure on the service . the royal college of service. the royal college of emergency medicine claims that as many 500 people could be dying each week because of delays to critical care. the government says it recognises is the pressure faced by nhs. lisa king told her husband would have survived if he'd been treated in time . 500 people a week dying in time. 500 people a week dying in nhs hospitals because they were denied the treatment and appointments that they needed. well, my husband died from is a
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very was treatable. he did not need to die. he should never have died. and for every one of those 500 a week that are dying , there is a family behind them there is a husband a wife, a partner, a son, daughter. thousands of passengers will face yet more disruption this week. members of the rmt and 14 train operators will stage two. 48 hour walkouts from tuesday and friday . aslef drivers will and friday. aslef drivers will strike on thursday. it's in an ongoing dispute over pay and working conditions. more than 100 national highway workers . 100 national highway workers. england will also stage a 48 hour strike from tomorrow . and hour strike from tomorrow. and thousands of mourners are paying their respects to pele at the grounds of his former club , grounds of his former club, santos. the brazilian legend died last thursday. he was undergoing treatment for colon cancen undergoing treatment for colon cancer. the three time world cup
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winner was , 82. the procession winner was, 82. the procession will continue through the streets of his hometown tomorrow, followed by a private family burial tv and dab+ radio. this gb news now it's back to . market brilliance. be working with a rhiannon jones who returns in an hours rhiannon jones who returns in an hour's time. this is dan wootton tonight with me mark dolan all week sitting in for the big man . prince harry says he wants to make with william. good luck with that. but can sibling relations chips be repaired? is blood than water? you had trouble with a brother or a sister? we'll be asking tv legend kim woodburn, the voice of common sense on this show. we'll also have tomorrow morning's front pages at exactly 1030 sharp. you can set watch to
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it with full panel reaction with me until 11 are historian and man about town david oldroyd bolts . top political commentator bolts. top political commentator journalist and successful playwright . and tv personality. playwright. and tv personality. right and broadcaster ingrid tarrant . now we want to hear tarrant. now we want to hear from you throughout the show. mark at gb news dot uk. so many emails to get through and i'll come to those shortly but we'll start with my take it . ten happy start with my take it. ten happy new year. here am . new year's new year. here am. new year's resolutions . i'm going to drive resolutions. i'm going to drive car which has a petrol on any street like i'm to watch outrageous and sometimes maybe even offensive comedy and i'll do the same with movies tv shows, music and literature . shows, music and literature. yeah, i'm not going wear a mask
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. i'm not going to be separated from family or friends this year or prevented from working . i'm or prevented from working. i'm not going to say a man is a woman. not going to say a man is a woman . a woman is a man , or that woman. a woman is a man, or that the earth is flat the only place i'm going to put my pronoun is where the sun doesn't . i'm going where the sun doesn't. i'm going to use cash daily and resist the idea of . a hellish, undemocratic idea of. a hellish, undemocratic world. i'm going to travel on aeroplanes and take nonessential trips via various of transport and i'm going to love life and enjoy it because it's short i'm not going to apologise for my country , for my masculinity , for country, for my masculinity, for my politics. i'm not going to apologise my values or the colour of my skin . apologise my values or the colour of my skin. i'm going to be caring where necessary and aggressive when necessary too. i'm going to be a man. i might
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even indulge in a bit of toxic masculinity. what do you think about that ? after all, it's about that? after all, it's served us well when we defeated germany in two world wars . i'm germany in two world wars. i'm going to love britain. i'm going to be patriotic. and whilst reflecting on its many mistakes and crimes , i will celebrate it and crimes, i will celebrate it in equal , if and crimes, i will celebrate it in equal, if not greater measure as well. i'm going to call things out when they defy common sense , gender, ideology, which sense, gender, ideology, which questions the very idea of biological sex and most of the nonsense around covid policies which it's now abundantly clear were a catastrophic failure and a catastrophic disaster stuff. i'm going to be afraid or cowed into submission by a politically active and toxic minority on social media policing. every thought every comment, rewriting history creating intolerable hate filled echo chambers , hate filled echo chambers, damaging children, destroying
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art and ending careers. i'm going to be right and i'm going to be wrong. but i'm going to do it my way , underpinned by the it my way, underpinned by the fundamental principles of free speech, tolerance , the speech, tolerance, the competition of ideas and fair play competition of ideas and fair play . 2023 is when the play. 2023 is when the totalitarian , crazy, communist totalitarian, crazy, communist land grab of our free society begins to end. i want the old normal back when freedom in all its forms was a good thing. and this year i'll be fighting for it peacefully. of course . here's it peacefully. of course. here's to a happy, healthy , prosperous to a happy, healthy, prosperous 2023 to all us brits . let's come 2023 to all us brits. let's come together as one community, one family and. make it one to remember happy year. well, here's hoping . now reacting to here's hoping. now reacting to thatis here's hoping. now reacting to that is my wonderful all star panel that is my wonderful all star panel. hey story and journalist
