tv Headliners GB News January 28, 2023 11:00pm-12:00am GMT
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rees—mogg whether the jacob rees—mogg whether the government is making the best of brexit. i'll also be joined by bods brexit. i'll also be joined by boris johnson's economics adviser, gerard lyons to discuss jeremy hunt's decision to cut taxes and leading feminist julie bendall will be telling me why she thinks nicholas sturgeon is a disgrace to women . all that a disgrace to women. all that and more at 930 tomorrow . and more at 930 tomorrow. i'm rae addison in the gb newsroom 276 fly b staff have been made redundant after the airline went into administration for the second time in three years around . 75,000 years around. 75,000 holidaymakers have had their bookings . flybe returned to the bookings. flybe returned to the skies last april after collapsing in 2020. they were operating to 17 destinations in the head of the rmt says its members will decide by the 8th
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of february whether to accept the latest final pay offer from rail delivery group . mick lynch rail delivery group. mick lynch says discussions will be held with members across the country over the next ten days. he gb news he doesn't feel optimistic what got is a really poor offer. the pay is below less than half of the rate inflation these two years. inflation is running over 20 to 23% in the retail price index. this is 9% over two years and we had no offer for three years before that. so this people are getting poorer and at the same time their conditions and their working lives have been trampled all over. so . i'm been trampled all over. so. i'm suspicious about what's going on and i don't know if our members would be prepared to accept it . would be prepared to accept it. sir keir starmer says he will pubush sir keir starmer says he will publish his tax returns if he becomes prime minister. the labour leader told the sunday that the chancellor and deputy prime minister would also do the same . it comes amid ongoing
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same. it comes amid ongoing questions over tory chair nadhim zahawi , tax affairs and the zahawi, tax affairs and the financial affairs . boris johnson financial affairs. boris johnson and international news. former us president donald trump relaunched his campaign re—election in 2024. they he's not doing rallies. he's campaigning. maybe he's lost that step. but we didn't are more angry now and i'm more committed now than i ever was. this mr. was speaking at a republican event new hampshire, in his first campaign speech . in his first campaign speech. several party members decided not to attend or claimed to have scheduling conflicts. mr. next stop will be south carolina, which is also seen as kingmaker state and the princess wales says she's determined to change attitudes towards early years development . in attitudes towards early years development. in an open attitudes towards early years development . in an open letter, development. in an open letter, kate , she wants there to be more kate, she wants there to be more focus on a child's first five years and how it shapes their life. the letter comes ahead of
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the launch of a new awareness on tv online and on disney plus radio. this is gb news time now for those headlines . for those headlines. welcome to headliners going to take a run .7 tomorrow's top take a run.7 tomorrow's top stories. i'm by the amazing comedians cox and dan spencer. before we do that , take a look before we do that, take a look at tomorrow's front pages . we at tomorrow's front pages. we start with the sunday telegraph . it says hospitals at home plan to save the nhs . so everybody's to save the nhs. so everybody's going to be working from home, even surgeons. they're going to come round and you open on your coffee table. the observer says, i saw children bullying and racism at a xylem hotel . sunday racism at a xylem hotel. sunday mirror has conservative cash with top tories rushing oil
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millions. we're going to cover that in a bit. and the sunday express has rishi war migrants. the daily star on sunday says pain in the bun. the daily star on sunday says pain in the bun . a dumping pain in the bun. a dumping doughnut is on its way. the referring to the referring to a weather front that's going to bnng weather front that's going to bring us some cold weather and those were the front pages . those were the front pages. first let's let's talk through the telegraph . yeah. lots of the telegraph. yeah. lots of interesting stories on the front paragraph tomorrow , leo. the paragraph tomorrow, leo. the first of which is, as you already mentioned hospitals at home plan to save the nhs. it's an interesting story isn't because i'm not i'm not exactly sure how they're to sure how they're going to achieve this. you say this. achieve this. let you say this. there's lots of jokes. i mean, are they going to do operations on i mean, everyone else on zoom? i mean, everyone else is online. so is working from home online. so we have surgeons we might as well have surgeons working as well. but working from home as well. but guess it saves money. well, i'm a bit worried this is to a bit worried this is going to sort of encourage family to sort of encourage my family to 90, sort of encourage my family to go, let me have go. you know go, oh, let me have go. you know , least my mom might come to turkey. she already watches what
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do much dr. pimple popper dread to think if this suddenly instructions like you're some kind flat pack that needs to be assembled your family members . assembled your family members. but i think the idea is that they're going to do a lot by video link. but i kind of imagine that sort of dystopian future don't you like adopt her sat there and they're looking like a bank of cctv images and they're all sort of people in their own homes. it just feels a bit wrong to me , doesn't it? bit wrong to me, doesn't it? it's not who they're going to do, though. i mean, they're going to do a lot more video link. and i'm assuming if you're going an on the going keep an eye on the patient, like if you need to sort of monitor people, then webcams is the way do. webcams is the way to do. yeah, i to honest i heard i mean to be honest i heard 2021. i mean i guess covid lockdown kicked this all off because they wanted to restrict the sort of the the amount of sort of face the amount of actual personal time face because could face to face because they could spread and i had a web spread diseases. and i had a web session with a private doctor because of course you can't get
