tv Bev Turner Today GB News January 9, 2023 10:00am-12:01pm GMT
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had tried to trash his and meghan's reputations. but that he's open to reconciliation . how he's open to reconciliation. how is that possible now also this morning in england, single use items like plastic cutlery, plates and trays are to be banned. we'll look at why and what difference that could make. and i'm going to be joined by dr. robert malone. half of you will no idea who he is and will have no idea who he is and half of will view him as an half of you will view him as an absolute hero of our times. i am the latter. stay tuned to find out his work so important out why his work is so important and now thinks about the and what he now thinks about the global around global situation around coronavirus censorship and corporate all corporate capture. that's all coming up after. look at the latest news thomson . beth, latest news with thomson. beth, thank you. good morning from the gb newsroom. it's 10:02. prince harry has gb newsroom. it's10:02. prince harry has made further claims against the royal family in a series of interviews to promote his memoir, spare . coming out his memoir, spare. coming out tomorrow , he told itv's tom tomorrow, he told itv's tom bradby his family was complicit in the pain and suffering,
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except in part by his wife, meghan markle . but he says he meghan markle. but he says he still open to reconciliation with the king and prince william, the duke of sussex, also claims he had to leave his country because of the planting and leaking to the press. the level of planting and leaking from other members of the family means that in my mind they have written countless books . written countless books. certainly millions of words have been dedicated to trying to trash my wife and myself to the point of where i had to leave my country . but the distorted country. but the distorted narrative is that we wanted to leave , to go and, you know, make leave, to go and, you know, make money. the health secretary will meet with medics and union bosses this morning in an attempt to avert further strike action. rishi sunak raised hopes yesterday of a deal, saying he was willing to discuss pay with health workers. however this wouldn't prevent upcoming industrial action. the head of the nursing union says there's more optimism that a deal can be
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made over pay . nurses are made over pay. nurses are preparing to go on strike again later this month afterjoining later this month after joining the picket line for the first time in the nation's history. last month . the government will last month. the government will spend up to £200 million buying extra care, home beds in a bid to ease pressure within the nhs . it's hoped it'll speed up the discharge of patients and reduce the strain on hospitals. it's after the prime minister held crisis talks with health leaders over the weekend. as a&e units struggle to keep up with demand , shadow minister for health and social care, andrew gwynne, says there needs to be a focus on keeping people out of a&e . to go keeping people out of a&e. to go to a&e , it's keeping people out of a&e. to go to a&e, it' s £360 per to a&e, it's £360 per appointment, so obviously the more people that we can pull back from a&e and have appropriate care in the community, in the home setting, at a pharmacy , at a community at a pharmacy, at a community hub, the better that is for the patient. but ultimate the better
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thatis patient. but ultimate the better that is for the nhs to. well, this comes as thousands of junior doctors in england will start voting today on whether to strike over pay. around 45,000 members of the british medical association are being balloted with the result due at the end of next month . the rail minister of next month. the rail minister is also gathering union leaders for talks over pay and conditions. today is the first time that most rail services will return to normal since the start of the christmas break. union bosses still insist the government is trying to block a deal government is trying to block a deal, but the transport secretary denies that allegation . brazilian police have regained control in the capital after it was stormed by far right protesters yesterday. thousands of supporters of former president bolsonaro raided the country's congress. the supreme court and presidential palace, demanding he be restored to power. bolsonaro refused to accept his election defeat last year with his supporters
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claiming it was stolen from him. president lula labelled the protest as fascist and has vowed to punish them. prime minister rishi sunak has offered him britain's full support. rishi sunak has offered him britain's full support . single britain's full support. single use plastic cutlery, plates and trays will be banned in england by the end of the year. the environment secretary says the ban will help prevent those items from ending up in rivers and seas and harming wildlife. government figures suggest more than 4 billion pieces of single use cutlery are used in england each year . use cutlery are used in england each year. britain has become less competitive and less attractive to foreign investors, according to a new survey. manufacturers who see britain as a competitive location are hard to 31, from 63% a year ago, and 43% say that britain has become less attractive to overseas investors . the report by investors. the report by manufacturer organisation make uk said falling confidence was
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down to rising energy costs and political turmoil . the first political turmoil. the first ever rocket launch on british soil is set to take off in cornwall later today . the cornwall later today. the mission, called start me up will blast nine satellites into space for the first time from europe . for the first time from europe. thousands of people are expected to flock to newquay airport tonight with thousands more expected to watch the live stream . something exciting, stream. something exciting, something different, something you don't see every day . you don't see every day. somewhere like cornwall . and somewhere like cornwall. and it's a bit of an underdog story as well. and i think people love an underdog story, especially in the uk. so i really hope that that's what people when that's what people feel when they're at home. they're watching it at home. this is gb news will bring you more news it happens. now, more news as it happens. now, though back beth .
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though, it's back to beth. good morning. welcome back. tennis day on gb news. hey, what's coming up on the show? prince harry has made further claims against the royal family in a series event, a serious interview to promote his memoir, fair . he interview to promote his memoir, fair. he spoke to itv's tom bradbury . we saw it all last bradbury. we saw it all last night and he said that the royal family was complicit in the pain and suffering experi winced by his wife, meghan markle . he's his wife, meghan markle. he's open to reconciliation with his family, he says. but can that ever now be achieved ? and later ever now be achieved? and later on in this hour, i'm going to be joined by dr. robert malone. he is, of course, one of the original inventors behind the mri technology. he rose to fame dunng mri technology. he rose to fame during the pandemic , warning during the pandemic, warning people that something was wrong. he was banned from twitter, spreading message information. he's going to give us his side of the story this morning on my panel of the story this morning on my panel. we'll be getting stuck into some of the biggest stories of the day. the leader of ukip, neil hamilton broadcaster neil hamilton and broadcaster tonia will be here. and tonia buxton will be here. and of course, at this show is
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nothing without you and your views. don't forget to vote in the twitter this the poll on twitter this morning. we're you the morning. we're asking you the royal family's motto. never complain, never explain. but is it now time for them to respond to prince harry's claims? at the moment , i to prince harry's claims? at the moment, i believe to prince harry's claims? at the moment , i believe about 25% of moment, i believe about 25% of you think that the royal family should speak out. let me know what you think. email me, gbviews@gbnews.uk or tweet me at gb news. have your say . gb news. have your say. so. we had a several days of leaks from the book last week, and then last night prince harry sat down with tom bradby of itv news to give his bare royal interview. he said he was still open to reconciliation with the king and prince william and that he didn't want camilla to marry his father. and i wanted our father to be happy. and he seemed to be very, very happy
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with her. we asked him not to get married . he chose to. and get married. he chose to. and that's that's his decision for the last however many years. let's just focus on the last six years, the level of planting and leaking from other members of the family means that, in my mind , they have written mind, they have written countless books . certainly countless books. certainly millions of words have been dedicated to trying to trash my wife and myself to the point where i had to leave my country. this status quo in tonally, they feel as though it's better to keep us somehow as the villains , as opposed to, i genuinely believe and i hope that reconciling between my family and us will have a ripple effect across the entire world. maybe that's lofty, maybe that's naive. whatever but i genuinely feel that first fascinating. well, royal broadcast and commentator rafe heydel—mankoo , commentator rafe heydel—mankoo, who is with me now. good morning , rafe. and if we thought we sort of heard it all last week with the leaks from the books
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there, but i thought there'd be nothing left for the interview last but there still last night. but there were still a bombshells, there? a few bombshells, weren't there? well, , i'll attacks rather well, yes, i'll attacks rather than bombshells. another firebombing generally looking at this, i was just sort of channelling my inner churchill . channelling my inner churchill. you know, in the field of you know, never in the field of human history one man human history has one man moaned. so much about so little . and i actually think in a way this i think that the last week of the book's revelation is being leaked. the book going on sale there a lot of damage to harry, including in america, most importantly. and i think for and some in for young people and for some in america, the interview that he gave on 60 minutes and with interview bradby may have actually help actually done something to help those demographics get back back onside him . i think for the onside with him. i think for the rest of us , it really basically rest of us, it really basically shows that the problems being shows that the problems of being a of privilege with too a person of privilege with too much on his hands to self much time on his hands to self obsess, self—absorbed and obsess, become self—absorbed and narcissistic and navel gaze too much and it's very unhealthy. you'll see the results of that because a lot of the arguments he was putting forward are really trivial really sort of trivial
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grievances. i would say. but if he's hoping for reconciliation , he's hoping for reconciliation, these attacks on queen camilla, i think are absolute, really outrageous. would say outrageous. and i would say unforgivable. and we know that the attacks on his the king regards attacks on his wife as a red line. but also the audacity of telling your father not not to get married. and at the age of 38, still implying that he should never have married a person that he loves. and also, when you becoming king, you want to have king, obviously you want to have a you need have a queen. you need to have a queen your side. so he's queen at your side. so he's living sort of a surreal living in some sort of a surreal other reality . well, prince other reality. well, prince william has brought out a prince story. prince harry brought story. prince harry has brought out in all out the psychotherapist in all of us, i think, at the moment. and he's very easy to psychoanalyse. i was on gb news on friday doing some on friday night doing some houday holiday cover, and i had a superb psychotherapist in here and saying that he's and she was saying that he's a classic case of a child that suffered trauma and then got stuck. and a lot of his behaviour is like a child old, it's disruptive and petulant and attention seeking . and she said, attention seeking. and she said, not only is it interesting that he doesn't yet have the insight
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into the way that he's behaving, is probably can be stemmed back to losing his mother. but she also what she finds really also said what she finds really shocking is many people shocking is how many people around monetising his around him are monetising his trauma. that cut you as trauma. is that a cut to you as well? yes and not just to me. in fact, alison stewart had on on the weekend a royal marine officer been injured in officer who'd been injured in afghanistan and who prince harry had spoken of as a hero in the past. and he tweeted out, harry, we love you, but please stop. if you had good people around you , you had good people around you, this wouldn't be happening. yeah, and you have to question who is around him, whose is letting this go on because you're and you you're quite right. and you know, heart still goes out know, your heart still goes out watching in the interview, his recounting of his mother's death. i mean, you'd to death. i mean, you'd have to have of not to have a heart of stone, not to not moved, not be by not be moved, not be moved by that. but, know, that was that. but, you know, that was a quarter a ago , as you quarter of a century ago, as you say, in my own family. you know, my parents lost their mothers at the age of and nine. and the age of seven and nine. and i can certainly impact it can certainly see the impact it had had on them. so, of course , had had on them. so, of course, we're full of sympathy for that. but danger of
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but there's a danger also of embracing therapy and embracing too much therapy and i think the danger that harry's had, having so much time at his disposal living in california, the land of happy clappy therapy , seeing psychics, seeing an energy practitioner who claims to be able to heal depression and breast cancer just with energy channels. this is not healthy stuff. this is very damaging. also engaging with mind altering substances as well to try to find this solution is clearly, deeply troubled. and after all of these years of therapy, i would say he's actually in a worse place, even despite what he's protest and says, than than he would be without it. i agree. we've got a twitter post asking people whether the palace should make any sort of statement. now, do you think they should, as a royal expert? no, absolutely not. think imperative not. i think it is imperative that the royal family rises above and by doing so , i above it. and by doing so, i think it's very good power play. but they're being seen to but they're also being seen to be on with duties be getting on with their duties and responsibility . and with their responsibility. yes. makes harry and yes. and it makes harry and meghan simply look like angry people having a tantrum and i
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think the important thing to remember is that this is happening during the period of transition between accession transition between the accession and the coronation. this is such and the coronation. this is such an important time. the whole purpose of this period is to focus attention on the king gets him reintroduced to his people here and in the commonwealth as king, and also for him to actually renew the bond between the crown and the people that every sovereign does. and for us all to see him put his own stamp on the monarchy and the tragedy of this is that four months after the death of the queen four months before the coronation, when all eyes should be this great ceremony and on be on this great ceremony and on the have these terrible the king, we have these terrible distractions and the negativity surrounding this story. and i think unforgivably to now the attacks on queen camilla, particularly on the 60 minutes show and cbs is not even on itv and america and canada of the countries which really have the most cold reaction to camilla, because whenever there's a royal visit, they're diana's shadows still looms large. a quarter of