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david bolt, tv personality tarrant and journalist , tarrant and journalist, playwright and political consultant , playwright and political consultant, angry what are your new year's resolutions ? oh, new year's resolutions? oh, ditto . you've just said . and ditto. you've just said. and thank goodness smart that you are in a seat where. you have a voice. people will listen. you and are wise. i honestly , i and are wise. i honestly, i don't want to sound like an echo chamber, but i have to say i agree with everything that you say. most importantly , it is the say. most importantly, it is the freedom of speech and not to be afraid to stand up be afraid to stand up and be counted and speak what you counted and just speak what you believe and you might be wrong. as you said , but you might also as you said, but you might also be right. and there are lots of people that will agree with you and people will and lots of people will disagree. point to, disagree. but the point is to, you know, to say what you think. well, going back to what well, so going back to what i don't really make resolutions because i kind of try to do those little things during the year you know is start on a
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monday type of thing so not necessarily wait a whole year before i start on new year's day but unfortunately well fortunately i had this horrible cough about three weeks ago. i noficed cough about three weeks ago. i noticed that i to cancel coming on your show i thought wants to start coughing but stop then i won't be able to say anything again and it's stopped me smoking which was fun because i really sort of wanted to do that . and then so the sort of thing that somebody would do even if it is resolution and well, i started . on new year because so started. on new year because so have you a fall. i've had a cigarette. so you had a cigarette. so you had a cigarette. so you all have you had a few so you've had a little cheeky puff since have you. yes. and of like really it was after midnight , and of like really it was after midnight, you know, sort of january the first. and really you should have i should have really thought thought really thought back and thought i've done you know, i haven't had one so far, but this kind of
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june, believe year's june, you believe in new year's resolutions every week, basically, don't you don't basically, you don't you don't really into this the really buy into this january the first. i know. i don't i slightly buy into doing starting on a monday it seems like that yeah so does the start a week. not necessarily a new year. do you want to his star signs by the way because it's going to be a good year generally because of the way the stars the stars lined the main ones certain malls and jupiter. i think that the palace this is what is what is saturn going to do about interest rates do you think? oh well so much to read what star sign don't tell you what do think do you think we could you could like in very, very brief way. i mean there are 12 star signs. do you think you could be us? could you could you do? but like all my view is out there, i've got virgos watching, so how i've got virgos watching, so how i go sagittarius is okay well what star sign you just look okay mean i'm okay let's let's i mean i'm myself emma both pisces. myself and emma both pisces. okay i'll tell you first of all,
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the one. so it's certain the planet display and pluto and mars plunge power. they all move into new signs. mars plunge power. they all move into new signs . why it's going into new signs. why it's going to be a good year 2023 for the whole world. oh, that's good. yes so pisces, the journey begins. jupiter and venus combined to strengthen your beliefs about what matters most. and mars turns direct in the second week of the year. you'll ready to pursue what makes you happy and secure. but it's the march destiny when they all march of destiny when they all move the saturn's this things, the planets and the move of saturn. the because cosmic teacher she'll sign in early teacher and she'll sign in early march followed by the move to pluto that brings pluto and blimey that brings tools you need to make the most of life to offer you'll of what life has to offer you'll also get stability and the termination benefits much as you never dreamed, would be taken seriously . you can turn seriously. you can turn inspiration , reality. i tell you inspiration, reality. i tell you what, mr. meg, eat your heart out wasn't mystic meg. we give you angry tyrant we'll look in great. i tell you what we're going to. i think i'm going to regular star signs. okay. and you're to be good. you are going
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to be the sort of the. jonathan canenif to be the sort of the. jonathan caner, if you like, of gb news because. you've clearly shown your prowess that, well, i lifted everything. jonathan of wrote. oscar caner. wrote. i see it's oscar caner. it's son. it's his son. keep it's his son. it's his son. keep it yeah, look, we might it in the. yeah, look, we might we in the future. we might do that in the future. you've inspired me. i'm back. let's let's go back. we emma burnell to this year. have you got for this year and do you think this year be a better year for everyone everyone . i will it for everyone everyone. i will it be a bit it won't a better year for everybody. it's going to a tough year. i think a lot of the things that were stored up and were rumbling forward at the end of last are just going to carry on this year that seem to be an awful lot of end in sight . i do awful lot of end in sight. i do think that it will be a steady yeah think that it will be a steady year. we won't get the shocks, but that probably is great because we're already rock bottom. so we'll just keep keep steadily, which isn't the news , steadily, which isn't the news, but do not think . i will make a