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an appointment the nhs an appointment on the nhs anymore. though you pay anymore. so even though you pay for nhs , you've got pay for the nhs, you've got to pay extra for private extra and talk for private doctor bob, not about it, doctor bob, not upset about it, but but yeah, it did seem to seem to make sense, although it felt like they just, they just pulled me off and prescribed me that i probably didn't need it. it's i mean there is a slight dangen it's i mean there is a slight danger. i'm sorry to . no, no, danger. i'm sorry to. no, no, no. there's a slight danger because obviously it requires the doctors sort of get in close sometimes . the doctors sort of get in close sometimes. i'm one of those people who moles just for fun . people who moles just for fun. yeah. and every so often those moles need to be investigated in the removed and. i remember dunng the removed and. i remember during covid did have to send a photograph of my mole in. now for me, who's like reasonably tech savvy , that's okay. but for tech savvy, that's okay. but for somebody isn't it's a little bit more tricky. you can't send in pictures, fussy moles, you know, you might know something. there is a website for that. actually but i think this is actually a lot of this is happening. i think, like you say , you've had
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think, like you say, you've had to do it. i a nhs doctor's appointments as a family during the pandemic and since actually i've never gone back to you know i'm an asthmatic so have regular appointment appointments with the actually the doctor. i've never actually been to the doctor's for my asthma since 19. and, know, asthma since 19. and, you know, one complaint did have had one complaint i did have had some , you know, some slightly some, you know, some slightly dodgy symptoms. they got me dodgy symptoms. so they got me in. think this is the in. i think this is just the normal this what is convenient for convenient for you and it for is convenient for you and it saves so maybe we need saves the nhs. so maybe we need more it's going to more of it and it's going to work . work better, knows? work. work better, who knows? there's another story on the air there a sturgeon is under there is a sturgeon is under fire again. yeah i mean, talking about more of something of a thing would never happen , thing that would never happen, just keeps happening. all right . why? in a week? . why? twice, twice in a week? i mean it doesn't look like you feel the thing is it feel as if the thing is it doesn't. well, thing a doesn't. well, the thing is a finding that are convicted finding that there are convicted criminals that were convicted as a man transitioning to be a woman generally rape unfortunate totally generally generally against women that transitioning once they've been convicted so
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that they can get and i supposedly easier right in prison by going to the right you mean and also i mean the other advantage the other incentive for male predators to transition is previous crimes almost get expunged because if anybody googles your name and you've got a new name, you're called lulu, trixie, belle, or whatever your previous crimes that are committed under bob smith aren't to. i'm going to turn up absolutely . it's those matters. absolutely. it's those matters. yeah. moving to the sunday express diane do they have in the front. okay so they're going with rishi at war over migrants so what it appears is that rishi sunak wants to change the law. he wants to bring a new, less legislation that would remove the right to assign here for illegal immigrants. the right to assign here for illegal immigrants . so an illegal immigrants. so an illegal immigrants. so an illegal entrance . it's to combat illegal entrance. it's to combat the boats, because we all know that the boats very, very dangerous. they're an illegal way of getting into the uk . but way of getting into the uk. but a lot of people are dying . it's
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a lot of people are dying. it's dangerous. it funds crime, etcetera you do need to stop the boats . now, rishi sunak says boats. now, rishi sunak says that he wants to make it so that if you come over by the boat immediately detained, you're taken away, but also there is no way you can claim asylum way you could a refugee. he says could be a refugee. and he says look a good system. it works in australia where you know if you if you enter the country illegally immediately illegally you immediately forfeit asylum . forfeit all to claim asylum. there's legitimate legitimate routes to claiming asylum that you can follow if you're a genuine asylum seeker. but this whole just jumping on whole economic just jumping on a boat and coming over because want to it would wait that too. but the home office want to stop because yes. because they because yes. so because they must have big, big walls in their house. oh well facing a lot of internal conflict from whitehall and it's described in this article as the whitehall block . right. this article as the whitehall block. right. and this article as the whitehall block . right. and there this article as the whitehall block. right. and there is a an insider says oh in the past other home secretaries have suggested this but we've told them by dragging our feet . i
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them by dragging our feet. i think so. so yeah that's. what we're in this trouble but in mess because you drag your feet , know we've got this this huge but there isn't just a problem for the uk having to house and sustain tens of thousands of illegal migrants coming across the channel it's also a danger to them because you sometimes they die, they're not coming across and you know, well looked after aircraft. no how. how had i read this story two or three years ago? i would have said there is probably valid reasons to try and seek out softer measures because you know , for measures because you know, for these asylum seekers as well, it's something i just made that same up and i'm just my that's officer is people who love using the asylum system to entry to the asylum system to entry to the point like to make though is that we now to try other ways and it does feel slightly inhumane to say if you come by dinghy you going home. but at the end of the day if you do
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come by i think it's probably the best measure because we need to prevent that from happening. now, i know there are lots of things need to prevent from happening, need to happening, but we need to prevent happening france or prevent happening in france or further know, don't further back. you know, don't wage east, wage war on the middle east, whatever it be. but at the whatever it might be. but at the end day, you know, this end of the day, you know, this a final stop we need to stop final stop and we need to stop it happening. yeah. and paul stayed with the page of stayed with the front page of the has some some more the observer has some some more bad this is bad news about. yeah, this is the step from this last the next step from this last story essentially the headline is i children face bully is i saw children face bully bullying and racism in asylum hotel and we've all seen pictures and videos of these asylum hotels now where hotels have been entirely taken over and so repat created by asylum seekers seeking their asylum or waiting to be processed and we've seen some horrific videos just recently of sort of fighting, infighting mean this isn't fighting between anyone in the and the people staying at the and the people staying at the hotel. this is fighting amongst themselves because course, it's us that's course, it's not just us that's racist point of this racist but the point of this story is that there's children