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a century later . still looms large. a quarter of a century later. and still looms large. a quarter of a century later . and the royal a century later. and the royal family are really hoping that they could reintroduce camilla to the commonwealth and to america. and i think this has done great damage and it's such a shame when we're close to a shame when we're so close to her crowned next to her, her being crowned next to her, next to do you think ? next to the king, do you think? i mean, you know, there is so much i mean, we could literally sit and talk about this or they couldn't wait. but is there a sense i mean, he says we didn't leave uk to go for money. we leave the uk to go for money. we didn't money. but i saw didn't want the money. but i saw that glimpse in the documentary series sat at series where they sat at the pool the actor or the pool of that. the actor or the producer, and they said we could have this. was it. have all this. and it was it. there was a glint in his eye. it's a bit of a myth, really, isn't it, that even though the royals this privileged life royals live this privileged life in they're not allowed in castles, they're not allowed to flashy life. and i've to live a flashy life. and i've had, know, behind scenes had, you know, behind the scenes that, harry is what that, you know, harry is what was young guy that really was a young guy that really wanted the trappings of a luxury lifestyle. he never lifestyle. and he was never really going be allowed to really going to be allowed to have do you think that have it. but do you think that will happy if he has will make him happy if he has the mansion, the montecito mansion, mansion and know, the cars and and the, you know, the cars and the jets he's going to
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the private jets he's going to be happy with that is he always going to thorn in the side going to be a thorn in the side of the family he's not of the royal family he's not going away quietly. well, going to go away quietly. well, this irony of a this is the great irony of a couple who are constantly preaching health preaching about in their health and yoga, all of the philosophy he's espoused, rid of he's espoused, getting rid of wealth and trappings and actually a humble life at actually living a humble life at the purity. and here they are, you still lecturing us on you know, still lecturing us on on the environment while still taking private jets around taking their private jets around the there's an element of the world. there's an element of hypocrisy here. of course , hypocrisy here. and, of course, we remember that we have to also remember that meghan this marriage meghan is part of this marriage as well . and we know full well as well. and we know full well as well. and we know full well as a hollywood diva , her as a hollywood diva, her expectations very high expectations were very high and her of life her expectations of royal life ended being not as glamorous ended up being not as glamorous . she living as a hollywood . she was living as a hollywood diva . your a lot more diva. your life is a lot more luxurious in many respects than it is an english palace, often with, you know, multicast . yes. with, you know, multicast. yes. and the floor, the floor. and my on the floor, the floor. absolutely. the queen famously putting on her three bar to having a complex and tupperware, a different life outside of a very different life outside of the rooms. yes. than you the state rooms. yes. than you would would expect. would than you would expect. yeah i mean, it's still a life that most of us would probably
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take. say. so it's take. but as you say. so it's brought to brought sort the brought to brought to sort the for of these things that for so many of these things that are behind closed are happening behind closed doors, i'm sure there's more to come. but rafe heydel—mankoo, thank we thank you so much. for now. we will be getting some public reaction moment reaction in just a moment because reporter because our reporter jack carson, still on coalfield in carson, is still on coalfield in birmingham us this morning. birmingham for us this morning. hello, jack . nice to see you hello, jack. nice to see you down there. you've been speaking to the people in the midlands in sutton coldfield. what have they told prince harry? do told you about prince harry? do they behaviour ? they approve of his behaviour? what well, good morning, beth. i think one of the it's really interesting mix of opinions here interesting mix of opinions here in sutton coldfield that we've been finding out today and over the course of, of the weekend on prince harry himself, a lot of them respect him massively for them respect him massively for the charity work that he's done, for work inside the for the work he did inside the royal family. and they even respected of them respected ian. many of them respected ian. many of them respect his decision to move to america, move away from the america, to move away from the royal family. but obviously, with the idea was with that, the whole idea was that he was going for privacy, going to spend time with his family, with his wife. and so
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people think he's he's being a little bit hypocritical by coming sharing such coming out and sharing such private information as we've seen interviews of seen from the interviews and, of course, memoir. course, from his memoir. and over the course of the last few days, i've been speaking to people the high street, people here on the high street, and this is what they've been telling they think telling me about what they think about well, he about prince harry. well, he was struggling with bills and everything him all everything and there's him all playing victim is suffering this state. you're not suffering . you state. you're not suffering. you literally have got everything and a lot of money in and you've got a lot of money in the that's it. you the bank and that's it. you don't need to worry about anything focus on anything else. just focus on your and that's it. i your family and that's it. i just think it's unfortunate situation, to honest. i think situation, to be honest. i think i do like harry. i really do like prince harry. i think prince harry as well. i mean i mean, i the royal mean i mean, i like the royal family as well. but think family as well. but i just think it's so mistakes made on both sides. i think is an absolute waste and i wish you'd waste of space. and i wish you'd shut away and do us shut up and go away and do us all favour. do you make all a favour. what do you make about some of things he's about some of the things he's been saying recently in the media these interviews? media and in these interviews? to honest, the to be honest, i'm not the slightest bit interested in him. i care what he does is not i don't care what he does is not relevant. wish go
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relevant. i just wish he'd go away and we could get on with the important things in life. i think you can't have it both ways you want privacy and you ways if you want privacy and you don't your children in the don't want your children in the pubuc don't want your children in the public eye, keep it that public eye, then keep it that way. go to way. but don't go to oprah winfrey and the tv channel and the book then the right your book and then say, our privacy. say, oh, we want our privacy. and say the things he said and to say the things he said about he's in the army, about when he's in the army, just not that, do you just you do not do that, do you do you think he can reconcile with his family now? now, if he if he was my brother or my son, i'd say, if you're british now . i'd say, if you're british now. and on that point of reconciliation, they're mentioning the burning bridges that was mentioned by in the interview yesterday in our tv . interview yesterday in our tv. but prince harry saying that he doesn't feel that honesty is burning bridges, that he does want to reconcile with his family. he says forgiveness is 100% a possibility because i would like my father back. i would like my father back. i would like my father back. i would like to have my brother back, although on the royal family on that reconciliation and the that he said that they're not really made any effort to reconcile with him
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just yet. of course, we're not too sure if he's actually going too sure if he's actually going to accept or be invited to the coronation. but people here in the feeling here he's the feeling here is that he's done these interviews , he's done these interviews, he's written memoir now take written his memoir now take things privately and sort things out family. just out with your family. just between you . okay. thank you, between you. okay. thank you, jack.i between you. okay. thank you, jack. i just love the british public. it is superb, isn't it? got any high straight in. you can find a woman, say, harry, shut up. go away. take your family out the limelight if that's what you want. superb right? don't forget, we've got a twitter running this twitter poll running this morning. as the morning. we're asking you as the royal is never royal family's motto is never complain, never explain. is it time them to finally respond time for them to finally respond to harry? let me know . is to prince harry? let me know. is it time for them to make their side of the story a little bit more public? tweet me at gb news or gbviews@gbnews.uk . now, off or gbviews@gbnews.uk. now, off the break. if you're watching in england, find out by soon you'll be unable to use plastic cutlery, plates or trays . there cutlery, plates or trays. there is a ban in coming. also dr. robert malone. now, that type of
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break good morning. it's 1023. break good morning. it's1023. this is bev turner today on gb news. my guests are here. i am delighted to say that. i'm joined by broadcaster and author gb news familiar face tonia buxton and ukip leader neil hamilton. having had you on before now this is the first time. i'm delighted to be here. marvellous. good to have you right. we're leading on prince harry, the metro front page. not a spare in world. they say , a spare in the world. they say, as further revelations are revealed that it's a it's a pun on on king charles, not a care in the world, effectively, is what they're saying. he's looking like laughing and jolly and not making any sort of comment. tonia should comment. tonia buxton should they now ? no, they say something now? no, absolutely not. and he should rise to the base hall. i mean, i feel i feel really sorry for
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harry. he looks like someone who's syndrome is who's got stockholm syndrome is he's . i mean, he was my son, he's. i mean, if he was my son, i would be so ashamed of what he's doing and really be worried about his health, because about his mental health, because this not a is not the this is not a this is not the harry wing. you remember the invictus guy, want the invictus games guy, the want the naughty the we all naughty one, the one we all loved. and become this loved. and he's become this whiny, crying ninny. loved. and he's become this whiny, crying ninny . and whiny, ing, crying ninny. and the suffering that he's had, i mean, he's got no sense of what's going on in the world at all. so it's hot. but see, a lot of viewers would say, well, of our viewers would say, well, we for him, we don't feel sorry for him, like he has everything that you could ever want in life. he has this beautiful wife, these beautiful this beautiful children, this wonderful not. wonderful home. but it's not. it's enough is it? it's not enough for him, is it? clearly and he doesn't clearly what's and he doesn't have to tell have anybody in his life to tell him that's the problem. he doesn't he surrounded himself with the people. we have with the people. i mean, we have to accept that he's chasing the money come out money and he has to come out with stories about his with these stories about his father i can you imagine father. i mean, can you imagine he's around he he's telling around that he told his not get married? well his dad not to get married? well he's objecting to anybody saying anything wife . and anything about his wife. and here in public, going out here he is in public, going out and told my dad not
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and saying, we told my dad not to marry i mean, the to marry camilla. i mean, the shame it. and then he say, shame of it. and then he say, but they don't want to talk to me anymore. i mean, can you imagine the difference between the reality, neil hamilton, of what he's saying and the reaction to get, what reaction it's going to get, what he the royal family he expects the royal family to do such a there's do in response to such a there's such a gap, isn't there, between the his head and what the reality in his head and what everybody now, everybody else is saying. now, i'm at one earth. is he talking about meghan's pain and suffering? people being suffering? the people are being blown to smithereens in ukraine. people are being oppressed in china at happening china. look at what's happening in iran , talking about pain and in iran, talking about pain and suffering of the diabolical diva in her $14 million mansion, a 16 bathrooms travelling everywhere by private jet. although she wants apparently to save the planet where is the pain and suffering and you see, he as i've said before, it's psychologically we can look at him he had this trauma. he's stuck in that time. you need some serious therapy to get through all of that. but as rafe heydel—mankoo was just saying. but he is a 38 year old man and somehow where's the insight
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going to come from ? what is it going to come from? what is it going to come from? what is it going to come from? what is it going to take like you said, he's stuck and he's getting the wrong type of therapy . i mean, wrong type of therapy. i mean, going to, to people to kind going to, to, to people to kind of going to therapy of he's going to stop therapy just what he's just reaffirming what he's feeling. and again, yes , people feeling. and again, yes, people it's i think it's making people that he's going to and really what he needs is a little bit more tough love. he used to be a tough guy and what tough guy. and that's what that's liked him. he was that's why we liked him. he was a guy. know, there was a tough guy. you know, there was something masculine about something quite masculine about him. completely him. and he seems completely domesticated now. he does doesn't absolutely doesn't he? you're absolutely right. what happens now with right. did what happens now with him now, neil? what where does he go from here? because he's got think it was 100 million got i think it was 100 million for his netflix series. he gets another book. another 30 million for his book. i is enough? like i mean, how much is enough? like when does he go? right. i'm just going go work now and going to go do good work now and just go away quietly and take myself out of the public eye, which is he been asking which is what he has been asking for. of course, it's the for. well, of course, it's the diabolical diva is behind diabolical diva who is behind all he? she is very all this, isn't he? she is very interested i have interested in the money. i have no about that whatsoever. no doubt about that whatsoever. and course, the publicity . and of course, the publicity. well, too. but then , you
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well, he is too. but then, you know, he was left 17 million quid by his mother. apparently the mother left him the queen mother left him another seven or eight figure sum in her will. these are funny money figures which most of us can barely imagine. this is all utter nonsense. the man is . he's utter nonsense. the man is. he's not a man at all. he's a man child with he's still mentally in his pram throwing the toys out when they wee. and we have to have some understanding . we to have some understanding. we have to have some sympathy for the fact that he did lose his mom in the worst seconds dances and the way that he talks about it when says he hasn't got it when he says he hasn't got any memories , has memory any memories, has much memory before that she died. before the day that she died. that speaks proper trauma that speaks of proper trauma that dealt with 25 that he hasn't dealt with 25 years since this happened. look, my sister lost a child who fell out of a 14th floor window in a block of flats in hong kong when he was 18 months old. you know, that was a hugely traumatic event. you get over these things, you discipline yourself. we've just got to throw to a little bit of video. i'm not
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quite sure what's going on here. the prime minister is currently visiting a health community hub in west yorkshire. he was speaking pressures the speaking about the pressures the nhs i was asked why nhs is facing. i was asked why more ahead of this more wasn't done ahead of this winter we get well winter crisis. here we get well actually ago the actually months ago the government announced half a billion pounds in extra funding to speed up the discharge of people from hospitals into their communities or back home. where that makes sense. today's announcement is even more funding to help support those initiatives. i'm fortunate to be visiting one of those places today which is doing a particularly good job in treating people closer to their homes . i know that that's the homes. i know that that's the right to do, because what right thing to do, because what it means is frees up pressure it means is it frees up pressure in hospitals that will ease in all hospitals that will ease some of the burdens that we're seeing emergency departments seeing in emergency departments and waiting times. and and ambulance waiting times. and it's for to it's also better for people to be treated at home where they can to their home. can be or closer to their home. it's part of our plans to drive down waiting times in the nhs, improve the experience that patients are getting . and it's patients are getting. and it's great to me teams of clinicians today who are doing a really
