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tv   Headliners  GB News  January 16, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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good evening. you're with gb news. in a moment, headlines. but first, let's bring you the latest news headlines. and scotland's first minister has called the uk government's decision to block the scottish bill a full frontal attack on the scottish parliament. nicola sturgeon's comments follow westminster, choosing to trigger a section 35 order which stops the scottish bill from becoming law . the bill was designed to it law. the bill was designed to it easier for people to change their legally recognised gender. it allows trans to obtain a gender wrecking certificate without medical diagnosis. the
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first time a scottish law has been blocked for affecting uk wide law . and the other main wide law. and the other main news today, the police commissioner has apologised victims after a serving officer has been revealed to be a sex offender . in has been revealed to be a sex offender. in a has been revealed to be a sex offender . in a tweet somewhat, offender. in a tweet somewhat, roly integrity is our foundation and matt will become ruthless at rooting out those who corrupted . david carrick has pleaded guilty to 49 offences relating to 12 women include 24 counts of rape over a 17 year period. he is due to be sentenced next month. earlier casey, who's conducting a standards review, urged home secretary to hold a full . now mp have voted in full. now mp have voted in favour anti strike laws as . the favour anti strike laws as. the strikes bill passes second reading in parliament. thousands of people praised braved icy conditions to protest against the legislation which would see
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workers having to provide minimum levels of service during industrial action. it means bosses would be legally able to fire employees who chose not to work on strike days . rmt general work on strike days. rmt general secretary mick lynch as well as members of the public and commercial services union and unison, were among those demonstrating outside downing street night. meanwhile, teachers and nurses planning strike action over the next two months as talks with the government over pay have failed to reach resolution. 90% of national education union members in england and wales voted in favour of action . the union favour of action. the union passed the 50% ballot turnout required law for action . required law for action. meanwhile, members of the royal college of nursing will walk out for two days this week . well, as for two days this week. well, as two days next month. both the teachers and nurses unions demanded pay rises above . the demanded pay rises above. the rate of inflation . i just lastly rate of inflation. i just lastly the uk health security has
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issued a severe cold alert response to arctic conditions sweeping into the uk . the met sweeping into the uk. the met office has issued a yellow warning for snow and ice across parts of northern ireland, northwest england and north wales . that lasts until midday wales. that lasts until midday tomorrow. snow will also continue to affect scotland and that will be until wednesday. meanwhile ice warning is in place for south england tonight , overnight until 9 am. tomorrow morning . for devon and tomorrow morning. for devon and cornwall , normally very warm . cornwall, normally very warm. that's it. up to date on tv at the abbey plus radio . you're the abbey plus radio. you're watching gb news. the people's where. now it's time for headliners . headliners. thank you, bonnie. hello. welcome to , headliners. i hello. welcome to, headliners. i am your chief this evening,
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simon evans . tools am your chief this evening, simon evans. tools are am your chief this evening, simon evans . tools are josh simon evans. tools are josh howie , nick dixon . simon evans. tools are josh howie , nick dixon. i'm sure simon evans. tools are josh howie , nick dixon . i'm sure that howie, nick dixon. i'm sure that got us to a good start. howie, nick dixon. i'm sure that got us to a good start . write a got us to a good start. write a to write about what i put in front of me. you could just as easily have been a couple pooches or something. let's have a quick console tasting to see what tuesday's front pages have in for us . the daily mail in store for us. the daily mail . first up, just how many more monsters in uniform? this, of course, relates to revelation that , one of the worst rapists that, one of the worst rapists of recent times has been operating as a police officer. the we have failed he should not have been an officer. and there is the chap in question taking a rather unflattering selfie of himself. the i police crisis . himself. the i police crisis. 800 officers now face inquiry after failure to stop rapist. the guardian. looks like the pictures aren't keeping up. come on, that's it the guardian met
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officer admits to brutal campaign of rape and terror there is at least consensus on what the story is this time. the daily express just how did police miss serial rapist in its ranks and finally the daily star batter being the most feared mafia boss is caught after 30 is on the run. those your front pages. on the run. those your front pages . so let on the run. those your front pages. so let us start things with the horrific story that is dominating the papers just we have it on the guardian . yeah so have it on the guardian. yeah so like you say it's an all of papers but met office admits to brutal campaign of and terror. he's pled guilty to assaults on 12 different women that could well be more from are and this is another police officer obviously had the horrible incident last or the year before
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that 2020 2020 121. i think i was scared of women being raped and killed by another police officer . and killed by another police officer. this one here is another one i think the most disturbing thing is as you're reading a part from the crimes themselves is just the missed opportunities . since they talk, opportunities. since they talk, they identify nine in of the times complaints went against him from complaint so these were people saying he's hate assaulted the break them strangled him yeah there's complaints at the level of the crimes he was not just he's a bit angelus no no yeah like actually from every single time he got dropped or people you know there were so many flags there disgrace and course then he and he didn't live within the met police he lived in a slightly different area. i think like everything else. like so it was like the police forces wouldn't talk to each other probably wouldn't communicate and this is a problem and i respect the police. i respect the job that they do but when
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you have examples of someone like this who's just able to get away with it for long and to away with it for so long and to be clear is, at least on occasion, he was using his authority, as , a authority, his status as, a police officer in order to he was basically telling them, yeah, there's no point you're reporting this because you know, he's you. i'm he's going to believe you. i'm a police intimidating them and police and intimidating them and it's grimness. it's very grim indeed. we also have on that front page sunak brooke's gender law, which i think we're going come on to later. but nick, you've got the i. yeah yeah. so they've gone with police crisis 800 officers face inquiry failure to stop it's off the back of that horrific case is the general horrific case of the now investigating a thousand sexual and domestic abuse claims realised they've missed this i mean the guy we've just mentioned he had a domestic abuse and burglary charge before he joined. he had a he he even joined. he had a he missed a ten year vetting refreshment 11. it took six refreshment. 11. it took six more years to get him. so after that they're going back and going hang, we're not doing any
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of mark rowley saying of this and. mark rowley saying we haven't applied the same sense ruthlessness sense of ruthlessness to guarding integrity, that guarding our own integrity, that we confronting we routinely to confronting criminals. stage criminals. and at this stage kind wonder, do you do kind of wonder, do you do ehhen kind of wonder, do you do either, know i mean. either, you know what? i mean. yeah, sure there are lots of yeah, i'm sure there are lots of great policemen. of course there are. but just think, what are. but you just think, what are. but you just think, what are told to be fair are you so told of? to be fair to, he's only been the job. i to, he's only been in the job. i mean, i'm not saying he's innocent, only in the innocent, but he's only in the job fairly short time. this job a fairly short time. this reflects badly on cressida dick and perhaps sounds like even and perhaps it sounds like even previous leaders previous metropolitan leaders pnor previous metropolitan leaders prior them prior that i couldn't list them off. this is going off. it sort of. this is going back failure, isn't yeah. back failure, isn't it. yeah. and it's people defending their own this going become own and this is going to become like think once like usurious. and i think once savile and his crimes savile dies and his crimes exposed. there is then this of horrific contortion of spasms of guilt and panic. and before know it people are being raked up from 40 years ago for i don't know i mean well they're going to investigate the 45,000 officers and staff are presently serving. so they're going to go and look into anything that they might that might have
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might that they might have missed the. question is why they didn't start this? of course a year ago when another police officer , killed and killed officer raped, killed and killed somebody . they they know that somebody. they they know that these cases are out there. and these cases are out there. and the fact that it takes has to go to this level before they actually start examining themselves. is ridiculous. yeah. also, nick. yeah, they too are covering the classic thing sunak stood up soon that triggers constitutional class was stirred in over gender laws and sturgeon has accused them a full frontal attack on the democratically elected scottish parliament. not the best choice of words. i mean, many people, you know, women will be worried if people like sturgeon get in the way, that will be a full attack that there will be a full attack in room. so it's not in a change room. so it's not the word i would, but it is. it is. this is shocking gender recognition, bill talked about basically you can basically from age 16. you can just yeah, different just say, yeah, a different gender perceive gender now than people perceive to bits of you. i'm paraphrasing, but it's not much more complicated and it's an awful bill sometimes being justified. well, justified. the element as well, which in canada and a which has been in canada and a few other countries, the world,