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involved. yeah which which makes it very, very tricky often and tncky it very, very tricky often and tricky to joke about because he's saying that they're being bullies and they're saying that you know there's racism being used against the children and the point they've made in here a couple of times is that, you know, child told that if know, one child was told that if he a good boy, then he he isn't a good boy, then he would have, you know, asylum dismissed. know dismissed. well, we know i haven't the context. i've haven't got the context. i've read i've got the read through story. i've got the context he was context of how badly he was behaving if he was a boy. behaving or if he was a boy. well there were worse instance than somebody said this than that. somebody said this was stuff of believe . and was the stuff of believe. and somebody said, if back to your country, which is obviously xenophobic and racist, else said it's called the child a terrorist which you know, unless they're incredibly that's that's probably inaccurate this is really appalling and if this is being run by home office this needs to be changed immediately because we do have such a thing called boarding . and if a child called boarding. and if a child arriving unaccompanied, we have schools , a child could be housed
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schools, a child could be housed . they already have caregivers that have been checked out by the police. they already a system to look after a child. so i'm not sure why that being in hotels, especially they don't have any adults with those. so you're saying we should send thousands of albanian children to ethan ? i mean, this would to ethan? i mean, this would certainly change the complexion of tory party in 20 years time. well, why not? because, you know, let's give them at least let's look at least give them a good start, a good impression of the uk because some those kids are going to stay. why not like look after them instead of putting them into a hotel when you've already got a place where people are trained to deal with children . they're trained to children. they're trained to deal children who have been deal with children who have been through experience . through a traumatic experience. and children can be and those children can be properly looked after well, sending illegal immigrants to eton seems like insanity to which probably means it's going to become home office policy. i think so. but the front page of the mirror . think so. but the front page of the mirror. yes. so
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think so. but the front page of the mirror . yes. so they've gone the mirror. yes. so they've gone with conservative cash scandal. top tories russian oil, millions. so a billionaire , millions. so a billionaire, mohammed mansoor. is that how you pronounce his name is co—owner of a company that has a subsidiary with a subsidiary thatis subsidiary with a subsidiary that is supply buying machinery to russia's oil and industry and this particular billionaire , he this particular billionaire, he is also the top treasurer or the senior in the conservative. and he is clearly essentially making money from this company that is selling things to russia , oil is selling things to russia, oil is still selling things. yeah. and you say, oh, no, but okay. it's just qatar equipment. excuse me, a caterpillar they make trucks and what you dig with a big truck and a digger, a trench, you know, there's a logistics you know, there's a logistics you can transport armaments. yeah yeah, yeah. so essentially
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big heavy machinery. i mean pull one one issue i'd have with this is so a lot of this machinery is in russia's energy industry and europe is still buying oil and gas. well, maybe the oil but gas in russia and you know , in in russia and you know, in a roundabout way, we're buying it from russia because it goes through india or somewhere else and then comes back to us through, we are through, you know, we are channels. so i it seems it channels. so i mean, it seems it seems hypocritical condemn this man for making money from russia's energy industry when we are still paying into russia. exactly and i the flipside to this is not something i always look for is that, you know, he was investing in these things long. hang on. bear with me. he was investing in these things long before the war. so capitalist success, catalysts, capitalists famed for their morals . so essentially he's morals. so essentially he's looking for a way to make the quickest buck at this point and that might just be it. so whilst i agree with it, it's he i don't agree with it, it's he does for a living but the issue is that sunak has, you is that rishi sunak has, you know, continuously spouted that
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companies should , you know, get companies should, you know, get away from their russian interests . they shouldn't be interests. they shouldn't be investing in russia. and he's been spouting this all the time. and yet you've got this bloke who senior treasurer of who is this senior treasurer of the conservative party who has donate 600,000. i think was forgive me if i get this wrong. that's right. at leas t £2 that's right. at least £2 million as well. that's this rumour in this article the from the company that he's given rumour in this article the from the company that he's give n £2 the company that he's given £2 million to the tory party so rishi can't it both ways. you can't go around everybody else that they can't invest in russia apart from your senior treasurer who's money to your party. the style things work. rishi yeah, it's quite a bad look. even though we really i mean, those, those figures are a tiny fraction, tiny fraction of 1% fraction, a tiny fraction of 1% of money. that's russia of the money. that's to russia by europe. first for its gas. anyway, that's the front pages sorted . join us after the break sorted. join us after the break for liberal losing lady voters scotland being the wokeist place in the world. apart me obviously a killer who now a trans killer who now identifies as a bp mr. minding
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welcome back to headliners. i'm leo. joining me tonight are paul big bopper cox. i insist we call him the diane spencer. fans of this. we call her that. and we're kicking things off with the daily mail. five black cops killed a black . and the problem killed a black. and the problem is white people , apparently. is is white people, apparently. is there anything that left wing journalists can't blame on people? diane, i'm not sure . so people? diane, i'm not sure. so the daily mail with the headline von jones slammed for op ed claiming cops who killed tyler nichols could have been quote,