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but do not think. i will make a conscious decision to make it about you because we've had such about you because we've had such a horrible last few i think we can individually do some things but are lots of people who won't be able to make those decisions . i'm thinking of people for example in warzones in ukraine or all those people who just are at rock bottom having a very, very time of it. and i don't want to judge them for not turning that around when it's almost impossible with you, when you're living day to day hand—to—mouth. the idea , you hand—to—mouth. the idea, you know, a decision you make on january the first is going to turn it all for you can be really, really hard. and you are right . i totally agree with you. right. i totally agree with you. we must not gloss the reality for millions of brits and as you said, people around the world. well, do not hang to a well, but do you not hang to a couple crumbs of comfort , couple of crumbs of comfort, which by all accounts , which is that by all accounts, we appear to be through the worst of the pan. demick inflation looks to have peaked, that should come that's that should come down. that's the living
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the cost of living unemployment's pretty low surely it can't as bad as last year is what many people are thinking. as i say, i don't think it's going to be as shocking as last yeah going to be as shocking as last year. i don't think it's going to be as turbulent as last year, but don't think it's all going but i don't think it's all going to suddenly be bread roses. to suddenly be bread and roses. i to be a i think it's going to be a fairly low and hard grind for lot but what we won't lot of people. but what we won't get i lot of people. but what we won't geti do lot of people. but what we won't get i do seriously hope is that kind of shock moments that we so often in politics world affairs last year just seem to often in politics world affairs last yearjust seem to it just last year just seem to it just didn't stop and i think this year will be a quieter year but it won't necessarily be an easy one for many people. yes, you wouldn't expect me to say this, but i think don't david oldroyd bolt, we had too much news last yeah bolt, we had too much news last year, far too news, too much even for us to keep up with. and one of the things i'd like to see 2023 is a return to , an old see 2023 is a return to, an old fashioned british attitude. instead of telling people what to think and not caring how they behave , how about we turn that
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behave, how about we turn that on head and accept that on its head and accept that everybody freedom conscious everybody has freedom conscious conscience so they can think what they want actually public behaviour. kurt as he towards other people is matters. there is so discourtesy among think britons now and i think this comes because everybody's had a pretty hard time for a number of years. but i'm fed up of getting on a bus a train and with on a bus or a train and with their feet on seats and nobody's saying anything. but i'll serve afraid. i'm fed with slovenly afraid. i'm fed up with slovenly attitudes of dress. i'm fed up with people going around as though all that matters is how they that they should behave . they that they should behave. and yet they're perfectly willing to have people tell them what to think. i think. that's a totally about it way, frankly, of going about and we ought instead to have this idea that what you believe and your conscience, what you believe in your soul is entirely of you. and you should defend that and you should about carefully. you should about it carefully. but behave towards each but how we behave towards each other is, one of the fundamentals civilised fundamentals of a civilised society it's something that i think we've drifted away from
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over the recent and i think it's something that should all try something that we should all try collectively society to collectively as a society to bnng collectively as a society to bring back this idea of good standards public life, for standards in public life, for pubuc standards in public life, for public and courtesy. i don't public and of courtesy. i don't mind a bit of about tit. don't knockit mind a bit of about tit. don't knock it till . you've tried it. knock it till. you've tried it. coming up, we've got the papers at 1030 sharp with full panel reaction . and our panel will reaction. and our panel will choose their greatest and union jackass but next, apparently prince harry wants to reunite with william, but how do those sibling relationship work? is blood thicker than water? can you make up with your brother or sister a traumatic moment of drama? we'll speak to the voice of common sense on this show. tv legend woodburn. don't forget, we've got the papers at 1030 as well. and there were extraordinary headlines on their way . see you shortly .
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a big reaction to the conversation on email mark@gbnews.uk this from phil in response to my big opinion monologue about the nhs. hi, mark agreed with your monologue until you that we should be preached at about our lifestyles . government is already exercising too much control over the public. they should leave us alone. phil you for that ? how alone. phil you for that? how about this in to the nhs and
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it's pretty spicy from john. john says hi mark. i'm even common sense like you and, your gb news colleagues perpetuate the myth that all frontline nhs staff are caring, competent angels . possibly most of all, angels. possibly most of all, but my own experience and observation of the treatment of family and friends tells me that too many of them are not recognition of that is vital precondition for any rational debate on reforming the service. john, thank you for that . hi. john, thank you for that. hi. mark says . i haven't got a name mark says. i haven't got a name here, but it's a he says hi, mark. i was seriously damaged by the astrazeneca vaccine. the damage is not just to the m r a brilliant programme . you helen . brilliant programme. you helen. i'm uneasy about this vaccine nation. i was very reluctant to have it, but felt coerced because i was told i couldn't see my children or travel without it. i refused to have the booster and now live in fear of repercussions from the two jabs i've had. but mick.