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but is as as an but which britain is as as an entire entirely right entire the uk is entirely right and can do it much quickly and you can do it much quickly than before. but on the 35, the scotland that they're blocking it course is going to it now of course is going to lead to a court battle where is going and it's all going to hit back and it's all going to hit back and it's all going to hit back and it's all going to kick off and you know, she's complaining about the devolved not devolved powers. i'm not convinced about the devolve powers anyway. you mean if you're that's you're independent that's one thing, you're not, you're thing, but if you're not, you're not. why they're not. and that's why they're allowed like this. allowed to do stuff like this. you should should you say, you know, should should they able to this? but in they be able to do this? but in this case it's a good thing, because it's an awful, awful bill, certainly test bill, this will certainly test the those devolved the strength those devolved powers. course, suppose powers. but of course, i suppose we isn't exactly we should say this isn't exactly a sue next saying a question. sue next saying i don't like that new law. i'm not going to allow you to it. it's a move for constitution. absolutely the fact is absolutely because the fact is that the law in that by putting in the law in scotland, going to have scotland, it's going to have this impact on the uk this adverse impact on the uk equalities for everybody . equalities law for everybody. yeah, uk. how yeah, the entire uk. so how would would it would it would it impact. it wouldn't impact in wouldn't impact anyone in england wales. wouldn't impact anyone in england wales . yeah. because, england or wales. yeah. because, because goes and gets because if someone goes and gets this id if rightly this gender id if rightly they're a woman. yeah. then come to or go to wales and
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to england or go to wales and they might be able to drive on a licence that you've got in another country calling only gender yeah. that's another country calling only gendgo yeah. that's another country calling only gendgo to yeah. that's another country calling only gendgo to women'sh. that's another country calling only gendgo to women's jail,|at's another country calling only gendgo to women's jail, they they go to women's jail, they can this is yeah. can go you know this is yeah. and this, this bill is so bad that they actually voted against of it. someone tried to put an amendment on it to say look like sex offenders, rapists like shouldn't be able to self i.d. into women's prisons and they actually voted that and one thing that i that struck me reading through it was the sort of vocal of the greens on this. they seem to be concerned with this than they are with ecological issues. it seems i'm not sure what part of the green agendaifs not sure what part of the green agenda it's mandate from saving wales amendment was mainly whale and dolphin based but. two thirds of scottish people are actually against this bill. yeah, and a lot of people are saying that this actually part of sturgeon's plan to sort of push through too. she's deliberately pushed this by through to force by the uk government to then protest
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against, to i mean it certainly does seem plausible to , which is does seem plausible to, which is why it's quite odd and frankly irritating to see their side. the green party and sturgeon side refer to this issue being used as a political football, being used as a political football at by both sides. i would argue move by the by the snp but you know anyway everything's a political football it's just a question . football it's just a question. the knowledge. it's not just me. how about front of the how about the front page of the telegraph. yes right. the telegraph. yes right. the telegraph they've obviously gone josh with the main story going but they've got that but it's they've got that they've seem they've got those. so these seem to the snp the and this to be the snp the and this police rapist in my stories but something else that's happening is that the school the air the any you national education union have voted to go on strike. yeah so we've got many strikes coming up from february 1st over into march and i just can't i can't do it i can't homeschool again broken i had hair this was me
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yeah it was traumatic and so i'm slightly conflicted here because i know from experience how hard it teacher's job is to do it. yeah, do it. well, i get it. i do think they deserve more money? i it. but then at the same time i'm angry because i don't want to do it so well. yeah i appreciate that. they want to. and also i'm angry because my are behind you know already so all that stuff before whole before covid where they say like you'd be fine if you took your kids out one day because you were going on houday because you were going on holiday something because they and they would bring out all these reports just missing one day would conclude day of school would conclude down to c and now it's down from b to a c and now it's like, oh, they don't mind if they lose a week, two three. they lose a week, two or three. they've lost lot in the last they've lost a lot in the last couple of years. and the truth is, teachers receive fairly is, the teachers receive fairly generous sort of furlough. they had time off. i'm not had a lot of time off. i'm not saying they wanted time saying they wanted that time off, but there's nothing quite like to disrupt entire
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like schools to disrupt entire economy. effective economy. is there an effective increase bank holiday, whether increase a bank holiday, whether you want or not for the full you want one or not for the full half workforce? yeah. well, personally , i wouldn't be a personally, i wouldn't be a teacher if paid me, which teacher if you paid me, which mean the strike action somewhat pointless. so i do sympathise. like i mean, you have like josh says, i mean, you have to teenagers all to deal with feral teenagers all day. it's very, very day. i'm sure it's very, very difficult. concern be difficult. but concern will be that going to make that you're going to make yourself mean you're yourself obsolete, mean you're already know, yourself obsolete, mean you're alr
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off nick they have some more cheerful with bada bing cheerful news with bada bing which flippant given which is slightly flippant given this guy's horrific crimes it's the well, world's most feared mafia is caught after 30 mafia boss is caught after 30 years the matteo denaro years on the run. matteo denaro from nostra. you'll from the cosa nostra. you'll know godfather. and know from the godfather. and he was ghost because was known as the ghost because he so hard to find even, he was so hard to find even, though he was just in palermo, in clinic. the clinic just in a clinic. the clinic just knocking about as good as it turned that's true. they turned out. that's true. they couldn't they couldn't find him or they wouldn't he is. that's wouldn't find if he is. that's the because they're the question, because they're saying why did he avoid detection? all these detection? he's done all these on crimes. he said he on so many crimes. he said he could fill a cemetery with his murders and yet they didn't pick up. eventually did. and up. eventually they did. and people it because he people are saying it because he paid was because he paid people or was it because he had people but he was had secrets on people but he was just knocking around in this sort town completely fine. but now finally picked up now they finally picked him up and to list some of and don't want to list some of his crimes, have the his crimes, but we have the 5 am. repeat. and yeah, it's a.m. repeat. and so yeah, it's not funny. you know, the not funny funny. you know, the mafia is interesting mafia thing is interesting because there have been some amazing made about it. the godfather sort of towers godfather is sort of towers above them, but a lot scorsese's work you help but work and so on. you help but glamorise slightly know these glamorise it slightly know these people appear fearless , they people appear fearless, they appear decisive. they're always
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immaculately dressed gorgeous immaculately dressed in gorgeous traditional tailoring. they seem to have family values and a certain kind of concern of a devout that's quite appealing andifs devout that's quite appealing and it's not that's not the whole story. i mean, it's almost the murder in the in the villainy and the coercion are almost just seen as a sort of shadow business model. you know, there's just slightly sort of on there's just slightly sort of on the dark side until operating costs are sort of necessary and then you go to somewhere you don't really have to walk around palermo, be honest, see palermo, to be honest, and see the unfinished engineering the unfinished civic engineering projects half projects know in the half bndges projects know in the half bridges and the foul bridges and the and the foul stench uncleaned up litter stench of uncleaned up litter the yeah, you know the streets and yeah, you know it , is never the streets and yeah, you know it, is never as the streets and yeah, you know it , is never as pretty the streets and yeah, you know it, is never as pretty as it is it, is never as pretty as it is it somehow and wasn't it somehow and there wasn't enough focus in the godfather on the civil engineering the unfinished civil engineering part. really, was it for the final break? that movie guess? to be fair, the sopranos, when they're but anyway that's all for part one join us after the we have the home office banning as a phrase bbc bans critics of
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trans and alison fans jeremy clarkson the firm not the jungle although be fair is probably unwelcome in both. see you in a couple of minutes .
