tv Mark Dolan Tonight Replay GB News January 28, 2023 2:00am-5:01am GMT
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welcome to mark dolan tonight's big stories, big guests and always big opinions and it's friday night. we'll have plenty of fun along the way. speaking of fun along the way. speaking of which, in just a few minutes, i'll take you through my clips of . the week highlights from of. the week highlights from over the last seven days, including plenty of on air mistakes and, hilarity. also this hour , brexit party mep this hour, brexit party mep beunda this hour, brexit party mep belinda lucy will be here to assess chancellor jeremy hunt's big statement this morning on the economy is brexit being talked down by the media? can
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this government make a success of it? belinda to lucy me shortly live in the studio . we shortly live in the studio. we welcome the top american comedian and broadcaster alex stein and ask him if wokeism is destroying the usa . plus, the destroying the usa. plus, the chart topping songwriter chesney hawkes . he's the one and only. hawkes. he's the one and only. and he joins me as well. he'll be telling us all about the fantastic experience he had in qatar recently. he was hailed as a lucky mascot . the england a lucky mascot. the england team, after performing during their win over wales. i'm just after 10:00 by mark meads guest is a true legend his story in a broadcaster dr. david we'll hear about his incredible life loss get through it is friday night so i want to stimulate you and inform you and entertain you along the way we don't do boring knocks on my watch i just won't have it. clips the week next but . someone that never makes a mistake is tatiana who has the headunes.
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mistake is tatiana who has the headlines . mark, thank you very headlines. mark, thank you very much. this is the from the gb newsroom. the chancellor has insisted the best tax cut for the united kingdom is to cut inflation. that's as he sets out his long term plans for growing the economy . with inflation the economy. with inflation close to a 40 year high, jeremy hunt has the government's pledge to halve it this year. his to use brexit freedoms boost growth and reverse what he calls a decline is an attitude towards the economy. the cambridge . well the economy. the cambridge. well mr. hunt also confirmed today hsz will mr. hunt also confirmed today hs2 will run to central london's euston station as planned . it euston station as planned. it follows reports the government was planning to scale back this leg of the project, instead terminating in a west london suburb. the rail link is costing ove r £44.6 billion, but over £44.6 billion, but supporting 22,000 jobs. despite costs due to soaring inflation, the chancellor says it is a
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priority . the chair of the chancellor says it is a priority. the chair of an independent review , an nhs trust independent review, an nhs trust maternity care, says hundreds of families and staff have raised concerns after it was fined £800,000, admitting failings in the care of a baby who died 23 minutes after birth. nottingham university hospitals trust their £1.2 million fine reduced after pleading to providing unsafe care . it's the highest fine ever care. it's the highest fine ever for failings in maternity . for failings in maternity. winter sophia. andrew has died in 2019 at the queen's medical centre . her mother, sarah, says centre. her mother, sarah, says no financial penalty will bring her daughter back . a man has , her daughter back. a man has, after being crushed by a telescopic pop up urinal in central london , emergency central london, emergency services called to the scene at cambridge circus in west london just after 1:00 this afternoon. a london fire brigade spokesman said man had been trapped below street level despite efforts by
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the emergency services to rescue him. the maintenance worker died at the scene . a firefighter who at the scene. a firefighter who was critically injured while tackling a blaze at a former department store in has died. police say 38 year old barry martin who in a critical condition in hospital died at the royal infirmary of edinburgh. he was one of five firefighters taken hospital following the incident. the other four have all been discharged . scotland's first discharged. scotland's first minister, nicholas sturgeon described his death as a terrible the king and queen have lit candles at buckingham to mark holocaust memorial day. king charles and camilla spoke with dr. martin stern , who with dr. martin stern, who survived a concentration camp dunng survived a concentration camp during the second world war. they also met a muna adam, a survivor genocide in darfur in western sudan. today marks 78 years since auschwitz—birkenau , years since auschwitz—birkenau, the largest death camp, was liberated and a day to remember
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all victims of genocide around the world. and at least seven people have been killed following a shooting at a synagogue in jerusalem. israeli police are describing it as a attack. police say the suspected attacker has been neutralised. a us state department spokesperson has condemned the attack . tv has condemned the attack. tv onune has condemned the attack. tv online on stb plus radio with gb news. now it's back to model and tonight . tonight. thanks to all we'll see you at nine. this is mark dolan tonight where we do through until 11 pm. in just a moment but now clips of the week highlights from gb news over the last seven days including plenty of on air mistakes and hilarity at 9:00. in my big opinion drugs have
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become normalised in our society. it's time . just say no society. it's time. just say no . also, as chancellor jeremy hunt asks for brexit to be given a fair chance, i'll be asking beunda a fair chance, i'll be asking belinda to lucy. former member of the european parliament, whether the media are too hard on brexit. live in the studio from across the pond youtube sensation and favourite comedian alex stein. we'll be discussing wokeism is destroying the united states. pop icon chesney hawkes joins us live from la to discuss whether plagiarism is destroying music . does whether plagiarism is destroying music. does he all sound the same . what's your view after same. what's your view after ten. my mark mates is the remarkable his story and broadcaster dr. david starkey we'll be discussing politics atheism , his cancellation and atheism, his cancellation and his comeback. nothing is off the table. lots to get through it is friday night so i want to stimulate and inform you in equal measure but have plenty of fun along the way. we do.
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boring. not on my watch . i just boring. not on my watch. i just won't have it. let's start with our tips of the week . it's time our tips of the week. it's time now for a look back at seven days on air here at gb news. now, since the introduction of this feature three high profile presenters no longer speak to me and the technical team have taken to boeing. when i arrive in the building. but of course you can't please everyone, let's crack on now. i'm not of a superstitious nature . i believe superstitious nature. i believe that the sets of marked ireland tonight is haunted by a poltergeist. take look, i'll get to your emails shortly . right to your emails shortly. right let's have another look at that. take a look at the bottom right hand corner of your screen. i'll get to your emails shortly . get to your emails shortly. well, the mystery has been revealed. it was not a poltergeist in fact, but someone
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almost pale. my excellent director, alister , all i've got director, alister, all i've got to say is usually legless, but that's another . what a handsome that's another. what a handsome chap by the way. he doesn't look like that any more. let me tell you, dan watson's show , always you, dan watson's show, always compelling. it makes headlines, but of late it's become quite x—rated. how about this saucy revelation from conservative mp for ashfield lee anderson regarding . his passion for regarding. his passion for politics. but you get turned on for that turned on all the time . know leigh i'm glad you enjoy yourjob but let's . know leigh i'm glad you enjoy your job but let's get carried away too much. information man now my good friend, broadcaster and loose woman carol mcgeough has suggested the authorities are planning a new pandemic. that's right, planning a new pandemic . just one flaw in her pandemic. just one flaw in her argument . take a listen. you argument. take a listen. you can't imagine that they're planning another pandemic. i mean, they're planning for pandemic. no, i don't think
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they're preparing for one. no do you think they're planning one? yes oh, god, i do. yeah mean really to me, it looks really obvious . i really to me, it looks really obvious. i haven't really to me, it looks really obvious . i haven't got the obvious. i haven't got the evidence out . okay. well, not evidence out. okay. well, not the most compelling argument on that one, but you've got to hand it to carol for her honesty . it to carol for her honesty. now, when you have laurence fox as a presenter, you don't just get a perceptive, clear eyed interview with a passion for the cut and thrust of you. get some real showbiz pizzazz to. jesus christ superstar looks like a but he wears a bra . jesus christ but he wears a bra. jesus christ indeed. but he wears a bra. jesus christ indeed . i'd forgotten how spicy indeed. i'd forgotten how spicy those lyrics by tim rice were now patrick christys always makes for unmissable from three till six every afternoon. this guy can do anything well almost anything . welcome back is 4 pm. anything. welcome back is 4 pm.
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is pow patrick christys. if i say my own name. hello everybody . that was the excellent patrick christie's there. i mean, pat fifties. christie's postman potts, of course , mishaps like potts, of course, mishaps like that during show introductions all complete one offs and would never happen regularly on your number one news channel. isn't that right, patrick and crucially, controlling britain's borders. so throughout the show , i thought that we should investigate . what was said that investigate. what was said that neverin investigate. what was said that never in all the show today heckled by your own production team. i know the feeling cat prick christie's packed . okay, prick christie's packed. okay, come on, patrick. you can do this. it's 5:00 here with me. patrick christys on gb news. and coming up , we patrick christys on gb news. and coming up, we go in the end now staying with patrick and he gave the brilliant michelle dewberry a right mouthful this week is dewbs& co is with me here in the studio right now, which gives me
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a to get some of haggis out my teeth. james you're coming up on your show. i have idea why on earth you got haggis burns night your teeth. i not let your teeth. i will not let imagination run riot now , imagination run riot now, patrick is the ultimate professional eating haggis, which is made up of animal organs, is just awful, especially after revelation. i am due to be back on stage at 3 pm. tomorrow, but you might p.m. tomorrow, but you might have noticed my face slightly dropped. there was michelle was doing an intro because i just heard in my ear that my producers didn't cook this haggis for giving it to me. so i've just eaten in it. i've just eaten raw pigs in it. i'll see you in about month i'll see you in about a month month. here go, patrick. a month. here you go, patrick. a present me. come in. useful present for me. come in. useful there . i have a right there you go. i have a right royal flush . now, clips of the royal flush. now, clips of the week is becoming such a hit here at gb news. that our old friend, commentator ben habib, turned up on the brilliant dewbs& co michelle resist using our clip from last week. and if you just if you just sitting there kevin you think can see self or you know i'm losing my temper i have
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a look at this and just remember what a man ben habib is. a look at this and just remember what a man ben habib is . on the what a man ben habib is. on the screen . look at him. oh what's screen. look at him. oh what's that? what does that come from ? that? what does that come from? well, i can tell you, once i saw that, i couldn't unsee all smiles there, but he may not be laughing for long. it seems there was a new gb news hunk on there was a new gb news hunk on the block and his identity may raise a few eyebrows. well, he's allowed to say any other ventures he's going to move to . ventures he's going to move to. on i just hope that we'll be seeing a lot more of jacob rees—mogg on giving news. i really hope the rumours are true . beautiful stuff , great news . beautiful stuff, great news this week that jacob will be presenting a show on gb news very soon. i think this calls for a celebration . of
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for a celebration. of. three groucho marx eat your heart now gb news has been recruiting some of the biggest names in the country, not just jacob rees—mogg , but comedy genius rees—mogg, but comedy genius cleese. here is the man promoting his new show . they promoting his new show. they want programming for who are completely out of touch a much neglected demographic. so stay of touch with me . well i, for of touch with me. well i, for one, can't wait to see john cleese on the channel later this year. cleese on the channel later this year . find cleese on the channel later this year. find out how the cleese on the channel later this year . find out how the hell cleese on the channel later this year. find out how the hell did you get here ? now, folks i'm you get here? now, folks i'm looking forward to my interview david starkey later in tonight's show, i'm sure this historian this great broadcasting titan , this great broadcasting titan, this great broadcasting titan, this great broadcasting titan, this great intellectual will have some very learned topics to discuss. after all, he did so earlier this week. i look at i look at the photographs in the daily mail because i am mildly
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and i quite a little bit of male where's that new role when you needit where's that new role when you need it ? there's only where's that new role when you need it? there's only one response i can give. take it away . away. we've got the out to that one. have we now scape the week was my interview with katie last weekend. unfortunately we had a few technical problems , which is few technical problems, which is very unusual for this place. take a look. yeah and did the surgeons do a good job? and are you okay now ? oh, i can't hear you okay now? oh, i can't hear you okay now? oh, i can't hear you . katie, can you hear me now you. katie, can you hear me now 7 you. katie, can you hear me now ? do you hear how long i can't hear you? this is live tv. can you hear me? that's. you know what i think is happening, kafie?| what i think is happening, katie? i think that you're hang on the signal. i don't know what's, but apparently . well, what's, but apparently. well, katie was , clearly in a rush to katie was, clearly in a rush to get on air, i think we can file
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this next clip under too much information but family always comes first, doesn't it ? well, comes first, doesn't it? well, yeah. like to literally if you saw what. i've got an update in fact some got anything on nothing on underneath q jacob . nothing on underneath q jacob. ihope nothing on underneath q jacob. i hope we haven't put him off coming here. let's end on very positive note chemistry between our excellent breakfast show presenters. ellie costello and stephen dixon has reached a new high . i'm laughing now. i ask high. i'm laughing now. i ask because for me, outside of the newsroom said you said it like it's like your wedding day or something like you're in the three piece suit. i do dress don't but you already i'm already married so there's no danger of that . we're basically danger of that. we're basically there. we are basically . yeah.