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good job of that. what i want to see is a spread that best practise out across the country. okay, talk about strikes. okay, let's talk about strikes. it sounds a one off payment it sounds like a one off payment is on the table. will that be just for nurses? i'm really pleased that union leaders accepted ministers invitations to come in today to have discussions across the board. that's a really positive development. and on pay, we've always said that the government is happy to talk about, you know, pay demands and pay issues that are anchored in what's reasonable, what's responsible, what's for the what's affordable for the country. but the most important thing talks are thing is those talks are happening and let's try and sit down find a way through. so down and find a way through. so to confirm a one off payment is on the table, you you wouldn't you expect to you wouldn't expect me to comment specifics. but the comment on specifics. but the most that most important thing is that the conversations that conversations are happening that people are talking. and with regard have regard to pay, we have to have those based on those conversations based on what affordable, what's what is affordable, what's reasonable, responsible what is affordable, what's reasonecountry responsible what is affordable, what's reasonecountry. responsible what is affordable, what's reasonecountry . butesponsible what is affordable, what's reasonecountry . but people»le what is affordable, what's reasonecountry . but people need for the country. but people need to get talking. that's what they're doing. and hopefully we can a way this. and can find a way through this. and then have the then you don't have the negotiations but think negotiations here. but i think
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people want and people do just want clarity. and there yesterday there was confusion yesterday about said you're about whether you said you're willing for willing to talk about pay for 20, 22, 23 or for the next year . can you just confirm what exactly you meant? yes, they i think people want clarity that the government is sitting down and engaging with union leaders. that's the right thing to do. and why we reiterate to and that's why we reiterate to that last week by inviting meeting union leaders in for talks . i'm meeting union leaders in for talks. i'm glad those invitations were accepted and those talks are now happening . those talks are now happening. and people can be reassured that dialogue is happening. and i think recognise that think people also recognise that when comes to pay we do need when it comes to pay we do need to be talking about things are affordable for the affordable ultimately for the country are responsible country that are responsible when it comes to tackling inflation, which ultimately is the root cause of the challenges people are seeing. what's people are seeing. that's what's driving cost of living. driving up the cost of living. we all want to root out inflation. it's really important that so . but the talks are that we do so. but the talks are happening. good, happening. that's a good, positive sign and most positive sign and the most important is that those important thing is that those talks on. and last talks carry on. and last question do you question very quickly. do you accept today , as the unions accept that today, as the unions say, you won't be to avert
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say, you won't be able to avert the nurses strikes next in the nurses strikes next week in 45 minutes? accept that 45 minutes? do you accept that today to be the today isn't going to be the moment i think it's moment? you know, i think it's important that the talks are happening . and always said happening. and i've always said that government's is that the government's door is open talks with union open to have talks with union leaders based on what's affordable , what's responsible, affordable, what's responsible, what's . it's a good what's reasonable. it's a good thing that talks all are thing that those talks all are happening. but what the government getting on with is government is getting on with is delivering on the people's priorities. i set out priorities. you know, i set out five priorities and five promises i wanted to make to the country, and to halve country, and that's to halve inflation and grow the economy, reduce waiting reduce debt, reduce waiting lists, stop the boats. you lists, and stop the boats. you know, that's squarely what everyone government is everyone in government is focussed delivering for the focussed on delivering for the country. i that's the country. i think that's the country's you know, country's priority. you know, today's here is about today's visit here is about improving performance in the improving the performance in the nhs and i'm keen to see progress on all of those fronts. this year. speaking just moments ago at a health centre in west yorkshire, i wrote a piece later . kelly was in hospital to talk to his tiny shirt, but we're going to be dissecting that after this quick break. i'm going to go to the news now. i
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think, and my panel will we'll go work out quite go nowhere. we'll work out quite what she said i was what where she said i was getting out there, whether it is going to satisfy all of our nhs needs. after the i'll needs. but after the break i'll have interview you will have an interview that you will not to miss. it's an not want to miss. it's an exclusive live chat with american physician, biochemist and inventors of the and one of the inventors of the rna dr. robert rna technology, dr. robert malone. just malone. i'll see you in just a moment . good morning. from the moment. good morning. from the gb newsroom, it's 1033. prince harry has made further claims against the royal family in a series of interviews to promote his memoir, spare coming out tomorrow, he told itv's tom bradby his family was complicit in the pain and suffering experienced by his wife, meghan markle. harry says he's still open to reconciliation with the king and prince william, but with accountable letting the level of planting and leaking from other members of the family , he means that in my mind they
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have written countless books. certainly millions of words have been dedicated to trying to trash my wife and myself to the point where i had to leave my country in the distorted narrative as the we wanted to leave, to go and, you know, make money in the health meeting with medics and union bosses this morning in an attempt to further strike action. rishi sunak raise hopes of a deal he is willing to discuss pay with health workers. however, it's this is unlikely to prevent further industrial action. nurses are preparing to go on strike again later this month afterjoining the picket line for the first time in the nation's history. last month , nation's history. last month, brazilian police have regained control in the capital after it was stormed by far right protesters yesterday . thousands protesters yesterday. thousands of supporters , former president of supporters, former president bolsonaro , raided the country's bolsonaro, raided the country's congress , the supreme court and congress, the supreme court and president palace, demanding he
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gb news. good morning . this is bev turner good morning. this is bev turner today on gb news. it is 1037 on now. my panel are still here broadcasting north of tonia buxton neil hamilton. ukip lead . we just heard from rishi sunak. talking about the health of the nhs . i don't think he of the nhs. i don't think he said anything particularly any new that he was optimistic they could reach a pay agreement. what did you make of it? well only say anything new. only did not say anything new.
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he didn't say anything at all. and it was trying to be. we just had of meaningless had a lot of meaningless platitudes, what he platitudes, which is what he specialises in. he's a vanilla prime minister in spite of his looks, isn't it? what do you think this idea that he was think of this idea that he was really pressed over the weekend? it rumbling on today about it still rumbling on today about whether private health whether he used private health care is relevant? care or not. is it relevant? well should glory in well i think he should glory in the that he can afford to the fact that he can afford to take burden off his health, take a burden off his health, off national service off the national health service and you know, and his family. you know, they're multi, multi, multi millionaires. what's there to be ashamed private ashamed of in having private health insurers ? i've got health insurers? i've got private health insurance cost me £2,000 it is not £2,000 a year. it is not a king's ransom. i don't go on cruises. i prefer to spend it on my this is what we my health. this is what we should be celebrating and not be ashamed of. isn't it funny that you can't say that, tanya? because when margaret thatcher was in power, she made this very clear point that, well, i've paid my taxes , i pay my taxes, paid my taxes, i pay my taxes, but i to use the nhs. but but i want to use the nhs. but if i don't have to, i won't. what? changing culture. it's such a change in culture . and such a change in culture. and she right. of course, if
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she was right. of course, if you've money, then and you've got the money, then and you've got the money, then and you afford then can you can afford it, then you can go. go privately and take the pressure off the nhs. i don't understand because you know what it that the all the it is, is that the all the parties have become this blancmange and no blancmange of nothingness and no one straight say, one stands up straight and say, yes, i'm yes, you know, i'm a conservative. i believe that if you've got the money and you should be pay it, that's should be able to pay it, that's what the whole of what that's the whole point of the capitalistic the cut of capitalistic societies can pay for societies that you can pay for yourself and the burden yourself and take the burden off. but he's too weak to stand up and say that they're all weak. worried about? weak. what's he worried about? that all right that he won't say it's all right for you, you've got loads for you, mate. you've got loads of that's it's of money. that's what it's about. that's what it's about. yeah, but i didn't. we used to say margaret thatcher say that when margaret thatcher was what's changed? was in power. what's changed? and that to and when did that start to change? tony blair, probably, i'm guessing. course. i'm guessing. well, of course. i'm guessing. well, of course. i'm david cameron. said he was the heir to blair. and we've had 12 years this under 12 years of this under a so—called conservative government absolute government that's done absolute nothing in nothing that i can think of in the last years, apart from the last 12 years, apart from getting the way what the getting the way of what the british people want. for example, but no doubt british people want. for exam talk but no doubt british people want. for exam talk about but no doubt british people want. for exam talk about later ut no doubt british people want. for exam talk about later on 10 doubt british people want. for exam talk about later on in doubt british people want. for exam talk about later on in the bt we'll talk about later on in the program. but you know, nothing's we'll talk about later on in the progridone ut you know, nothing's we'll talk about later on in the progridone about know, nothing's we'll talk about later on in the progridone about the iw, nothing's we'll talk about later on in the progridone about the migrationj's
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been done about the migration crisis. far crisis. they've made things far worse on energy . we've closed worse on energy. we've closed down native energy, down all our native energy, producing things like coal and oil and, gas. so what is this conservative government supposedly for ? and you won't supposedly for? and you won't get anything out of rishi sunak. and he was the head boy when you said we have a chancellor as the head boy of charterhouse. these people get to be head boy because they keep their noses clean to toe the clean and know how to toe the line. don't actually strike line. they don't actually strike out with a radical, which is what the tories need if they are to surmount of the to surmount the obstacle of the next election. what next general election. what do you well, you think that for? well, i think they should have spent their time undoing damage. blair did, we reaping did, because we are now reaping all bloated, whether all the damage bloated, whether it to the education system it comes to the education system or any of these or the nhs or any of these things. i don't know why he's constantly as this constantly being hailed as this great when great prime minister. when he did terrible things to the did such terrible things to the country. me, the main thing country. for me, the main thing is, is with kids in education, he was the one that started that our children should be our children should all be educated which we educated in university, which we know they don't need, and then they're with this they're saddled with this massive start their massive debt. they start their life plenty that and
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life with debt plenty that and instead of them doing it, instead of them doing it, instead conservatives instead of the conservatives coming had 12 coming into power, we've had 12 years the damage . years to undo the damage. they're just doing more of the same well, mean , same. yeah, well, i mean, tuition fees was was under nick clegg and david cameron was i guess that was the but it still blows my mind that university isn't free. it was a luxury that we all enjoy. we didn't realise it luxury the time. it was a luxury at the time. which the next solution this which is the next solution this week? to education was to week? now to education was to make maths make everybody study maths until the well luck the age basis. well good luck with that money. well i'm still trying to teach christine some maths today. i had 60 years later. what do we need it. we don't need it in the same way. of don't. basic of course we don't. basic numeracy. needs , but numeracy. everybody needs, but we to be to we don't need to be able to solve quadratic equations or do differential and differential calculus and so on and so forth . and that's where and so forth. and that's where our education system, the state sector is , is failing so often , sector is, is failing so often, particularly in inner cities. the people who need education most are the ones are least most are the ones who are least likely to get it. can just say likely to get it. can i just say that what's missing? and he is right because she likes maths. i get that that's his
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get i get that that's his subject. so really he subject. so really what he really he wanted to make a difference something really he wanted to make a differehee something really he wanted to make a differehe should something really he wanted to make a differe he should reform thing really he wanted to make a differe he should reform maths right. he should reform maths within because our within schools because all our kids school, they don't kids out of school, they don't understand taxes, they don't understand taxes, they don't understand pensions, understand their pensions, they don't mortgages. they don't understand mortgages. they don't understand mortgages. they don't understand mortgages. they don't understand to don't understand any anything to don't understand any anything to do that. what if he do with that. so what if he wanted to do something for maths, is his big maths, which he says is his big thing, then do it properly. don't couple of don't lay on another couple of years that we can't afford to do. the school and do. i could get the school and get board him saying. he get on board with him saying. he wants to be compulsory. wants english to be compulsory. yeah. think would yeah. now that i think would have been if for i him. anyway, we to on, guys. later we need to move on, guys. later today the window opens the today the window opens for the first ever satellite launch from uk the start me up uk soil. at the start me up mission off from the mission will take off from the new spaceport cornwall facility and pave the way for and could pave the way for manned space flights taking off from the site. i know it's really strange, but it's true. our southwest reporter geoff moody the story . we're moody has the story. we're blasting into the stars , into blasting into the stars, into the record books, into it's that that's made the nation's media head west for the press conference that should kick off a monumental couple of days.