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and welcome back to headline as i am simon evans. i will be taking through tuesday's top stories in the company of comedians josh howie and, nick dixon. a more conventional introduction there. so kicking off with tuesday's gendered language again. nick. yeah, don't use the word homosexual. home office, civil servants told them this is the homeland security group went to a slightly bizarre talk, but they were told genderqueer a blanket term for those who don't their genuine binary terms each identity is valid and deserves respect does it though? and they were not homosexual were told not to use homosexual homosexuality because . that's homosexuality because. that's considered medical and
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considered a medical term and it reduces people sexual reduces people to purely sexual terms, which this whole movement seems reducing seems to be about reducing people sexuality, as people to their sexuality, as far i can see. but there was far as i can see. but there was a email as well and they a bizarre email as well and they were shown an excerpt from an email sorry for calling email which sorry for calling you mate. now don't think it was a wrong number. it wasn't sorry for it was that you for you a mate. it was that you call because that's call someone mate because that's some microaggression. some sort of microaggression. and also nice thing and it was also a nice thing with that it doesn't say with me is that it doesn't say probably to or something it says there a 90 minute virtual there was a 90 minute virtual session queer session on the queer reconnecting with lgbt plus reconnecting with the lgbt plus people from long ago . queer the people from long ago. queer the homeless like a western . yeah. homeless like a western. yeah. and another of these and it's another of these classic government classic things. the government has now distanced themselves. the home office of distanced themselves from which they like to do. but it just carries on happening anyway. the woke civil service and then service it runs amok and then some says. oh, no, some minister says. oh, no, that's what doing. that's not what we're doing. well, approve of that. well, we don't approve of that. and it happens again. and then it happens again. i mean it's a tired trope, mean i know it's a tired trope, isn't it, to complain the political correctness has gone mad. about mad. but the point about political that's so tiresome is it's endlessly fooling it's just endlessly fooling around with language doesn't change new
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change anything, and the new term bring in within months term you bring in within months has been co—opted by the playground as another term of abuse know, special needs, abuse, you know, special needs, which supposed the most which was supposed be the most like delightfully sort of careful sensitive way , careful and sensitive way, referring who had referring to people who had educational, difficult is immediately and immediately becomes so and special needs to remain constant that though this is much more insidious than that this alone the adults in that this is people with an ideology and they're to their they're trying to spread their ideology, of this this ideology, sort of this this gender ideology . yeah, that gender ideology. yeah, that i disagree with you is saying you reducing everything sexuality. no they want they're trying to do the opposite. they're trying to sort of everything to make it sort of everything this of pansexual, this kind of pansexual, you're you're to gender, you're attracted to a gender, not yeah, exactly. right. not to a. yeah, exactly. right. yes reason they're yes that the reason they're right say it sounds too right there say it sounds too scientific because don't want science homosexual does sound scientific , which is exactly scientific, which is exactly what being homophobic is. you are attracted to people of the same sex. yeah, i don't want that word because they want it to you're talking someone to be. you're talking to someone of same what is of the same gender. what is gender gender's anything? i mean, do sometimes wonder if mean, you do sometimes wonder if the if mean, you do sometimes wonder if theif end mean, you do sometimes wonder if the if end game is the
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the if the end game is the dissolution everything it dissolution everything isn't it into mean just like the into colour mean just like the corruption cosy . anyone corruption of a cosy. anyone would want that. but it does seem hard sometimes to just to fathom any of the like ultimate scenario, kind of utopia scenario, any kind of utopia they're working towards, because they're working towards, because the number people who the number of people who actually trans in this sense or have a which doesn't conform to their physical whatever tiny . it their physical whatever tiny. it seems like there's a larger number of people who are trying to weaponize is that that problem that that dysphoria whatever you want to call it in order to undermine and all of the structures that hold society up right you know i do think it's 0.5. yeah most who are trans and non—binary so they're obviously activists working allegedly on their behalf or co—opting that to reshape society . actually, there's society. actually, there's something else there where there's an ironic thing or where they're trying to push the word genden they're trying to push the word gender. queer. yeah and that's the word they're saying you should use. the way, there's should use. by the way, there's a lot homosexuals really a lot of homosexuals who really that them , a very offensive that for them, a very offensive word was used to attack
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word that was used to attack them. yeah. for decades queer and they don't like that it's been appropriated by mostly non homosexual people . yeah. i.e. homosexual people. yeah. i.e. people like oh i find some people like oh i find some people at all. i'm queer. yeah people who like people who are like a kind of i remember when they first came out was accused of sort of co—opting a bowie as well co—opting gay tropes because they have a kind of glamour to them that you suggest you're bit of a think to be you're a bit of a i think to be fair bowie did see it through i think you've done it through that you can say you want anderson that was his name tuesday his daily mail and we continue in a similar thing someone called nathan wren is in a rant about men who identify as birds. there we go . yeah. so has birds. there we go. yeah. so has fear of being called transphobic led bbc allow militant proton group to censor reporting this is a very good article it's in the mail it's quite a long and
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comprehensive and essentially what it proves a bunch of different examples is how the pride organisation within the bbc has become very powerful. it's an lgbtq a—plus organisation and how they have essentially sense and balance within this debate of gender ideology. so they call the bbc pride flag. it's not it's pride like an in—house organisation and powerful they are. and when they go through of these examples and what they've done to damage, impartial. examples and what they've done to damage, impartial . and i to damage, impartial. and i would argue that of the reasons that the gb gb news exists is as a countenance to this so you can actually hear about this stuff that you weren't getting from the bbc or other media institutions . and so some of institutions. and so some of these here are crazy about how these here are crazy about how the influence that they actually of went into where they the for example, they put through article about how this line called the cotton ceiling, which is about how lesbians were being
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fairly coerced, literally being coerced , having sex with people coerced, having sex with people , men, biologic men with willies essentially. yeah called themselves lesbian. and if they didn't they were being told they were a bigot and how the pride organisation how they tried to basically get this article shut down then how they unbelievably got to change they they changed the word of a of sexual abuse they changed her words she was talking he them and they and then they changed a he and they changed would they you would never do that then. so just shows the power of this bbc pride and how a lot of other journalists are coming through and saying, we're don't and saying, we're not we don't feel safe we can actually feel safe that we can actually report about of this report or talk about of this stuff because the power within the bbc this group, i mean, i the bbc of this group, i mean, i know it been going on for know it has been going on for some soon as you say, some time. as soon as you say, as as channel has been as long as this channel has been going this programme going on, this programme has going on, this programme has going was going there, there was a suggestion that stonewall as an organisation had an extraordinary amount of power. and they're there