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dnven nichols could have been quote, driven by races . so van jones is driven by races. so van jones is a cnn commentator and obviously the time nichols was killed because he was beaten severely by five police officers on the 7th of january. and he succumbed to his injuries and died a few days later. and the body cam footage come out from memphis police and it's is harrowing yet shocking. it reminds me of rodney king being beaten who obviously didn't die . but this obviously didn't die. but this is yeah, it is horrible. it's i can't watch . i just can't. i'm can't watch. i just can't. i'm a bit too delicate and i won't but this commentator has said that it's that black people can harbour anti—black centre and can act on those in harmful ways . so this commentator is claiming that there is such a undercurrent of whites within ,
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undercurrent of whites within, the us, that it's even black police beat up a black person to death. and obviously this is a little bit just confusing and shocking . it's kind of it feels shocking. it's kind of it feels a bit counterintuitive , feels a bit counterintuitive, feels like a bit you know, it's kind of like the moment that wokeness the shark and everybody's like , the shark and everybody's like, what you're seeing black , people what you're seeing black, people are no racist because of white supremacy. so like, because another commentator said , look, another commentator said, look, you're dividing america by bringing in this race racism issue, you can unite. and when i read that, i was like, now everybody can hate the i mean, at least you're all united. and it does seem interesting . it's it does seem interesting. it's just trying to wedge this racism thing again when it is five, surely it's the violence the police they should be looking at. yeah, well, i think i think the looking at a left wing can look at anything. it's like a rorschach blot test. they can look anything, racism.
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look at anything, see racism. but paul , look at anything, see racism. but paul, we're but i mean, paul, if we're speculating motives , the speculating on motives, the police i mean, the police have a of with their with of interactions with their with violent criminals. and, of course , young men are course, young black men are overrepresented as as perpetrators for those crimes. yeah, this whole i mean, we should deal with that how angry why exactly i mean this is essentially what they're saying why exactly i mean this is esthisially what they're saying why exactly i mean this is esthis isly what they're saying why exactly i mean this is esthis is racism they're saying why exactly i mean this is esthis is racism byey're saying why exactly i mean this is esthis is racism by osmosising why exactly i mean this is esthis is racism by osmosis you is this is racism by osmosis you are in an environment where this journalist perceives there is racism, therefore no what colour your skin is, you will be racist conveniently just towards black people, if that's the only people, as if that's the only type of racism. and of course we've footage other we've seen footage in other videos. might been videos. the might not have been as the police as publicised of the police beating white people death or beating white people to death or shooting shooting white people. yeah. mean, i want i mean yeah. i mean, i want to i mean it's harrowing. i was outside with producer with the producer jonathan earlier to earlier and we both tried to avoid watching video. avoid watching this video. i don't see the video is don't want to see the video is harrowing but i got to hear it and we should probably sit that to honest. but parking to be honest. but parking that absolutely harrowing one side this presents a really interesting to left wing and left wing and left wing speakers
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essentially because this really does challenge the narrative because it's black on black it's doing this we all know had that been a black person and so had that been a white person and some black cops, that would be a big story. and conversely it would be a much bigger story if had white cops on a black person. now, this just black people beating up black people, which is the same as white people beating up white. but i know they've got a power of being police. yes, police being a police. yes, the police is absolutely. the is crucial. absolutely. is the power being police. but what power of being police. but what this does is completely says you rather racist. you have rather than a racist. you have absolutely don't agree absolutely is. but i don't agree that racist. i mean , that police are racist. i mean, this isn't racist one. of this isn't a racist one. of course not. but i took a chunk of the. yeah, it does appear that why is a fair comment although you know, i'm sure you're jest, but it you're saying it in jest, but it is fair comment. but this this is a fair comment. but this this isn't that's the isn't racism and that's the trouble trying to find racism trouble of trying to find racism where there isn't any. yes. they're trying to project it on. where there isn't any. yes. tcan'te trying to project it on. where there isn't any. yes. tcan't believe to project it on. where there isn't any. yes. tcan't believe youoject it on. where there isn't any. yes. tcan't believe you haven'ton. i can't believe you haven't watched video anyway watched that video and anyway the telegraph now in the sunday telegraph now in scotland haggis and scotland has banned haggis and is allowing meal rapists to
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is allowing meal rapists and to female walk female prisons. is it the walk is in world pole. is country in the world pole. well quite possibly going that way and how scotland became way as and how scotland became the in the the wokeist country in the world. headline says world. the headline says nicholas sturgeon's passion for fashionable changing nicholas sturgeon's passion for fasiscottish changing nicholas sturgeon's passion for fasiscottish much nging nicholas sturgeon's passion for fasiscottish much to ng nicholas sturgeon's passion for fasiscottish much to the the scottish social, much to the frustration now frustration of many locals. now you know, full disclosure upfront. anyone who's seen me on social media or youtube or anything will know that i'm not the biggest fan of nicholas sturgeon and it's for this very reason because she just floats around winds around in the political winds picking any left wing calls, picking up any left wing calls, essentially to deliver what i is a right wing manifesto . he's her a right wing manifesto. he's her and snp s manifesto essentially to break up britain . right. and to break up britain. right. and the way she's doing that is she's over as many as she possibly can. she's essentially nationalist. your socialist nationalist. your socialist nationalist. yeah. she's like the scottish of the bnp . yeah. the scottish of the bnp. yeah. yeah, exactly but i think if you she, you know, she seems to have a fixed asian fixation with gender sex and worst of all, children and, and seems to be