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conference that should kick off a monumental couple of days . and a monumental couple of days. and you get a strong sense that this is the culmination of years of partnership, years of research, years of experimentation , and years of experimentation, and this exciting and it's positive story for cornwall. it's a great for the uk sitting at home. it's just something exciting , it's just something exciting, it's something different, it's something different, it's something you don't see every day. somewhere like cornwall , day. somewhere like cornwall, andifs day. somewhere like cornwall, and it's a bit of an underdog story as and i think story as well. and i think people an underdog story, people love an underdog story, especially in uk. so especially in the uk. so i really that that's really hope that that's what people watching people feel and they're watching it at home. thousands are expected to flock to newquay airport thousands airport tonight and thousands more will watch the live stream . but it may not happen as planned. our launch window opens tomorrow night with a number of opportunities over the next couple of weeks . we're always couple of weeks. we're always geared towards and focussed on the beginning of the window, which is why we're here today. but we will be looking very carefully at the readiness of the system as we process forward
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right now everything is green . right now everything is green. the rocket was armed yesterday . the rocket was armed yesterday. and we're will be loading fuel later today. so we're in full motion right now, gearing towards the launch tomorrow. the rocket has been loaded on board a specially adapted boeing 747 cosmic girl . a specially adapted boeing 747 cosmic girl. the a specially adapted boeing 747 cosmic girl . the space plane cosmic girl. the space plane will blast the rocket into orbit where it will a series of satellites that will monitor the earth and the ocean initially for the ministry of defence, but the possibilities are endless as the possibilities are endless as the sky itself . our role here, the sky itself. our role here, of course, is to create a commercially sustainable launch capability, but also it's ensuring that we step through the regulations that we've we've put in place through primary legislation . and there are legislation. and there are inevitably things that we are learning from that as well as we go along and take that at the right pace in order to make sure that it can be successful so it can build confidence across the sector. and then people want to
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come back and launch from the uk and they see it as a good place to do business. it's not cheap. it's cost to do business. it's not cheap. it's cos t £20 million so far, it's cost £20 million so far, but the rewards are great. it's estimated spaceport cornwall will bring a quarter of £1,000,000,000 into the economy, as well as providing jobs and opportunities . the duchy and opportunities. the duchy and hope and that's something cornwall badly needs. geoff moody gb news and geoff moody is in newquay for us now . geoff, in newquay for us now. geoff, how historic is this today. in newquay for us now. geoff, how historic is this today . oh, how historic is this today. oh, it's so historic , isn't it? it's it's so historic, isn't it? it's a great atmosphere down here. all the media is starting to we're expecting around two and a half thousand members of the pubuc half thousand members of the public here, people watching all around the world on the live stream as well. it's a blustery all day. we keep having heavy showers , too. we're about 12 showers, too. we're about 12 hours away from lift off from launch from the air, flying the
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aeroplane taking off. i'm joined by matt hughes, the project director . matt, a very historic director. matt, a very historic day to day. congratulations. thank you. it's been a lot of work for a lot of people get this far but really looking forward to tonight. absolutely. how likely is it do you think it's going to happen? because the weather conditions aren't particularly today, particularly favourable today, are they? it would british to are they? it would be british to not the weather, but not worry about the weather, but certainly of the certainly it's kind of at the moment but actually moment and rainy, but actually the is meant to dry up the weather is meant to dry up and kind the winds will die and kind of the winds will die down on and that down later on tonight. and that will hopefully good will be hopefully good conditions for a launch. but it's one that it's certainly one that virgin are monitoring closely. it also wouldn't be if we didn't wouldn't be british if we didn't complain a little the cost complain a little about the cost . so costing upwards . yeah. so it's costing upwards o f £20 . yeah. so it's costing upwards of £20 million in the middle of a cost of living crisis. there are naysayers out are going to be naysayers out there that's saying, why on earth do need to go into earth do we need to go into space there's so much still space when there's so much still to achieve here earth ? yeah, to achieve here on earth? yeah, and actually a fair and that's actually a fair question to ask. and i think for us in the programme, we're always conscious of the money we spend when taxpayer as we've put
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it think for us bearing in it up, i think for us bearing in mind this has 20 million, mind this has cost 20 million, the a whole is 50 the programme as a whole is 50 for all launches that we're for all the launches that we're conducting aiming deliver conducting and aiming to deliver a million return to a £500 million return to taxpayers. so a 10 to 1 return is not a bad investment to make and certainly one that we're delivering for british taxpayers. why cornwall ? it's taxpayers. why cornwall? it's a cold is a great sight cold war is a great sight because it's near the coastline , offers good access both for virgin orbit to be able to fly either north south past the either north or south past the irish so them to irish coast. so allows them to access a of orbits that access a number of orbits that are valuable for the space sector. to bring sector. and it's going to bring an lot money to the an awful lot of money to the economy down here, isn't it? and to . hope yeah. mean, so this to. hope yeah. i mean, so this is a really pioneering project andifs is a really pioneering project and it's high and high and it's been high risk and high reward. for cornwall reward. and i think for cornwall and spaceport they've put and the spaceport they've put lots of new infrastructure here , businesses coming , lots of new businesses coming to cornwall. so we've already created over 100 jobs. we're expecting to see 250 or by expecting to see 250 or more by the this decade. and the end of this decade. and again, it's a long term job creation scheme for cornwall, which is why so many people have invested in this project and a lot of schoolchildren have got
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involved with various competitions to design things to get involved with it as well. it's really captured the imagination of the community down here, hasn't it? yeah nationally, not just down in cornwall . so the rocket that you cornwall. so the rocket that you see us , we had 10,000 see behind us, we had 10,000 youngsters write it and present their ideas as to what logo we can on this rocket. and that was a great, great scheme to do and kind of get people involved and understand what satellites do, why they're important for us here this planet, why here on this planet, and why it's launching them into it's worth launching them into orbit now, worth saying orbit. now, it's worth saying that going to sort that it's not going to be a sort of cape canaveral style rocket launch, is it's a very launch, is it? is it's a very british way. we're going to we're going to take a and we're going to take a plane and gradually, gently ease it into the , aren't we? the atmosphere, aren't we? yeah, it's different type of it's a very different type of launch so as you say, launch system. so as you say, we're used the rockets we're used to having the rockets that vertically and effectively blasting pad blasting off for a launch pad today will jumbo jet. so today will see a jumbo jet. so 747 carrier under its wing . it 747 carrier under its wing. it will travel for about an hour to the south coast of ireland and then it will launch heading
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south over antarctica. and again , hopefully by the early hours of tomorrow morning, we'll know whether or not the satellites have been successfully deployed brilliant. here . brilliant. well, we'll be here. day on news following day on gb news following development . it's a little bit development. it's a little bit cold, but for now , you cold, but for now, thank you very indeed. you . very much indeed. back to you. thank you, jeff. thank you very much. jeff moody there in much. jeff moody there down in cornwall. next guest is cornwall. now, my next guest is dr. robert malone. half of you will absolutely no idea will have absolutely no idea what is and the other what who he is and the other half will think he is the spiritual of time, spiritual leader of our time, the people's for the the people's champion, for the way questioned the way that he questioned the scientific logic upon which global lockdown policies and the safety vaccine were safety of the covid vaccine were enacted . if you google dr. enacted. if you google dr. malone, you will. all sorts of things about spreading things about him spreading misinformation and i'm so happy that he's joining us now on daytime , on on gb news. thank daytime, on on gb news. thank you so much, robert. great to see you. thank you for joining us.thank see you. thank you for joining us. thank you . was a little us. thank you. was a little hectic getting connected from the east coast of the us. great britain. you would think it would be easier, but i'm glad to
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be here. thank you. well so happy to have you now , as i said happy to have you now, as i said in my introduction and a lot of people will see you as a hero. and a lot of people will have absolutely no idea who you are. you are a credible scientist. you are a credible scientist. you are a legitimate scientist you were one of the initial team working on the mmr and a techno ology, not the covid vaccines themselves , but on the ability themselves, but on the ability to put some messenger rna into , to put some messenger rna into, the lipid nanoparticles to get them into the human body. now, i just want do that in just want to do that in nutshell, because what i want to talk now is whether talk to you about now is whether you on the last three you look back on the last three years, you've been silenced, you've been censored, you've been cancelled. and how different your life today different is your life today than it was ? i think we've lost than it was? i think we've lost him all. you still there, robert ? oh oh, i think we might have lost his connection. and i think he's back easy back. yeah, i'm back. yeah i think i can. i think you can hear me there we go. how different is your life today than it was before the beginning of 2020? i almost
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constantly i'm just back from orlando. i put on over 400,000 miles last year on a commercial air travel through europe in the united states to speak to various groups so that the travel is pretty intense . my travel is pretty intense. my role has changed quite a bit. i'm now a published author this is our first book and of course, there's the constant broadcast thing and a lot of mentoring and mentoring . i've always been mentoring. i've always been a mentoring. i've always been a mentor and a teacher, but now it's on a on a much broader scale with many, many people. i can't i can't even keep track of the names . so can't i can't even keep track of the names. so it's it is a little different from what was previously a more private life . previously a more private life. and, and now it's i find myself in a position of doing my to
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best help people to understand what they've been subjected to and to think through what they do to process happened and to prepare themselves for the next few years. what's coming at us now? you spent your life devoted to developing vaccines and as you said , you had a fairly you said, you had a fairly bonng you said, you had a fairly boring existence, really , as boring existence, really, as a scientist. you were you were very involved in medical ethics and upholding those. and suddenly you've found on the flip side of the overriding global narrative , i first saw global narrative, i first saw you on the bret weinstein podcast, the dark horse podcast, and that was where you really burst into the public consciousness, didn't you just just give our viewers who may not be familiar with who you are, what that journey has been like for you? well previously i was very embedded in the us. government working at the
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interface of the commercial sector in technology development, in vaccine and in the government, particularly the department of defence, in the biodefense space, and just kind of keeping my head down, doing my work, serving my clients. i've run a consulting business for decades and then suddenly , for decades and then suddenly, because i had the temerity to discuss this what the normal would be that's approved globally in terms of the standard for regulatory affairs and clinical development. suddenly i found myself at the front edge of this huge controversy where everything is weaponized, all information russian became controlled , and russian became controlled, and all i did was just share with the public . number one, what was the public. number one, what was the public. number one, what was the nature of the technology had? how to understand and this scary acronym m a what does it
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mean? what are they being what's being injected ? and then to being injected? and then to understand the discrepancies between what the standards were and what was being implemented . and what was being implemented. and that led to a whole series of things . and you mentioned , of things. and you mentioned, bret, perhaps the biggest event was the combination of being deeply informed by twitter and linkedin and then immediately, two days later, being on joe rogan with this podcast that i'm understanding may be of the biggest ever in the world, well over 100 million views. so and then, then all the backlash from that, when i said these words mass formation, psychosis and google about lost its cookies. so it's it has been a very odd kind of almost surreal transformation . it's not one transformation. it's not one that i saw it, but having been given this position of providing some leadership and counsel to
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people , i'm doing my best to try people, i'm doing my best to try to meet expectations and if you look back now, robert, on the people who who spoke out and those who were able to speak out , i those who were able to speak out ,i asked those who were able to speak out , i asked this question of our mutual friend, dr. ryan cole, who was one of the very few physicians , america, who was physicians, america, who was just shouting alarm bells from the start to say so much of this doesn't add up. we shouldn't be taking these sorts of lockdown measures for a disease with such a low infection fatality rate. and he was also talking about the potential harms the covid drugs because of the industry , drugs because of the industry, imminent injecting of people with different age groups regardless of their health, risk profile and i asked him, what do you think you have in common the collegiate group of people who spoke and i'd love to know your answer to that. what what did you what do you all share ? well, you what do you all share? well, that's a great question . and a
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that's a great question. and a lot of people are wonder why this group was able to see through the propaganda and other groups weren't . and i my groups weren't. and i my interactions with the psychology and psychiatry community leads to the conclusion no one can really figure it out . i was just really figure it out. i was just with ryan yesterday and many others in orlando and i think we're a diverse group, come from various backgrounds and many of us are just very committed to truth and integrity and have been our whole lives and that seems to have been part it. but there's more to it than that . there's more to it than that. these are people that have had the courage for whatever reason and often to speak out. often they've gone through some prior eventin they've gone through some prior event in their life that's caused them to question things . caused them to question things. and then when this came about that questioning and that
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willingness to question and i think, frankly, a certain amount disillusionment in the narrative that we've all been subjected to for our whole lives. often is played a role in people being able to see through the propaganda that we were all subjected to, including , subjected to, including, unfortunately , your colleagues unfortunately, your colleagues there in great britain. yeah, absolutely . i've just to tell absolutely. i've just to tell you, ryan cole's answer to that was humanity. he said, i think we all have a shared love of humanity. and that's something about the forces at play at the moment, which are undermining that notion that we're all becoming basically a very monetizable data set. that is how humanity is viewed. dr. robert malone i could talk to you all day, but i'm so sorry. we had some technical issues at the beginning. as you know, the interview is a bit shorter than i would have liked it to have been. but i believe you're coming london. i'd love coming to london. i'd love to buy you a sometime soon, buy you a drink sometime soon, so. okay for joining good so. okay for joining you. good
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bye. malone. bye. bye that's robert malone. i this. don't meet your heroes this. i don't meet your heroes i just it now on the government's website they say vaccines website they say that vaccines are where we go. i have to do this but vaccines the best way to protect people from covid 19 and have already said save tens to protect people from covid 19 anthousandseady said save tens to protect people from covid 19 anthousands ofy said save tens to protect people from covid 19 anthousands of lives. save tens to protect people from covid 19 anthousands of lives. everyone; of thousands of lives. everyone should continue to get their vaccination when invited to do so specifically advised so unless specifically advised otherwise . oh, it goes on. as otherwise. oh, it goes on. as with all vaccines and medicines, the safety of covid 19 vaccines is being continuously monitored . the benefits of the vaccines in preventing covid 19 are serious, complicated and associated with covid 19. far right. any currently current side effects in the majority of patients right at the end of our first hour. we'll be right back after
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break very good morning. welcome back. best wednesday on tv news before midday. we're going to get to the bottom of prince harry's book, spare as the new bombshell interview unfolds. going be talking to cameron about that in just a moment. in other news, the head of the nursing union has said there is a of optimism that a deal can be made over pay off. the prime minister signalled he was open to signalled that he was open to talks while also going to be talking therapy talking about pony therapy with a to a home in a visit to a care home in leicestershire who are using little to boost the mood little horses to boost the mood of residents. going to of its residents. i'm going to be my panellist again be joined by my panellist again back studio, tonia buxton back in the studio, tonia buxton and got and neil hamilton. we've got lots stories barely got lots more stories we barely got through any of the first hour and lots of views. that's and lots of your views. that's all coming after a at all coming up after a look at the latest news . thank you both. the latest news. thank you both. good morning for the gb newsroom. it's 11:01. good morning for the gb newsroom. it's11:01. prince harry has made further claims against the royal family in a series of interviews to promote