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extraordinary amount of power. and extent they're there extraordinary amount of power. and extent there'sy're there extraordinary amount of power. and extent there'sy're theof to some extent there's a kind of pipeline between them and this bbc what would you bbc printing. what would you think mean. the woke think i mean. yeah the woke hydra calling now cut hydra i'm calling it now you cut off of stonewall and off the head of stonewall and then pops up. yeah then bbc pride pops up. yeah it's phenomenon a small it's this phenomenon of a small minority dictating when you have many individuals within an organisation with organisation won't agree with this says in this stuff. but as it says in the they feel bullied, the article, they feel bullied, they they can't speak they feel they can't speak because not because they're not as ideologically driven the mad ideologically driven as the mad people enforcing stuff people who are enforcing stuff that people that is normal. people are saying. is bit off. saying. this is all a bit off. i'm sure if i should say i'm not sure if i should say anything. you're up against ideologues who are incredibly driven. you know. driven. and then, you know. and then there someone then then there someone said something interesting to me today the reason today about the one reason politicians have gone so woke and politicians politicians have gone so woke and work politicians politicians have gone so woke and work virtuousliticians politicians have gone so woke and work virtuouslitithey're doing work virtuous is they're worried politics, worried once they politics, they need you know, need a job. and so, you know, once you have these these these these bbc and whoever it is running all these institutions, you have to then sort of, you know them. yeah but know placate them. yeah but yeah. so you just have to yeah. and so you just have to blame here at the bbc blame the bosses here at the bbc who a small who essentially just a small vocal have they they've bowed to the cowardice. they also took it. there's one more thing.
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there was this big article, this this trans weightlifter from new zealand, laurel hubbard. but within article basically within article they basically said, no between men said, oh, there's no between men and biologically in taiwan and women biologically in taiwan straight. this is. and women biologically in taiwan straight. this is . we can use straight. this is. we can use our eyes and this is coming from our eyes and this is coming from our state broadcast tim davie has indicated he wants to take that on we've yet to see much evidence of so far sticking with the male police have identified a way to facilitate the school to prison pipeline for many black and ethnic young people. i'm not sure that sounds like a good idea. nick well, yeah, this is new. 1000 police officers are operating schools britain operating schools across britain now. that police now. we hope that a good police officer the evil ones. we officer is not the evil ones. we discussed earlier. yeah, but so this from the this is coming from the runnymede who is sort a runnymede trust who is sort of a lefty think who was saying lefty think tank who was saying that? encourages the that? this encourages the so called, said, school called, as you just said, school to prison pipeline. and the idea is you're schools where there's higher incidents of free school meals and tend to be schools as well, where there's higher incidence so incidence of black kids. and so on and the idea is your your them and you're doing a stop and all kind of thing. and so
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all this kind of thing. and so it's because most it's controversial because most of the people are boys that they search, a lot of them are black and so that's where it and all that. so that's where it gets controversial, people say you're targeting and you're you're targeting and that you're encouraging to encouraging this pipeline to prison. is prison. the other argument is that actually just coming that actually you're just coming into kids getting into to stop kids getting stabbed whatever is and stabbed or whatever it is and you're actually and, know you're actually and, you know and stop these kids and arguably to stop these kids going further off the near where they are if they're bringing a knife into school, then they're probably already at some extent and that's and they're saying that's hobbled of hobbled by the presence of police schools, but it's kind police in schools, but it's kind of police shoot an america. of like police shoot an america. theidea of like police shoot an america. the idea of should you have armed armed teachers sorry and in and like, well, in schools and it's like, well, not but you've got not ideally, but you've got school do. so school issue is what you do. so once we've let society get bad then you can have you can then then you can have you can have a police in school because you didn't have them on the streets offering a deterrent in the place. remember, the first place. remember, there was we did cover it was a school and we did cover it on this. it was very early on, i think it was in where think it was in america where a lot of dads had started in and they were kind of working on a road to scheme and they were just middle aged dads, but just like middle aged dads, but
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they little bit more they were just a little bit more rough, suppose the rough, i suppose in the teachers. lot of the teachers. and a lot of the teaching staff were women and they were just imposing degree of corridors and so of order in the corridors and so on. it worked quite well. perhaps they slightly perhaps they were just slightly i can't expect dads to i mean, you can't expect dads to do jobs ideally do that. dads have jobs ideally and ones that don't and the ones that don't have jobs not necessarily going jobs are not necessarily going to be the best ones to present a role model, but it's there's got to be some middle to be some kind of middle ground, maybe between totally militarised ground, maybe between totally mililarised it's such a huge but i mean, it's such a huge jump, within year. yeah jump, 50% within a year. yeah going out the numbers but on top of that well this article doesn't anything about like doesn't say anything about like how there how how many arrests there were, how many convictions that might have come that come through. and the thing that we're hearing is we're not also hearing about is when organisation when this this organisation talks say school talks about it can say school prison pipeline. well arguably by preventing disruption it's other kids going that path but okay so absolutely a two stage telegraph now one last story before the break this the most dangerous third rail of exiled royalty in the world looks set to claim another victim, josh , to claim another victim, josh, this is this the clarks? oh,
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jeremy clarkson, yes . jeremy jeremy clarkson, yes. jeremy clarkson likely to be dropped by after the meghan comment . think after the meghan comment. think they're pretty much saying it's happened now. supposedly they were when after this were furious when after this column the big four it's the most complained article all overtly the paper yeah yeah overtly in the paper yeah yeah and look we talked about quite a few times and the idea that there's context that has to be added to it. his excuses say i wish i'd just said the reference like, but somehow that if people knew it from game of thrones then they wouldn't be that bothered it. that's not the problem. what he's said though, and when people who have defended he's never said, defended it, he's never said, oh, joking, he's put an oh, i was joking, he's put an apology screen. now he says apology on screen. now he says things joking manner, things in such a joking manner, doesn't is very hard to doesn't it? that is very hard to tell. not same now. it tell. it's not the same now. it is. it's too late now, definitely. i mean, i have a certain amount of sympathy for him because obviously him because he was obviously using effect. i don't using for comic effect. i don't think expects he would think anyone expects he would honestly or honestly anticipate or urge or anyone, know , want me. it's anyone, you know, want me. it's like a fantasy, i'm still like a fantasy, but i'm still that you only are sort of more so on this because