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picking up and running without cost. all we ever hear is it from the other side is on how. can you possibly challenge this gender recognition bill? you know, because you know trans trans people victimised at trans people are victimised at the same time. how can you use it this way? there are also it in this way? there are also other things that have happened under nicola sturgeon's watch for example, the scottish civil service agreed to delete the word mother from its maternity leave policy. they asked for anyone a cervix to come with the screening , anyone a cervix to come with the screening, hoping anyone a cervix to come with the screening , hoping they could be screening, hoping they could be the key to maternity leave, even when gender or whatever. you know, pronouns you've got, you know, pronouns you've got, you know, if you're taking maternity leave, you're a mother . the two leave, you're a mother. the two words are inextricably . it's not words are inextricably. it's not a dirty word either. mother is a lovely word . what comes after lovely word. what comes after mother? oh, that's a good point . but also scottish undergraduates are also minority because they introduced a strategy that was they trying to
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reduce poverty and to reduce a lack of social mobility. but they've ended up effectively pounng they've ended up effectively pouring middle class students from the best university courses , and it actually that out of 1200 scots who applied to study law at the university of edinburgh , basically 600 of 59 edinburgh, basically 600 of 59 were flagged as widening access . so that means that , oh god, i . so that means that, oh god, i saw the term for diversity isn't it? tell you something, i'm basically turning in circles with this. but the point is, is that they are shutting down access for middle class students because if you're from a disadvantaged background, you can't go to university , then the can't go to university, then the universities don't have enough money, so they have to get in foreign who pay astronomical fees. so that means that the middle classes of scotland are being squeezed out. yes particular particularly middle
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class the class students are obviously the best . working on police best anyway. working on police say police groups for vegans . say police groups for vegans. people on the t q that are distracting from going out and chasing criminals. although if they're vegans they're not to get very far chasing down those criminals. are they down. no, no they won't have the muscle mass. so vegan and lgbt police groups are among 200 distracting officers from fighting , says officers from fighting, says priti patel . so this is a report priti patel. so this is a report by the think tank policy exchange and they have fabulous names and it's been backed by priti patel and it's basically saying there are about hundred staff network in groups that have been formed by the police. so for example, you have the national association of , muslim national association of, muslim police and, you have groups like this that work within the police force . but unfortunately they're force. but unfortunately they're starting try to influence government policy . yeah. now government policy. yeah. now this is coming at a time where
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the crime solving right is at a record low like it's ridiculous think only 5.4% of crimes get solved at the moment the police teams are too busy painting everything rainbow coloured . everything rainbow coloured. well yeah that's like go into these groups trying to get i mean the things that they're trying to ban the trade to ban term islamist from muslim extremists that's extremists even though that's specifically word islamist specifically what word islamist means they could abolish the counter—terrorism prevent progress if a crucial thing move it to trans critics they're trying to abolish they're trying to do good work and they're spending their time doing politicised things that are really no business of the police. well, the police are effectively trying to change government policy like so that group, the national association muslim police, got together with another muslim muslim engagement and development and they are campaigning against the terrorist programme. it's ridiculous. like they're trying influence government policy , but influence government policy, but it's not the role of the police . like you can have your ideas
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but you shouldn't be like you be policing. you should be looking after the telling us that you're all vegan so we should all be vegan. yeah, absolutely. this seems to be across all organisations , just the not just organisations, just the not just the police. we've got equality and diversity and inclusion groups , organisations in groups, organisations in business and every public sector institution, organisation that are, you know, promoting these politicised woke ideology is at the expense of actually getting work done. everybody gets sent on you . racial awareness, on you. racial awareness, training and has to sit there for an afternoon. there's there's free sandwiches, but there's free sandwiches, but there's nothing of any productivity or spend. it's one great big contradiction, isn't it, for us to have organised asians that's hell bent , asians that's hell bent, impartiality, diversity equity, equality . we have an awful lot equality. we have an awful lot of special interest . yeah. so of special interest. yeah. so they've got this great. oh, we're all in it together. but in these tiny little silos , we all these tiny little silos, we all got our own thing. yeah. and going to try and influence everybody . yeah. it's to me it's everybody. yeah. it's to me it's madness. it does very much feel
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like everyone is equal and some people are more equal than others. and i think the police only need one special interest group and that's masons. group and that's the masons. anyway, sunday times. no and anyway, the sunday times. no and roses red libra in the news. roses are red libra in the news. what a surprise . they hate women what a surprise. they hate women and jews. is this the case? a lovely problem. leo labour, shut down the anti—semitism debate . down the anti—semitism debate. now it's silencing women . i'm now it's silencing women. i'm going to read a little bit of this story. i see, because i it really gets a decent piece, a context in the privacy of a committee room on the parliamentary estate labour meps gather for top secret meetings to discuss erosion of sex to discuss the erosion of sex based some have taken to based rights some have taken to wearing a badge with dinosaur and placed on it as a to shadow foreign secretary. david lammy is claiming that feminists who oppose id for people oppose south id for people wanting change their gender are dinosaurs holding their rights . dinosaurs holding their rights. i think it's absolutely fascinating and actually it's heartwarming or heartening at least for me to hear that groups , parties now, particularly