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there. we are basically. yeah. link you here. oh we are. that actually it could work. except i'm old enough to your father. yeah, but anyway, apart from that fair play to ellie, who wants to marry stephen dixon she clearly likes a challenge , and clearly likes a challenge, and that's about it for clips of the week officially confirmed the very best segment on. isn't that right carol? i haven't got the evidence , though . those were evidence, though. those were your clips of the week . if you your clips of the week. if you spot anything or awkward any howlers when you're watching or listening to gb news, drop me an email mark at gb news dot uk and label your email of the week after . the break the press love after. the break the press love to knock it, but jeremy hunt has said this morning that brexit could be a huge success. former brexit mep belinda de lucy will be here to the chancellor's first big speech of year. can we
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next now chancellor jeremy hunt this morning laid out his plans to turbocharge the british economy. brexit remains a favourite punchbag for the media. they're always talking it down. but jeremy hunt, quite rightly says our decision to leave the eu can be a catalyst for bold choices . be a catalyst for bold choices. the chancellor added that his plan to grow the economy is quote, necessity, energised and, made possible by brexit. well, joining me now to discuss , i'm joining me now to discuss, i'm delighted to welcome the political commentator and former brexit party mep lucy i belinda. he's changed his tune . he. brexit party mep lucy i belinda. he's changed his tune . he . well he's changed his tune. he. well maybe he's just rereading the script that boris out in his
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2019 victory speech . it was like 2019 victory speech. it was like a major deja vu. we have heard all before boris came out 2019 what he wasn't saying. it is a new dawn, new day. we're going to unleash ourselves into the world. we're going to we're going unleash a primal wave of and we heard it all with boris and we heard it all with boris and what has happened is we've got stagnation nation still so as much as i loved hearing what he had to say he was just really good things that the conservative party been saying for years now with very little action to back it up. there's no reason at all why the conservative party haven't passed through the eu regulation reform bill yet . they claim that reform bill yet. they claim that that's too hard and there's not enough time . the lords are going enough time. the lords are going to cause problems . i mean, it's to cause problems. i mean, it's excuse after with the conservative party and so i do see i took his speech as dropping the brexit bill more try and claw back the few remaining brexiteer votes rather
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than actually believing what he said. we've had similar mood music from keir. the good said. we've had similar mood music from keir . the good news music from keir. the good news is that you want to win the next election . you've got to love on election. you've got to love on brexit. that's yes. well, listen been love bombing brexit for since 2000 and i did whenever i did my eu law at uni and it's all well and good to love bomb it but unless it's backed up with action and political will, there's no political will the labour party to make use the opportunities of brexit and we haven't seen any evidence for a few tory mp like jacob rees—mogg to have the big change. the people voted . there are bills people voted. there are bills for example like the digital information act which is a fantastic new bill to replace the innovation crushing regulation. it was started may it has been delayed . delayed. it has been delayed. delayed. there's been distractions almost unworkable now and conservatives
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have very little time to actually pass any of through before the next election . that before the next election. that is a concern do you think the media are still talking brexit down? oh, yes and i think they will forever be talking brexit down. i genuine believe brexit derangement was actual thing and they will the political and media class want to associate everything will drama and woe. we experience as a country to brexit. and in all truth, brexit was simply a nation self—determining in its own laws, making politicians accountable and allowing to have more of a stake in the laws they have to live under. it's quite frankly, nothing to do with what each political party wants to do with the powers we gifted them, and to be quite honest, the conservatives were gifted this excalibur of power , the british excalibur of power, the british people and the machinery behind that party have hidden behind apron strings of mutter eu go in panic over the accounts ability
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that comes with it and i've thrown breadcrumbs our way we need divergence now it becomes too easy to rejoin the eu through the back door with a labour government. well, i think you've got to play the long game with brexit i voted remain because i predicted short term economic . however i did see economic. however i did see advance which is to brexit which is why i've embraced the result i've. acknowledged a democratic and the day after that plebiscite i got behind the project because i think that in time brexit will unleash great economic and cultural for the country . however, do you think country. however, do you think the forces work within westminster will try to undo brexit? i mean, how far could we be from re—entering the single market or joining a customs market orjoining a customs union? so what's happening now is because conservative party seem to lack the political will to dry through all the opportunities have been afforded
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them , makes brexit look like no them, makes brexit look like no change has happening and people voted for change in 2019 and that seemed very little happen . that seemed very little happen. and this is the way they damage brexit and this is the way that they're going to put people off they're going to put people off the of brexit by just simply not doing anything about it. so looks like it was the same as if we were the eu and i just feel like we're at a point now. i don't believe we can trust . the don't believe we can trust. the conservative all labour party with reducing immigration lowering tax protecting our on using the brexit opportunities fully . i using the brexit opportunities fully. i think it is time that the people have to decide are they really going to reward these parties with their vote but more of the same more delay more being frightened of having this wonderful power to make our country nimble , efficient and country nimble, efficient and drive us forward . indeed. i drive us forward. indeed. i mean, i would the brexit is a success because it's an insurance policy against closer
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union being a member of the united states of europe which it's my view is coming . it's an it's my view is coming. it's an insurance policy against members , membership of a single european, a single currency . european, a single currency. it's an insurance policy against free, of course , got our own free, of course, got our own trade policy. now can do trade deals with the rest of the world. a deal in the offing with india and a billion people. a massive market. however, there is a flipside. and what would you to those small business is who are no longer exporting to eu countries because the paperwork and do you any scintilla of buyer's regret in relation to brexit. oh well on your last point never never will i think that the best interests the british people will be served in the dark corridors of brussels with the unaccountable commission . so, so never for commission. so, so never for that. commission. so, so never for that . but what commission. so, so never for that. but what i do feel for small businesses is that was always going to be disruption this is a huge change of
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governance in our country. and it was never going to happen overnight. it was going to be a magic pill just as when we joined the european economic community fishing community had to completely change. there will be winners and there'll be losers. but i will say they have had seven years of preparing to adjust their businesses because of brexit. you know, this was this happened in 2006 and it was only because the conservative party and other political parties trying to, you know, rerun the vote and not deliver brexit. so i remember conservatives were forced to deliver brexit. this isn't a natural home for them , and it's natural home for them, and it's only because they gave them that we would somehow reverse brexit, that they didn't prepare their businesses over seven years to deal with the home feeling . that deal with the home feeling. that is a natural occurrence when we do take a step back from the eu and maybe they should spend a little bit more time, other marketplaces, another opportunity. but of course i feel their disruption. but it's
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a price paying to extract ourselves not just from this this democratic project, but one thatis this democratic project, but one that is evolving to more anti democratic and accept . ukraine democratic and accept. ukraine is on the horizon. there will be more freedom of movement. there'll be more movements of labour into richer countries . labour into richer countries. and i actually think we'll see the eu as it expands become more divided and there even may be more civil unrest because it cannot run smoothly without denying people the veto . you denying people the veto. you know, democracy is not its friend . it needs to completely friend. it needs to completely reject democracy to be able to run this huge empire smoothly. i've got one for you just to put you in a good brexit, an insurance policy against payments of insurance policy against payments 0 f £20 insurance policy against payments of £20 billion a year, which, after two decades is the entire cost of the pandemic. listen. have a brilliant friday for linda. lucy will see again soon. fantastic contribution . soon. fantastic contribution. what's your reaction ? are you what's your reaction? are you
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concerned about brexit? is it going well? it going badly? let me know your . experience market me know your. experience market gbnews.uk coming up shortly. pop superstar the remarkable chesney hawkes the one and only is with me live from california. but speaking of top us comedian and commentator alex stein is next to answer a simple question is wokeism destroying america? see you .
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in three. welcome back to mark dolan tonight . it's my welcome back to mark dolan tonight. it's my big opinion monologue dog is on the way. why are we normalising drug use ? i'm are we normalising drug use? i'm not pulling my punches. that's at 9:00 now. comedian alex stein has been making a name for himself in america with his hilarious appearances at local government meetings and his concentrations of political figures. the host of prime time
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with alex stein has become a youtube sensation . guy is now youtube sensation. guy is now a massive star as a result of his numerous stunts, and he's now running for place on a school board in. texas. that's another man that doesn't boring. alex stein, welcome to gb news wow what an introduction i just want say mark you know balls of steel i want to be like you so you are an inspiration i want to be just like mark dolan so thank you for the kind thank you the kind words. well thank you for name check for my for the name check for my channel in the day channel 4 series back in the day i was young i needed the money. now talk about your now let's talk about your career. of all, why have career. first of all, why have you signed up to join to be part of a board ? listen, mark, of a school board? listen, mark, what's happening american? of a school board? listen, mark, whasureappening american? of a school board? listen, mark, whasureit'sening american? of a school board? listen, mark, whasure it's happening|erican? of a school board? listen, mark, whasure it's happening here,1? i'm sure it's happening here, but happening an rate in but it's happening at an rate in dallas this new york. dallas. this isn't new york. this this not california. the this is this not california. the sexualization our children is out rage . i'm telling you, in out rage. i'm telling you, in dallas, texas , one of the most dallas, texas, one of the most conservative cities. well, this neighbourhood, at least you were saying all. not woke saying not woke at all. not woke at but now had at all. but now just had a teacher. they went in. they looked at third grade teacher. they her
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they went and found her instagram had a bunch instagram and she had a bunch deviant there, of, deviant art on there, kind of, you know, sexual nature. and this a third grade art this is a third grade art teacher. she's the teacher. she's binary. the district you district didn't really know you know, her past . they know, about her past. they didn't background on didn't do a background check on her. that my her. so i understand that my point so now you have the point is so now you have the non—binary teacher then on non—binary teacher and then on top of that, they just invited an author come speak to third graders gender, graders about gender, inclusivity me, gender, inclusivity and for me, gender, ideology is meant to be ideology is not meant to be taught children . mean, taught to children. i mean, they can't have do you say? can't have sex. what do you say? third age would third grade is? what age would that be? they'd be eight years old. this is a 17 year, eight years old. and they're being told boy, you told you might, be a boy, you might a girl. well what? it's might be a girl. well what? it's done. to confuse done. it's meant to confuse people. what's people. and that's what's happening children, that happening to our children, that there's this weird over sexualization children. it's sexualization of children. it's the the the massive that's all over the world. in this day and age world. kids in this day and age cannot be indoctrinated cannot be un indoctrinated because. indoctrination because. it's the indoctrination is my opinion. i is so strong, in my opinion. i mean, these teachers not mean, all these teachers not teaching be teaching the children to be inclusive towards people, the most in society and most victimised in society and first, first of all, i don't ever be considered transphobic or homophobic, but what they're doing is they're letting 14 year
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old children have double getting surgeries for gender surgeries that for gender dysphoria, cutting your breasts because you have a mental health facility. blockers, puberty blockers . they that these blockers. they say that these puberty are puberty blockers are irreversible reversible, irreversible, reversible, but they irreversible. can they are not irreversible. can they are not irreversible. can they you have one they be? yeah. you have one window maturation that. window of maturation that. if you up window, you're you mess up that window, you're not get to repeat. i not going to get to repeat. i don't get to go back to being 18. could all. my god, 18. i wish i could all. my god, i think all do. but the i think we all do. but the reality of the situation is, is facing cultural marxism and now we this know woke we fight this know woke ideology. but the woke is overcoming the world, in my opinion. well, indeed. and it's happening without elections seems that the kind of the woke warriors you like some consider it to be a sort of manifestation of hard ideology. they're winning , but they don't need to winning, but they don't need to go to the ballot box. they've infiltrated institutions and corporations and the media. let me just tell you this. in america get censored. but the 2020 election was 100% fraudulent. the idea that joe biden from his basement, the guy can barely speak english with his son, hunter biden, who's
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smoking crack with prostitutes, pictures exposed everywhere that he 81 million votes over barack obama who got 63 million votes. barack obama was the most popular politician other than donald to ever exist . and donald trump to ever exist. and if sleepy joe biden , if you think sleepy joe biden, you of the crazy things you know all of the crazy things he with ukraine, all of his he did with ukraine, all of his illegal business dealings he's done with china, if you think that the answer that he that he was the answer that he fairly very mistaken. fairly you're very mistaken. where evidence where is the evidence though that stolen? i'll that election was stolen? i'll tell evidence it's mail tell you the evidence it's mail in ballots the time in ballots for the first time ever , the first election ever, ever, the first election ever, we had to mail in ballots at a number that we've never had. and ballot legal in ballot harvesting is legal in certain only takes certain states, so only takes three to rig the three states to rig the electoral college in his favour. so it only takes a few counties to actually do mine. high to actually do mine. he's a high number of not relate to number of votes not relate to better turnout because mail better turnout because of mail ballots. no way. let me tell ballots. oh, no way. let me tell you something, joe biden is universally by everybody. you something, joe biden is univ seeilly by everybody. you something, joe biden is univ see the by everybody. you something, joe biden is univsee the high by everybody. you something, joe biden is univsee the high gas everybody. you something, joe biden is univsee the high gas prices. ody. you something, joe biden is univsee the high gas prices. you you see the high gas prices. you see the way that country , see the way that our country, you know, the border crisis, i mean, every single day, the amount deaths amount of drug overdose deaths in this past year, 180,000 drug overdose we've
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overdose deaths, the most we've ever had in recorded history. and going on at the and what's going on at the border an open border is they have an open border is they have an open border policy. wanted them to border policy. we wanted them to build wall. and they did build a wall. and what they did is of building a wall is instead of building a wall they're getting hundreds of billions to ukraine. billions of dollars to ukraine. for seeing my american for me, i'm seeing my american citizens our citizens struggling. our homeless america we homeless problem in america we don't social don't have the same social services here. there's services you have here. there's hundreds of thousands of homeless in america that are freezing and of freezing cold now. and all of our politicians want to our politicians all they want to do want to sign a blank do is they want to sign a blank check vladimir zelenskyy check to vladimir zelenskyy listen, since listen, vladimir, since the visit, want ukrainians visit, i don't want ukrainians to russians die to die i don't want russians die but wouldn't even have this but we wouldn't even have this conflict at the border of russia and ukraine if they would just negotiate. but unfortunately because we're run by multinational corporations, nato and of and the western allies of america, saying, hey, america, they're saying, hey, ukraine because we ukraine not negotiate because we just got out of the 20 year war in the middle for weapons of mass destruction that did not exist. so what people don't realise, america, we are in a money scheme and all of our tax dollars to the military dollars going to the military industrial that industrial complex and that doesn't americans. doesn't protect americans. and i want to you about money want to talk to you about money in a second, actually. now the us authorities and the courts by
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the would challenge the way, would challenge the idea reject the idea idea they would reject the idea that election was stolen. that the election was stolen. but to your but you're entitled to your you're one with you're not the only one with that can we talk the that view. can we talk about the economy but want say this the economy but i want say this the same about same that say same about the same that say that the election was not stolen are the ones that are not are the same ones that are not talking the mail itis talking about the mail card itis and children talking about and children not talking about the itis and the period card itis and children talking all children not talking about all soccer are just soccer players that are just falling with that falling down with attacks that are best of their are in the best shape of their life. these are the same people that are tell you a medicine that are tell you a medicine that was on it that was tested on eight is safe and on eight mice is safe and effective for 7 billion people. on eight mice is safe and effe lete for 7 billion people. on eight mice is safe and effe let mer 7 billion people. on eight mice is safe and effe let mer 7 bsomething,e. on eight mice is safe and effe let mer 7 bsomething, mark. but let me tell something, mark. you is not safe and you know what is not safe and effective people, effective for billion people, shellfish peanuts or almonds. so they created vaccine that they created a vaccine that better all and uses it's better than all and uses it's one size all. it's the only one size fits all. it's the only in one fits all. in the world one size fits all. and your booster because and get your booster because anthony you to. well, anthony fauci told you to. well, of know, here the of course, you know, here in the uk health authorities, the nhs have been clear that the have been very clear that the vaccine safe effective, vaccine is safe and effective, but debate that will but that a debate that will continue cannot deny continue and, you cannot deny vaccine and vaccine vaccine injuries and vaccine deaths. possible . endless. deaths. it's possible. endless. and just going say if you