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his memoir, spare coming out tomorrow , he told itv's tom tomorrow, he told itv's tom bradby his family was complicit in the pain and suffering experienced by his wife, meghan markle . but she says he's still markle. but she says he's still open to reconciliation with the king and prince william. but with accountability , the level with accountability, the level of planting and leaking from other members of the family means that in my mind they have written countless books . written countless books. certainly millions of words have been dedicated to trying to trash my wife and myself to the point of where i had to leave my country like the distorted narrative is that we wanted to leave, to go , you know, make leave, to go, you know, make money. the health secretary's meeting, medics and union bosses this morning in an attempt to avert further strikes action. the head of the nursing union says there's more optimism that a deal can be made over pay . a deal can be made over pay. speaking this morning, the prime says it's a positive sign . talks
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says it's a positive sign. talks are happening when it comes to pay- are happening when it comes to pay. we do need to be talking about things that are affordable ultimately for the country that are restored possible when it comes to tackling inflation, which ultimately is the root cause of the challenges people are seeing, saying that's what's driving cost living . driving up the cost of living. we to root out we all want to root out inflation. it's really important that we do so. but the talks are happening. good, happening. that's a good, positive sign and the most important thing is those important thing is that those talks over to brazil. now talks carry over to brazil. now and brazilian police have regained control in the capital after it was stormed by far right protesters yesterday . right protesters yesterday. thousands of supporters of former president bolsonaro raided the country's congress. the court and presidential palace, demanding he be restored to power . palace, demanding he be restored to power. bolsonaro refused to accept his election defeat last year. accept his election defeat last year . his demonstrators accept his election defeat last year. his demonstrators claiming it was stolen from him . it was stolen from him. president lula has labelled the protesters a fascist and vowed
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to punish them. prime minister rishi sunak has offered britain's full support. rishi sunak has offered britain's full support . single britain's full support. single plastic cutlery, plates and trays will be banned in england the end of the year. the environment secretary says the ban will help prevent those items from ending up in rivers and seas and wildlife. government figures suggest more than 4 billion pieces of single use cutlery are used in england each year . use cutlery are used in england each year. the use cutlery are used in england each year . the first ever rocket each year. the first ever rocket launch on british soil is set to take off in cornwall later today. the mission, called start me up will blast nine satellites into space for the first time from europe. thousands of people are expected to flock to newquay airport tonight with thousands more expected to watch the live stream. something exciting, something different, something you don't see every day. somewhere like cornwall. and it's a bit an underdog story as well. and i think people love an
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underdog story, especially in the uk. so i really hope that that's what people feel when they're at home. they're watching it at home. this is gb news has more for me in half an hour now. it's back to back . to back. good morning . welcome to bev good morning. welcome to bev turner kenneth today on gb news. thank you for joining turner kenneth today on gb news. thank you forjoining me. coming thank you for joining me. coming up this hour, the level of planting and leaking from other members of the family means that in my mind they have written countless books . certainly countless books. certainly millions of words have been dedicated to trying to trust my wife and myself . prince harry wife and myself. prince harry has made more claims against the royal family in a series of interviews to promote his memoir, spare . speaking to itv, memoir, spare. speaking to itv, the duke of sussex alleged that the duke of sussex alleged that the royal family was complicit in the pain and suffering experi witnessed by his wife, meghan
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markle . we're going to be markle. we're going to be looking at everything that is said coming out. said in the coming out. elsewhere as rishi sunak reportedly considers a one off pay reportedly considers a one off pay ment to end nurses strikes, the nursing union, there is a of optimism that a deal can be made . meanwhile, the health secretary will meet with unions this morning in an attempt to avert further strike action and we have heard of horse therapy . we have heard of horse therapy. if you're listening on the radio, we're seeing a picture now of a tiny little horse in an old lady's bedroom. well, that's a care home in leicestershire. they are using ponies to boost the and mental health of the mood and mental health of its thought its residents. i thought that might dull. i've seen might be quite dull. i've seen the trust don't want the video. trust you don't want to anywhere. you want to go anywhere. you want to watch my panellists are watch that? my panellists are also going to be back to dissect all the biggest stories you need to broadcast at tonia to know, broadcast at tonia buxton as of buxton as well as leader of ukip, neil hamilton and of course still giggling about course is still giggling about the in the ladies the little horses in the ladies bedroom. is nothing bedroom. this show is nothing without you and your views. email me views at gbnews.uk email me gb views at gbnews.uk or tweet me gb news to have your
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say . right. cameron and i are say. right. cameron and i are going to pull ourselves together and talk about prince harry. although i have to say cameron , although i have to say cameron, i know it's serious. i know the implications are serious, but i couldn't stop laughing at some of the stuff that he was revealing kind of at the end of last and the weekend, last week and over the weekend, the losing of virginity, the taking the drugs. i know that taking the drugs. i know that taking drugs serious, but taking drugs is serious, but i couldn't believe the juxtaposition stuff juxtaposition of this stuff coming a royal human coming out of a royal human being. it's unprecedented. i was completely unprecedented and there was a lot of contradict actions, perhaps between the different interviews as well. i think what's perhaps is most striking to people is the fact that he's revealing all these private details about conversations he has had with his own family, and yet them in turn of leaks in private stories and conversations to the press. and he says he wants reconciliation with charles and william. but i think perhaps a
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palace perspective just anyone watching these interviews are going to inevitably ask the question , why would they trust question, why would they trust you, harry if you are going to be leaking these stories to the press now , from prince harry's press now, from prince harry's point of view, he says he tried to do it all in in private himself. but anything he said in private would inevitably be leaked to the public . and he leaked to the public. and he went very hard on the queen consort. in what way? what did he say so i'm going to quite what he said. so this is in the cbs interview, midnight uk time with anderson 60 minutes. okay. so just so, so a lot of us will have been familiar that it the interview with tom bradby that went out at nine last night and that was a whole hour sit down wasn't it. oh i and a half was an hour, an hour and a i might have a little snooze on the have had a little snooze on the second, an interesting little bit of breaking news to do with that. interview. got that. itv interview. we've got the the bbc and itv the ratings of the bbc and itv from last night's bbc 5.2 million 9:00, itv 3.6 million million at 9:00, itv 3.6 million
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at 9:00, which that wasn't the when they were expecting. no. so more than 1 million people extra chose to watch the bbc rather than itv . that's significant than itv. that's significant because it suggests to me that the british public , at least the british public, at least some of the british public, are not quite as interested in prince harry as perhaps we first thought, know what was on bbc at 9:00, happy valley . oh, that's 9:00, happy valley. oh, that's a very good drama . well, you've very good drama. well, you've got real life drama or fiction drama. i understand why drama. i can understand why happy . well, but still, happy valley. well, but still, that's win itv that's not the win itv would have been looking for. so carry on. so he did that and then he did the cbs one as well. yes, he has. it's one of his two or four interviews he's doing to promote stable coming out. he was sorry. yeah. branded camilla yeah. so he branded camilla dangerous for what prince harry alleges is forging connections with the british press to try and improve her image. her image she caused her a villain and says he was the third person or in the in the marriage with diana and charles. so clearly perhaps suggests to me quite a
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lot of resentment for camilla that the queen consort, which clearly i don't think is going to go to down with the royal family, particularly king was led to believe that camilla was charles's red line, but buckingham palace, kensington palace have not responded . palace have not responded. they're not going to responds. i think they're keeping what could be dignified silence be seen as a dignified silence and the work do and focusing on the work do well. put them in good well. it's put them in good stead hundred years, stead several hundred years, hasn't complaining and hasn't it? not complaining and not explaining . when is the not explaining. when is the actual book out here, cameron, do we know? because the moment it's not even released, i think all of the leaks last week and it went accidentally on sale overseas didn't it. yeah it did. so had initial leak from so we had an initial leak from the which had this the guardian which had this story prince william story of prince william allegedly prince harry, story of prince william al|the dly prince harry, story of prince william al|the floor prince harry, story of prince william al|the floor and prince harry, story of prince william al|the floor and cracking harry, story of prince william al|the floor and cracking the ry, to the floor and cracking the dog bowl, injuring his back. clearly comment. you clearly no no comment. you palace on that one, then was accidentally released in spain five days early. so ridiculous . five days early. so ridiculous. clearly every journalist under the sun scrambled somebody out there to try and get a copy and translated into english, which is where all leaks came from .
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is where all leaks came from. then parts of the book have been retold the interviews retold during the interviews he's done to promote the book, but in britain it's going to be published tomorrow . it's going published tomorrow. it's going to be on sale. the thing is, i'm not sure anyone is going to buy it because so much of the book has already leaked in the has already been leaked in the press, newspapers doing press, the newspapers doing a very impressive job of making sure that nobody does buy it. because is because let's remember, there is another on here . there another war going on here. there is not only harry with his family, there is harry with the british and they are british media, and they are really enemy, he really his enemy, even when he talks about his hatred towards it , say hatred, that's a strong it, say hatred, that's a strong word. but his animosity towards camilla, it's because she was collaborating with the press, wasn't it ? there will be fleet wasn't it? there will be fleet street editors who are furious that harry is doing this without them, because that's the arrangement. the royal family, right? they speak for the royal family well, perhaps, yeah. i mean , the whole theme of his mean, the whole theme of his book and the interviews he's done seems to be his hatred towards the press. i think that's fair to say. he does see
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the press for the part he thinks they played in the death . his they played in the death. his mother, diana, princess of wales , with the paparazzi chasing the car, which was which was proven in the interest, etc. and how his family relationships have been damaged . what he sees is been damaged. what he sees is buckingham palace, kensington palace colluding the press to make him and his wife meghan look like villains and the rest of the royal family perhaps look good. that's the allegation as said, no fight back from buckingham palace or kensington palace on the points of will the book sell in the amazon ? the book sell in the amazon? the last time i looked at that about an hour is number four in the charts and it's not even on sale. yes, it's not number one, but not it's still pretty high in the us. interested i thought it would be higher, but it's number five, which suggests to perhaps popular as , it perhaps not as popular as, it perhaps not as popular as, it perhaps be, but i'm sure perhaps could be, but i'm sure penguin random , which is penguin random, which is publishing his book, will be making a hefty profit . well, making a hefty profit. well, maybe. i mean, they've paid him a huge advance and this is the
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thing as somebody who's written three books they probably about 20 copies each but you get paid your and then like a record deal obviously i'm sorry if i'm patronising cameron know this but know it's interesting to but you know it's interesting to reflect it you have to earn reflect upon it you have to earn out your advance before you get any royalties on it. they've paid enormous figure. paid such an enormous figure. i think it's about do you know it's about 20 million is supposed to be $20 million. oh dollars. he's to dollars. okay that he's going to have to sell so many to have to sell so many books to make that back . and i wonder, make that back. and i wonder, with of information with all of the information we've already from the book, we've already had from the book, i people go, well, is i think people will go, well, is there is there anything there anything is there anything left? still i almost left? what do you still i almost wondered done wondered whether he's done too much well the gamble much publicity. well the gamble isn't his, but fact that isn't his, but the fact that we're talking about the fact we're talking about it, the fact on single page in on every single front page in the kingdom, i'm sure, is the united kingdom, i'm sure, is pretty united pretty similar in the united states well. means like them, states as well. means like them, all that is a genuine all of them that is a genuine desire for information about the private lives of prince harry and the royal family. so i guess we'll have to wait and. see, on the sales figures on that one. but well, there is that desire
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unless there are links just playing a officer on the other side of the tunnel and then of course, they go cameron, course, they go like cameron, thank so for that. now don't thank you so for that. now don't forget, we've got a twitter poll running this. we're asking you the family's motto is the royal family's motto is never complain, never explain, but the time for them to but now the time for them to publicly respond and to prince harry, let me know what you think at the moment, 78% of you are saying that they should keep schtum and not comment on what they're roeg son, nephew , they're roeg son, nephew, brother is saying. now send us an email to gbviews@gbnews.uk or tweet me at gb news. coming up, we're going to take a deep look at today's news with my panellist, broadcaster tony buxton and neil hamilton. that's all you with whether i'm all after you with whether i'm alex deakin and this your latest weather update from the met office mitt coulter there office mitt coulter out there today. there's some sunshine, but also a few showers but there's also a few showers and there's more wet and windy to come during tomorrow . that's to come during tomorrow. that's going be courtesy of this going to be courtesy of this area pressure. but we area of low pressure. but we have this one controlling things
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at of at the moments. plenty of isopods on chart is pretty isopods on the chart is pretty blustery wind is fairly blustery and that wind is fairly cold, it feel certainly a cold, making it feel certainly a lot colder than it did much of last week. as i said. there is some sunshine to had and too some sunshine to be had and too not eastern not showers over eastern england. of northeast england. parts of northeast scotland for england. parts of northeast scotwest for england. parts of northeast scotwest of for england. parts of northeast scotwest of scotland for england. parts of northeast scotwest of scotland and for england. parts of northeast scotwest of scotland and through the west of scotland and through northern ireland, plenty of showers in heavy, showers coming in heavy, possibly thundery showers at times . some possibly thundery showers at times. some snow on the tops of the mountains. well, showers the mountains. well, the showers most further south, most scattered further south, but some for wales and parts of england, we might get up to eight nine in south later eight or nine in the south later on, it is going to feel cold on, but it is going to feel cold out six or seven. the out there with six or seven. the high add on that wind, it feels a lot that chilly winter will be around this evening, but the showers should steadily fade. for it become for for many, it will become for time but then that time overnight. but then that weather system we saw earlier, here it comes bringing rain in from west dawn. that will from the west dawn. that will lift the temperatures ahead of it. we could see some touches of frost north—east scotland frost across north—east scotland , but most places staying a few degrees above freezing then degrees above freezing and then temperatures rising . things turn temperatures rising. things turn wet and that , we wet tomorrow. and for that, we have office yellow warnings
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have met office yellow warnings in place. it's been very wet of late. so this extra rain falling across and across parts of wales and north—west england cause some problems . north—west england cause some problems. it's north—west england cause some problems . it's basically north—west england cause some problems. it's basically a north—west england cause some problems . it's basically a wet problems. it's basically a wet start. then the rain ease from parts of the south and east of england through the day and from northern it northern ireland later on it will blustery, gusty will be blustery, gusty conditions, for wales conditions, especially for wales , but it will be mild as well with teens for most of with in the teens for most of still some heavy rain to come across wales and into the midlands south—west england dunng midlands south—west england during and still during tuesday evening and still very blustery as well. maine area starting to pull away . area starting to pull away. it'll be followed by more and that's the picture for wednesday. a mixture of sunshine and showers , but persistent and showers, but persistent rain. on thursday . back to rain. on thursday. back to sunshine and showers on friday. good bye .