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groups women are starting to sort of stand up against this because they have been afraid. the point of this , the thing the point of this, the thing that jumps out to me in this is that jumps out to me in this is that women in particular are afraid to talk about this issue. and if the patriarchy is back . and if the patriarchy is back. well, absolutely. and i mean, i don't i don't want to talk don't want i don't want to talk the out with bathwater. the baby out with the bathwater. i dismiss the fact i don't want to dismiss the fact that, know, there's very that, you know, there's a very small the tavistock . small number at the tavistock. so i think the way well, keep setting up for these talks as well . so you completely fine me well. so you completely fine me but . there is a point here that but. there is a point here that whilst there is a very small population , trans people, they population, trans people, they are victims often but the biggest cohort of victims in this without a shadow of a doubt is . women, women are . nobody can is. women, women are. nobody can identify what one is. they can't do anything with anyone having to say this isn't happening men. it's men that seem to continue . it's men that seem to continue. you'll be the oppressor. yeah yeah, diane, i mean, this this poll said i'm sort of heartened that this is at least there are
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people in labour who, you know, don't go along with all the gender nonsense. and amanda semitism. it's a shame they have to secret. yeah, that is to meet secret. yeah, that is the really appalling thing and it really shows that c'est alma has absolutely he doesn't have a unified party at all because you have people rosie duffield and she speaks out for women's rights and she's shouted down by in the house of parliament and it's very clear optic when see that there was a another lady miriam cates she shouted down as well and the weird thing is, is that the people who are meeting together, who are gender critical, which for those of you listening, who might know what that is, gender critical is when you mean you're opposed to the idea . gender identity is more idea. gender identity is more important or significant than biologic sex. it means you think a bloke's a bloke and a women's are women. yeah definitely too. yeah that's where you sort of more lean toward . yeah. and it's more lean toward. yeah. and it's a cross—party meeting because
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whenever anybody says something out loud , they'll get shouted out loud, they'll get shouted down and they'll get all this hate on online and things like this . it just shows that sadly this. it just shows that sadly c'est alma because he could barely say what woman was a couple of months ago anyway. yeah, and i'm just glad that jake has held back some of her funding for the labour party mean he is their biggest. anyway, the final story of this election is a story in the express saw radical. it seems like it's made up this is unbelievably the world we live in. there's some teething issues in. there's some teething issues in present they and can't even begin so the express is going with trans killer now identifies as infant and demands nappies and baby food in jail so a prisoner called sophie eastwood just to give you the talk so once upon a time sophie eastwood was daniel and was put into jail in 2004 for dangerous driving whilst in jail with a month to go until they were released.
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daniel murdered. his cellmate by strangling him to death in a very violent manner and he was given life with a minimum sentence of 15 years. then in 2016, after session with a psychologist, daniel realised he was a woman and wanted to become sophie eastwood and now . in sophie eastwood and now. in 2023, apparently sophie wants to be baby sophie and i can't feeling . the i mean, there's feeling. the i mean, there's limits here. i don't know whether this is a fetish by this person. i don't know whether person. i don't know whether person is simply seeing what they can get away with. yeah, because they're both well maybe, maybe instead of being transparent women's prison, they want be transferred to the want to be transferred to the north that. yeah. possibly they definitely. i i feel like this is somebody who's just trying to escape from they are and it escape from who they are and it really does , it really does give really does, it really does give genuine trans people a bad look
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because this now makes genuine trans people is the kind of thing that they don't want in the news. and of course, this is of very minor person doing this , like it's one person who is a horrid you know, it's was just one person. but there's a lot just one person doing , you know, just one person doing, you know, one they identify one thing they identify as wherever men who wherever there's lot of men who one babies. i've one identify as babies. i've seen seen other things. the seen it seen other things. the thing that worried me, the thing jumped at mean, people jumped out at me. i mean, people can to do they want they can want to do they want they can want to do they want they can dress wear a nappy can dress up, wear a nappy whatever you want to fine. whatever you want to do fine. you know, just don't you don't make i'm make everybody else for me. i'm not along and give a not to come along and give you a cuddle and something that jumped out for me was prison bosses are taking the demand seriously really . i tell really taking the demand. i tell you what they probably are is because the process scotland in is that they have to and allows for these things to take place. i mean i really do love scotland leo half my family is scottish and i love them all dearly but when i said i'm not a racist but back in the day when you hate
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school , when the world is going school, when the world is going absolutely mental like it is. yeah, scotland starting to lead the way . yeah. and i didn't see the way. yeah. and i didn't see it either but it surprised and it's and it's again it's because of the within scotland you know speak to the average scots man or woman or trans person. yeah they're not interested in this this and don't hit the nail on the head actually all this nonsense aside and there are stories like this now they're always going to jump all this nonsense aside. the people in this particular case have been undermined most are undermined the most are transgender people they don't want stuff this want to see their stuff this completely everything completely undermines everything that's why should buckle that's why they should buckle down the process and prevent from happening in the first place. people that are being undermined the most. babies undermined the most. the babies are share a court are to have to share a court with this man. anyway, that's it for this section but join us after the break as the port goose parade gen z a celibate and regional accents go to the jobson well. it seems to be alive we'll see after the .