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and i'm just going to say if you want to go get vaccinated, go ahead. i'm in since i'm ahead. i'm in that since i'm a libertarian, if that is what makes you feel comfortable. but at time, mandating at the same time, mandating a vaccine, these are the same people don't you to have an people that don't you to have an id they wanted you id to vote but they wanted you to vaccine passport to go to have a vaccine passport to go a 7—eleven to buy gas. i mean, and you still can't go to america. still can't go america. you still can't go to a right now. that's how terrible our i'm telling our country's. i'm telling you guys, i it you know guys, america, i it you know tried and true red blue all day long but america a dystopian nightmare by human nightmare not run by human beings. when beings. it's literally when i say and tinfoil hat say this and this is tinfoil hat conspiracy but this is conspiracy theory but this is the it's being run by the fact it's being run by corporate. these corporations are able to are the ones that are able to buy sell. politicians gained buy and sell. politicians gained power the power and money during the pandemic. my god. they've pandemic. oh, my god. they've only gain power and dominance through i these through the i think these corporations you know pfizer you look now google amazon is look at now google amazon is on top right now so top of the world right now so financially those corporations are the are doing great. but the individual america are individual people in america are suffering ever suffering worse than we've ever seen. is being crushed or seen. this is being crushed or closed down. and they could care less. don't care at all. less. i don't care at all. family bye bye . listen, family run. bye bye. listen, there no empathy in from our there is no empathy in from our politicians. as a matter of fact
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if do not put the ukrainian if you do not put the ukrainian flag in bio, you put your flag in your bio, you put your booster in your you're considered a white supremacist. and that's really what's happening. about the happening. and we talk about the school in america. have school here in america. we have a problem, theory where a crt problem, race theory where they children feel guilty they make children feel guilty for tell for being white. they tell children feel children that they should feel guilty slaves that guilty for owning slaves that they nothing it. so we they had nothing to do it. so we are in a dystopian are living in a dystopian nightmare and the direction that things is very things are going now is very scary. if we redirect scary. and if we redirect course, i think we're going to fall off a cliff very soon. well, do wonder what's going well, you do wonder what's going to the to happen. speaking of the cliff, talk about the cliff, let's talk about the ceiling. broke is america? ceiling. how broke is america? well, is the well, you know, this is the other thing is because the multinational corporations, i don't ever don't think america will ever necessarily broke. necessarily be that broke. we have american industry, but at the same time, we have a country that's rich. the that's super rich. but the american citizens benefiting. so we're we we're broke, even though we couldn't under couldn't america collapse under weight 100. and weight of its own debts 100. and i is big possibility. i think that is big possibility. but even the problem is but it's not even the problem is it's not the debt problem. it's a misallocation of funds. we have where we can have enough where we can actually help our citizens, but instead politicians are instead our politicians are signing ukraine, signing blank checks to ukraine, spending social spending money on, social
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services actually services that don't actually benefit though they benefit listen, even though they say, right wing say, oh, you're right wing conservative. i'm actually pro i like socialised medicine in like some socialised medicine in texas insulin costs, $175. that same , only $8 in mexico. same insulin, only $8 in mexico. why is that ? insulin is a very why is that? insulin is a very bafic why is that? insulin is a very basic medication. it should be free i mean, it should be i mean, if anything. so that's why we have a problem. we have a misappropriation of our funds in our world. okay. another one. tell me about your charity. how does up really does a comedian wind up really so much against the status quo ? so much against the status quo? and have you suffered personally , professionally for it? have you got in trouble? have you lost friends? lost lot, but lost friends? i've lost lot, but i've also gained a lot. it's been a great thing. and listen, nobody's to stand up for you. i started going, i'm getting harmed i'm harmed by it. look, i'm sweating. crazy the sweating. i'm crazy over the ukraine right now. i just want you off you please you get me off here. you please look this. i'm just fired look at this. i'm just so fired up, kid. mark, i'm so fired up right now because come to great britain time and i'm coming britain one time and i'm coming here call out the here and want to call out the establishment listen, we establishment because listen, we have epstein, have guys like jeffrey epstein, who's prince who's friends with prince andrew, who's son, and
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andrew, who's the queen son, and a of people don't even know a lot of people don't even know prince in america prince injuries in america because bunch idiots, because we're a bunch of idiots, including not including myself. i'm not that smart myself. so okay, now, listen, the comedy's out there going the board. going to join the school board. what you? because what is next for you? because i feel like i'm sitting in front of future president . i feel like i'm sitting in front of future president. i am of a future president. i am going be listen, is. and going to be listen, that is. and that honestly the he's that is honestly the case. he's on feet. sweating . i'm on his feet. i'm sweating. i'm going insane. i'll take another. i'm tucker carlson's biological son. and what people son. and that's what people don't when you the don't realise when you are the son tucker nobody he son of tucker carlson. nobody he can prime time 99. they're can be prime time 99. they're going alex, you're going to say, oh, alex, you're not the race for real. let me not in the race for real. let me tell something. i'm in it to tell you something. i'm in it to win it. and once they elect me and bring america back to the prominence it once has, i'm going back the show, going to be back on the show, marc, we're going take marc, and we're going to take and fix the uk. and we're going to fix the uk. you watching a future us you are watching a future us president. man to the president. i this man to the house. okay folks listen ego you've got energy you don't do bonng you've got energy you don't do boring as i said at the beginning of the interview you're off back to the states now a brief word on politics. do you think donald trump return to the white house? i do think
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donald trump will. he can. this is a problem now with the mail in ballots. i have no election integrity. so i that he could go back.i integrity. so i that he could go back. i think that he could win. but if he doesn't get a fair shot, i believe it's going to be either gavin newsom or some other puppet that they put in place because joe biden is not going to run again. as a matter of fact, these documents were leaked. to kick leaked. they're going to kick him the house, i believe him out of the house, i believe kamala is just kamala harris. and this is just speculation be the speculation will be the president, because they want the rishi, want the multi you rishi, they want the multi you know, the leader. they know, look of the leader. they want the leader be want the leader to be multicultural. okay. very multicultural. okay. and very briefly, florida, briefly, desantis from florida, does chance? yes. the does he have a chance? yes. the sentence awesome the sentence is awesome because the way he is way he handled covid, he is probably best politician in probably the best politician in america. movement america. the second movement gave roots . why gave him the grass roots. why are hung up on donald? are they so hung up on donald? because donald trump's the most popular president ever. he's the one that people out for one that called people out for you all the he not too you know, all the is he not too divisive? oh, of course, he's way too tough. the way too tough. if the republicans are serious about doing the numbers in 2024, surely be somebody surely it's going to be somebody like the santos. i say the desantis is more of the, you
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know, middle of the road more voters probably get behind voters would probably get behind him is to him and donald trump is to polarise so he makes people you know but that polarise zation is what we need because we need somebody willing stand somebody that's willing to stand up for us because. this is the problem. the left wing the problem. the left wing and the right the same bird and right wing are the same bird and that through plate that bird is going through plate glass unless we stand up glass window unless we stand up first. okay now, alex, please do, marketing of your do, the marketing of your your channels. it out channels. let's get it out there. world that's there. tell the world that's watching news where they watching tv news where they can find guys monday find you guys primetime monday night. instagram. i'm on night. i'm on instagram. i'm on twitter. i'm on youtube. i got show on blaze tv february 7th coming should be coming out. it should be february premieres the february 8th. it premieres the day state union day after the state of the union in america. guys, if you in america. so guys, if you can't you're not looking very can't me you're not looking very hard and there you go. well, we're delighted. found david we're delighted. we found david fascinating conversation. some will agree. some won't agree with let me know with what he said. let me know your market gbnews.uk your views. market gbnews.uk next, stop covering some big stories of the day. pop superstar chesney . and don't superstar chesney. and don't forget my big opinion it's on its way. see you shortly . join
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its way. see you shortly. join me camilla tominey at 930 on sunday morning when i'll be jacob rees—mogg. whether the government is making the best of brexit, i'll be joined by boris johnson's former economics adviser, lyons , discuss adviser, gerard lyons, discuss jeremy hunt's decision not to cut taxes and leading julie bendall will be telling why she thinks nicholas sturgeon is a disgrace to women . all that and disgrace to women. all that and more at 930 on .
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sunday why have we gone so soft on drugs? that's my big monologue at 9:00. plus, tomorrow's papers my all star panel, my take at ten and my mount meets guest is legendary dr. david starkey . now legendary dr. david starkey. now let me take you back to the football world cup last month in qatar, england, wales in a huge game, but at half time it was nil, nil. let's be honest, not
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much had happened . step forward, much had happened. step forward, chart topping singer chesney hawkes, his brilliant halftime performance was credited many of the players themselves within inspiring england to a three nil win and eventual place in the quarter final is, of course, bad news for my lovely viewers in wales, of whom there are many . wales, of whom there are many. but it was a memorable occasion and i'm to say that pop sensation chesney hawkes joins me now. hi, chesney chesney . me now. hi, chesney chesney. hey, mark how are you, mate? it's been a long so. well, i miss what a moment for you in qatar . yeah, that miss what a moment for you in qatar. yeah, that was fun miss what a moment for you in qatar . yeah, that was fun mean qatar. yeah, that was fun mean you know the first time i the played a stadium in 30 years which was great and have 65,000 people england and wales fans singing that song it's you know with me was phenomenal like you hairs on the back of the neck type of stuff and then it all ended up going crazy, i met the whole of the england team pretty much and you know, it was was a
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crazy time. i became england's mascot to write what a mascot . mascot to write what a mascot. listen, tell me about these chaps , the flesh, the likes of chaps, the flesh, the likes of harry and marcus. i mean, did they seem consumed with tension 7 they seem consumed with tension ? they're at the world cup where they stressed with a biting their nails. what was that ? their nails. what was that? well, of course, when i when i met them, it was after just literally after that game where they just had a great victory . they just had a great victory. so i was standing in in the tunnel there and they were all coming in and full of and just kind of laughing and joking. and there was a great kind of camaraderie within the team as far i could tell, you know, and it was it gave me great hope for the rest of the tournament to, be honest, because i could really tell that they all of loved each other. it was a real nice kind of community that they showed, you know? yeah well, i thought you performed brilliantly. you are course a man touring the world all
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man that's touring the world all yeah man that's touring the world all year. you've never been in greater demand. but this have been one of the biggest gigs ever. been one of the biggest gigs ever . it was. it really was an ever. it was. it really was an amazing moment for. me, i loved it. and i'm a massive football fan. so when my manager said, hey, do you fancy doing the halftime at the world? i was like, yeah . so i jumped at the like, yeah. so i jumped at the chance and found myself there at that stadium . and it was yeah, that stadium. and it was yeah, it was an incredible it was a great ride. i ended up coming coming back to the to the world and i was hanging out with everybody in uk media and just kind of being of the, of the furniture out there in qatar. it was, it was really fun and then it kind of all culminated playing the fan festival in front of 50,000 people, which was just another amazing moment. so it was it was great fun. yeah all football fans, quite a difficult audience. are they a bit noisy or a bit drunk? well well, there was no alcohol in those bar, so. good point. yeah
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yeah. so that was a whole nother thing. but no, to be honest, you i was a little trepidatious. i have to be honest about singing the one and only in front of that crowd when because there was a kind of crowd participation bit in the middle there, where, where dropped out. and i was just hoping everyone was going to sing, you know, and for me they did. so i was , oh, for me they did. so i was, oh, is this going to be me? really? no my mates just kind of singing the chorus, the one and only, but it turned out good. now at your fellow superstar elton john had a very important gig, the very, very sad occasion of princess diana's funeral . and he princess diana's funeral. and he sang, as you will remember , a sang, as you will remember, a reworded version of candle the wind in front of a viewing audience of, i believe, to billion people. and old elton had a prompt he had a little auto key with . the lyrics next auto key with. the lyrics next to the piano in case he forgot any the words. have you ever forgotten the words at the gig . forgotten the words at the gig. oh yeah. all the time. my band
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mates always take the mickey me for that. i'm dyslexic and think one of the things that comes with dyslexia for certainly for me is lyrics just kind of go out of my head. i'm fine with music . music is absolutely fine. i very, very rarely will i forget the lyrics to the one and only. but of course, if i do, can just hold the microphone out to the crowd. they go, yeah, that'll do it nicely. can we talk about your mate rick astley? he's in it nicely. can we talk about you news; rick astley? he's in it nicely. can we talk about you news at ick astley? he's in it nicely. can we talk about you news at the astley? he's in it nicely. can we talk about you news at the moment.3's in it nicely. can we talk about you news at the moment. course, the news at the moment. course, he many hits in the he had so many hits in the eighties early nineties. eighties and the early nineties. he's suing the yung gravy for using an alleged impersonation of his voice . we can't go into of his voice. we can't go into the details of that case, but do you think plagiarism or copying is a problem in the music business? not as big as i think the media makes out to be when these big cases come . i mean, these big cases come. i mean, there are obvious cases where that has happened , but there's that has happened, but there's only so many notes , a scale . you only so many notes, a scale. you know, we all kind of use very
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similar chords. so sometimes things are going to happen, you know? i mean, know i've written songs over the years where i think, man , that's so that's got think, man, that's so that's got to be something else. surely it's got to be something ask is it's got to be something ask is it you know kind of reminisce in my head somehow you know and then ends up not being but you know, think some of know, honestly, i think some of these come because these cases they come because they sound similar or they feel similar in reality, you know , as similar in reality, you know, as i said, there's only certain certain amount of chords and melodies out there. and some of them you're going to sometimes get some similarities, you know, but course, there are obvious cases where that that is true , cases where that that is true, where plagiarism does happen. of course . yes, of course . but course. yes, of course. but sometimes it's parallel thinking . yeah, that's true as well. it's like inspiration inspired by your by your artists and your favourite songs and, you know , favourite songs and, you know, they're always going to be in there. you know, i'm a massive beatles fan. so i'm always going to use that seventh chord, you
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know, the way it is to know, it's just the way it is to right now. listen, rick i know that you carefully . so you're that you carefully. so you're not you're not, rick. you are. chesney is main . mark, tell you chesney is main. mark, tell you what slap in the face calling you stuff . yeah, you better do you stuff. yeah, you better do that. i've got rick on the brain chesney. that. i've got rick on the brain chesney . can we talk about chesney. can we talk about because you don't involved in politics which i really really another of your colleagues in the music industry rod stewart called up sky news this week to speak on the government's in about the strikes but generally stayed away from politics. yeah stayed away from politics. yeah stay away from kind of , you stay away from kind of, you know, venting it were i was watching your last guest there live in america so you know i am not a donald trump fan and know so i can you know i get involved in politics in as much as you know i have my i've just i just don't think that, you know, you need to kind of impart it to everyone you meet. you know, i'd
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rather about music and what i do , you know, that's why i'm here. i'm here to talk about what i do. so you know, obviously, politics is very important . a politics is very important. a big, big, huge part of everyone's is everything . but, everyone's is everything. but, you know, i'm not a politician . you know, i'm not a politician. i don't want to i don't want to get in anyone's bad side. well, look, i think mean not yours, alex, but it's a really answer because i think there's much politics out there already. i mean , hypocritical, but i guess mean, hypocritical, but i guess it's my job. have an opinion. but we love about is but what we love about you is your music, craft talents. your music, your craft talents. how can and listeners find out about next gigs ? well, about next gigs? well, everything's chesney hawkes .com ihave everything's chesney hawkes .com i have a brand album coming out very excited new team fantastic super producer working with me so watch this space watch this chesney great see you do join us again soon. what a talented chesney hawkes sing us. song writer and general public and well, next up at 9:00, it's my
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on mark dolan tonight night. in my big opinion, the government's they want to make hippy crack , they want to make hippy crack, nitrous oxide , illegal drugs nitrous oxide, illegal drugs have become normalised in our society , killing and harming society, killing and harming people . it's time to just say no people. it's time to just say no . after ten, my martin guest is the legendary historian and broadcaster dr. david starkey will politics, atheism , his will politics, atheism, his cancelling and his comeback? nothing is off the table in the big question amid safety concerns , should the vaccine concerns, should the vaccine rollout be pulled out? and in the news agenda with my panel,
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should we be ashamed ? the should we be ashamed? the british empire should divorce couples, get time off work ? and couples, get time off work? and is it wrong to let your peds pets, i should say, sleep in the bed? do you ever let the dog or, the cat into the bed? is that the cat into the bed? is that the right thing to do? i think it's filthy. so is it wrong to let your pets sleep in the bed? plus, halifax, howard is live in the studio after beginning his music with an music career with an extraordinary anti woke video. that's howard from the halifax live on the show at 945. this is not a drill the video is incredible the guy's amazing you will love it. a busy 2 hours to come lots to get through and i couldn't do it without tatiana sanchez, who has the headlines . sanchez, who has the headlines. mark thank you. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. the chancellor has insisted path to tax cut for the uk to cut inflation as he sets out his long term plans for growing the economy with . inflation close to
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economy with. inflation close to a 40 year high. jeremy hunt has reiterated the government's pledge to halve it this year. he's promised to use brexit freedoms to boost growth and reverse he calls a decline in them towards the economy. the london whale mr. hunt also confirmed today hs2 will run two central london's euston station as planned. it follows reports the government was planning to scale back this leg of the project , terminating in a west project, terminating in a west london suburb. the rail link is costing over london suburb. the rail link is costing ove r £44.6 billion but costing over £44.6 billion but is supporting 22,000 jobs despite , increasing costs due to despite, increasing costs due to soaring inflation. the chancellor says it is a priority . the chair of an review into an nhs maternity care says hundreds families and staff members have raised concerns after it was fined raised concerns after it was fine d £800,000, admitting fined £800,000, admitting failings in the care of a baby who died 23 minutes after birth.