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good morning. it's1119. this is at bev turner today on gb news tv on radio. thank you so much for joining me. you've been forjoining me. you've been getting in touch with me. a lot of you commenting on harris situation, on all the situation, on all of the revelation from the weekend . revelation from the weekend. gary has said my dad always advocated best and most effective way deal effective way to deal antagonists was ignore them. antagonists was to ignore them. this advice has served me well ever since. just ignore . and ever since. just ignore. and harry and carol said, i don't think anyone will believe harry, even if it was all true. there are too many royalists in this. they're now forced into they're now being forced into showing . i think i miss showing emotion. i think i miss the royal family. the one thing that me from, that really did strike me from, the things that he was saying to tom bradby last night, is how harry wants to these harry wants to have these emotional just not emotional and his dad's just not capable them jonah said, capable of them and. jonah said, poor world is this poor harry, the world is this silly a very public silly boy having a very public breakdown. utterly deluded breakdown. he's utterly deluded . the royal family's absolutely right to keep quiet, right tonia buxton neil hamilton. let's have a look what we're talking about this morning right. the environment at tanya and sometimes i know you and i
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really do scratch your heads when we hear about this, we're in this net zero climate crisis . so i'd like somebody to define what a crisis is. i can't get on board, though, with less plastics. gosh, i have been screaming about plastics for many, years because what many, many years because what people don't understand is the long effects of them. long term side effects of them. so having plastics in our so by having plastics in our seas like these billions masks that are in the sea now being broken into xeno oestrogens, which are affecting men's testosterone and their complete endocrine disruption disruptors so they can affect hormonal system. they're going to affect a male hormonal hormonal system. they such damage and it's very insipid long term damage that you don't know. you know, why have we suddenly got all these problems with fertility in the modern world? it's to do with plastic eggs. i've been plastic eggs. and i've been screaming this for ages, screaming about this for ages, but that to didn't but that seemed to stop, didn't as started , as soon as lockdown started, everybody went back to single use plastic. well, the pandemic everywhere breathed oxygen into the plastics industry. it was nearly on its knees at that point. and they will only we
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were all doing little pipettes and testing and like you say, the gloves, the gloves, the melamine, what you call those things of the people and all. but also my main thing is, is that the people that manufacture plastics need to be made. they should be penalised, not the people buy things. yeah, they should be penalised. change what they're doing. we need go they're doing. we need to go back glass go back to paper back to glass go back to paper bags and things aren't going to destroy world. so what's the destroy our world. so what's the new plastics be new disposable plastics be banned end of year? banned by the end of the year? what why weren't they banned? ten ago? the end of the ten years ago? the end of the year good enough. ban year is not good enough. ban them and make those them now and make those companies for not getting on companies pay for not getting on board. really they're being given a year. they'll just push it back. we'll kick the can down the road. well, i hope not. therese the environment therese coffey, the environment secretary, reveal secretary, she's going to reveal this a single use this week that of a single use plastics plates, trays, plastics such as plates, trays, cutlery, will no longer be cutlery, cups will no longer be permitted here. this is well overdue . well, in a way, i hate overdue. well, in a way, i hate plastic myself when . i first plastic myself when. i first started flying. we used to have proper restaurant meals on planes with knives and forks as
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we like to have them at home. but this is one of these stories which i think is a distraction from the country's real problems, like the migration crisis, the energy crisis, all the other crises by which we are beset. the other crises by which we are beset . yes, there is a problem beset. yes, there is a problem with plastic in the oceans and so on, but that's a question disposal rather than the plastic itself. and that's where we've been going wrong over this. the eu, of course, was exporting millions of tonnes of plastic that were collected be recycled every year. it was being sent to the far east, it was being dumped in, the irrawaddy river, etc. the i'm looking at some pictures now and really is pictures now and it really is depressing. and if you're listening on the this is a beach with just somebody walking across tonnes and tonnes of plastic waste that is just being pumped into our oceans. i think it's incredibly sad . i you know, it's incredibly sad. i you know, you look at where's the to stop this and i guess i'm not a big fan of anything being banned to be don't like the word ban i
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don't like the word mandate any more should it be that that but i guess in education we can't do anything about it. tony we the thing is, we can do something here. i mean, all this kind of net zero stuff and climate change, of the science change, one of the science is still out. i don't know what's on there. and it's a long term thing. we don't know. we can do something about now. so. something about this now. so. yeah, aren't we doing yeah, so why aren't we doing about right no, i about this right now? no, i don't to anything, but don't to ban anything, but i will happily ban plastics. well, i hopeifs will happily ban plastics. well, i hope it's not i very much hope it's not just england it ends up england and that it ends up being a of countries around the world this because there's world do this because there's only we can do on only so much that we can do on our own right? a quarter of adults a&e if they can't adults go to a&e if they can't get a gp, tony yes, it's true. it's mean. it is it's the truth mean. it is absolutely truth . i very, absolutely the truth. i very, very go to doctor . i very rarely go to the doctor. i try be as well as i can. so try to be as well as i can. so it would be last thing do. it would be the last thing do. but and again, if one of my but now and again, if one of my children gets an ear infection or might a chest or what think might be a chest or what think might be a chest or infection, i need to get or ear infection, i need to get hold of a doctor in order to get some antibiotics or what if i need you can't need them? you can't get through. can't through.
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through. you can't get through. you just can't. you're on the phone for hours waiting. we have to a system. doesn't to go on to a system. doesn't react. oh, you've got 48 hours before do anything before it. it will do anything for truth and for you. it's the truth and that's what's happening. so doctors, they need to just reinvent that deal with reinvent way that they deal with patients they're not patients because they're not deaung patients because they're not dealing an dealing with us. it's an interesting 18 year interesting 18 to 24 year olds with most likely go to a&e with those most likely go to a&e because could not get an because they could not get an appointment. that's kind of what you isn't it? because you talk. yeah isn't it? because he's partly he's not because i'm partly because teenagers sometimes because of teenagers sometimes they something's they don't know that something's wrong or they don't wrong with them or they don't mention it. then suddenly, mention it. and then suddenly, like they've a head like you say, they've a head cold gone to an ear cold that's gone to an ear infection. urgent infection. they need urgent treatment. we shouldn't be using the our gp though, should treatment. we shouldn't be using the oh, our gp though, should treatment. we shouldn't be using the oh, ourtrue. hough, should treatment. we shouldn't be using the oh, ourtrue. butjh, should treatment. we shouldn't be using the oh, ourtrue. but the ;hould we? oh, that's true. but the scandal here, of course, the scandal here, of course, is the gp contracts, which gordon brown was negotiating was responsible for negotiating back which most back in 2008, which makes most practises business five practises a 9 to 5 business five days a week. you know, doctors are absolutely essential to lives. not just able lives. and we're not just able on nine five. so on weekdays nine and five. so all practises should have a seven day a week for synergy for the patients . and that's what we the patients. and that's what we need, a redrawing the doctors
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contract so that they actually conform to what the patients want, rather what the bma wants. well, the all the lead. what would you do then . fix our nhs? would you do then. fix our nhs? well it's not something which you answer on the back of envelope because there are so many things that are wrong with the nhs. basically it will never be funded properly if it relies only on the taxpayers money and therefore we've got do what holland does, what australia , holland does, what australia, which is to wean people off this so—called free service we all pay so—called free service we all pay for through the nose but doesn't actually perform as it needs to. and as we want. so what we've got to do is have more diversity in the system and i don't mean by that in a rainbow flags and all the rest of it. what i mean is we need have a mix of public and private provision. so that we are not solely dependent upon the exchequer deciding how much the cake is going to cost this and then we have to slice it up as best we can. yeah what we need
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to get more money into system. but not only that money which is going to be more productively used and is being used at the minute . i mean, ijust don't minute. i mean, ijust don't agree with throwing more money at nhs. it already takes at the nhs. it already takes a disgusting amount of money billion a week for thank you very much we need it needs very much and we need it needs restructuring needs disbanding from beginning it did get from the beginning it did get rid the of people that rid of the 50% of people that are that aren't the are working that aren't on the on coalface of medicine. on the coalface of medicine. they need to go like you said, these diversity managers all these diversity managers and all these diversity managers and all these they need to these middlemen, they need to go there amount of there and a silly amount of money. lot of are earning money. a lot of them are earning more than. our prime minister. yeah, need but they yeah, so they need go, but they need more money. a lot of he's got a point, the point is, got a point, but the point is, is if we restructured the is if, if we restructured the nhs enough money there, nhs there is enough money there, it's being so badly wrong. it's just being so badly wrong. yeah. that in my health insurance cost e £2,000 year. insurance cost me £2,000 a year. admittedly doesn't pay for insurance cost me £2,000 a year. a�*gp ttedly doesn't pay for insurance cost me £2,000 a year. a�*gp ttedlit doesn't pay for insurance cost me £2,000 a year. a�*gp ttedlit doesn't�*sn't pay for insurance cost me £2,000 a year. a�*gp ttedlit doesn't pay pay for insurance cost me £2,000 a year. a�*gp ttedlit doesn't pay for! for a gp and it doesn't pay for accident emergency. doesn't accident emergency. it doesn't pay pay for cancer. trophic conditions but things conditions. but things like elective surgery and so on, things that are predictable . as things that are predictable. as a of the population, a proportion of the population, we knees and hips we know how many knees and hips
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and are likely to be and so on are likely to be neededin and so on are likely to be needed in any one year. that is something which you can ensure that throughout the whole that for throughout the whole of your modest cost. this your life at a modest cost. this is of way we ought to is the sort of way we ought to reform the health services obviously to maintain the free at point provision at the point of use provision particularly for catastrophic illnesses, be illnesses, which nobody will be able against. well, able to ensure against. well, we've sort of big news we've had sort of quite big news this really about the this morning really about the strikes. remember, pat strikes. if you remember, pat cullen of her meeting cullen came out of her meeting with barclay. she was with steve barclay. she was furious wouldn't talk about furious they wouldn't talk about pay- furious they wouldn't talk about pay. has pay. well, rishi sunak has summoned bosses to summoned major union bosses to resolve the strike action across the later this week. do you the uk. later this week. do you have any tony would take this idea that he's talking about maybe giving them a one off pay moment, nurses some very moment, the nurses some very strange do isn't it. well, strange thing do isn't it. well, i think it's , it's two things i think it's, it's two things isn't it. it's a shut up payment . yeah. shut up and get on with it. payment and i think it. payment and also i think that really that people are really struggling to bills struggling to pay their bills and to pay their mortgages to and to pay their mortgages to and because we have a cost and live because we have a cost of lockdown crisis going in of lockdown crisis going on in britain. in the world britain. the moment in the world has cost lockdown crisis has a cost of lockdown crisis going so i think going on. and so i think i understand why he's that
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understand why he's doing that in order just get them in order to just get them through this little but through this little bit. but it's keep them quiet and it's just to keep them quiet and it's just to keep them quiet and it's the can again, it's it's kicking the can again, it's another thing that's kicking can down road feel like kicking down the road feel like kicking it the long grass by just it into the long grass by just what them all a cheque what writing them all a cheque for pick your for what? how to pick your figures . £1,000 it. 5000. but figures. £1,000 it. 5000. but what each guess he what does each nurse guess he said heard this said i've never heard this before policy, a as a before as a policy, as a as a suggestion, as a policy at a time of strikes. have you know and you know within three months of the end of this financial year and the pay award for next year and the pay award for next year will stay as start to be discussed. yeah so the way this strike should be dealt with that we will deal with it as part of next year's pay negotiation. that's why we have these independent awards to independent pay review awards to get away from the kind of sticking plaster that it seems that rishi sunak is not going to adopt for the nurses and for the nurses. then why for the nurses. then why not for the drivers? for the teachers, drivers? one for the teachers, one for all the other public sector workers. and only sector workers. and it is only pubuc sector workers. and it is only public workers that are public sector workers that are on strike . and so there's no on strike. and so there's no coherence to a government which
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operates on this ad hoc basis. and given that are a sort of blackmail deal, you know, albeit legitimate and legal type of like , i suppose the idea that he like, i suppose the idea that he will just give a single payment to the isn't that a little bit like negotiating with him so then what happens they go back to work and then another six months which quite like another little handout please. and then another six months can have some more. and everybody you say more. and everybody like you say would i want that would be doing i don't want that to way that all to become the way that all pubuc to become the way that all public run anyway, let public services run anyway, let me know think. gb views me know what you think. gb views at gb news dot uk. and also we've tweet of we've got that tweet of paul rowling about harry. don't forget about the royal family they should on that at they should comment on that at gb break, gb views. but after the break, we're carry on this we're going to carry on this discussion nurses strikes discussion about nurses strikes and june hire and whether or not the june hire doctors also be following doctors might also be following suit. after suit. now all after your morning's news with tamsin roberts . beth. thank morning's news with tamsin roberts. beth. thank you. morning's news with tamsin roberts . beth. thank you. good roberts. beth. thank you. good it's 1130. prince harry has made
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it's1130. prince harry has made further claims against the family in a series of interviews to promote his memoir, spare coming out tomorrow , he told coming out tomorrow, he told itv's tom bradby his family was complicit in the pain and suffering experienced by his wife, meghan . harry says still wife, meghan. harry says still open to reconciliation with the king and prince william , but king and prince william, but with accountability , the level with accountability, the level of planting and leaking from other members of the family means that in my mind they have written countless books . written countless books. certainly millions of words have been dedicated to trying to trash my wife and myself to the point of where i had to leave my country . but the distraught country. but the distraught narrative is that we to leave, to go and, you know, make money. the house secretary's meeting with medics and union this morning in an attempt to avert further strike action. the head of the nursing union says . of the nursing union says. there's slight optimism that a
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deal be made over pay . nurses deal be made over pay. nurses are preparing to go on strike later this month afterjoining later this month after joining the picket line for the first time in the history last month. things to brazil now and police there have regained control in there have regained control in the capital after it was stormed by far . protesters yesterday . by far. protesters yesterday. thousands of supporters of former bolsonaro raided , the former bolsonaro raided, the country's congress. the supreme court and presidential palace demanding he be restored to power. bolsonaro refused to accept his election defeat last with his supporters claiming it was stolen from him . president was stolen from him. president lula labelled the protests fascist and has vowed to punish them . tv online and dab+ radio. them. tv online and dab+ radio. this is .