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break welcome back to headliners we kick off again with the metro and the pope says homosexuality is no longer a sin. it should be relief for a lot of clergymen . relief for a lot of clergymen. what's the story, paul? well, first of all, the pope is the one person who can say he's not homophobic , because he can say homophobic, because he can say that most of his friends, gay . that most of his friends, gay. however, pope francis has moved to clarify comments about homosexuality recent after homosexuality in a recent after he was reported to have labelled a sin and the problem he's got here is francis has made headunes here is francis has made headlines over across the world in the last week or so in the associated press because. what he's saying is that criminalise homosexuality is unjust however his religion that it is a sin. so he's just got. i'm always fascinated it's when the catholic church go at these
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stories now i'm sure if religions can progressive and keep evolving perhaps they have to keep people in through the church door. but this is you argue to the cows, come home with a homosexual anti is the band with a badge within the bible but . band with a badge within the bible but. one band with a badge within the bible but . one thing is band with a badge within the bible but. one thing is pretty much overwhelmingly as is a sin, not something i agree with, by the way. so how he how he can be progressive about in any way? i know. i mean, do people want to be progressive? i mean, i thought the point is, it's sort of a mumbo jumbo nonsense and it doesn't you know, it doesn't have to be nice. and it doesn't have to be nice. and it doesn't have to be nice. and it doesn't have to make sense. well, there are two things here that are really . one is that, yes, you're really. one is that, yes, you're right . he's really. one is that, yes, you're right. he's trying to really. one is that, yes, you're right . he's trying to change really. one is that, yes, you're right. he's trying to change his religion . right. he's trying to change his religion. i'm right. he's trying to change his religion . i'm sorry. other it's religion. i'm sorry. other it's the word of god. it isn't ehhen the word of god. it isn't either. it's what believe autism and what is what's happening is he's trying to bring in a whole new range of people who say , new range of people who say, look where cool with the look where we're cool with the lgb crowd, we're cool. there's well, you know and your go
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decent and your religious book isn't so make up your mind. well lots of people going to jump over to islam because they're not put they're not changing their book. yeah. do you know what i mean. although they perhaps should. second thing perhaps should. the second thing which bad that he did which is really bad that he did say it's a sin, he said it's a sin and said but it's not a crime wait a minute, that's because the sin judged by god . because the sin judged by god. and that gives people who are extremists the excuse to attack homosexual people , all because homosexual people, all because god told don't give them ideas. diane you just fail them. my client lists something you commit against another human. a crime is something that could be judged a law court, but a sin a sin against the almighty universe. that's 50 times worse. and it gives people the right to just go off on their own crusades and really inflict on the gay people, which is the danger of ideology anyway, the only thing is next and it seems the region like sins limit your career options. does this mean
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i'll never get a job hosting a topical news show town. what did you i was using so academics you say i was using so academics at nottingham trent and de montfort university have found out regional accents are still a part to law careers. now you must take this with a pinch of salt. they seem to have only questioned 99 people. so initially was not very impressed with the amount of people that they ask. but apparently more than 80% said they would be comfortable being represented by an advocate with , an accent. so an advocate with, an accent. so somebody sounds bit like me. they'd be like, yes, you can me in court . however, fewer than in court. however, fewer than 20% said they were happy to be by a barrister with a south, western or west midlands accent and they would be uncomfortable . so now i get my southwestern back. once i've had three gins. yeah. so you know i've got, i've got to say i mean would you be happy paul. would you be with the barrister. you a letter the west country. i mean i wouldn't a barrister or more specifically
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an airline pilot. i don't want to be on a plane and somebody comes over the tannoy look, we're going to london. i can't do the accent, but you know what i mean. absolutely. ladies i mean. well, absolutely. ladies and cruising and gentlemen, we are cruising at feet. see wrong at 6000 feet. i don't see wrong with we're going have with that. we're going to have three jeans in the last 2 minutes. airbus not attract them. no, absolutely. i mean i'm not anyone wants, know, not sure anyone wants, you know, barry, past or barry the barry, the past or barry the fingers them. but fingers representing them. but to so prejudice right and to say so is prejudice right and i'm talking about working class . yeah. because the, the point of this is that as, as is rightly pointed out, people that speak and should do proper , it's speak and should do proper, it's like if you're sat on a plane and the pilot comes over, if he's all a bit you are he start worrying whether you didn't say that. no that's exactly what you said diane is now on the television reading off a newspaper ridiculous we've moving on this is the sunday telegraph . i know the telegraph. i know the government's zero plans could be derailed by image of plumbers as white male, who is too dumb to go to paul? swear it's purely