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nottingham university hospitals trust had thei r £1.2 million trust had their £1.2 million fine reduced after pleading guilty to providing unsafe care . it's the highest fine ever issued for failings in maternity care . winter sophia andrews died care. winter sophia andrews died in 2019 at the queen's medical centre. her mother, sarah , says centre. her mother, sarah, says no financial penalty will bring her daughter back . a man has , her daughter back. a man has, after being crushed by a pop up urinal , after being crushed by a pop up urinal, central london. imagines services were called to the scene at cambridge circus in west london just after 1:00 this afternoon. a london fire brigade spokesman says , the man had been spokesman says, the man had been trapped below street level despite efforts by the emergency to rescue him. the maintenance worker died at the scene . a worker died at the scene. a firefighter was critically injured while tackling a blaze at a former department store in has died. police . 38 year old
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has died. police. 38 year old barry martin, who'd in a critical condition in hospital, has died. royal infirmary of edinburgh . he was one of five edinburgh. he was one of five firefighters taken to hospital following the incident. the other four have been discharged. scotland's minister, nicholas sturgeon. it's described his death as a terrible tragedy . the death as a terrible tragedy. the king and queen consort have lit candles at buckingham palace to mark holocaust memorial day. king charles and camilla with dr. martin stern , who survived dr. martin stern, who survived a concentration camp during the second world war. they also met a moon. adam, a survivor of genocide in darfur in western sudan. today 78 years since auschwitz—birkenau , the largest auschwitz—birkenau, the largest death camp, was liberated and a day to remember all of genocide around . the now, at least people around. the now, at least people have been killed following . a have been killed following. a shooting at a synagogue in jerusalem in which israeli
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police are describing a terror attack. police the suspected attacker wounded number of people before he was shot , people before he was shot, killed by officers. the shooting comes amid heightened tensions along the west bank. it comes just a day after a deadly raid that killed at least nine palestine ians. there has been no confirmation of who's responsible as of yet. it also comes ahead of the us secretary of state blinken's visit to israel next week . tv online and israel next week. tv online and the abc plus radio. this gb news now it's back to mark dolan tonight tonight. my thanks to tatiana sanchez, who returns at 10:00. welcome to mark dolan tonight. in my big opinion in just a moment is the government say they want to make hippy crack or nitrous oxide illegal . hippy crack or nitrous oxide illegal. i'll be asking hippy crack or nitrous oxide illegal . i'll be asking why have illegal. i'll be asking why have become so normalised in society.
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in the big question , safety in the big question, safety concerns should the vaccine rollout be paused and after ted mark meets live in the studio. it's remarkable historian and broadcast david starkey. we'll discuss politics atheism. his cancellation and his comeback. nothing is off the table. plus. so excited about this. you won't to miss it. halifax howard live in the studio after embarking on a music career. remember howard from the halifax ? well, he's from the halifax? well, he's made an incredible anti woke music video. you won't believe it? it's not to be missed. he's live . 945. and the news agenda. live. 945. and the news agenda. should we be ashamed ? the should we be ashamed? the british empire should divorcing couples get time off work. and is he wrong to let your pets sleep in the bedroom ? reacting sleep in the bedroom? reacting to those stories and many more? my fantastic tonight, all journalist and radio legend mike haughey parry and a brand new
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star joining mark dolan tonight, former editor of the sunday mirror newspaper , one of the mirror newspaper, one of the most experienced and respected in the country , ave paula arts. in the country, ave paula arts. and last but certainly not least, a very good friend of mine broadcaster and political sam dowler . mine broadcaster and political sam dowler. now i want to hear from you throughout the show . from you throughout the show. your feedback, your response , your feedback, your response, your emails. all my priority at gbnews.uk . and this programme gbnews.uk. and this programme has a golden rule . we don't do has a golden rule. we don't do boring. not on my watch. i just won't have it. so for the next 2 hours, big guests , stories and hours, big guests, stories and always big opinions. let's start with this . this news will have with this. this news will have you buzzing and will literally take your breath away. the government are considering ending the sale and use of social laughing gas in england . social laughing gas in england. wales. the proposed banning of
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nitrous oxide hippy crack as it's known , which can have it's known, which can have damaging side effects . this is damaging side effects. this is part of a drive to tackle anti—social behaviour behaviour . worryingly, nitrous oxide is one of the most commonly used drugs among 16 to 24 year olds in england . you may have seen in england. you may have seen those small gas canisters lying around on the streets heavy regular use can lead to a range of side effects, including dizziness, weakness , the legs dizziness, weakness, the legs and impaired memory. inhaling the gas directly from a large canister can be so laughing is no laughing matter about time they made it illegal. whatever happened to the war on drugs. it seems to have ended in a hellish ceasefire in which we've normalised the use of marijuana , cocaine and every stimulant you can think of all the authorities , the courts and the authorities, the courts and the police. now so weak they can't stop people buying and selling
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this stuff . if the police can't this stuff. if the police can't stop it, what's the point in having them after the illegal narcotics trade is a gateway drug to so many other muggings , drug to so many other muggings, violence, domestic damaged families , damaged kids, you name families, damaged kids, you name it the explosion in illegal drug use in this country is one of the worst things that's ever happened to us and it's far more of a threat than terrorism. for example, as drug dealers terrorise , the streets as they terrorise, the streets as they ramp violence for profit and as they wreck lives . now, last they wreck lives. now, last night i attended a brilliant school talk about drugs . drug school talk about drugs. drug use is now so bad in with children as young as 11 skinning up that very often the toilets are open plan now. that's right the loser open plan with no locks on cubicles to prevent drugs being consumed during the school day . one of the great school day. one of the great misconceptions i learnt last night is this idea of a spectrum
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of drugs , you know, class a, of drugs, you know, class a, class b, class b, clear the old drugs are in a class that can kill you, damage to your health and ruin your life . one of the and ruin your life. one of the speakers told me about 20 year old who'd been using for a few years now this drug is known to affect the bladder of all things. well, this young lad has had his bladder removed and urine now goes straight into a colostomy bag attached to the side his trousers. okay so just picture that i'm no expert fashion, but i can't imagine that's the best look for an aspiring 20 year old walking around a bag of piss on his belt . this tragedy caused by a drug taken all the time by young is only considered class b tell that to the kid i've mentioned he's now to empty a bag three times a day . you've got codeine times a day. you've got codeine based painkillers. again, these pills have become very normalised and are even available via prescription , available via prescription, except they're highly addictive
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. and as a member of the opioid family , if you're taking these family, if you're taking these pills, you're effectively taking a form of heroin, then there's cocaine, which, although linked to an international industry by gangsters, has a fashionable drug enjoyed by the chattering middle classes who chatter a lot more when they're on it. and then you have marijuana , wacky then you have marijuana, wacky bakkie the ganja, which some argue, should be decriminalised , but to decriminalise would send the most disastrous message that the government thinks this drug is okay. it's not okay. first of all, the dope sold now, often called skunk , is an often called skunk, is an industrial and chemical product. it's not like the green leaves that were making the beatles high in the 1960s or the weak brown block of resin that people crumbling into their lives at university in the eighties and nineties . university in the eighties and nineties. this university in the eighties and nineties . this stuff university in the eighties and nineties. this stuff is university in the eighties and nineties . this stuff is toxic . nineties. this stuff is toxic. hell, youngsters are sometimes being sectioned afterjust one spliff, by which time it's too
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late . there's the long term late. there's the long term impact on human health. marijuana use has been linked to depression, anxiety , low energy. depression, anxiety, low energy. there's a surprise and a curtailed , unproductive life. curtailed, unproductive life. the only good use for any of these substances is, in my view, medical morphine, fentanyl , medical morphine, fentanyl, marijuana are fantastic. as pain relief. or for those with diseases. but beyond those we in my view, have got to move to a society which aspires to be drug free. the people that sell drugs are the worst members of our society with no scruples whatsoever perfect happy to pursue their business model resulting in the death of children and of young people the team last night who work with victims of drug abuse told me that order to make skunk look more valuable so that it glistened to the naked eye they've been known to add gloss rats poison and human faeces. they've been known to add gloss rats poison and human faeces . do rats poison and human faeces. do you want that going into your kids so much for marijuana being
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a natural recreation or drug? i went school with an amazing out of respect for his family. i will change his name to daniel he was my school friend . i've he was my school friend. i've known daniel since i was seven years old. he had fairbridge farm , brown eyes and was farm, brown eyes and was a ridiculously handsome kid with a hilarious wit. ridiculously handsome kid with a hilarious wit . this lad was whip hilarious wit. this lad was whip with his life ahead of him. he came over to my place for sleep overs. i went to his place as well. his family were lovely, but having gone from being inseparable , joined at the hip. inseparable, joined at the hip. we grew apart when he hit his teens. we grew apart when he hit his teens . and why was that? well, teens. and why was that? well, because he got involved with the wrong crowd. so called hard lads, aggressive slightly violent individuals who were, of course, into drugs . it was only course, into drugs. it was only when i hit my late teens, maybe 18 or 19, that i got . an update 18 or 19, that i got. an update on daniel . he 18 or 19, that i got. an update on daniel. he was found dead in
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his garden by his mother following a heroin overdose . following a heroin overdose. this is my friend we're talking about here . daniel would be here about here. daniel would be here now if it wasn't for the drug industry and gateway stimulants like marijuana, which many characterise as harmless and. but it ain't . the drugs don't but it ain't. the drugs don't work folks. they should be a taboo not the mark of a great night out they're killing people hurting and they are damaging our society and we must fight back there is no safe amounts of any drug . it's time for all of any drug. it's time for all of us to just say no . your reaction us to just say no. your reaction market gbnews.uk. let me know your thoughts. have we normalised the use of drugs? i often get emails from people that they enjoy marijuana. they've had it for years and they think it's much harmful than alcohol so. it's all about
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opinions. let me know what yours is. this is a show where we're allowed to disagree and in fact embrace it. there'll be of disagreement my talented disagreement from my talented panel tonight, strong opinion makers , their own rights applaud makers, their own rights applaud . former editor of the sunday mirror newspaper mike parry, journalist and radio legend and sam dowler, broadcaster and political commentator. e pollard . a warm welcome to the show. we are to have you on properly star struck. your reaction to the news that the government wish to nitrous oxide illegal . all i nitrous oxide illegal. all i would say about time. well actually son of i a mutual friend whose son died after taking nitrous oxide laughing gas and so i'm behind the government on this i don't i mean obviously they had a bad batch it was very bad luck. but why take any risks with your children's life? why take any risk with anybody's life? of course i am of the generation that like alcohol and that is not great for you but it does go
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into your body and it pretty quickly leaves body. i do think drugs do and i want to say to young people if you want to feel dizzy have weakness in the legs and impaired memory, just wait till you're older. it happens automatically . and i can see automatically. and i can see i can see mike perry is high on that drug right now . mike, what that drug right now. mike, what is the point in having a police force? what's the point? having courts if we can't make these substances illegal ? i courts if we can't make these substances illegal? i mean, it's a very good question, mark but jim, monologue you hit on the fact that there is a creeping acceptance of the drug culture in this country. it started on streets with policemen suddenly giving out warnings to people who were smoking cannabis, ganja, that sort of thing . it ganja, that sort of thing. it was against the law, but was the start of the crumbling of respect for the law in this country. it's against the law to smoke marijuana, but i tell you what will issue warnings instead of prosecuting you . a lot of it of prosecuting you. a lot of it came, of course, with the growth
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of the pop culture because . so of the pop culture because. so many people in that sort of culture were advocating that it was good for you and it opened up your mind and all that kind of stuff. but let's not forget the middle classes this country mark the people who take off the cabinet . well, i can't verify cabinet. well, i can't verify that. i'm sorry. i don't have that. i'm sorry. i don't have that sort of information. yeah all i know is that, you know in the chattering classes in this country and, you know, maybe islington in north london and maybe in our team says and up in the skies of cheshire, all that . it's so common. it's so common. people say cocaine and cocaine might seem innocent when you sprinkle on your table and stop renos but what about the damage it does to the people who supply it on the on the people who deliver it it's a huge criminal enterprise this country so it's a thin under the if you start ignoring the laws on clamping down on drugs we've got a massive criminal enterprise sprinkle it on the table shove
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it up your nose. it's showing a bit too much knowledge there, mike, paul qui parry i've seen it in films, i've seen it in films. sam dowler what do you want tonight? well i've, i've had a drink, so that's, that's well, that's illegal. that's illegal. hi. do agree it's about drugs , okay. yes, of course. drugs, okay. yes, of course. yes, of course we do. and it's my opinion and the opinion a very good friend of mine who is a police detective in the met police, she thinks and i agree that i'm more on i should be legalised cocaine should also be legalised cocaine should also be legalised because he would he would cut dead the drug the drug problems and the drug gangs instantly insula if it was managed by the government, then obviously never going to happen. but i'm just saying you need certain things like for example, not dockside. mean, this is not dockside. i mean, this is this not an this it's not it's not an illegal drug because it's actually used to actually what you're used to from cream, for example and i'm in europe and your hot chocolate it's just illegal. in europe and your hot chocolate it's just illegal . you know, it's just illegal. you know, it's just illegal. you know, it's not illegal. it's not illegal. you can you can buy the
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kind of and it's but it's just it's obviously like with like if said with a friend of ours that was a bad batch. but you will neven was a bad batch. but you will never, ever, ever stop drugs in this country. well you won't stop them anywhere in the world. so it's about managing managing it with the police, with the with the communities . we didn't. with the communities. we didn't. oh, that's okay . you either oh, that's okay. you either decide things are legal, not. and look at the whole naval legal now and then. what's being done about well, that's done about it? well, that's problem. we haven't decided as a nafion problem. we haven't decided as a nation . we haven't decided this nation. we haven't decided this legal . well, it's illegal, but legal. well, it's illegal, but nobody really discussed it. it's one those. and it was one of those. and it was discussed about years ago. discussed about ten years ago. well, you perhaps. yeah, well, there you perhaps. yeah, as even some have as as even some have demonstrated is a lively debate. i know mike has got more to say on this as well. we'll return to this topic indeed . reaction to this topic indeed. reaction to my big opinion monologue. i think we're too soft on drugs now. market gbnews.uk my martin guest is the remarkable historian dr. david starkey . he historian dr. david starkey. he tells his life story and quite a life he's had. but next, the big
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in two. now rushing . all digital team is now rushing. all digital team is busy crafting my big opinion monologue into a video which you can catch gb news. twitter very shortly at to gb news it out. the emails are coming in thick and fast. richard i believe by the way, in relation to that, if you're just joining us that we're too soft on drugs now in this country. i believe that collectively should just say collectively we should just say no , richard says mark, i usually no, richard says mark, i usually writes in after your monologue with a view on what you've said often, strongly disagreeing. but that was so powerful i just want to applaud you. agree 100% to applaud you. i agree 100% with . now, how about with every word. now, how about jenny talking about not normalising taking prince harry
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has talked blatant me about the drugs he's been taking for years and nobody seems bothered. a member our royal family breaking the law and one bats an eyelid. jenny brilliant points. carl hi, mark i think the government too right on this. we should be making it harder to get hold of drugs. not easier. it's impossible taking impossible to stop people taking drugs. should be taking drugs. but we should be taking a much proactive approach much more proactive approach towards educating people that they them to have they don't to take them to have an life. well, carl, an enjoyable life. well, carl, i went to a school talk night and that theme is that the that was the theme is that the drugs don't work, that tell your kids a complete of kids it's a complete waste of time this? finally time how about this? finally from said who says hi mark seriously your rant on cannabis was ridiculous. i've got a severe spinal prescribed up to 24 tablets a day. it's like saying if you drink, you become an alcoholic . 29 years and an alcoholic. 29 years and better mental pain control and no addiction issues is a political issue spurned from the vietnam war , where americans, vietnam war, where americans, british financial in and commonwealth fighting southeast
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asia never being revisited be responsible legalise legislate safe kids fund social build more houses schools , etc. well, thank houses schools, etc. well, thank you so much for balancing that debate said and. i would agree that when it comes to a medical application, drugs are a great thing, including cannabis but not recreation only. but look, it's all about opinions. thank you for yours and i'm glad you're enjoying your whacky back. it's time now for this . back. it's time now for this. i feel very old using expressions like wacky barky and ganja . but like wacky barky and ganja. but there you go. look, it's time for the question in which we tackle a major news story of the day and the potential effects of the covid 19 vaccine have been a hot topic. parliament of late , hot topic. parliament of late, of course, we've heard from andrew bridgen . well, now andrew bridgen. well, now conservative mp and gb news presenter esther mcvey raised the question in parliament about excess deaths. here's she had to
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say chief medical officer recently warned that non—covid excess deaths is being driven in part by patients not getting statins or blood pressure medicines during the pandemic but when looking at the data on statines and open prescribing dot net, which is based on monthly nhs prescribing, there appears not to be a drop. so where is the evidence? and if isn't one, what is causing these excess deaths? will the minister commit to an urgent and thorough investigation ? the matter now? investigation? the matter now? it's difficult to dismiss higher rates of mortality as being an nhs problem given the fact that's, as the minister pointed out in answer to that question, that higher rates of excess deaths are happening around the world. so is this the health price of lockdown or could the problem be the 19 vaccine itself ? to debate this, i'm delighted to welcome former director of