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so anti clarke's on this because he it was a joke obviously that i hate on a cellular level etc. obviously the a cynic would say just worried about its position . i mean clarkson's grand . . i mean it's clarkson's grand. there's a massive long apology and if so i think so if we just worried about his job if we take it face value, obviously you can't apologise to ideologues. you can't apologise all you can't apologise to them all because have because they don't have a mechanism forgiveness and mechanism for forgiveness and they're not acting in good faith. we saw that faith. and we saw that immediately apologised, immediately after he apologised, then issued then harry and meghan issued this okay, that's this statement that okay, that's all well. but what all very well. but what about his rhetoric? and it's his hate rhetoric? and it's theories misogyny in all of theories and misogyny in all of his articles, they want him to go further, can't apologise to people and more people learn. and it's and i think what and it's true. and i think what said true, i what he said was true, i think what he said was true, i think what he said honest mean in his said was honest mean in his column. think gave it in column. i think he gave it in the he took and the thing he took wrong. and this is not this should not be a sacking offence but he got the form the column wrong. he form of the column wrong. he just he worded it slightly wrongly what he trying to wrongly so what he was trying to express was degree to which express was the degree to which he incapacity by he himself was incapacity by hatred yeah hatred for this woman. yeah rather saying, you know rather than saying, you know what, think we should
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what, i really think we should go out and. yeah yeah. well i think saying it like think that saying it is like even it's incandescent, even they oh it's incandescent, it violence. it does, it incited violence. it does, it does incite violence. the does incite violence. but the thing counter when thing is just to counter when they is he never said it's a they say is he never said it's a joke. that's been able to explain all jokes. mean he explain all jokes. i mean he would go it was obviously would just go it was obviously yeah said it yeah he could have said it obviously it's not necessary obviously but it's not necessary to that. but now to go away with that. but now she's him like she's destroying him like certainly. so it's kind of ironic she is danger. tell ironic she is danger. i tell you, not going to do any you, i'm not going to do any jokes that's all for jokes about her. that's all for part join us after the break. part to join us after the break. so we have to go to the break. it's a little poor single. why homeworkers might want to go back office and babies back to the office and babies that vegan. it's that are vegan. i am sure it's their you in a their choice. see you in a couple minutes .
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welcome to headline news tuesdays. male off the third section, we have some figures from oxfam that suggests that
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really very few of us need worry about helping the world's poor after . josh yeah, no, we just. after. josh yeah, no, we just. that 1. yeah you're not in the 1, are you. i don't believe. well these aren't even the ones. are these the 1. however, maybe. yeah. the things that seem to be about the top ten, but they mean the 1% richest 1% of those living in the uk now wealthier than two thirds of the rest of the country. and by the way, only one of those people who are in the top ten of that one. yeah are actually uk born uk . so are actually uk born uk. so there's a lot of foreign money. but that's that's slightly but that's that's a slightly separate. a non—dom separate. so they're a non—dom does that mean they taxes does that mean they pay taxes here? that james dyson here? would that be james dyson or ratcliffe? i think even a orjim ratcliffe? i think even a sean think both british sean they i think both british ratcliffe went take ratcliffe is we went to take takeover monday night and that ratcliffe is we went to take takeov solve nday night and that ratcliffe is we went to take takeov solve jim/ night and that ratcliffe is we went to take takeovsolve jim being: and that ratcliffe is we went to take takeovsolve jim being britishiat ratcliffe is we went to take takeovsolve jim being british as would solve jim being british as well. yes, that's right. yeah. so 2.8 trillion between them, the top % yes. they've got 20. the top% yes. they've got 20. yeah 21 trillion. and that interesting thing here is the essentially the division between extreme poverty and, extreme wealth is getting ever wider .
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wealth is getting ever wider. just to correct you just in case 21 trillion is around the world oh. so 2.8 trillion in the uk. yeah. yeah. so we got roughly 1% of the 1. yeah. so but what this means is that this is for the first time in the last two years, the first time the idea about like extreme wealth is this is what some people would argue is yeah, well these people are getting really but are getting really rich, but that's because all that's okay because we're all getting yeah that's not getting rich. yeah that's not what's happening. getting what's happening. it's getting where got where people are is, is got bad. i i used to be very much a i mean i used to be very much a kind oh you know rising tide kind of oh you know rising tide lifts kind of guy but lifts all boats kind of guy but i see it's gone. it's broken. people drowning. yeah, well, people are drowning. yeah, well, in known as the in maths it's known as the potato distribution and it's just thought to be a mathematical you can't avoid. andrew call have andrew tate we'll call it have nots have yachts so it nots and have yachts so it a different but no one sees we are solve it obviously no wing system has ever solved it. you still a few people still up with a few people that top know the rest top well you know one the rest of living people say don't you think piketty the french guy who wrote the rewrite wrote on capitalism the rewrite of came of marx's capital, came out about nine years ago. about eight or nine years ago. he the only thing that ever
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he said the only thing that ever sold right ? war he said the only thing that ever sold right? war is the sold is war, right? war is the great redistribution of otherwise tend to otherwise wealth does tend to get large faster than earnings can keep up. so if you want your asset rich, you start to get away . yeah, well, i was going to away. yeah, well, i was going to say want someone could say i want to if someone could solve they'd be a very rich solve it, they'd be a very rich person because a perennial person because it's a perennial problem. it's a little problem. and it's also a little further. i knew that this has increased in the last few years and lockdowns massively exacerbated it and that whole thing of lefties thing and lots of lefties supported though supported that even though it was a wealth transfer. so i'm saying only that they supported the well transfer. we the biggest well transfer. we are the biggest in are one of the biggest in history, left just history, which is a left just just in the just the broadest terms. like without into the practicalities of it in principle, would you be in favour of a wealth tax if it just drove capital flight out of the country it could be some universal agreed one says here increased taxation has never worked does it because there's always that there's always loop but in principle you would do it a wealth tax not income tax. a wealth tax not an income tax. a yeah i think but a wealth tax. yeah i think but yeah course who's yeah but then of course who's going be spending this money
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going to be spending this money and going to be and how are they going to be spending i certainly trust spending it? i certainly trust the present government to spend it. well, just vouchers it. well, no, just in vouchers guess. well, oxfam guess. yeah. okay well, oxfam hoping to spend some of it anyway and luck to them. they do seem to be focusing on the political stirring these days rather than getting tinned goods out to ethiopia . i don't know out to ethiopia. i don't know whether that's a good thing or not. next story we have tuesday's telegraph . i feel tuesday's telegraph. i feel almost cruel asking your response for this. yeah, i was going to say thanks for giving me. this one, this is a reveal the true cost of being single and. finally i'm a victim groups it feels good it single it feels good and what it single people are forced to spend it feels good and what it single people are forced to spen d £860 people are forced to spend £860 more a month than those in couples . it's shocking stuff and couples. it's shocking stuff and we say we already identify over this . we have less in savings, this. we have less in savings, less cash left over, less for retirement less equity. even the taxes is against single people that specific breaks for people married to civil partnerships. and you can also you can combine income in a way you can't if