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of repercussions from the two jabs i've had. but mick . mick jabs i've had. but mick. mick says hi mark. andrew bridgen represents all this wrong with the tory party on gb news tonight. doing he does best acting against his own government . lone a party government. a lone wolf. a party within party. he seems more content in promoting himself and his causes rather than the government's trying to pull vaccinations. is a futile and pointless cause with little or no backing from scientists. thank you. keep those opinions coming. market gb news duke. prince. harry's opinion is that he would like to get his father back and he'd love to have his brother back as well. they say in a trailer. in a trailer for an interview ahead of the release of autobiography . release of his autobiography. autobiography. prince harry's book spare which is anticipated to give details about disagreements . his brother, disagreements. his brother, prince william, will be released on the 10th of january. but here's the question is blood thicker than water ? how do you thicker than water? how do you resolve sibling tensions? can they be resolved if there's been a big like that between william
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and harry? i want to talk about this generally. let me know if you've had problems with a brother or sister . you've had problems with a brother or sister. did you work it out? market joining us to discuss this is tv personality kim woodburn. hi, kim . good kim woodburn. hi, kim. good evening. how you go you just gorgeous as ever to . oh, listen gorgeous as ever to. oh, listen you spoil me. i'm loving your pearl necklace i'm wondering if igave pearl necklace i'm wondering if i gave it to you . well, look, i gave it to you. well, look, you are a married man. a married , please. we note we exchanged just one. we're having passionate sex, but shut up, say nothing. just invited it now. my lips are sealed now gorgeous. kim, happy new year. you look , kim, happy new year. you look, it's great to see you. i hope you had a great christmas this all i want to at christmas mine. ihope all i want to at christmas mine. i hope so . you know, we're i hope so. you know, we're discussing the most you're going to have and i'm going to tell you this. i they could be the william and high we knew. but a lot it's not going to happen. i love i think it's because of the dislike of mac i'll just oh neck
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i didn't know we don't quite know what happened but i'm going to say something to you now you know this is my opinion of my opinion only if i'm wrong i you know, i believe that ah charles iii has a lot to do with this you know we've let that man off the hook and i will tell you something , as long as prince something, as long as prince william bless him , is so royal william bless him, is so royal and, wants to be our king . and and, wants to be our king. and harry says to self, how can you stand on that balcony ? me with stand on that balcony? me with my father , charles. the third my father, charles. the third and queen consort camilla , when and queen consort camilla, when she wouldn't be dead . mother she wouldn't be dead. mother that wasn't for two people. and i that's what the root of all. i think that william is a royal and he says i'm going to be a king and i'm going to do it. well, what i think what has is
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william , how could you do this ? william, how could you do this? well, you know, if it wasn't those two people, our mother would alive and standing, my father on the balcony . and i father on the balcony. and i think that's a big thing between them . so i think why william's them. so i think why william's willing to be and he is him is willing to be and he is him is willing to be and he is him is willing to the finest royal william , his lovely wife , he's william, his lovely wife, he's siding with the father is allowing things on as normal when . they're far from normal . when. they're far from normal. look, my love, i've got to say something to if it wasn't for charles iii, who's got his own way out last , charles iii, who's got his own way out last, he's going to be the king is going to make the woman was his mistress. queen camilla . and harry knows that camilla. and harry knows that thatis camilla. and harry knows that that is wrong . i know it's wrong that is wrong. i know it's wrong . and we all know it's wrong . we . and we all know it's wrong. we put up with it and bless him if
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a true roy and he's not going to be a i have got to have the stiff upper lip . i know he has, stiff upper lip. i know he has, but how can how can that young man stand beside that mistress on, the balcony? who . charles on, the balcony? who. charles how can i stand with them knowing if he hadn't had a is mistress diana be with them today?i mistress diana be with them today? i would be the queen of england. and i think that's a massive bone of contention with harry towards his brother william, because i'm going to tell you something, i personally could not on the balcony beside that woman who and my father was not for my mother being dead and she would been with her husband that she wouldn't be now. and i just all the people when she died in 1997, 31st of august, it was terrible thing the country was terrible thing the country was broken. what is wrong with you british people that you
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allow this to you allow that woman to stand there queen camilla you are all of you are disgraced. i'm not faced. they saw other from the time that charlie was marrying diana. he was speaking with camilla parker—bowles . he's continued parker—bowles. he's continued sleeping with her. you once tell diana every prince of wales has a mistress and we're going to make him king charles. and i will tell you something, he belonged to the church in england . no church in england england. no church in england has ever crowned a king who has been divorced . it is not allowed been divorced. it is not allowed in the church of england . so why in the church of england. so why is that man going to be our king ? and i think the bone of contention with poor harry is all right. we know we've got meghan. we know we all will go for that. she's not the vengeful black girl . but i am sure that
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black girl. but i am sure that harry is with william , that he harry is with william, that he can stand camilla. help us through door, sit beside her, have smile, charles and camilla killed his mother. but let william, who was where his loyalty is this his mum ? this loyalty is this his mum? this was his mom . there you go . i'm was his mom. there you go. i'm that's the way i feel. i know you feel passionate and calm, let me tell you. no one. no one is going to be sense sad on my watch. and i know that speak figuratively because you're that the circumstances that led to diana's tragic death were you know myriads and of those things was was the affair there were three of us in that relationship what diana told panorama and i hear what you're saying you're entitled to your view. kim dropping lots of truth . kim, dropping lots of truth. kim, will you come back and do it again soon? i will. i know my