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communicable diseases for public health wales , dr. rowland salmon health wales, dr. rowland salmon . salmon welcome to the show . . salmon welcome to the show. hello. look lovely to have you on the program . do you think the on the program. do you think the vaccine is in part responsible for higher excess deaths the uk and elsewhere ? well, you're and elsewhere? well, you're going to be disappointed to hear this, but i don't think there's a clear case to be made that it is if you look at where the excess deaths have been and i took the trouble to look at this before i came on, it's been over a very cold period and the flu season which is say , a season over which is say, a common, well known public health phenomenon, sadly. and the was in the summer during the heatwave when i was many years ago a young doctor training in health. you were told that three things would push up mortality extreme , weather, extreme cold extreme, weather, extreme cold weather and influenza . and we've weather and influenza. and we've had all three this year. now there are questions over the vaccine safety and they've been awful of yellow card reports awful lot of yellow card reports , an awful of reports in the , an awful lot of reports in the united states. the problem that
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i think we have is the systems that have for looking at them are entirely passive. they rely on someone saying well, i've got a problem, i better send it. and i think right, they i think if i'm right, they originally came in to after the thalidomide scandal in the 1960s, so they discover uncover rare events rather well. but if you are trying to answer question, is there more of this combination event than we would otherwise see? they're really unsuhed otherwise see? they're really unsuited for it . and what we unsuited for it. and what we really need and we've needed this for probably two three this for probably two or three decades is a system decades now, is a system monitors vaccination . according monitors vaccination. according to the number of doses given. so if you receive your vaccination, you are then followed up actively. a few scandinavian countries have that but the bigger countries don't i think that's the only way we're going to get a realistic measure of exactly what the side effects are . so we can sort of are. so we can sort of disappoint if you're expected to be more actively anti—vax situation. but that's where i find myself not at all. dr. sarma and i've been vaccinated
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three times, but what has ever explained to me in in a convincing is why we vaccinated healthy people in the first place. i think there's a strong case for the vaccination of those who risk hospitalisation and death . but given the fact and death. but given the fact that we know the vaccine doesn't stop transmission , why did we stop transmission, why did we vaccinate healthy people and young people ? i entirely with young people? i entirely with young people? i entirely with you on that i think there was really no need to do that i mean the great driver of risk was age and the other great driver was other illnesses you had. and that should have been focus on vaccination. and i think it was perhaps disappointing that we extended to vaccinate to younger and younger people and eventually children who didn't have a say in because the one thing that we do know is whereas your risk goes up markedly with age your the problems that you have with side effects occur more readily the young you are so i have no problem with that view but i would hate to throw
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out if you like, the baby with the bathwater because quite clearly those older and vulnerable people have benefited enormously promotion enormously from active promotion of vaccination to the indeed i mean those excess deaths are a worry aren't they. i think early in january excess deaths were at highest levels since february 2021. of course, the height of the pandemic. it doesn't speak well for the lockdowns or the vaccine, that people are still dying in such high numbers. does it ? n0, dying in such high numbers. does it ? no, it doesn't. as i say, i it? no, it doesn't. as i say, i think there probably other factors coming into play . i factors coming into play. i mean, i personally of the lockdown is that it's really achieved very little or at best marginal and nowhere in proportion to the social and economic cost it's had. it was my opinion in 2020 that that's what would happen and indeed that's what has happened . doctor that's what has happened. doctor simon let's talk about the elephant , the room, the sudden elephant, the room, the sudden deaths fit means dropping dead
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heart attacks . celebrities young heart attacks. celebrities young people, all these stories, i mean, is anecdote little or should we worry ? i think the should we worry? i think the trouble it's very hard to make a judgement. i mean yes, of course. we should worry and i think the way we should to that worry is by setting up those sorts of systems of what is sometimes called prescription event monitoring so that we can not only follow up vaccines effectively and have an idea of what the real proportion are and not be affected by when the things becomes a phenomenon, lots more gets reported as i say, people have been talking about this for three or four decades now, and it seems to me now that we can process information so much effectively and cheaply. is the time to and cheaply. now is the time to reconsider not just for reconsider this and not just for vaccines. mean, very vaccines. i mean, a very high percentage hospital percentage of hospital admissions are by the admissions are caused by the inappropriate , excessive inappropriate, excessive administration medicines. this would give us a much handle on this. and indeed, as a result to any sort of system that was set
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up, we could probably quite rapidly pay for itself . dr. rapidly pay for itself. dr. salman , i'm very grateful for salman, i'm very grateful for your time. i wish you'd been in charge of health policy in the uk. i think we'd be in better shape if you had been given your even handed accounts of the last years. thanks there to the years. my thanks there to the former of communicable former director of communicable former director of communicable for public health wales, dr. rowland salmon. thank you role and your reaction? are you worried about the vaccine? of course. let's not forget, i understand it's not being offered to under fifties now, is the right thing to do. do let know your thoughts. market gbnews.uk now coming . my mark gbnews.uk now coming. my mark meets guest is the remarkable and historian dr. david starkey. we'll talk about his amazing his childhood and boy has this chap got a story to tell we've also got a story to tell we've also got the papers at 1030 with full panel reaction next. should we be ashamed of the british empire? see into .
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today excess deaths? should vaccine rollout be paused ? vaccine rollout be paused? excess deaths happening around the world, says kev . what has the world, says kev. what has been administered around the world? what could be the connection let's hope we don't get fooled by the world health organisation asian david hi mark, i suggest your guest looks at the high wire from last night's deaths by number of vaccinations as well. look, it's all about opinions , isn't it? all about opinions, isn't it? keep those coming . last one from keep those coming. last one from dee. hi, mark. of course your guest is going to say it's not the vaccines. if he says yes, he leaves himself the wales government open for being sued . government open for being sued. well, look, thank you very much for of your views on that. the government's and the nhs are very clear that the vaccines are safe and effective with recent reports suggesting 3 million lives have been saved . keep your lives have been saved. keep your opinions coming. market gbnews.uk reacting to the big stories of the day. my all panel
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brand new to mark tonight as mike points out, the most successful female editor of her generation eve pollard, former editor of not just the sunday mirror but the sunday express. mike parry, journalist and legend, of course, and the very popular broadcaster and political commentator sam dowler . now, today, the actor alan cummings announced that he had returned his obe, that he received 14 years ago, saying he does not want to be associated with toxicity of . the british with toxicity of. the british empire writing about decision to return his obe . alan said the return his obe. alan said the queen's and the ensuing conversations , the role of conversations, the role of monarchy and especially the way the british empire profited at the british empire profited at the expense and death of indigenous across the world, really opened my eyes. alan now joins a growing list of those who have either returned or declined to . and it begs the declined to. and it begs the question, should we be ashamed of the british empire ? sam of the british empire? sam dowler well, obviously, what
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alan's doing here is a gesture as opposed to making a particular stand i'm obviously since the queen's death, which, you know, we all still mourn. and i loved i love the queen but l, and i loved i love the queen but i, i've encountered times in my life where felt like i wasn't educated enough about the sins of the of the british empire. i didn't know i didn't know anything about, you know, what happened with the separation of india and pakistan and know the millions of people that died the like. and i to know that i think children should that. but however i don't think that you know the that we should pay for the sins of the past the you know the monarchy at the moment is obviously is not the same monarchy like the monarchy has around thousands of years . around for thousands of years. you know, and this is and this is different time where we're just reparations or just you don't in reparations or anything well it's on anything like that. well it's on anything like that. well it's on a case by case basis. it depends on. reparations for what? for slavery or for or for, you know,
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going to australia , you know, going to australia, you know, murdering, you know, native . i murdering, you know, native. i mean, these are, these sins of the past of the of the british. and we i mean, you know, you kind of sugarcoat it. however, you know , are looking to the you know, are looking to the future . and the queen was future. and the queen was looking to the future and think king charles it does the like you're saying he's you to climate change he's looking you know making you know making making the world a better place . i think that is what we should focus on. what do you think about idea of act to about the idea of this act to handing back obe he's it for handing back his obe he's it for 14 years, hasn't following. alan cumming name is it. yeah. cumming it name is it. yeah. never heard of him. was in act scottish actor scottish actor. well he's a first class queer but you didn't say who you are exactly what? who's in first class burk. okay, i see you have a studied the history of the british empire and what britain has to world has contributed to the world around world. in 1907, slavery was abolished between 1807 1860, the royal navy , british navy the royal navy, british navy intercepted hundred slave ships
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. and freed 150,000 people. who would've gone into but were freed by the royal navy because of the might of the british empire the british empire in those days was the policeman of the world and we did so much . the world and we did so much. you can't believe it to this day my colleague some here on the right, who i think does not quite the knowledge he might want to have about the british empire to this day. countries like india and pakistan. he like india and pakistan. and he mentioned the systems are based on what the british empire instilled into those country is a civilised behaviour the way to run a country sorted their economies and laid the foundations for the greatest of wealth in the world, which to this survives. i'm sorry, but for one thing i tend to interject before speaks. but what alan cumming is as well talking about lgbtq stuff and rights for example and the british empire went to various
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places like, you know, various african countries , ghana, for african countries, ghana, for example, nigeria and know and impressed the idea onto them. and no matter what their idea was at the time that homosexuality was wrong , it was homosexuality was wrong, it was a sin, etc. and then we and they have kept it and that's why we stand here now like with, you know, with 70 or commonwealth countries that still have like, you know , that gay people it's you know, that gay people it's is punishable death. yes we left and that is and that kind of and that got me to know some countries queuing up to join the commonwealth did you know that countries are applying by the year join the commonwealth, year to join the commonwealth, including non empire countries. exactly. empire countries . exactly. non empire countries. want to get in. have you ever been have you got and been to the have you got and have you seen miniature of big ben and red letter letterboxes. that's because they're proud of the impression that britain put on their countries to make them better but but not if you're putting on you're being hounded in the streets or murdered or put in prison for. no no no that
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wasn't. you mean because that wasn't. you mean because that wasn't unique to the british empire. some the greatest respect that still remains that's what paul's anybody did in those days. it was horrendous . but everybody did this. i think what been wrong is that haven't taught enough about the british in british schools because we were sort of embarrassed about it and also nobody quite knew how we discussed in a different races different groups and it was a different groups and it was a different rules in different countries and lots people have left the british empire and so is outdated rules . my feeling left the british empire and so is outdated rules. my feeling is every does wrong. we are now today all of us are doing something which in 30 years time people say how could they have eaten chicken? they have done whatever, how could they ? you whatever, how could they? you know, we are trying get it right. that's the only thing i can say for this generation. many us have tried to get it right and you're quite right. countries like india and pakistan , which too had a pakistan, which too had a terrible war when separated. but
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they will sail . our judicial they will sail. our judicial system , legal system, lots of system, legal system, lots of were left by the british and have done them the world of good . they're far ahead of many countries that infrastructure and of course absolutely . and so and of course absolutely. and so what we have look back and say look back and regret certain things, of course, the slavery terrible but also as you say, the british navy sorted it out. yeah what we to do and what we'd like all countries of the world to do and of course they don't is to look back on the past and bnng is to look back on the past and bring themselves up to modern day. well, can always an day. well, we can always an example and actually i'm rather proud of britain because it often said that we should and i love island comings i and i didn't know i was going to look at the empire in the round for not only failures and crimes but its as well. so i think about the queen. the late lovely queen. she made commonwealth what it is exactly voted to come with . that's right. so what we with. that's right. so what we your continually get better
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continually learn from learn the past the past. continually learn from learn the past the past . since continually learn from learn the past the past. since i'm cannot tell you why the british empire ended it's because we use the might of it to smash hitler and fascism. yes. and that drained us of all resources and. then the british empire broke up well, but only because we got rid of hitler. so it's all about opinions . what is yours? do you opinions. what is yours? do you agree with that , sam dowler, agree with that, sam dowler, about the crimes, the past? or should we celebrate ? the empire, should we celebrate? the empire, as might porky parry and pull out all suggesting let me no market we've you market gbnews.uk we've you onune market gbnews.uk we've you online a big poll from gb news online a big poll from gb news on that should we be ashamed of the british empire 68% say no. 32% at the moment say yes . 32% at the moment say yes. coming up in the next hour , coming up in the next hour, should we drop the word the from our vocab such as the or the french? that's the topic of my take at tedx and i'm not pulling my punches my mark meets guest is the remarkable dr. david starkey . but next live in the
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starkey. but next live in the studio what a guy. it's starkey. but next live in the studio what a guy . it's halifax studio what a guy. it's halifax star. that's right the guy that was in those halifax it is howard from the halifax who's done a hilarious anti woke pop video . that's howard brown from video. that's howard brown from halifax ads. he's live in the studio shortly .
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in take at ten the associated press are now deciding new expressions and words that we're not allowed to use . that is my not allowed to use. that is my take it to end monologue ten and i'm not pulling my punches you won't believe what they've got for us. but howard , you know the for us. but howard, you know the name howard , the man from the name howard, the man from the halifax . well, he's made his halifax. well, he's made his music comeback this week after releasing a new protest song titled . what happened to which titled. what happened to which questioned some of the big changes that we're seeing in our society . many people call it
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society. many people call it wokeism extreme political correctness. howard says it's not an anti woke song , correctness. howard says it's not an anti woke song, but he just wants to have a conversation about what's happening to, our society, how it previously hits out against this culture . following the this culture. following the decision by halifax , the bank to decision by halifax, the bank to introduce pronouns on employees name badges . he described the name badges. he described the decision back then disgraceful, and said that halifax had got it wrong. his latest swipe at the utter madness sweeping the includes dancing is from the engush includes dancing is from the english national ballet and leo kearse the comedian and tv news presenter as , a six foot seven presenter as, a six foot seven transgender unconscious bias trainer. it's worth a watch but happened everybody scared of being attacked . what happened being attacked. what happened suddenly ? opinions are now facts suddenly? opinions are now facts . what's happening is scenes .what's happening is scenes descending to new lows and maybe less is still slipping down. we know some things just never
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change. big losses are still slipping down. i hope they don't play slipping down. i hope they don't play tony. i said my glasses are still slipping. i know somebody comes . well, he's a star all comes. well, he's a star all over again. i watched the whole video last night check it out onune video last night check it out online it's hilarious but it's powerful as well and sparks a great and i think it's a good tune. howard brown welcome to gb news. hi, mark. how are you? i'm very well. it's great to be here. i'm thrilled to have you on the program. how much i love the video. i'm not just saying that a great tune. the that it's a great tune. the lyrics are clever. so simple question, did happen? well question, what did happen? well i just decided that i kind of just decided that i wanted to call a make a fun song. will involved with song. will be involved with a fun and, you we got the fun and, you know, we got the idea to , do it. so i thought, idea to, do it. so i thought, well, let's go with it. i mean just basically highlight some of the on today. the issues are going on today. and to get the and so for me to get the opportunities do that to opportunities to do that and to have a little bit of fun with it and, just basically say to people, it's okay to disagree, but long we do it in
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but as long as we do it in a respectful way and what respectful way and that's what it's all because i think it's all about, because i think so people there and the so many people out there and the moment are really frightened to speak and say, you know, say speak up and say, you know, say how and that shouldn't how they feel and that shouldn't be has to be wrong. be the case. a has to be wrong. we be able voice their we be able to voice their opinions, disagree if need opinions, disagree if we need to, just in to, but just do it in a respectful way. so for example, if don't want your if you don't want to your pronouns, if you don't want to say i am he her at a meeting he him or she, know, they them. him or she, you know, they them. if you don't want to participate in should be all in that, that should be all rights. i think should rights. and i think that should be choice. and i think be your choice. and i think everybody that everybody should respect that choice. that's choice. you know, i think that's what it should be all about. i don't think people should be forced of taking that forced into sort of taking that they actually to they don't actually want to because natural. so because that's just natural. so this song is all kind of just highlighting little issues highlighting those little issues that i'm that we've got out there. i'm having of fun with the having a bit of fun with the song and, you know, song as well and, you know, hoping people sort start hoping people sort of just start to take a common sense, look at this. that's that's the most this. and that's that's the most important thing. yeah. do you feel comments has rather feel that comments has rather sort the past? it sort of disappeared the past? it really it's a shame. really really is. it's a shame. really you watching you know, i was watching a interviews the weekend.