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you're single, blah, blah, blah. yeah. so it's extraordinary victims and but what you're really paying for , simon, is a really paying for, simon, is a kind of misanthropy tax. you're paying kind of misanthropy tax. you're paying from people, paying being away from people, if about throughout if you think about throughout society, you pay to get away from people. first class box, an executive the football. executive box at the football. that's you're always paying that's what you're always paying for you have for elbow room. yeah so you have to with people that's to put up with people that's that's can't i'm that's the part i can't what i'm doing instead is working two jobs trying to get a mortgage myself because myself into the ground because otherwise know otherwise after we didn't know what used to somebody what we used to find somebody you your with who you could share your with who worked hours from worked different hours from you and just never saw them that and you just never saw them that you leave post—it notes and share that driver share a fridge with that driver suggested that to me the other day, he didn't me well. day, but he didn't know me well. so going to obviously you so i'm going to obviously you don't enough. don't know me well enough. i kick off a netflix series about a murder. i've been living a murder. yeah i've been living a murder. yeah i've been living a you, joshua. at a life. i love you, joshua. at the other end of the well, this the other end of the well, this the one thing doesn't mention the one thing it doesn't mention in is i go yeah, so it's in the is i go yeah, so it's £860 more expensive. you be single then you have kids. single and then you have kids. we'll kids. yeah. see we'll have five kids. yeah. see if, what that number is. the if, see what that number is. the one you i certainly think one thing you i certainly think about actually get
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about footprint i actually get money not having all those money for not having all those polluting get polluting kids. now you get a dog here never mind about carbon you're literal filthy you're quite literal filthy footprint that. anyway, footprint all over that. anyway, that's another matter. tuesday star and our bosses at gb star now and our bosses at gb news ever install software we're done oh this is kind of one done for oh this is kind of one of those terrifying lazy of those terrifying stories lazy asked repay wages off she's asked to repay wages off she's caught out by bosses by software so she worked for an accountancy in vancouver in canada accountant . yeah and then and accountant. yeah and then and basically they fired because they were like you're not doing yourjob as they were like you're not doing your job as well you're not yourjob as well you're not doing the hours you said so sued them and said well i want, i want get paid the money. well i was owed and actually because they and secretly this this program called time come onto our not only does it our computer. not only does it seem she's on seem like when she's logged on it what software she's. it sees what software she's. yeah to do that yeah you've got to do that otherwise just otherwise you could be just browsing. that was which browsing. oh that was which essentially they proved that she was only not get the was not only did she not get the money had to pay back a grand because basically proved because they basically proved that hours. it's that she had those hours. it's always counter cases and always the counter cases and it's always the counter suit should in these should never sue in these situations. full theft,
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situations. full time theft, which amazing thing much. which is an amazing thing much. if you could steal time, you could live forever. if you stole all like an x—men. all that. sounds like an x—men. yeah. too. i mean, yeah. yeah, me too. i mean, i worked so hard, especially in this was one of this new day. if was one of these on my computer, if find i'm actually working like, 30 and he's getting too and he's like, he's getting too much. so yeah, i'd fine. you much. so yeah, i'd be fine. you know, amazon warehouse how know, like amazon warehouse how they've ever oh they've sort of like got ever oh yeah is like the white yeah this is like the white collar version yeah and collar version of that yeah and i it's scary as someone i think it's scary as someone warehouse to work hard warehouse they have to work hard because are robots they're because there are robots they're working have no working with and robots have no sympathy keep the sympathy they'll just keep the books if you sleep one books and you if you sleep one of these at home, if you're an accountant working home, accountant working from home, you or something to you need a robot or something to come on project son. come up on project tuesday, son. now progressive is taking now progressive school is taking a and relief out a discipline and relief out of the blair witch playbook. oh, yeah? you mean we're yeah? so what, you mean we're furious? kids furious? schools made our kids face 20 minutes as a face the war for 20 minutes as a punishment. and stay inside lunchtime. these are lunchtime. so this. these are people's wednesfield and semester which were taken wolverhampton which were taken over academy over by the matrix academy trust, also andrew trust, which is also andrew tate's and a good tate's online course and a good reference . yeah, well i have reference. yeah, well i have a quote i have to hit supposedly i
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was really . yeah, i've got was really. yeah, i've got a deal with that is of those things that was made to make trust. yeah yeah. yeah. so anyway they signed a petition let our kids be free because they're saying these new rules are too draconian . and some of are too draconian. and some of them did seem a bit silly. this staring walls and not being allowed outside at lunch, so on. although i would say as a general, need about as much general, kids need about as much discipline get now, discipline as they can get now, which mikayla school which is why the mikayla school is well. yeah, that seems is so well. yeah, that seems like discipline like genuine discipline and respect pupils. respect instilled in the pupils. whereas to me if this whereas it sounded to me if this is a more like is true a bit more like arbitrary, draconian, just like losing your temper going right the first of you the corner. first of all, you know, very hard to tread know, very, very hard to tread that getting the that line, isn't it getting the balance yeah, but balance right. yeah, but authoritarian headmaster, my authoritarian new headmaster, my eldest they needed eldest school and they needed little bit more discipline and so yeah a lot of parents were complaining even i was like, wait a minute you are. yeah 30 seconds late and really you've got and messed up at got to stay. and it messed up at home. often couple home. there's often a couple of moments where they of feel like
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they're being out of shape and then then they then they attack and then they and go with it the and they go with it and the person one of the mums has started let our be started this let our kids be free campaign. but one of the things that she i'm things that she said i'm surprised didn't on this surprised you didn't go on this is of her complaints is is she one of her complaints is that because they're sort of staying in during lunch she's saying children saying that many children increases children increases the risk of children getting illnesses. yeah getting more and illnesses. yeah that's in school the that's the they're in school the yeah. lunchtime is yeah. being in lunchtime that is just to make a just not going to make a difference. weird isn't how difference. it's weird isn't how people justify what gut people justify what their gut instinct that this is instinct is just that this is wrong they to come up wrong but they have to come up with. a number of with. there are a number of approved things that you can oh, this is the safeguarding, you know, whatever. may sound know, whatever. and it may sound ridiculous. tuesdays and ridiculous. josh tuesdays and nutritionists making your baby veganis nutritionists making your baby vegan is a dangerous quite literally so turns you into a camel. i'd say the word warning to parents over making babies vegan dietitians plant based diet can stunt growth so this is now on the nhs staff for website and they're basically saying that yes, you can be a vegan but