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love. i would love nothing than to have. when i was kitty, a royal family you looked up to you really did. you know, you don't do any wrong. unfortunately, you know what's happened. unfortunately, you know what's happened . the media has brought happened. the media has brought it to light . even happened. the media has brought it to light. even in this series, the crown my love. i don't want hear this. it puts me mentioning charles and the temple. but i'm not going into all that. gross phone call he was making when he was not coming home. i think the royal family will never be what it was again . i think we're fooling again. i think we're fooling ourselves . i think the media has ourselves. i think the media has out. that was human, you and i. they have said they curse, they swear . they say the most gross swear. they say the most gross things we know charles does. and so the image of the royals to me when i look at prince charles, i think and he's puffing and puffing and blowing and, you know , he's totally ground know, he's totally ground doesn't take or charles the first was terribly grand and he
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was beheaded sophie you know something came would be very and that's one of the reasons he was beheaded. be careful, charles, but i just feel that we've got to stop everyone is to blame. but prince charles and prince charles is 100% to blame for all that's happening between us and, those boys. i tell you something like that. he gets off scot. okay, look , it's a fascinating , okay, look, it's a fascinating, fascinating conversation . and fascinating conversation. and kim, they're throwing shade . kim, they're throwing shade. king charles, what do you think? mark@gbnews.uk happy new year, kim. i tell you what, i don't what they put in your tea, but i want catch up soon. what legend she is. what do you want to put in my tea and don't tell my wife like my lips are sealed the fabulous kim woodburn will speak soon. next up, we've got the papers with some spicy headlines. see you shortly .
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welcome back to the show. it's mark dolan in for dan. all of this . and we've got the papers this. and we've got the papers now . full panel reaction. and now. full panel reaction. and let's with the financial times and here's what they lead with. it's not news for the economy. uk recession will be excuse be the deepest and longest say economists weakest recovery among g7 public policy compound the downturn. meanwhile kremlin admits ukraine missile strike on barracks killed 63 russian soldiers . okay, next up, let's soldiers. okay, next up, let's have a look at the and the eye newspaper lead with nhs faces three months of turmoil of the nhs was the topic of my
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monologue which you can now up with online connor from all digital team has crafted that into a digital @gbnews extreme pressure on britain's hospitals is likely to continue until april with further critical incidents expected and basic patient care routinely oxygen . patient care routinely oxygen. shortages two day waits for beds and 12,000 medically fit people stuck hospitals crumbs. look as that reads a litany of horror. we'll get to some more thoughts on a panel on that shortly. the independent really, really sad news about a sporting icon, martina navratil . later, tennis martina navratil. later, tennis star diagnosed with two cancers, both throat and breast cancer. she vows to fight on and to overcome that awful set of diseases revealed at china arrival can opt out of covid tests . passengers from china who tests. passengers from china who travel to the uk next week will
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not face compulsory covid tests on arrival . testing will be on arrival. testing will be voluntary and. those who test positive will need to be quarantined or asked to self—isolate . brilliant sat . self—isolate. brilliant sat. more covid madness . welcome to more covid madness. welcome to hell the times. now ski holiday hopes going downhill as alpine melts away. alpine resorts are closing after warm weather turned snow to slush , turned snow to slush, threatening the prospects of holidays for hundreds of thousands of low altitude resort in france and western switzerland are the worst affected after torrential rain and mild temperatures obliterated the snow also , obliterated the snow also, harry, i'd like to have my brother back . he said that in an brother back. he said that in an interview promoting his book spare , he spoke to tom brady , i spare, he spoke to tom brady, i should say. tom bradby of itn . should say. tom bradby of itn. millions will shun trains forever as the latest rates bnng forever as the latest rates bring the worst disruption for decades. unions are told a generation will turn against
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rail travel the guardian next intolerable nhs crisis will last until easter. that story there covered the eye newspaper as well . and moscow admits losses well. and moscow admits losses after missile hits . and let's after missile hits. and let's have a look at. the daily star climate change crisis . barking climate change crisis. barking mad . spend millions on trees and mad. spend millions on trees and thousands die . critics fury over thousands die. critics fury over bad job admit extreme . thousands bad job admit extreme. thousands of new trees are dying of shoddy council plant . according to the council plant. according to the experts blasted town hall chiefs for poor efforts to save the planet whilst wasting . and those planet whilst wasting. and those are your pages. we'll have a look at the telegraph in a second. it's got a couple of big, juicy stories as well. but bad news, folks, for the david. uk recession will be deepest and longest say economists . i wonder longest say economists. i wonder whether we should have cut in order to boost growth . we