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interviews over the weekend. it's a of it's really strange. a lot of the interviews the debates the interviews in the debates seem to be very, very angry. there seems to be a of anger around. and i've noticed that myself about, to. myself being out and about, to. talking me, it was talking so for me, it was important to kind put important just to kind of put something there that could something out there that could kind people, kind of hopefully lift people, give comfort you give them the comfort that you you you careful to say it's not an anti woke song but i guess you're railing against extreme political correctness. absolutely we're absolutely you know what we're saying is look, it's okay to have opinion. it's okay to have an opinion. it's okay to disagree. an opinion. disagree. and have an opinion. but respectful the but we can be respectful the same are you rejecting same time. so are you rejecting the shakespeare is the idea shakespeare is problematic or that winston churchill some kind of monster? absolutely not. the british history is something to be ashamed of those. the things. no, no not all. i know a lot no, no not at all. i know a lot of people may that may be of people may think that may be their maybe that's not their view. maybe that's not view. you know, these historical are they're there for a reason and think people you and i think people whether you agree or not, you agree with them or not, you should respect it. statues being torn your view on torn down, what's your view on that? i personally that? you know, i personally think don't think think it's wrong. i don't think anybody deface anything. anybody should deface anything. i think anything anybody i don't think anything anybody should do anything that's illegal so those sort
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illegal anyways. so those sort of things to happening, i of things to be happening, i have it can't be wrong . have to mean it can't be wrong. sort of pull down a statue. what about racism? there of about racism? there is, of course, in our society, course, racism in our society, in society the evil in every society the most evil thing. but how do you feel about the way the race is being characterised in the kind of current political conversation ? current political conversation? well, it's a strange one, really, i think many really, because i think so many people different opinions people have different opinions this and i think what have to try and do i think really sometimes is just be true to yourself you are. yourself and be who you are. don't anybody impose their don't let anybody impose their will you . and i think will onto you. and i think that's the right and proper way to go. but i know that there's lots discussions about race lots of discussions about race at i think it's at the moment. i think it's right have that debate, but right to have that debate, but it shouldn't be a one sided debate. it should be an open debate. it should be an open debate. we can agree to disagree. the disagree. so that should be the way it should be respected. way and it should be respected. yes. what about the halifax? have you have you in touch have you have you been in touch with have they been with them have they been in touch you? absolutely i touch with you? absolutely no. i suppose waiting for suppose i'm still waiting for the you know. the phone call. you never know. i'm have you out with the i'm like, have you out with the halifax? not only if they disowned you after position on the no i've
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the pronoun badges? no i've still some colleagues. i've still got some colleagues. i've still got some colleagues. i've still some close. because still got some close. because you work the you did actually work for the halifax. anything. halifax. not an to or anything. no, i work for them. i joined them 1998 and spent 11 them in 1998 and i spent 11 years on the advertising years working on the advertising campaigns . of years working on the advertising campaigns. of people my campaigns. a lot of people my and before had fantastic and none before had a fantastic time. i have a fondness for halifax. it's a great place. they gave me a wonderful opportunity. but going back to kind pronoun badges, kind of the pronoun badges, i believe got that wrong believe they got that wrong because customer should because the customer should always and i think always come first. and i think they lost a little bit of sight there because i know lot of there because i know a lot of customers out there were very disappointed you disappointed when, you know, it's we it's okay to make changes we know then to turn know that. but then to turn around your customers and say well not happy with well if you're not happy with it, account. yeah, i it, close your account. yeah, i think that's just a bit think i think that's just a bit wrong. that wouldn't happen wrong. yes. that wouldn't happen on you know on your watch if you know because the thing about how many facts would family and we facts would have family and we wanted our customers wanted to bring our customers in as that's what made as a family and that's what made it unique. and for that to it so unique. and so for that to sort of just be discarded to me is of a shame because we is a bit of a shame because we did lot of hard going out and did a lot of hard going out and convincing our customers join convincing our customers to join us they loyal customers
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us and they were loyal customers as well. do you think halifax are worried now? you were very much of halifax. you're much the face of halifax. you're you're in some much the face of halifax. you're you'r messaging. in some much the face of halifax. you're you'rmessaging. doin some much the face of halifax. you're you'rmessaging. do you»me much the face of halifax. you're you'rmessaging. do you think their messaging. do you think they're you they're worried about that? you know, going to be know, it's going to be interesting see they interesting to see what they say, they've created say, but they've created a monster but are friendly with a friendly and talented monster. friendly as friendly very handsome one as well. so. and i say well. thank you so. and i say you look exactly the same as you did the adverts ten years did in the adverts ten years ago. well, you so much, did in the adverts ten years ago iwell, you so much, did in the adverts ten years ago i can, you so much, did in the adverts ten years agoi can you you so much, did in the adverts ten years ago i can you the (ou so much, did in the adverts ten years ago i can you the secretsnuch, did in the adverts ten years ago i can you the secrets that, but i can you the secrets that it is. glass of water with some lemon juice every day. and then on bike. so it's almost on the bike. so it's almost a week. 20 minutes. well, it clearly works those adverts. clearly works i. those adverts. yeah you get like a yeah did you did you get like a hollywood those hollywood money for those adverts. hollywood well, adverts. hollywood money. well, you'd ask my you'd probably have to ask my agents about that, you know, because imagining first because i'm imagining at first they just your they just. it was just your salary. the funny thing salary. well, the funny thing about when i first about it is when i when i first asked to do it, i mean, i studied music anyway. so. so get the opportunities to sing and dance. yeah know mean dance. yeah you know i mean in a wonderful production was wonderful production was wonderful didn't think wonderful me so i didn't think anything the side anything about the money side of it. and strangely after it. yeah. and strangely after i did the first commercial, i didn't really want do one didn't really want do that one because focusing on
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because i was focusing on a creative banking. but then, um, when offered the second when i was offered the second commercial, i did that was i really loved it, you know, so they to did they didn't have to sell. did you proper deal after you get a proper deal after that? i didn't sort an that? well, i didn't sort of an agent who took it. i looked agent then who took it. i looked after i didn't really after it because i didn't really want to worry about. i just wanted to find out. what about fame i mean, been fame has i mean, has not been a mixed you are, howard, mixed blessing. you are, howard, one the best known men in the one of the best known men in the country. no, no, not at all. i hear you still get mobbed. oh, even the funny thing even joking. the funny thing about said to the about suit, he said to me, the man to me, would you man said to me, would you change? absolutely not. i would it again. and twice sunday, it again. and twice on sunday, his been very kind his people have been very kind to listen can do to me. well, listen you can do it me twice on a sunday. me it to me twice on a sunday. me tell you that is a quote. how would you go? my hero? i just i love the song. thank you. i love the video. can people the video. so how can people find it on youtube where it's find is it on youtube where it's on also social media platforms, it's on it's on facebook on it's on it's on facebook it's on there. just look at what there. and you just look at what happens, it happens, what, how, how it around what happened, how it brown stuff do go in brown a brilliant stuff do go in take at that video lots take a look at that video lots to a busy hour we've to come a very busy hour we've tomorrow's papers with full
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this show like clockwork well doneit this show like clockwork well done it is 10:00 and this is mark dolan tonight. it might take it ten in just a moment after the associate press issue guidance to stop using the word the in the disabled or , the gay the in the disabled or, the gay community or the french. this woke takeover of our language would be hilarious if it wasn't so chilling . i'll be dealing so chilling. i'll be dealing with that shortly after ten, my mark meets guest is legendary historian and broadcaster dr. david starkey will be discussing politics, atheism , his politics, atheism, his cancellation and his comeback. nothing is off the table. dr. david starkey live at 1015 in
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the news agenda with my panel. should divorcing couples get time work is it wrong to let your pets sleep in the beds ? your pets sleep in the beds? plus, tomorrow's papers at exactly 1030 sharp with full panel reaction. lots to get through. but first, the headunes through. but first, the headlines with sanchez . headlines with sanchez. mark, thank you very much. this is the latest from gb newsroom. the chancellor has insisted the best attacks for the united kingdom is to inflation. that's a key set out his long term plans growing the economy with inflation close to a 40 year high. jeremy hunt has reiterated the government's to halve it this year. he's promised to use brexit freedoms , boost growth brexit freedoms, boost growth and reverse what he calls a decline ism attitude towards the economy . mr. hunt also confirmed economy. mr. hunt also confirmed today , will run to central today, will run to central london's euston station as
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planned . it follows reports the planned. it follows reports the government was planning to scale back the flag the project instead terminating a west london suburb. the rail link is costing over £446 london suburb. the rail link is costing over £44.6 billion, but supporting 22,000 jobs despite costs due to soaring inflation. and the chancellor says it is priority . the chair of and the chancellor says it is priority. the chair of an independent review into an nhs trusts maternity care , hundreds trusts maternity care, hundreds of families and staff have raised concerns after was fined £800,000 admitting failings . the £800,000 admitting failings. the care of a baby who died 3 minutes after birth. nottingham university hospitals trust had their £1.2 million fine, reduced after pleading guilty to providing unsafe care as , the providing unsafe care as, the highest fine ever issued for in maternity care . winter sophia maternity care. winter sophia andrews died in 2019 at the queen's medical centre. her mother, sarah, says no financial
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penalty will bring her daughter back. penalty will bring her daughter back . a man has died , after back. a man has died, after being crushed by a telescopic up urinal in central london , urinal in central london, emergency services were to the scene at cambridge circus , west scene at cambridge circus, west london, just after 1:00 this afternoon. a london fire brigade spokesman says the man been trapped below street level . and trapped below street level. and despite efforts by the emergency services to rescue him , the services to rescue him, the maintenance worker died at the scene . a firefighter who was scene. a firefighter who was critically injured while tackling a blaze at a former department store, scotland, has died . police say 38 year old died. police say 38 year old barry martin, who had remained in a critical condition hospital since monday , has died at the since monday, has died at the royal infirmary of edinburgh. he was one of five firefighters taken hospital following the incident. the other four have been discharged . scotland's been discharged. scotland's first minister, nicholas sturgeon, has described his death as terrible tragedy . the
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death as terrible tragedy. the king and queen consort of late at buckingham palace mark holocaust memorial day , king holocaust memorial day, king charles and camilla spoke with dr. martin stern , who survived dr. martin stern, who survived a concentration camp during the second world war. they also met a muna adam , a survivor of a muna adam, a survivor of genocide in darfur in western sudan. genocide in darfur in western sudan . today marks 78 years sudan. today marks 78 years since auschwitz—birkenau , the since auschwitz—birkenau, the largest death camp, was liberated . it a day to remember liberated. it a day to remember all victims of genocide around world. foreign james cleverly has condemned dead the attack on a synagogue in that killed at least seven people. he's called it. the israeli prime benjamin netanyahu has been visiting the. police say the suspect attacker wounded several others before , wounded several others before, was shot and killed by officers . the shooting comes amid heightened tensions along the west bank . and just a day after west bank. and just a day after a deadly raid killed at least nine palestinians. no one has
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yet claimed responsibility . tv yet claimed responsibility. tv onune yet claimed responsibility. tv online and ap plus a radio. this is gb news. now it's back to mark dolan tonight. thanks, tatyana. we'll see you at 11. welcome to marked tonight. big stories, big guests and always big opinions in the news agenda with my panel. should divorce couples get time off work to sort out their problems? and is it wrong to let your pets sleep in the bed? plus, tomorrow's papers at exactly 1030 sharp with full panel reaction. my more meets guest is the legendary historian and broadcaster dr. we'll talk politics atheism. his cancelled version and his comeback. nothing is off the table with me until 11. my all star panel of journalist and radio legend mike parry, former editor of the
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sunday mirror and the sunday express . eve pollard and express. eve pollard and broadcaster and political commentator sam dowler, a busy our lives to get through including those at 1030. but first my take . at ten the first my take. at ten the associated press the highly and trusted international press agency have made the wrong headunes agency have made the wrong headlines for this tweet . it headlines for this tweet. it says we recommend avoiding general and often labels as the poor , the mentally ill, the poor, the mentally ill, the french, the disabled the college educated instead use wording such as people with mental illness and use descriptions only when clearly relevant . wow only when clearly relevant. wow hilariously, they had to send a follow up tweet apologise saying for referencing the french.
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apparently people were offended you couldn't make it up in an attempt to be politically correct. they've wound up upsetting people anyway. not for the first time. we have clear proof that the woke crocodile will eventually devour its . now will eventually devour its. now this would be a funny story if it wasn't so serious . as for it wasn't so serious. as for this world renowned news agency to be making pronouncements about language and how things are phrased is an example of the growing intellectual tyranny to which we are all being subjected. the media, academia, corporations and the political class are down on our language in a way that would make chairman mao blush . take that chairman mao blush. take that rule . a few months ago with the rule. a few months ago with the halifax . remember when they told halifax. remember when they told that branch staff that they could wear prone on badges to demonstrate gender by which they identify ? now, it's important to identify? now, it's important to stress that this was a voluntary policy was very popular. we're
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told, among many customers and the public . it was designed to the public. it was designed to make trans people feel comfortable and included. fair enough. but woe betide the cashier. that doesn't wear a pronouns badge and doesn't follow the holy woke scriptures . pronouns on badges , meetings . pronouns on badges, meetings or on emails is, in my view, compelled speech. you're effectively making people sign up to gender ideology, which questions the very existence of biological sex, i.e. that there a man and a woman. we've seen an assault on the word manpower because apparently manpower is sexist . apparently the term sexist. apparently the term battle with cancer is offensive to people suffering. the big c. i would have thought that was the least of their problems. brainstorm is upsetting to people with brain and happy hour and pub crawl we're told are triggering people with a drink problem . blimey. all of this
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problem. blimey. all of this makes me need a stiff drink dnnk makes me need a stiff drink drink now . in fact, the drink now. in fact, the venerated stanford universal in california has published an index. that's right, an index of harmful language that it wants to eliminate from its website . to eliminate from its website. and it systems , because the and it systems, because the terms are ablest ages or racist . so here we go. the term walking walk in clinic has been banned because it trivialises people with disabilities . master people with disabilities. master is out of as it connotes slavery . killing two birds with one stone isn't allowed because that promotes animal cruelty . white promotes animal cruelty. white papen hey promotes animal cruelty. white paper. hey there , it is. that's paper. hey there, it is. that's white paper. is that's white. but it's racist . of course it is but it's racist. of course it is .even but it's racist. of course it is . even the words brave have been banned because the word brave promotes a stereotype . but promotes a stereotype. but surely this takes the biscuit .