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you have to make sure that they have the necessary supplements. yeah, real dangers with for example, if you don't have enough iodine you've got enough iodine then you've got deficiency. don't if you deficiency. if you don't if you don't get enough b12, then can have anaemia. but what about protein when you're protein? it must be when you're growing and using your brain development. now all this development. now all of this becomes like a parrot. there are lots of interviews here with vegan saying, oh, we're vegan and saying, oh, we're raising get to a raising a kid. when you get to a certain study that was and certain study that was done and it says that 187 vegan kids will study they were basically study and they were basically three shorter . yeah, three centimetres shorter. yeah, for me, that's enough that's like here's some good stuff face because a lot of vegan the image of vegan cooking vegan parents i mean ever since these and what have you is a well—meaning bearded hippies isn't it cooking up a lot of falafel and famous but i think a lot of people go i'm a vegan and they just eat cnsps. i'm a vegan and they just eat crisps . you mean it's like crisps. you mean it's like there's. there's no attempt to kind of interlock all the different. i mean , you know, different. i mean, you know, there are there are lots of
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culinary traditions around the world are essentially vegan, which you can get into a mediterranean or southern indian or whatever . a lot of people or whatever. a lot of people just don't have the resources or the all the kind of tradition in their own home to be to their own home to be able to follow those things. and it is i mean, historically speaking, my own considerable own parents, considerable shorter than the i am. and the my kids are , you know, it's all my kids are, you know, it's all about nutrition. north korean is, i think, five inches shorter than south koreans. but then nutrition is all in there. exactly the same people. and that's why it's an appalling thing do to child and thing to do to your child and also saying, well, you also the nhs saying, well, you can them soy, but then they can give them soy, but then they become soy boys of course famously because these also if they reduced or have they have reduced iodine or have iron they have a iron deficiency, they have a reduced intellectual capacity, so become so they'll definitely become vegans it's final vegans and then it's my final point that parent here is point is that parent here is saying that because she gives her various vegetables her daughter various vegetables she'll to be less fussy she'll grow to be less fussy about food. be a vegan. about food. she'll be a vegan. what you talking as what are you talking about as triple whammy. that's it for part three. coming up after the break we have a statue that is
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unlikely to be vandalised how thor may be using lasers or battling them why you battling them and why you wouldn't to daughter's wouldn't want to your daughter's boyfriend after all. we'll see you in a couple of minutes.
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and welcome back to headliners for our final walk to tuesday's mail. now of martin luther king have queuing to denounce the hideous monstrosity in his honoun hideous monstrosity in his honour. nick, i imagine , already honour. nick, i imagine, already had a look at this initially, but yeah and i'm sure you've probably seen it on twitter, michael, describe it. he said, i have a nightmare. there was a kind of so just strange. kind of so it's just strange. it's the embrace of martin it's this the embrace of martin luther wife. they luther king and his wife. they don't in the in the don't have heads in the in the sculpture . because what is sculpture. so because of what is . well, it's just sort of just all. yeah if you look at the original photo, it gets bit better, but it's still a bit weird. and the cousin mlk, his wife, scott king, wife, coretta scott king, says
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it's well. he called it it's awful as well. he called it a waste of money. he said a woke waste of money. he said that wasted $10 million, that they wasted $10 million, whatever is , he says a woke whatever it is, he says a woke algorithm is broke. i don't algorithm is just broke. i don't know what else to tell you. there it is. you can see. yeah, there you go. that's one of the less. and there's one angle less. yeah and there's one angle where looks like he's where it looks like he's basically weighing a man's member, no, member, isn't it? oh, no, no. there's angle where it there's another angle where it looks oral . oh really. looks like the oral. oh really. yeah. it's a really clever sort of magic trick that's i think probably the artist just isn't very good at faces and he just leaves one. i don't think very hard to do on that. i'm almost and that's what it is. he tried to explain hank willis thomas the he said when we recognise all storytelling an all storytelling is an abstraction an abstraction or as an abstraction, it allows abstraction, hopefully it allows us open more dynamic us to be open to more dynamic and forms of and complex forms of representation. that's an abstract like somebody abstract line like like somebody else with a who is his is tenuous. no just said melt it down. i mean, that's that's king's wife's cousin is the guy doesn't hold is based on right
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wife but this is the most intense connection the most anyway they're speaking the truth seneca scottish because you don't know they're speaking the truth despite that they should melt . the folk myths should melt. the folk myths though . do you know what i mean? though. do you know what i mean? somehow it is isn't it. you just sense it is. no, i don't. if it is anything to work, it's just a bad decision. one thing i think it might be is sort of feminist because it's saying like he was the woman behind him and their relationship important. relationship was important. you see it be see what i mean? it might be saying, hey, you think sort saying, hey, but you think sort of equals. yeah. because otherwise it'd just be mlk. jemele oh, would jemele wouldn't. oh, that would be the heads. yeah, be the two of the heads. yeah, but you know me if but you wouldn't you know me if you to honour mlk. i don't you going to honour mlk. i don't know. i think there might be some feminist kind of. some sort of feminist kind of. you have maybe you can't have any. maybe because ugly art because it's ugly modern art people it's woke. people just think it's woke. yeah know, it would be nice yeah you know, it would be nice to representative to just go to representative art, wouldn't my statue that art, wouldn't it my statue that was the thing that you could was of the thing that you could go oh that's statue martin go oh that's a statue of martin luther king his great ally luther king and his great ally why beauty matters. roger scruton just finally, scruton also just finally, it's
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the waiting the battle we've been waiting for, not between the statues, lasers lightning. yeah. lasers versus, lightning. yeah. scientists use, powerful laser to and world to divert lightning and world study. i don't know how someone came the idea for this. came up with the idea for this. it doesn't at all how it oh you it's a bit of that. okay do you think they would like making some on on joe guess you some of it on on joe guess you know what would work would let you yeah so they you with fun. yeah so they basically hooked up this they here's a photo of it essentially they they captured it in slo mo this green laser managed to kind of get the lightning come down it so wound iron so lightning a laser forms a conductive that essentially what they want. yeah that's so i guess the idea is a practical keep this keep a sort of lightning away from buildings or yeah and maybe to harness the power of that that would the thing wouldn't it the link the power lightning every every night earth apparently if you could harness it or would would run the world's batteries invented back to the future yeah the green laser into the moon they're going to a light coil