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order to boost growth. we should. and big problem with the liz truss government was they totally ruined the of this happening anytime soon. their totally cack handed presentation of and by the idea that they going to fund taxes through borrowing which is ludicrous when you have government expenditure at one of the highest rates, when you have a deficit of the size we have when never mind a public debt of this size, it is the idea that then you borrow to fund tax cuts is citi. but i think that with this comes back what we have said now for what, two and a half years, what we covid is going to what we did covid is going to have at for generations the have at last for generations the amount that we simply gave amount of that we simply gave away to keep people at home who should have been working the amount of government spending that went on, taking out of taxpayers pockets when . there taxpayers pockets when. there should have been different responses. so people did not end up with massive tax bills years down the line. so that is central government services weren't now weren't harmed. well, now we're reaping shown all us reaping what was shown all of us who the were told that who at the time were told that we being that were
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we were being that we were playing with people's lives, that we people to die. we that we wanted people to die. we were gambling with safety. well, what was what we were pointing out was that these have that no all these things have cost cannot simply put cost to. you cannot simply put the at home for the best the nation at home for the best part of a year and expect that it won't any impact it won't have any impact whatsoever. you're it whatsoever. you're seeing it now. would like to ask all now. so i would like to ask all those government and those in government and opposition failed think opposition who failed to think about about it about the time to think about it now explain their electors now and explain their electors why were so at the time, why they were so at the time, why they were so at the time, why they were so at the time, why they did not of the consequences of were consequences of what they were propounding and why we are now being for it. do being asked to suffer for it. do you david's analysis? no you share david's analysis? no you'll shocked to hear. no you'll be shocked to hear. no there are the story is not. yes had an impact on our economy. of course, there was always an understanding that it would . we understanding that it would. we made choices . and that's what made choices. and that's what government is. government is never exactly the right thing to do. it's about making choices. we can argue we will go into a long examination inquiry as to how those choices were made, whether the right choices were made. we will look at that with a certain of hindsight, a
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certain amount knowledge that we should have at the time. but should have had at the time. but the story that we have the weakest economy , all of those g7 weakest economy, all of those g7 countries coercive measures. we the ones that weren't set up one rope just enough to be able to come out of it in the same way that the other countries are. and that's not covid. that's ten years of absolutely running down our economy . the it's 25 years our economy. the it's 25 years of building up enormous budget deficits of having high taxation , of having a low growth economy and not caring about it. because apparently this magic monetary where we could keep ten quid out of the national cash machine every time somebody squealed on social media of a cut. i agree. the tory government's culpable , the tory government's culpable, but is the 13 years of labour but so is the 13 years of labour government before it. we went into in appalling shape into this in an appalling shape and we're going to and of course we're going to come of it in an appalling come out of it in an appalling shape, probably worse than the rest not rest of europe. but it's not simply a conservative problem, a problem the whole country to problem for the whole country to that cannot what we that we cannot afford what we the public we the levels of public interest we in beyond means for in living beyond our means for decades. we've been living
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decades. we've we've been living in systems for decades in wrong systems for decades certainly we don't have good productivity in this country . productivity in this country. david and i will fundamentally disagree about how to change and i would like to see a much more diverse economy , an economy diverse economy, an economy that's much less centralised . it that's much less centralised. it isn't run from whitehall. i would like to see much more investment in the uk's infrastructure and that does mean spending. but spending to invest rather than spending to cover day to day costs , day to cover day to day costs, day to day costs can be brought . if you day costs can be brought. if you spend to invest. we can in more tax money without having to tax levels. if we better investment. it's about the investments with at the rate that it is now. it's about sensible choices and setting up different systems. and you can't keep saying we won't get, we won't get unless. we actually try something new. but we can't do. and david's not quite and there's trust is as a anyone being able to do any kind of big bang reset because it was bonkers and provably so. so what we're going to see, i think is a
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quite gradual change into different types of system , different types of system, putting sensible into the uk infrastructure our infrastructure our infrastructure that is our biggest . you we had headline biggest. you we had headline aboutidea biggest. you we had headline about idea that the strikes are what is keeping people off the railways the rail ways are keeping people off the railways i don't think people might nofice i don't think people might notice if there's a strike because if even were never on the trains anyway. so there much bigger deeper problems that are not just about our individual politician and the politics we have now but the systems we've had for about 40 is where we completely need a complete reset and, a real examine of how to do pubuc and, a real examine of how to do public investment. am i am i right to think you'd like to see a labour government? 100, yes. right now i've always said on, on, on platform that, you know in times of plenty labour governments have done good things including under new labour investment things including under new labourinvestment public labour investment in public services , bringing many parts of services, bringing many parts of the public sector , you know, up the public sector, you know, up to date and up to speed, but