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surely this takes the biscuit. the word american is be eliminated by this great american university. because the word american discriminates against. and central america . an against. and central america. an american is now a us citizen and. that's progress, is it? now stanford university will argue are encouraging inclusive language to make students and teachers feel safe and part of the community. however, george orwell famously said that language controls thought . it's language controls thought. it's my view that's exactly what our pubuc my view that's exactly what our public and corporate institutions are now trying to do to us. right now it's view that we're being brainwashed , that we're being brainwashed, terrifyingly google. we're looking at word processing software that would offer you an alternative word if the word you were writing was inappropriate in some or offensive, such as misgendering someone that were writing about big brother watching you folks and now he's your words as well . i say he your words as well. i say he could be zany in so—called free
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society. we be free to say whatever we like within the law, controlling words, controlling language and controlling what people read here and say is the ultimate form of mind manipulation . it's illiberal and manipulation. it's illiberal and i it abusive to. this creeping intellectual totalitarianism must stop . in fact, i've got must stop. in fact, i've got a couple of choice words of my own for these woke bullies. but unfortunately , those words are unfortunately, those words are not broadcast able on a family show . your reaction market? show. your reaction market? should we stop using the word the as in the french, the disabled , the gay community. disabled, the gay community. let's get now from three wordsmiths. ave former editor of both the sunday mirror and the sunday express . mike parry. sunday express. mike parry. broadcaster and lifelong journalist. and sam broadcaster. and political commentator . and
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and political commentator. and writer. eve pollard. you've made a career out of language. should we be curtailing it in way? of course we shouldn't . i mean, we be curtailing it in way? of course we shouldn't. i mean, i'd much rather that all this effort was put into making sure that everybody in this could read and write, which seems to be much more important . i mean, what more important. i mean, what worries you about the rise? re—emerges, as people say , we re—emerges, as people say, we produce emotions because they don't know how to spell heart for detonator, how to spell praying . and i have this image praying. and i have this image in my head that , the dreadful in my head that, the dreadful putin, when he saw that apparently some civil servants said they had to be addressed by the correct pronoun, he decided going into ukraine tonight , the going into ukraine tonight, the world has gone mad . and i do world has gone mad. and i do think i think you've got to be careful. of course about how you describe people . but the idea describe people. but the idea that you can't use the word american, the idea that can't use the word the french sometimes that fits into the sentence they're trying to change language. i think all of
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us should be better read , us should be better read, understand, spelling our language and, not worry about the niceties . and of course, we the niceties. and of course, we mustn't insult people . but mustn't insult people. but that's taken as a given this stifles. i know no authority should be telling us what to say . sam dowler no, i agree that of course, but but i kind of agree with tweet as well. i'm saying the gaze, the jews, the french, there's an othering about because it's not you joining me like you said, if it was you, but if it a history thing you're talking about the french did but you might say french people or the jewish or gay people. but the jewish or gay people. but the french say both. but i you understand what i'm saying? but there is a nuisance to it that can sound a bit like of them joining me. all of them then at me and then like, oh, what? you know, like i've said it many times, i love gays, but obviously i am a gay. say like
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for like that's that's okay but like anyway if you think this there's a there's as i said, there's a there's as i said, there's a there's as i said, there's a nuance about it and there's a nuance about it and there's anyone's language in general language changes general and language changes over know this over time. and we know this like i example, like you i know, for example, like you hate you hate the phrase hate that you hate the phrase lives experience, which is the link, is an experience as link, which is an experience as opposed to unless exception is the of someone's the experience of someone's lived. simply you lived. it is simply the you know, the changing of language over the years . this is, you over the years. this is, you know, this is part of humanity it is part of what we do. and you know, we monitor ourselves, of course there's overreach, of course, as you know, things know things that like brainstorming, for but and i doubt for example. but and i doubt there's anyone with with mental who'd like, oh, how dare you who'd be like, oh, how dare you say a meeting? of course say that in a meeting? of course there but as i said, there was an but as i said, there's overreach. but there has to be like know nuances and things that change time things that change over time and that the balki, having that is the case. balki, having read columns over years read your columns over the years in the sun in the express and the sun newspaper, the you are a veritable poet . you must be veritable poet. you must be horrified by this . well, there's horrified by this. well, there's a group of people in the world
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somewhere who once they've been offended by whatever they're offended by whatever they're offended about now, will off and try to find something else to be offended about . it's so offended about. it's so ridiculous. so i go to the emirates stadium is the home of arsenal football club. they score on their one nil up against my team everton on 60,000 people will be singing well now do they also know . 102 well now do they also know. 102 they are arsenal what are they supposed to sing? well now to arsenal's football as well. no, i mean that's how ludicrous it is that you know the actual word doesn't in any way offend . if doesn't in any way offend. if we're talking about the french to me that is a term of endearment that context. there's no to me it's a term of endearment . no to me it's a term of endearment. if i say something like french, i shouldn't i'm just say, oh, i in france during the rugby world. okay. two thousand and seven, i would say
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things , you know what the french things, you know what the french they know how to make bread. i love their croissants . i was love their croissants. i was turned onto them ever since it was a term of endearment and perhaps the time and so it is of course what is it offensive? what is offensive when someone says oh the french do people the french all these we're looking for. they're a group people. right. and you can either praise or you can criticise them. but for instance , mark the word so for instance, mark the word so now that's crept into our language it over the last three or four years, maybe whenever you ask even a politician that was what's the answer to the tax problem. so i'm not to use the word so it's a small of every sentence and that's where we're going to go, if we it's constantly yeah . respond to the constantly yeah. respond to the people going around looking for offence. okay. well let me tell you that the panel will return very shortly. eve pollard keen respond to that will she's back
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well i'm looking forward to this . time now for mark mates . yes, . time now for mark mates. yes, it's . time now for mark mates. yes, wsfime . time now for mark mates. yes, it's time for mark mates in which i speak the biggest names in the world of politics, showbiz, academia, sport business and beyond. tonight, we're joined by one of britain's leading historian , dr. david leading historian, dr. david starkey . he's the author of starkey. he's the author of bestselling such as crown and country henry and known course for channel 4 historic documentary series the monarchy. david a broadcasting titan as well , who was awarded a
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well, who was awarded a scholarship at cambridge where he studied tudor. he's a winner of the w.h. prize for biography and was awarded a cbe in two thousand and seven. and he joins me now. hi, david. hello. david you had a challenging childhood, but don't like to characterise yourself as victim. i hate the word . i hate you talking about word. i hate you talking about before the word victim immediately punishes you. this is the problem you embrace victimhood? we see the consequences , harry, and the consequences, harry, and the profound irony with harry you know, he invents a thing called you're about language. he invents those wonderful games called invictus . does he know called invictus. does he know what it means? it means not a victim . yes. those men refuse to victim. yes. those men refuse to be victimised by terrible injuries. he is by this little cherished grievance . i hold it cherished grievance. i hold it in contempt. i it was difficult when i was born. boring things like club feet. i got club . you like club feet. i got club. you did recover from that. but what
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were what were the implications for you growing up, were what were the implications for you growing up , that for you growing up, that condition? well , the condition? oh, well, the correction was was really done by the time i was four and that would have been a bit victorian. i would thought, oh, was i would have thought, oh, it was victorian sense of how victorian in the sense of how you were treated in hospital. i remember i was in male remember vividly i was in a male ward. i wake cannot with this great cage over my feet agony in the middle of the night i can still see the light hanging in the middle of, still see the light hanging in the middle of , the ward. but the middle of, the ward. but that strange, dark green fabric hanging over it. that strange, dark green fabric hanging over it . and the sister hanging over it. and the sister came over and said shut up. you are disturbing other patients. astonishing. and your feet. your feet strapped to blocks of wood. do i know it? no, no, not at that. it was only the left foot , which because it was going to be much shorter, the left leg, rather, was going to be much. it was, you were saying victorian . was, you were saying victorian. my surgery wasn't my . surgery my surgery wasn't my. surgery was part of the revolut , which was part of the revolut, which happened because of war. my surgeon, i can still remember his name. a short, very tough
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irishman called mr. kitchen apparently had learned his skill on crushed air and in the second world war and, i mean he did something punishing. he broke every in my leg, my below the knee, so that it will be longer . and of course, in those days was no such thing as pinning. it was no such thing as pinning. it was just put in plaster of paris for and months and months until . this strange i can still remember the day when it was cut off this extraordinary thing with peeling skin, which hadn't been exposed to air or anything for at least four months. like an egyptian . like an egyptian an egyptian. like an egyptian mummy . oh, i an egyptian. like an egyptian mummy. oh, i would. you must not you you have not been keeping up. it has colluded. yes. haven't you read it? i mean the egyptology gists have decided it has got colonialist . i can't has got colonialist. i can't even say the word implications. the madness. the madness indeed . and what about your mental health going up? because i don't want to persist with this victim
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narrative because you don't sign up to it. but you did have something of a breakdown, i think, in your early teens. yeah, i did. what? what happened? aged 13. oh, he was i couldn't face school again despite my ability and everything else. i mean, i've been to an astonishingly progressive primary school. we forget progress . restiveness in forget progress. restiveness in education starts very early after the second world war. i went to that school in 1949. i left in 1956, we have a prize. won i course the main prize, by the way, won my scripture prize by cheating . but that's an end by cheating. but that's an end because you , of course, an because you, of course, an atheist . by i because you, of course, an atheist. by i am because you, of course, an atheist . by i am terribly because you, of course, an atheist. by i am terribly proud that but the main school prize that but the main school prize that i won was believe it or not 1956 environment mental study is 56. i've still got it the foundation of so of the history
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that i write it's the cornell's peter and i forget his wife's and what it is called a history of england through everyday things so it's history through objects which have been something that i've always been nowadays. it's called material culture because we need to blow it up . but then so i have that it up. but then so i have that extra primary school was only there were just two male teachers so it was again very much like a feminised environment . and i knew i was an environment. and i knew i was an only child child of elderly parents, so on. and you suddenly go to a boys grammar school . it go to a boys grammar school. it was a very humane school. i'm first, and pop psychology was and escape. no i wasn't particularly interested in history at that point. again my career i was i was at the oxford union last night and i was talking with a couple of other people and we had very similar express agencies. they were historian , but at school they historian, but at school they were interested in the natural sciences. they're interested, physics and chemistry. what good
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you history in the end in the you to history in the end in the long suppose my failure long run, i suppose my failure to natural, be honest to be a natural, let's be honest , had the great good fortune to oncei , had the great good fortune to once i got back the stream of the school which i after six or seven months my class tiny the when they tired of us there were there were three or four of us who went cambridge out of a class of that size to including two getting myself and another another getting open scholarships and. two of them were natural one of them roger haworth. it was kind person for whom a number had to sound a colour and it must just so him. it was a very creative and it about as intellectual they were they were highly impressive and in verbal subjects as well . i in verbal subjects as well. i could not do that with number i can do it with words . and so for
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can do it with words. and so for me i think history i'm going to make this some terribly , make this some terribly, terribly. i thought it was a kind of second best i had a terrible history . it was awful terrible history. it was awful and the sheer shocking ness of the teaching dictated notes and whatever. but he did one wonderful thing for which am to return the two wonderful things. i'm eternally grateful to george. there one of them was when was a sixth form. he gave me the use of his own library and he had a magnificent library . he was a failed don in a beautiful room . books perfectly beautiful room. books perfectly organised. and i swore. then i have won. and it took me 50 years and a channel 4 contract to be able to it. and the other thing that he did which i think is even more important, my little boys grammar school was brilliant at drama and brilliant pubuc brilliant at drama and brilliant public and debating . the only public and debating. the only time i ever became with that how
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system course in grammar schools in those modelled themselves on pubuc in those modelled themselves on public schools. so you would if i was in school you would divide in different houses which competed at games and everything else. and the only sort of intellectual competition was the pubuc intellectual competition was the public speaking competition , public speaking competition, which invariably won of the which i invariably won of the yeah which i invariably won of the year. and we'll look, you've been educating us ever since and perhaps to a degree, your self taught as result of that terrible history teacher. no i will you real maybe you're right. i mean i think my education really began much earlier than school i and the that i talk as i do despite my background i was taught by the you mentioned channel 4 i was taught by the old beeb see i was really educated by the home service , which is where i talk service, which is where i talk like that . and as even as a like that. and as even as a lonely child with elderly parents relatively parents, my grandfather living with us, for
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me , the bbc the world that me, the bbc the world that opened another profoundly important influence on me was offered me children's encyclopaedia most brilliantly constructed and the final influence was you're talking about ill health and whatever , about ill health and whatever, which i have a lot of . until i which i have a lot of. until i was late in my late teens, at which point it vanished but i had a needed a course of infrared treatment i got a terrible of these huge the kind of thing that prince charles frightened about appearing on on trafalgar square. and it was nearly as big as as rich as roger's extension would have been. roger's extension would have been . and i had a wonderful been. and i had a wonderful physiotherapist who administered have no idea, but the infrared did anything to it at all. and she she was one of the typical figures, you know , women were figures, you know, women were dominant at that point. forget this, but they were all unmarried and. there was a very powerful i, i can sense retrospectively very sense of
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whiff of lesbianism and all the rest of it anyway, i had not with the nuns, a massive woman doing what she did. she gave a book called 100 great lives . as book called 100 great lives. as i was at my last appointment and my horrible carbuncle at popped and she said you'll be one of them spectacular. we were at channel 4 together in the early 2000 as you signed , i think 2000 as you signed, i think a four year deal wort h £2 million. four year deal worth £2 million. that was reported. don't let the balls to the moon of that. just be so vulgar. i just remember being on a similar for balls of steel all my document, but the books are incredible . the tv was books are incredible. the tv was incredible. you have shrugged off your brief cancel lation with grace style and panache and it's great to have you back. and we love your contributions to gb news. thank you. a true hero , news. thank you. a true hero, dr. david starkey. we've got papers next with full panel reaction . see shortly .