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look , most of the lightning look, most of the lightning takes place in some of the lesser advantage parts of the world that have very little on this. so some other than that powerful laser sounds like something that romberg and boasts that has a very you boasts that he has a very you have very powerful he have a very powerful laser he plays on the beach. yeah plays his dog on the beach. yeah and powerful into and firing powerful lasers into the divert lightning the sky can. divert lightning don't gates because don't tell bill gates because he's already trying to block the sun. you heard that he's sun. have you heard that he's going dark to going to fire dark matter to block so that would be a block the so that would be a good suggestion good good suggestion i think good yeah bill. yeah, yeah bill gates bill. yeah, well, not. bill gates, the well, maybe not. bill gates, the geo engineer climate geo engineer research on climate crisis up driving crisis rather than up driving i'm that you know they'll i'm for that you know they'll block out the sun for. you don't mess with the sun. simon this block out the sun for. you don't mesfamous he sun. simon this block out the sun for. you don't mesfamous he the. simon this block out the sun for. you don't mesfamous he the matrixn this block out the sun for. you don't mesfamous he the matrix andis the famous of the matrix and will matrix would fine tues will matrix would be fine tues metro the more niche metro as one of the more niche human issues i've encountered lately. yeah, is an lately. nick yeah, this is an excellent important story. excellent and important story. so thousand so scientist wants thousand pounds because he got rs i.e. from repeatedly squeezing pipettes might say he has repetitive strain. oh yeah, that's why i'm paid the big book 48 minutes in and we get the
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first proper joke of them. yeah there you go. and that's all i've got. dr. asi had me on 36. he developed this from repeatedly squeezing, but that's what right hand. he switched what his right hand. he switched his and then lo and his left hand and then lo and behold, same happened behold, sound the same happened again left hand. got again to his left hand. he's got no itis and he's he's no sign of itis and he's he's suing them now their argument and this is a king's college. their argument is well, hang on. didn't us you were getting didn't tell us you were getting this carried this problem. you just carried on these pipettes. on squeezing these pipettes. you just know rampantly , just just, you know rampantly, tricky. but i mean, be fair tricky. but i mean, to be fair it's no joke. our science is real really painful. real i know it's really painful. i making , but real i know it's really painful. i making, but it's real i know it's really painful. i making , but it's serious i was making, but it's serious because happens when you because what happens when you follow said, follow the science, i said, you've got to have some way of i mean so an important part of laboratory there you can't laboratory on there you can't just it, it or just throw it, do it or whatever. but this article does have it's in metro have a very it's in the metro has a very beautiful description of involved him of pipetting involved him gripping mean yeah gripping paper you mean yeah with gripping pipette with the gripping the pipette with the gripping the pipette with his hand and pressing down using on the top and using his thumb on the top and for very evocative. yeah for me that very evocative. yeah but pick up pipette . pituitary but pick up a pipette. pituitary of the penis that would be the
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next is so anyway that's brought flooding but tuesday's got him with more pro cooperate and kindness propaganda it seems being nice to animals is actually adaptive behaviour . yes actually adaptive behaviour. yes altruism towards species may have helped humans to thrive. study finds as a big may. there essentially they had a bunch of kids , little toddlers and they kids, little toddlers and they help these dogs get like a toy or get some food. and that proves that humans sort of it's ingrained with us to help not only each other , but to help only each other, but to help from other studies. suppose they prove that little babies want to learn, toddlers want to help a rival. and it also extends to animal species, the is when i read this i was kind of surprised because having had a lot of toddlers they didn't seem to sort of want to help anybody even like you put two toddlers next week. they're not bad ones so they just don't they don't they will feed i mean, they will give ice cream to a dog and things like that. it's though, i mean, we have a fairly good
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sized golden retriever. walk sized golden retriever. you walk it the and the different it in the park and the different instinctive from instinctive reactions from small children. away children. some run away screaming with fear, screaming semi rigid with fear, another it could be, another yeah, well, it could be, but others run and but then others run and they just want with it, you just want to play with it, you know, and i always feel very, i sorry for kids who were afraid. you know what i it's like it seems be baked you can't seems to be baked in. you can't say, is bad parenting say, well, this is bad parenting or your instinctive or anything. your instinctive towards is a dog towards whether a job is a dog is going to be a bit of fun or a threat. yeah. feels to me like something that's kind of halfway lazy. about the lazy. only about half the toddlers half did toddlers helped, but half did help. says this may have help. but it says this may have helped humans thrive around the world. mean, could world. i mean, could be a massive. it says why we massive. it also says why we came domestic animals a came to domestic animals is a big wanted to but big mystery. we wanted to but they they've never never they said they've never never having the animals before. having met the animals before. they may never met they say that they may never met dogs. i think the minute dogs. well, i think the minute or just that specific dog they some dogs in home some of them had dogs in home something hard pushed something very hard pushed to find that's never find a kid that's never encountered all encountered a dog at all facility fed at least on a cartoon something, right? cartoon or something, right? yeah. know, yeah. dogtanian but, you know, the domestication a big the domestication of dogs a big deal the domestication of dogs a big deal. a very was a key deal. it was a very it was a key moment, i think probably better
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than farming in my view. anyway, nick, off with nick, we finish off with tues mirror glimpse my near mirror a glimpse into my near future sponging boyfriend is hanging for yes hanging too good for them. yes i'm boyfriend is i'm a my daughter's boyfriend is tagging it's a big problem tagging along it's a big problem for me he's taken advantage of us inevitably this from us so inevitably this from mumsnet and basically there's a freeloading boyfriend who's coming nice coming they say he's a nice person. simon? is he person. is he simon? is he really? my daughter. really? course my daughter. he comes along and he just freeload and i think they have to pay for him. they get their home into various ticketed events and so now he's like my ticket, now he's just like my ticket, bro. so yeah. and oh etc. so bro. and so yeah. and oh etc. so i do though my kind of boyfriend days, it was always a pleasure to have late scotch with to have late night scotch with a dad, know , you feel dad, you know, you did feel quite dad, you know, you did feel quhe up dad, you know, you did feel quite up that . yeah, quite grown up about that. yeah, well, this then well, i'm reading this and then gets it says my daughter 21 gets so it says my daughter 21 and weighed i thought it was and i weighed i thought it was like a 15 year old or one. i've got a 21 year old this evening to my brilliant guest, josh henry and dix and i'll be back with headline is tomorrow night at i'm joined by leo kearse at 11. i'm joined by leo kearse and schaefer fantastic and louis schaefer fantastic line—up. the headliners line—up. remember the headliners he repeated at 1 am. and 5 am,
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which if you're and watching stay tuned the breakfast stay tuned for the breakfast show just after the break. meanwhile it's been simon evans address facing the nation this evening. you very much evening. thank you very much for joining you again joining us. see you again tomorrow, kyra .
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cold good evening . tonight we debate good evening. tonight we debate has british politics become non—binary to the terms left and right? apply any more for the modern day labour and conservative parties ? the conservative parties? the skidmore report was out on friday and if the government's policy on net zero will debate, doesit policy on net zero will debate, does it make sense to go even faster with those policies ? i'd faster with those policies? i'd explain to you why i think jeremy clarkson has apologised to harry and meghan and joining me on talking points, the comedy duo belle and sperling. but
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before all of that, let's

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