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good morning. it's 1134. good morning. it's1134. this is bev turner today on gb news. it is a bright morning you've been sending in your views. lots of them, actually. thank you. we're talking about rishi sunak who's talking about rishi sunak who's talking this morning about his plans for saving the nhs . and plans for saving the nhs. and sue has said sunak is out of his depth. virginia says mark, this was his plan last week to make people live. mass until the age of 18 months should include budgeting this would help more than pure maths. and andrew says forcing kids to learn maths until they're 18 makes them think for the think they're too good for the millions of unskilled jobs that keep and keep the country running. and hamilton said, i'm a lifetime tory voter , but rishi looks like tory voter, but rishi looks like a very good school prefect. but he's no of our people. it he's no leader of our people. it is a for the country that is a shame for the country that we this mess. we are in this huge mess. i don't you're alone in don't think you're alone in thinking hamilton the head thinking that. hamilton the head of the nurses union, says that there's finally of after the there's finally a of after the prime minister expressed a
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willingness to discuss a pay deal health secretary, deal. the health secretary, steve barclay , will meet steve barclay, will also meet with royal of nurses with the royal college of nurses today a bid to avert further today in a bid to avert further strike get the strike action. let's get the latest . from gb news political latest. from gb news political editor darren mccaffrey. good morning , darren. what is the morning, darren. what is the latest we've heard rishi sunak speaking this morning. what are the new headlines ? well, there the new headlines? well, there seems to be, as you say, a of optimism, not just among those nurses, but it obviously must be said as well. some politicians at westminster as well. and these back for the first time since the christmas winter break today. since the christmas winter break today . this all comes around. today. this all comes around. these reports . let's watch these reports. let's watch downing street refusing to rule out i.e. they are definitely on the table. that could be a one off payment for nurses. know as you've said , that they are due you've said, that they are due to meet the health secretary later on today. now, in theory , later on today. now, in theory, conversation is about future pay- conversation is about future pay. so pay for this year onwards. the strikes , the moment onwards. the strikes, the moment are taking place of current pay
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arrangements. the government say they're not willing to enter into, however, could be this compromise of a one off payment that unions could claim it is victory the government could claim well . you know what it is claim well. you know what it is rewarding nurses but not necessarily fuelling inflation which they fear greater wage increases at this moment could do because it would be a one off payment. however are a lot of lots of questions about, of course, would it be enough to call off those strike actions? how much would it be? also is this something that obviously other unions potentially would want to go strike ? the bus want to go on strike? the bus drivers, railway workers, drivers, the railway workers, the baggage handlers , the gp and the baggage handlers, the gp and junior doctors who may well go on strike later on this month. so it is far from certain that this is going to be a guarantee plan. but it is the first concrete sign we've seen , i concrete sign we've seen, i think, in the last couple of months that the government are potentially willing to move and it could be quite significant and all this comes, as you say,
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as the health service and the nhs dominate headlines that westminster, the government announcing it and 50 million quid today to try and help clear some of the backlog in hospitals with thousands and 13,000 patients hospitals that could patients in hospitals that could be community care . so it is be in community care. so it is very much nursing and the health service and the nhs that is dominating the politics agenda as they arrive back on this morning. okay thank you, darren. you'll bring us any breaking news on that? i'm sure, as the day goes on. darren mccaffrey that down at westminster now residents at a care home in leicestershire are being treated to a regular by a therapy horse to a regular by a therapy horse to help horse help boost their mental health during the winter and.the mental health during the winter and. the non—profit team of volunteers looking after the animals say that visits can brighten even the darkest days . brighten even the darkest days. and i promise you this will brighten up your day, even if it is pretty dark. east midlands reporter will hollis has the story at mount view care home in rosalie efforts to beat the
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winter blues can come in all shapes , sizes, but having shapes, sizes, but having a miniature horse in your bedroom is of the more unusual options . is of the more unusual options. what do you think of having a horse in the bedroom as it made you feel? answer yes or yeah. yeah as long as you got enough . yeah as long as you got enough. alfie is a therapy horse. he comes into care homes like mount view to cheer up residents while helping them to remember things from their . marion is 93. what from their. marion is 93. what we were farmers in our day and we were farmers in our day and we kept horses sometimes yeah so yeah always light room yeah . is yeah always light room yeah. is it nice that you can see one. oh yes. yes it's. but some nights i should say it is. yes today alfie's brought his pal iolo the donkey, as one of the newest team members. she's doing a bit of on the job training . i of on the job training. i reverse and she does the university . you don't let it
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university. you don't let it come in. sarah's always worked in care homes. she started bringing her animals along 15 years ago after seeing how it helped the people she looks after . now, her non—profit after. now, her non—profit business uses more than 30 of them, including parrots and pigeons for therapy not only in care homes, but schools and hospitals, too. for me , my hospitals, too. for me, my animals . here, hospitals, too. for me, my animals. here, i hospitals, too. for me, my animals . here, i love to see animals. here, i love to see these smiles and. i love to actually just see how it how they react when we walk through they react when we walk through the door and they look forward to it. think really it just makes a huge because at the end of the day you you're not getting out so we can come to you can't wait in the next room betty's waiting eagerly betty's been waiting eagerly to see make everybody feel see alfie make everybody feel better than she's always had a busy life working at leicester's hospital and decades of travelling. she says getting old can be tough , but not on days can be tough, but not on days like this . what it's like all like this. what it's like all animals isn't it? it makes you feel peaceful and you forget. forget your problems and all the rest of it really. well, we just
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talked about that. and the day we were going to send you for a parrot. but you didn't fancy that, did. annette runs the activities here at mount view. so we know psychologically that it has a very effect on people , it has a very effect on people, but it also just heightens and adds some excitement to some this life that possibly will not get that sort of thing by events elsewhere, but stage of life, when it's harder to get out bringing a small piece of joy inside, can be like magic. i've never been this close a house before will alice for gb news in rosalie . oh i thought here we rosalie. oh i thought here we tonia buxton they will hamilton. and that is just so lovely. what did you think, neil? well, i think may be the answer to prince problem. what he prince harry's problem. what he needsis prince harry's problem. what he needs is a donkey in the bedroom. and i think will bedroom. and i think that will sort well well, sort them out. well well, i think what he needs think probably what he needs is maybe hang out there and get maybe to hang out there and get a perspective. well, a little perspective. well, actually know when we were kids after saturday morning after on a saturday morning my mum always to an mum would always take us to an old home where she was old people's home where she was an she knew? and
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an old lady that she knew? and we to have to go and speak we used to have to go and speak to all the kind of old people in the old people's home and just chat to at the time, okay, chat to them at the time, okay, we know, with our we didn't it you know, with our mates on a say but in rochester it was such wonderful thing to do perspective. you do to have such perspective. you left there thinking that especially were laughing and especially if were laughing and smiling you smiling and we'd have jokes, you felt good about yourself felt really good about yourself doing think doing something and i think that's harry needs to i agree that's harry needs to do i agree what idea. neil what a lovely idea. now neil ukip issued press release ukip have issued a press release this are we still being this morning. are we still being hounded ireland hounded by the northern ireland protocol discuss protocol post—brexit? discuss yeah, we are. yeah, well, of course we are. i mean, absolutely mean, it's absolutely unacceptable. we can't export things great northern things from great to northern ireland through ireland without going through mountains felling in mountains and from felling in marks said they marks and spencer said that they have enforce pages have to enforce thousand pages of every year just to send things across the irish sea. northern ireland is an integral part of the united kingdom and, so it's unacceptable in a sovereign, independent country which is brexit was all about that we have to put up with this andifs that we have to put up with this and it's all because of this nonsense about the single market border between north and south
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of ireland. anybody who's in the know recognises isn't a real problem because in the days of modern technology, we can track goods and people can obviously smuggle across borders, but not in the quantities that make any difference . so this is difference. so this is a political weapon which the eu has been using against and you know, sunak should just tell to sling their hook. but of course that's not his style, isn't it? why won't you do? but because ultimately he's a conformist. and i said earlier on he was the head boy of winchester. he tows the line and he's part of the system. he's part of the establishment. he doesn't have the radical edge agenda the kind of radical edge agenda that we need make a success that we need to make a success of brexit in the in the modern world. i mean, margaret thatcher would have got anywhere would never have got anywhere with of vanilla with the kind of vanilla arguments rishi arguments which rishi rishi sunak putting out at the sunak is putting out at the minute , but there's, there's minute, but there's, there's a tragic irony in it because in order to be establishment, to be the the establishment, the head of the establishment, if call it that in this if we call it that in this country to be the head the country to be the head of the elite, have be part the
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elite, you have to be part the establishment. you're not going to a maverick, person, to get a maverick, edgy person, parachuted in. i mean, what we did margaret thatcher, did with margaret thatcher, i but that's again, but i agree that that's again, the rather than the the exception rather than the rule. we started rule. it's how we started talking 10:00. there's been talking at 10:00. there's been such in culture such a massive shift in culture in psychology, even and particularly in terms of how the she she would never her character and the things she was saying that then would never be acceptable today . and i'm really acceptable today. and i'm really fascinated by what's changed. we're no longer allowed to aspire. it feels often to aspire to better ourselves . we should to better ourselves. we should all just be coming down. everybody with the same. yeah, but this is what political should be about . it's actually should be about. it's actually leading the nation, not following the nation and yes, there's been a change of culture over the last 25 years. going back to what he was saying early on about tony blair wrecking everything. the chickens now coming home to roost. there was virtually no difference between david cameron and tony blair. cameron himself, as i said earlier on, describes him as the heir to blair and theresa may
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was even worse . liz truss only was even worse. liz truss only there for 5 minutes, although she at least attempted to the consensus, although it was done a backhanded way. ironic though, tonia buxton in that we have got this mentality now that we kind of, you know, we knock anybody that has loads of money. and i've said it before, i support anybody to work hard and make i've said it before, i support anylofy to work hard and make i've said it before, i support anylof money. rk hard and make i've said it before, i support anylof money. i'mard and make i've said it before, i support anylof money. i'm notand make i've said it before, i support anylof money. i'm not happyike lots of money. i'm not happy when people positions of when people in positions of power conflicts of interest power have conflicts of interest that taxpayer. that might affect the taxpayer. i want to draw that distinction, but we've never a but we've never had a big difference and the difference between haves and the have nots . and this culture, have nots. and so this culture, this economic mindset hasn't worked . no, it hasn't worked. worked. no, it hasn't worked. i think it's partly to do with the people, psychologists. we're being nudged. i mean, it's spelt out in order to have books they fit. but for me, so my parents came over literally in knickers, you know, they had nothing and they their work ethic they worked their work ethic blows my nose when what decade was that? in the fifties, right . so they came over in the fifties and the late fifties, and they worked and worked and
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worked and became wealthy. and that everybody aspired that was what everybody aspired to do. margaret thatcher's britain everyone could aspire to going up higher , doing better going up higher, doing better for . now it seems to for themselves. now it seems to be that no, the aspiration is that everyone gets squashed down to the same, apart from the big elitists they're guys elitists and they're the guys are conflict interest are doing the conflict interest things. the ones that things. they're the ones that have millions and billions things. they're the ones that hav of millions and billions things. they're the ones that hav of the millions and billions things. they're the ones that hav of the lockdown. and billions things. they're the ones that hav of the lockdown. so billions things. they're the ones that hav of the lockdown. so there»ns things. they're the ones that hav of the lockdown. so there is out of the lockdown. so there is something really sinister going on our society the moment. on in our society the moment. and we need to have , you know, and we need to have, you know, we need to have eyes opened we need to have our eyes opened and see things clearly and to be warned we're being warned against what we're being pushed we've warned against what we're being pusteenagers. we've we've warned against what we're being pusteenagers. we've got we've got teenagers. we've got teenagers. so how are you inspire the teenage agers to think that they can reach the dizzy heights that they see on social media, that they see from the very wealthy ? i think the very wealthy? i think there's a lot of them are just disillusioned. i think what i can never going to have that. so i'm just giving up. that's exactly that's that's exactly the ethos that's being portrayed now or can't have it, so i now or i can't have it, so i don't want anybody to have don't want anybody else to have it. i'm going give up
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it. so i'm just going to give up as well. but you to try. as well. but you have to try. what? try and say to my what? i try and say to my children is try and be mavericks you've got to try and think out of box that day of like, of the box that day of like, i've my 9 to 5 i've got a job. my 9 to 5 forever, but those days are gone. so they've got to try and be mavericks and think outside of the box and take for everything it's hard everything they do. it's a hard one. yeah, is. it's difficult one. yeah, it is. it's difficult isn't it? right. lots coughs, isn't it? right. lots of coughs, colds, damaged colds, sniffles, lots of damaged immune around. immune systems knocking around. and yet the have got no none of our usual powdered remedies to make better with the cold, so make us better with the cold, so on. so what these these remedies are literally a lot of them. the placebo effects because they just people feel better by just make people feel better by taking you can make taking them but you can make them at home. so don't go and buy these remedies that you're buying. we've got a shortage buying. and we've got a shortage of. deal. we of. it's a great deal. we haven't them anymore haven't got them anymore because, they've because, actually. they've got chemicals so you chemicals in them. so if you want to make kind of lancet want to make a kind of lancet alternative or what has paracetamol, of paracetamol, so take a bit of paracetamol, so take a bit of paracetamol, has a honey lemon, put some ginger. and if i you i'd some turmeric into that i'd add some turmeric into that bit black pepper make bit black pepper to make absorbable. want absorbable. and then if you want to of open up airways
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to kind of open up the airways is chemical that it has is the chemical that it has in it then little bit of it then put a little bit of chilli powder in that and chilli powder in sip that and that will make you feel much better. it'll do exactly the same thing cos of the price. is that what mrs. hamilton that what you and mrs. hamilton do evenings, sit do over winter evenings, sit around cough around knocking up cough medicines. is often medicines. no alcohol is often what being pretty what do you being pretty sophisticated, you think, honey, you trying to you know, if you're trying to sleep actually you know what alcohol does suppresses you initially, then wakes you up later. but little a little later. but if a little a little drop just to kind get you off to sleep you're feeling bit sleep if you're feeling a bit yucky, not a bad thing. oh, okay. and okay. well good to know. and right. what we talk about right. what else we talk about this brazil. okay seen these massive rise? i think this story is interesting. is so interesting. it's not getting lot getting an awful lot of coverage. bolsonaro got voted out. in the are out. lula got in the are depicting this as a far right riots . and i have a problem with riots. and i have a problem with that because it's very about bolsonaro that i recognise far right neil go. absolutely right. i listened to the bbc news this morning . my hotel, and it was morning. my hotel, and it was all these buzz words like far right and so on and extremists and so on and so extraordinary.