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it's just gonna 1030. let's this . yes tomorrow's papers off the press 3 minutes later than scheduled but who is going to interrupt david starkey i hope you enjoyed interview as much as i did . let's you enjoyed interview as much as i did. let's have a you enjoyed interview as much as i did . let's have a look now at i did. let's have a look now at tomorrow's front pages. we start with the telegraph and the photo that clears duke over bath sex, a photograph that the family of ghislaine maxwell believe discredits the duke of york's accuseris discredits the duke of york's accuser is public today. the image shows the bath in which the duke is alleged to have in sexual activity with a teenage girl. two of maxwell's acquaintances are sitting in the bath, fully clothed wearing masks, depict the duke and virgin roberts due for a look. the plot on that one pension tax
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plan may get over fifties back to jobs and navy in not pulling their weight in relation to ukraine. the daily mail pant examines the idea of raising the lifetime allowance to lure back early retirees as a story of just covm early retirees as a story of just covid from the telegraph pension reforms lure over fifties back into the workplace are being examined by ministers in a major speech on the economy today. in a major speech on the economy today . earlier today, jeremy today. earlier today, jeremy hunt called on older people who dropped out of the workforce in the pandemic to return to help ease chronic labour shortages. daily hunt's perks will help work again. same story. this is obviously going to be the dominant story of the day. the times now i will boost business to fix the economy, vows hunt . to fix the economy, vows hunt. tax cuts for businesses will be priority sized over those for workers . the next election to workers. the next election to boost britain's long term prosperity , says the new
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prosperity, says the new chancellor i say the new chancellor i say the new chancellor is always a new chancellor, isn't it? every 5 minutes, just a bit. the guardian now. uk for sale offshore linked to thousands of property is the bbc chair richard sharpe more 20 conservative donors a string of billionaire business men and the formula one driver lewis hamilton are among those who have declared they uk property through offshore jurisdictions . through offshore jurisdictions. according to a guardian investigation . the i now brexit investigation. the i now brexit regrets but uk not eager to rejoin the eu growing public concern that britain is paying penalty for leaving, according to an eye poll, more voters believe the economy trade, nhs and the uk's global standing would improve by rejoin ing the eu with immigration , the only eu with immigration, the only area believed to be at risk the mirror. new energy scandal. the prophets of gloom as millions suffer oil cash in with prophets of gloom as millions suffer oil cash in wit h £160 suffer oil cash in with £160 billion bonanza and independence
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whistleblowers expose horrific systemic abuse of children , systemic abuse of children, mental health, hospitals, patients young as 13 force fed whilst restrained is left alone to self—harm instead being supervised. staff shortage is blamed at privates hunter units . the daily star last but least, priest comes back from the dead and reveals hell's demons. tortured me with eternal riri karaoke . hell is full of demons karaoke. hell is full of demons belting out catchy karaoke such as umbrella by rihanna according to a us pastor who died then came to life. the star's top hits play non—stop in underworld pastor advised we will all take up hymns instead . amen to that. up hymns instead. amen to that. and those are your front pages reacting to that. we have radio and tv broadcasting legend mike porky parry , the first lady of porky parry, the first lady of fleet street is , pollard obe and fleet street is, pollard obe and talented writer and journalist
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dowler. let's go through all of those papers . what about this, those papers. what about this, sam dowler shake—up to over 50 years in work. older have a huge contribution make. well i mean ridiculous. i mean i was talking with my the other day like looking at old pictures and i'm like my when she was 50 looked like my when she was 50 looked like she was 80 and obviously like she was 80 and obviously like it is it is a different world. and in a way and i would say this to my mum, who's 72 and she's like, oh, rickety. i'm like, hillary clinton ran for president of the united when she was like just one year younger than the age. so, i mean, are as young as you feel really. so i think like, you know, if you want to get back into the workforce when you're 50. of course i'd like 50. it's not far off me. a new ma, for goodness sakes. well, the economy sakes. well, it if the economy has problem, of working has problem, millions of working brits are economically inactive. this sustainable. the this is not sustainable. the place to start is experienced over. place to start is experienced over . absolutely. well over. well, absolutely. well first of all, we have a problem
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in this country. example, we have an enormous problem with doctors. doctors are doctors. so doctors are resigning leaving at about 60 resigning or leaving at about 60 because their pension gets so far and then they can't make more on their pension. and we've got brilliant doctors sitting twiddling their thumbs and they should be earning and in fact as an older person is i can say this on this panel. well main favourite i'd like to do a fact check on that but a fiver in the pocket lisa but the truth is work makes you feel young and i'm not saying you should work as hard as you might have done when you were younger, but what is great and also if you want this country to help children, to help make more money, to help pay to help make more money, to help pay taxes, we should all be . and pay taxes, we should all be. and if you can work or if you can offer some help or do something , say, i'm going to play tennis. i'm going to play golf. those things are fabulous. they're not life correct of you've had some of the biggest jobs in fleet streets and you've been hiring
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and firing . would you really and firing. would you really have employed older people when ? you were at the helm? of course i did. and i did employ older people all of the ages though. don't you tend to look for the young up and coming talent rather than old talent rather than the old duffers? it depends much money i had for the salary that would come tottenham would for come in tottenham would work for anything i and some of the old duffers thought they're still worth they earning 20 worth what they were earning 20 years but gave i was an years ago but gave i was an equal opportunity and i'm very keen to have women on board was very hard at time and i have very hard at the time and i have lots of people for me who are older than much older than me. when i was a relatively young editor and they had experience, i learned from it was a sign of confidence in you that. you hired them. of course . i mean, hired them. of course. i mean, and people know what they're and if people know what they're doing, these can they doing, not in these can they help? i mean, was as the help? i mean, i was as the editor you get to the top of your thing like you know on the top of coffee if you have the best people, what for you? i don't think we should be quite. mike, you haven't started yet.
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let's be clear . well, i've got let's be clear. well, i've got a long way to go because i still feel quite young and i like working the age make some very good points and got this huge sort of army of people who are not being what you've got to do is give incentives. so thank god there is some incentive here because i'm afraid that three years of locked down and i lied to the fact that starting with gordon brown people will be encourage not to go to work because welfare state will look after you put those two together and all of a sudden you've got this timebomb of people came out after lockdown open up who decided , you know what, i can't decided, you know what, i can't be asked to go back to work. i smoke the welfare states pretty . a report told me this week that we all read half the country are taking more from government than they're giving back in taxes. i mean that is a system and you've got to change it and you've got to give people
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incentive to go to it. he's absolutely right. you know, business journalism, you did it largely because you loved it. and secondly, the higher you got, the more money you . but got, the more money you. but none of us ever wanted to stop . none of us ever wanted to stop. we were 16 hours a day, we were there 16 hours a day, six days week, finding out the six days a week, finding out the stories, i think in business and in business in general. i mean, like mean, my father, he like i mean, i my father, he retire he retired 50 like a golden handshake cause he was an insurance and then he went to university , studied to be a university, studied to be a social like because is people specially in high powered business this stop the deteriorate deteriorate of course like you know if you if your mind is working even if you're doing like two days a week, three days a week, like you said not like as it not as much as you were doing before, but keep your mind active and you like keep yourself relevant, relevant young relevant and watch what. young people yeah, yes. people watch. yeah, yeah, yes. they from you . you can they can learn from you. you can pass on the experience that you've yourself it's you've learnt yourself know it's madness to be i mean people madness to be just i mean people love their and love much to
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love their and they love much to give you to go with absolutely everywhere you go in this country you see groups of people i'm talking about visiting just a pub now who are there every day in the corner having , a few day in the corner having, a few drinks, talking to their friends . what do they get it all from now? that doesn't mean i'm in the public eye, but sometimes i go out in the morning teaching, sometimes to go in the morning on the way work. sometimes i'm coming tonight 7:00. coming home tonight at 7:00. it's of people it's the same group of people i'm getting money from. i'm not getting money from. they're don't see they're not old. i don't see these people about 50. you know a lot. and you the feeling a lot. and you get the feeling that actually britain isn't working i mean if i was in fleet street today at 6:00 on a friday night and fleet street used to be i know it's not no longer the centre of world's press. it was just that it was easy but that's but that is that's leftover from the pandemic kids from working from home and that is and that is an incentive to work because it but also for the older person
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you can come in at you could work from home all come in once a week and talk to us talk to us about what know because they will have learned things on their way up . stunning their way up. stunning revelations , the duke of york is revelations, the duke of york is there a way back to public life for prince andrew ? be asking my for prince andrew? be asking my panel for prince andrew? be asking my panel. plus should divorcing couples get time work to sort out their problems . and is it out their problems. and is it wrong to let your pets in the bed? see you shortly .
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yeah welcome back to mark dolan tonight with me until 11 radio and tv legend mike porky parry , and tv legend mike porky parry, the first lady of fleet street eve, pollard obe and journalist and political commentator sam dowler . let us to get to another dowler. let us to get to another story and this one is in the daily telegraph . mike, you've
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daily telegraph. mike, you've covered many stories in your time, so i did, in fact, released to the world the death of diana, princess of wales she broke that story, which is a brave journalistic call on your part to have finished your career. but it put your it put your name on the map. career. but it put your it put your name on the map . this could your name on the map. this could be another big story. the photo that clears the duke over bath sex. yeah. is there a way back to public life for prince andrew? well just to explain to your millions viewers, this is a we're showing this picture on. welcome to holly . just look welcome to holly. just look down. and what it shows is it shows two people in a bath? holly, if you could find that image of the front wall, you click on one wearing a mask of prince andrew, one wearing a mask of the lady that he was to have assaulted. virginia right. you get free. you were free, we call it now the ins and outs. this about, you know, what activity you can get up to in a bath . i don't really want to get
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bath. i don't really want to get into it to, be honest, because it's a bit of a of non—specific science, isn't it. what i do want to say to get this story leading the daily telegraph clearly prince andrew has started employing people now to promote his case and present his case that he's never had in the past. i mean this the first story we've we've seen in the last ten days in which all of a sudden prince andrew is saying it couldn't have been true because we've had ghislaine maxwell from prison saying the first time that picture probably fake to another picture him and ms. good. very okay . now we've ms. good. very okay. now we've got somebody coming out and saying what was alleged to have happenedin saying what was alleged to have happened in this past, couldn't possibly happened. i think he must have a new team. people around the place start. well, the telling graph has big connections know within royal circles and within the establishment . and so i think
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establishment. and so i think that there's something going on behind scenes here which is very pro andrew i don't think there's any way back for really i think you need stench is too great. well i agree with that but what i'm saying is, we haven't seen this sort of fight back in uk. well because you know , media well because you know, media operates. i agree with this kind of i think the die is cast now. andrew there will be there will be , you know, there might be a be, you know, there might be a softening for example, i mean, that was the pub over the road and, you know, it said written on the wall print andrew is a and. i don't think that don't think that any point he was a or anything such a thing. i think he's stupid . i think he was in he's stupid. i think he was in the wrong place at the wrong time. i think that he is know he's he's a he he's a victim of being know living in a bubble. i don't think he's, you know, any of the terrible things people say, you know, with the same time as i just said , the stench
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time as i just said, the stench is too stinky. i mean , there's is too stinky. i mean, there's no there's no there's no there's no there's no there's no there's no dog could give give no way the dog could give give the calls do it. the the door his calls to do it. the die is cast some doubt apologies 21 offended offended by by that word we apologise for that now we're let's crack on and let's to some other big stories from the people going through a divorce could soon be granted time off under a new scheme the positive parenting alliance will employers to change human resources policies to declare a separation is similar family death or syria illness asda tesco natwest are among companies supporting scheme which was introduced at an event in parliament yesterday . this, in parliament yesterday. this, according to the times newspaper . so should divorcing couples time off work ? is this country time off work? is this country stopping work? i mean i mean the engagement. let's have couple of weeks off for the engagement i mean it's quite that people can have time off when a baby's born
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babyis have time off when a baby's born baby is a lot of extra work all this most fathers would like skedaddle out of the house and. many wives think it be easy without you. some leave it to me you'll be more used in six months time when you can take them for a walk and do things. i think divorce first of all, divorce takes a long time. so what are you going to give the months, weeks, years date of the divorce so you can have a party? i mean , divorce is very i mean, divorce is very complicated . i think having complicated. i think having a mum and dad's at home all day will probably make children feel stranger . i will probably make children feel stranger. i think will probably make children feel stranger . i think there should stranger. i think there should more advice about divorce . can i more advice about divorce. can i say also as well you run two newspapers in fleet street? yeah if everybody who was getting involved in divorce on your stuff, you wouldn't have anybody . not most days. i'm not joking . you know, it's quite interesting. i watched the next generation. my generation got divorced . you watched the next
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divorced. you watched the next generation often the child i mean if you look at the things in newspapers about engagements you see you know so—and—so is getting so—and—so mistresses lives in clifton and mrs. so—and—so lives down the rendering them . we were the rendering them. we were the generation that got i sense the next generation who suffer that let's be honest won't get divorced. well i would say i was i would say i was the next to probably get the next generation. and i think a great idea because because at the end of the day you've got you've got to you've got to go in and sign papers. you've got mediation, which be done during which can only be done during work months and say, work hours, but months and say, i'm not saying but i'm not saying seven months a month. i'm saying seven months a month. i'm saying like, give somebody maybe like a week's grace and say like, know , use, use day like, you know, use, use a day and basically it's the only people who make from divorces of a solicitor. and would you yeah and you are imposed to be greedy . yeah but you you're giving
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they'll give you the maybe five days with them on their part and i can come together, mediate on the case and then come please pay the case and then come please pay them when they're not in, when they're not coming to work because they've messed up their so you punish me you so but you punish me you companies out you don't get divorced so court yeah exactly . divorced so court yeah exactly. that's a day yes. divorced so court yeah exactly. that's a day yes . leave you divorced so court yeah exactly. that's a day yes. leave you out five days in total a few for different problems . and then different problems. and then really on a monday , friday when really on a monday, friday when nobody else is. and i is madness. blimey. well, i think my panel are about to get divorced on this issue last, but not a news out. this this last 24 hours and influence from california has revealed that she's told pet pig to speak you thought this was a figment of your imagination . she's also your imagination. she's also admitted to letting her pig sleep next to her and even cuddles with them at nights i will. it begs the question whether it's a pig, a cat or a dog . it wrong to let your pets dog. it wrong to let your pets sleep the bed? or is it possum?
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what do we think? well, you know, when i said every makes a terrible mistake . yes, maybe it terrible mistake. yes, maybe it was it the cats or the dog. a lot i know people who have their dogs, even with them. i think that's fine i it's up to them. just think they are discovered in about three or four years time that. animals don't like sleeping with humans in some very unhappy , but maybe they very unhappy, but maybe they weren't . i very unhappy, but maybe they weren't. i think people very unhappy, but maybe they weren't . i think people should weren't. i think people should do what makes them happy and i'm for some and for some people know people who like like my mother has a dog like that's our family dog and she you know, sometimes sleep on the bed like it's as if for somebody and they're single on the road in a big draughty. i agree and then it's my cup of tea but have you ever had anything big and hairy in your bed. yeah i'm not going to be drawn on that. so of course i'm themselves. i feel that that is a step too far to say, you know , it's not hygiene. say, you know, it's not hygiene. a dog belongs a kennel. right? so clothes in the kennel
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downstairs, you shut the kitchen . the dog is in it's basket, got its water for the night. and then the next morning it leaks off and welcome you to the start . a new day. a dog does not belong anywhere above . step one belong anywhere above. step one thatis belong anywhere above. step one that is on the staircase in a home. i amen to that. well, look, thank you to my fantastic panel look, thank you to my fantastic panel. we've been so excited about them on the show and we were rightly rewarded thanks to eve , to sam and to mike . we're eve, to sam and to mike. we're back tomorrow from eight with the people's hour right until 11:00. the headliners is next. see tomorrow . i'm simon evans. see tomorrow. i'm simon evans. join on gb news for headliners at 11 pm. what's the scoop? i'll be joined by two of the country's top comedians. yes right. so we take a look at tomorrow's newspapers tonight, which is going to if it's a big story, we'll be covering , spill story, we'll be covering, spill some tea on him there. he will also have some i wouldn't stick up a bank . my also have some i wouldn't stick up a bank. my father didn't love me. so anyway , headliners every me. so anyway, headliners every night from 11 on gb news the
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channel good evening. i'm tatiana sanchez in gb newsroom, the chancellor has insisted the best tax cut for the uk is to cut inflation as he sets his long term plans for growing economy. with inflation to a 40 year high. jeremy hunt has written the government's pledge to halve this year. he's promised to brexit freedoms to boost growth and reverse what he calls a decline ism attitude towards the economy . now the met police says economy. now the met police says a 21 year old serving member of the british army has been charged terror offences. daniel abed from beacon side stafford is facing two charges. one in
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