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wages also , you know, just like wages also, you know, just like renovating , investing in the renovating, investing in the nhs, all the above. but what's the point in a labour government in two years time, if the cupboards bare when there's no money because you talked about investment, i hear what investment, now i hear what you're it's valid point. you're saying. it's valid point. you can't do that through raising taxes any higher. i wouldn't have thought. the wouldn't have thought. and the international gone international bond markets gone right lending us money. so right off, lending us money. so how is it done? well, i think there choices. again, government is about choices. i don't think a labour government, the only opfion a labour government, the only option is option i can think of is a labour government comes and labour government comes in and cuts massively. i don't think it's economies. so i it's reshaping economies. so i think there are things you can do that don't money which do improve productivity. so a lot of that is about dispersing power much as about power as much as about dispersing money. so actually having more local decision making where people can build a local that then comes back to help us all understanding that we need to have better decision making . therefore empowering making. therefore empowering local politics and therefore getting a better calibre local
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politician because it's worth doing, having local government mayors devolve local investment banks , local investment banks. banks, local investment banks. i've seen all of these things. these are not additional costs . these are not additional costs. they are better spent money. all right. interesting. so it's just sort of re redistributing that . sort of re redistributing that. what do you think about this, ingnd what do you think about this, ingrid ? is britain broke? i mean ingrid? is britain broke? i mean , we bounce back in 2023 because i just wonder whether the hue of this headline in the financial times too negative. i'm not buying it . i times too negative. i'm not buying it. i don't think we bounce back in 2023. i think it'll take and years and years but we've got to help in long by making radical changes. i absolutely think the biggest mistake would be to the taxes up that happened before this is after world war ii that if you put up taxes, you go from depression, from recession , depression, from recession, depression. and that's why would be had we're in recession, it could only get worse if that's what we're going to do was end was saying sort of like everything we need those foreign
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investments so we to be attractive to outside investors within the country get things going we need to get mobilised again. everything's become a little bit to grinding halt this new enterprise so a lot of people during the lockdown there were a lot people that either lost jobs or they were furloughed which was big, big, big mistake as well because people cheated the system well and they didn't check it. and they've been cheated out of billions . so they can't even billions. so they can't even that right . you know, so they're that right. you know, so they're not going to get a lot of these of things. right. but they're lost people. are very enterprising during lockdown . an enterprising during lockdown. an extraordinary thing from. their kitchen from their kitchen kitchen table from their kitchen and then using zoom the power of that which opened up a whole new world and actually has changed the way that we live and work these days in case. so these people the ones that there's so many other people out there like that. well you can put money into it. you can invest into new enterprise and so on and so
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forth. so to me, to put reducing it is quite right. you liz truss got it completely wrong with quantum . they went in far too quantum. they went in far too fast. quantum. they went in far too fast . they didn't see it's food. fast. they didn't see it's food. they couldn't how they were going to fund this but the labour party of saying they're going to do these things they've these things both these wonderful things both tinted never spain tinted but they never spain where it comes from and that is where it comes from and that is where the problem lies because they can't afford to do the things that they promised . some things that they promised. some very spicy headlines up, including the daily telegraph next. also stay at home orders . next. also stay at home orders. we a nation of hypochondriacs . we a nation of hypochondriacs. do you remember in winters you drag yourself into work half dead, coughing, wheezing. in my opinion, those were the good old days. but once your people discussed that, plus our panellists will nominate their greatest person and union. see you shortly .
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it's mark dolan in for dan wootton. all of this week. we've got tomorrow's papers and is the telegraph. take a look . this telegraph. take a look. this prince harry, i want my father and back and also where mask if you're unwell the public have been and urged to wear masks they feel unwell a new advice to stop the spread of flu so that you go couple of headlines and it ties in with a wider story that we wanted to discuss tonight which is widespread stay at home orders people with colds and the flu and covid have been urged by employees to home and not spread the disease. but we didn't do that three years ago. so have we become a nation of hypochondriacs or is this good common sense? ingrid it's absolute . it's not common sense absolute. it's not common sense at all. the thing that you can
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do if you're really, really dragging your crawling into what then obviously you're not going to do , but this is a get out. to do, but this is a get out. it's so easy for people to say, oh, i'm really not feeling i'm not going to do freelance are very rarely ill employed. people are so much more often ill or claimed to be ill and not be able to function. it's good to spread a little bit of disease is good to build the antibodies but obviously you are free. i had to cry off and i'm freelance because i had that awful, awful cough and. that was not because i wasn't feeling bad, but i talk but i only say i crawl . i will but i only say i crawl. i will go on my hands and knees i can't remember the dish. what's that? nothing oh, okay. but no, we are all happy . we all the time. we all happy. we all the time. we are in to take advantage of being ill. you can stay at home. i one, one, one. and one of the
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things on the menu that you can phone get a note, a sick note rather than going to your gp think maybe because it's the bank holiday i know because i've never phone one morning before people will abuse that course they will. oh not well. and it said in the paper that i've got to do it, you know, it's all i can't stand it honestly mark i can't stand it honestly mark i can't . i mean, emma, we've got can't. i mean, emma, we've got 3 million years of human evolution andifs million years of human evolution and it's only two and a half years ago that everything changed and now if you've got a sniffle, you're public enemy number one. if you're sat at the desk next to me and hacking away. you are being deeply rude and i'm to me, i want your germs over my desk and all over me . it over my desk and all over me. it would be people with a bad dick . that's the ultimate public health role. don't ever do that . but this isn't. this is this is a people coming on because they want this is people coming on because into work when they're ill because they feel