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i didn't really know anything very much about brazilian politics. and do i care ? it's politics. and do i care? it's not as important for brazil. but doesit not as important for brazil. but does it affect me? no that why it should be quite such a big news. i don't know. except it feeds into the anti—trump narrative of. yes, everything else that . we are fed by the else that. we are fed by the globalist . they have their own globalist. they have their own agenda , which is why gb news agenda, which is why gb news exists that's to confront this kind of thing, provide an alternative platform, alternative platform, alternative news. and, you know, some people would take that as an insult, but i take that as an enormous compliment to say that i'm that. because you're i'm part of that. because you're right. realise the right. what you realise over the last a half years we've last two and a half years we've realised is that realised this, tonya, is that we're often brainwashed by we're often being brainwashed by one set of the narrative, one perspective if is actually perspective if which is actually predominant leaning. predominant the left leaning. yeah, in brazil yeah, the bolsonaro in brazil dunng yeah, the bolsonaro in brazil during was very during the pandemic was very much personal much about personal responsibility. he wasn't. yeah. and been kicked and that's why he's been kicked tells the is why it's been kicked out because the globalists this is my globalists i mean this is my opinion know gb news opinion you know this is gb news opinion you know this is gb news opinion opinion . the opinion is my opinion. the globalists have an agenda during lockdown first three weeks lockdown after first three weeks
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to save the nhs . yes, i started to save the nhs. yes, i started to save the nhs. yes, i started to go insane because none of the stuff that i was hearing on the news made any sense to me at all. didn't make any sense to all. it didn't make any sense to me. a non—political me. and as a non—political person, didn't even vote for person, i didn't even vote for brexit because i didn't care. i'm not political. i've never seen as political seen myself as a political person. i started thinking i have to involved here have to get involved here because is wrong. this is because this is wrong. this is madness lied to. i'm madness i'm being lied to. i'm being my children are being nudged my children are being nudged my children are being a nudge. and being lied to. a nudge. and i wonder this is the same wonder whether this is the same type it's type of thing. now, it's certainly part of the fever. if brazil is certainly part there's no doubt this political no doubt that this political riot in brazil is as a reaction to the compromises of freedom that we've seen in the last three years with with lock down policy and tony says somehow the reality of what a lot of people were saying didn't match up with what the press were us we should see it also with lockdowns in brazil with the favelas you couldn't you know you can isolate you can't isolate these people and no different is happening to them or to the people that weren't looking , people that weren't looking,
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seeing their grandparents and their family seeing their grandparents and theirfamily ill seeing their grandparents and their family ill members of their family and ill members of that, life so know that, their life and so you know that, their life and so you know thatis that, their life and so you know that is a real highlights. hang on a minute. conned on a minute. we were conned lockdown a and it was a lie lockdown a con and it was a lie for the government is part of the problem solution the problem not the solution that government very often is the just part of the problem, not just part of the problem, not just part of the and we see this as the problem. and we see this as we have been talking it with covid. i i voted against covid. i mean, i voted against all the legislation when was all the legislation when i was in the welsh parliament, the beginning pandemic , beginning of the pandemic, because then we knew that because even then we knew that sweden had a different and there were lots of academics like senator ted oxford university, carl hennig in the centre , carl hennig in the centre, evidence based medicine, etc. etc. who were taking a more balanced, proportionate view. but of course but government of course embarked upon project fear. big time. if you thought project fear in the context of brexit was bad enough in copenhagen into overdrive it kind of into overdrive on it kind of nonh into overdrive on it kind of north korea model and what's result now the health services in meltdown. we have all these thousands of excess deaths every month. the cure was worse than the disease. so everybody should be hugely sceptical about
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anything government says about absolutely increased scepticism . the one phrase that i always remember from the last couple years a genuine pandemic. years is in a genuine pandemic. and to diminish the and this isn't to diminish the experiences of families who those two covid because of course those families exist in their important in a genuine their are important in a genuine pandemic. you didn't have to tell people in the house, tell people stay in the house, you be coaxing out you should be coaxing out because they would know so many people had their people that had lost their lives. moving on in the lives. now, moving on in the guardian, says that care guardian, it says that care providers on providers double fees to take on death discharged patients . death to discharged patients. what's your take on this, neil, in any sort of emergency, why is it there's always somebody in the sidelines wanting to make more well, of course they more money? well, of course they want money. are there want to make money. are there commercial businesses? yes, but it to tango it takes two to tango in a contract and. the government is the biggest purchaser of health services the. if they can't services in the. if they can't strike a good deal with commercial companies who are fundamentally going to do a deal if commercial sense , if it makes commercial sense, then i don't know who can do so. this may just be a negotiating ploy by this may just be a negotiating ploy by one big company, which i
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was reading about. is that the biggest single health provider? but i would be very surprised if the government can't do a sensible deal with private providers who got the spectrum which is currently being unused. let's face it, care homes are very profitable tony. okay, sutton care homes are very profitable. businesses guys, these big companies , it's like a these big companies, it's like a machine. they are very but i actually know people own care homes for people who are elderly, people with learning difficulties . and the government difficulties. and the government has squeezed and, squeezed and squeezed out almost no . so if squeezed out almost no. so if they can see a chance to making some money, i don't blame them because i know that for example, their mortgages up their mortgages have gone up their mortgages have gone up their gone up, and their wages have gone up, and they're having to give. they're still having to give. goodif they're still having to give. good if you're if you're a decent with a care home and i'm not that all all them not sure that all all of them are then squeezed are then you are squeezed totally so you know, it's totally so i you know, it's really difficult for me. this is the clock . it's the big the big clock. it's the big companies. they should companies. i think they should be down into small be broken down into small companies, small people. and then are you they are then are you know, they are responsible for what they do. and then you can go straight to
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that person, say, if this person wasn't, is wasn't, she's right. this is your also it's your fault. but it's also it's like nhs tax, right? so if a private provider of a service or drug or anything staff, if you put on the invoice , why does it put on the invoice, why does it always feel like this tick is zero on the end? yeah well, of course. but why do we it? why do the people in the nhs pay this stuff. yeah but we've seen the same for many, many years in defence you know projects , get defence you know projects, get out of control costs of telephone numbers , figures telephone numbers, figures attached to them and the health service is much the same. look at the scandal over ppe contracts during the covid crisis. yeah, contracts during the covid crisis. yeah , £40 billion. and crisis. yeah, £40 billion. and that's equivalent to four months of the entire national health service cost. and it's all non—military in warehouses costing us 700000 hours a day. i can't even just store stuff that we've never actually used and never will use . i mean, what's never will use. i mean, what's this is why government is part of the problem, not the solution in. they always get it wrong. we needis in. they always get it wrong. we need is to have more private sector involved, more
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competition, more you don't get that with public sector contracting and yet nobody seems to ever ask the prime minister these sorts of questions. tanya and one's hell we should get him on this show. oh, let's not be nice. knows where am. nice. he knows where i am. i don't think i'd be at the top of his to be fair, his list. to be fair, i interviewers. no one is held to account in any business model. if you're the private sector, if you're in the private sector, the would have been the nhs would have been disbanded again . disbanded and rebuilt again. it's failing constantly , year it's failing constantly, year in, year out. i mean , for all my in, year out. i mean, for all my life i'm 54 years off. all my hopeis life i'm 54 years off. all my hope is , oh, thank you for all hope is, oh, thank you for all have all i remember is in the winter and just crisis every single newspaper headline for as long as i can remember. yeah right . thank you guys. tonia right. thank you guys. tonia buxton hamilton there this morning . we had our twitter poll morning. we had our twitter poll running for you. of course, the royal family's motto , never royal family's motto, never complain, never explain . but complain, never explain. but now, after all of these revelations from prince harry, should the family hit back ? should the family hit back? 78.2% of you are very dignified and you say no only 21% of you
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want to hear from the royal family. well, that says it really, doesn't it? okay. we've come to the end of this morning. it has flown by. coming up next, it's tv news live with stephen dixon today. he is superb. you haven't seen stephen before. do stick around. i'm bev turner. i'll see you tomorrow. alex i'll see you tomorrow. i'm alex deakin your latest deakin and this is your latest weather from the met weather update from the met office. out. that's the office. colder out. that's the day. there's some sunshine , but day. there's some sunshine, but there's also quite a few showers and more and windy and there's more and windy weather tomorrow. that's weather to come tomorrow. that's going courtesy this area going to be courtesy this area of low pressure . but we have of low pressure. but we have this one controlling things at moments. isopods on moments. plenty of isopods on the chart. it is pretty blustery and wind is fairly cold, and that wind is fairly cold, making feel certainly a lot making it feel certainly a lot colder than. it through much colder than. it did through much of week as. i said there is of last week as. i said there is some to be and not some sunshine to be had and not too many over eastern too many showers over eastern england. of northeast england. parts of northeast scotland for england. parts of northeast scowest for england. parts of northeast scowest of for england. parts of northeast scowest of scotland for england. parts of northeast scowest of scotland and for england. parts of northeast scowest of scotland and through the west of scotland and through northern ireland, plenty of showers coming in. heavy possibly at possibly thundery showers at times and some snow on the tops of the mountains as well. the showers most scattered further, but and western
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but some for wales and western of england. we might get up to eight or nine in the south later on, but it is going to feel cold out there with six or seven the high and add on that wind it feels a lot chillier. that chilly around this chilly winter be around this evening showers should evening but the showers should fade for it become fade for many. it will become dry . but then that dry for time. but then that weather system we saw, it weather system we saw, here it comes, rain in from the comes, bringing rain in from the west by dawn . that'll lift the west by dawn. that'll lift the temperatures ahead of it . could temperatures ahead of it. could see touches of frost see some touches of frost northeast scotland most northeast scotland but most staying a few degrees above freezing. and then temperatures rising as things turn wet tomorrow. and for right we have met office yellow warnings in place. it's been very wet of late. so this extra rainfall across parts of wales and north—west england could cause some . it's basically a wet start some. it's basically a wet start .then some. it's basically a wet start . then the rain should ease from parts of the south and east of england through day from england through the day and from northern it northern ireland later on it will be blustery , gusty will be blustery, gusty conditions, especially wales, will be blustery, gusty conditwill. especially wales, will be blustery, gusty conditwill be pecially wales, will be blustery, gusty conditwill be mild lly wales, will be blustery, gusty conditwill be mild .y wales, will be blustery, gusty conditwill be mild . well,as, will be blustery, gusty conditwill be mild . well, with but it will be mild. well, with temperatures in the teens for of us, still some heavy rain to come across wales and into the midlands england midlands southwest england dunng and
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midlands southwest england during and still very during tuesday and still very blustery as well main rain area starting to pull away it'll be followed by more showers . that's followed by more showers. that's the picture for wednesday. a of sunshine and showers more persistent rain on thursday. back to and showers on friday. good bye .
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it's 12:00 this is going news live. and here's what's coming up for you. afternoon, prince harry launched a broadside at the king, the queen consort. his brother and other royals in a furious interview in which he defended his memoir. in the interview , he made a serious interview, he made a serious claim saying he angry that the royal family didn't defend meghan in the wake of alleged
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