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that they have to do in order to keep their jobs. there's this nasty little of nasty little american of presenteeism was not presenteeism that which was not a workplaces. if you a thing in workplaces. if you read british read going back into british history, you read the diaries history, if you read the diaries of century, early 20th of 19th century, early 20th century, go 1870, people to century, go 1870, people went to bed they ill, there bed when they were ill, there was basic that was a public was a basic that it was a public courtesy that if it's being used in the modern age for people to back off, well, that's for their employers to with. but employers to deal with. but i would thought that all the would have thought that all the possibilities of remote working someone take two or three days off because they've got cold off because they've got a cold and therefore spreading and therefore not spreading it to the office. to the rest of the office. meaning you go, what's the meaning that you go, what's the problem productivity? problem with the productivity? it's cold. well, it's okay, it's cold. well, it yes. up to point that if yes. but up to the point that if you're running small business and you've say, 20 and you know, you've got say, 20 people 15 of them are all people and 15 of them are all filled at same time because filled at the same time because one came sounds one person came in. it sounds like zero covid all over again. it's not it's just the basic idea that you're running idea that if you're running a small business. it's quite difficult having people listen, i may not being naughty i know you may not being naughty tonight, but we love it. i'm not one talking about pearl necklaces. my by the way, i hope
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thatis necklaces. my by the way, i hope that is it that out where a mask if you're feeling unwell surely that's much though emma you can't sign for that. i'll mean, wear a mask if you choose to. i personally i don't wear mask on the tube anymore, but i know people are clinically vulnerable who do it is . i would say if you who do it is. i would say if you are or feel like you're being forced into work, then there might be things that you would steps that you would take, that you wouldn't is that they don't work if. they worked great unless you're wearing one with the if you're wearing a mask, you're you're not you're not you're not vulnerable. you're intellectually vulnerable. vulnerable. you're intellectua onlyilnerable. vulnerable. you're intellectua only kidding. . listen, i'm only kidding. i'm a libertarian, you to wear libertarian, if you want to wear a mask, knock yourself out. but please don't make me wear one ever all my kids, ever again. all my kids, my friends, family . we've friends, all my family. we've now very exciting part of now got a very exciting part of the show. it's heroes and villains of the greatest villains of the day. greatest britain and union jackass. so who's caught your eye. david oldroyd my bear with me. we've got a fancy sting that money for the budget . down a lucky man.
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the budget. down a lucky man. it's going to you next. david. i am looking forward to it. yes. your great spirit and someone you liked my greatest britain is fergal. now everybody , they're fergal. now everybody, they're thinking why are you choosing the peel's the singer of john peel's favourite song ? it's because he favourite song? it's because he has, the four years has, over the past four years done most amazing. he has done the most amazing. he has built campaign to clean up built up a campaign to clean up britain's chalk streams, which i'll describe amazon i'll describe as our amazon river. the 160 out of the 210 streams in the world are in this country, they've been allowed by the environment agency to be despoiled , to scandalous despoiled, to a scandalous degree , fergal, over the past degree, fergal, over the past few years has fought really one man of such success. man campaign of such success. it's now being taken seriously, not only governmental level, not only at governmental level, but of environment but at the level of environment agency, absolute legend, really. twice over . agency, absolute legend, really. twice over. emma, the agency, absolute legend, really. twice over . emma, the clock's twice over. emma, the clock's against us. who's your greatest britain? i just want david now. that's oh, agree . and i love that's oh, i agree. and i love and a good heart. wonderful. so very quickly, i want to say that i scarborough council taking over care of the walrus on their beachit over care of the walrus on their beach it just makes me feel so warm snuggly. and it was my mum who came with that one for me.
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so my and scott your mum called jan. right. well i'm not allowed to have a greatest britain but jan . jan, jan to have a greatest britain but jan .jan, jan is jan revel to have a greatest britain but jan . jan, jan is jan revel is my jan. jan, jan is jan revel is my greatest tonight. god bless you mum . right. and how you ingrid mum. right. and how you ingrid you a great very quickly and this is absolute coincidence andrew crichton i think he's fantastic. i love the way that he spoken up and he's my guest he spoken up and he's my guest he suppose the vaccine complete coincided i didn't know who was going to be on i'm just very quick one in kids who don't have a chance to say later jim my brother in law because he's been absolutely amazing he's a doctor and he's doing face with me over holidays. isn't that wonderful? how long have we got folks ? can how long have we got folks? can you in 5 seconds give me your union jackass. mick lynch doesn't need an explanation. emeryville steve berkeley. what did health secretary ? and did health secretary? and ingrid. oh, jeremy hunt. sorry all right. the chancellor, the health secretary they've all got it in the neck. well you've all been my greatest britons
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tonight. thanks to my brilliant panel tonight. thanks to my brilliant panel, amazing guests , and panel, my amazing guests, and most importantly to you for your company. week. i'll company. i'm here all week. i'll see . nine see you tomorrow. nine headliners is .
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next i'm rowland jones in gb newsroom. the office has
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confirmed two brits are

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