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coincidental that you've got this story. well best to speak to. this is the flipside of the previous story, isn't it, for the viewers and the listeners of course, plumbers , plumbers, course, plumbers, plumbers, thick white male could derail . thick white male could derail. net zero ambitions loads of things are wanted me up straight away experts of race because experts want him out again raised concerns that image problems in plumbing could stop recruitment of people needed to install heat pumps heat pumps of slums of middle class privilege is a low. we're going to replace all of our gas boilers with these heat pumps, electric these new heat pumps, electric pumps. need 600,000 installed pumps. we need 600,000 installed a year by 2020. governments which seems ridiculous . i mean, which seems ridiculous. i mean, who is saying that all plumbers are white and thick anyway ? it's are white and thick anyway? it's quite a difficult job. yeah, it really is a difficult job. and who can ? the only thing i'm who can? the only thing i'm interested is , whether they interested in is, whether they are competent or not, i care what colour are. they can what colour they are. they can speak or not. only speak the lingo or not. i'm only interested in the merits ocracy of good they are. study of how good they are. the study
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was conducted , the department was conducted, the department for energy and for business, energy and strategy and report found that plumbing workforce is 95% white and at least 95% male. more two thirds are over 45 years of age and two in five want to leave the industry in the next decade. so it's the sense of the situation is with truckers where they had a huge problem with the truckers falling out of the labour because they reached that age and nobody wanted to be a trucker and then then the wages spike for truckers and no doubt it for plumbers as it will happen for plumbers as well actually make well who actually already make a decent think it's decent i don't think it's relevant it's not even relevant that it's not even saying why 100% working class. yeah point. here is yeah that's the point. here is the in. the stories the point in. the other stories that a middle that there's a 100% a middle class upper middle class. class or upper middle class. these aren't white. these people aren't white. they're class, they're just working class, traditional jobs . traditional working class jobs. although ironically, if people do into trades often do go into the trades they often make more money than she make a lot more money than she does. some, you know, mickey mouse, some humanities or arts degree. one of our former polytechnics, there's no university anywhere sundays mantra section their
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mantra to the section and their report on the self—centred sex of the west degenerate . yeah so of the west degenerate. yeah so sex and gen z people think we're not interested but it isn't true. so the point of this story is and it reads a bit like jackie magazine, if ever seen the 70, because it does it's kind of a tour. it's a story of this young girl lying on her bedroom music, how she uses bumble and what she's looking for and what and what she's finding is that in her particular case, men are much more interested . gen z men, more interested. gen z men, i should say, are much more interested friends who interested in friends who benefits or they call it sneaky links , which is news to me. i've links, which is news to me. i've not had a sneaky to those. when you a source on the fridge. you got a source on the fridge. ooh sneaky link you link. yeah. well this seems to be, i mean i'm sure that it's news that men which seem to be it for this particular story , are much more particular story, are much more interested in casual sexual relationship than women are. yeah however, her argument back to that is and the second part
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of the story really is they're not saying that they're less interested in sex. they're saying they're much more open about sex. they talk about it much more openly. and as a they seem to have less it. they probably think they invented it . well, was the site. . well, that was the site. there's this idea that numerous university studies have said that those born between 1996 and 2012 are in a sex recession and 12 plus there are living well and they should be a sex recession. yet one here, not in scotland . that's what this scotland. that's what this article says . oh, this article article says. oh, this article is clearly written by maxwell. i mean , an 11 year old. that's a mean, an 11 year old. that's a good point. i just read the numbers, didn't do the maths grief. that's this isn't romeo and juliet. seems well, i mean the women they are interviewed for the article where were all age. i was surprised though you know, considering they're young, they very considerate of they weren't very considerate of talking sex kind of talking about sex kind of minors, mostly , but they can't minors, mostly, but they can't they're looking at this they were saying they're they're a
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were saying they're they're in a sex and they're sex recession and they're saying, this is the saying, well, this is the generation of had the social media for the first time that the have had a lot of the generation have had a lot of access to and they're saying that because have a very this saying they've got an uncertain economic outlook i'm sorry but i think average had thought they everything in the labour market is very very tight at the moment wages are up so you know their economic outlook is rosier than it might have, but they're more likely , as you said, because likely, as you said, because they have all of this flying around and easy access it. they're more likely to also unique relationship . so things unique relationship. so things like hetero flexi which is where your mainly heterosexual but you flex able to not be a college amorous i suppose they have polynomials and stuff as basically being being you know chucking it about a bit dressing up language so you feel better about yourself and that's it for
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this. and i'll see you in couple of minutes for the final section with. scots of the scotch and an american has problem with wheels . no, not this way. a disastrous door. . no, not this way. a disastrous door . ding . no, not this way. a disastrous door. ding dong . can we talk to door. ding dong. can we talk to bnng.
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it to the well—oiled machine? this headliners we jump back in with the sunday times and it's a story about booze doesn't affect me. i've been doing trojan and she hates it when i follow that rule, but this is retired. the times lost orders , alcohol times lost orders, alcohol advertising . so the scottish advertising. so the scottish government it's them again . government it's them again. they're in consultation on new which at their most extreme would result in a on alcohol
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branding or advertising in pubuc branding or advertising in public spaces or online. now this consultation ends on the nights of march and obviously there is a very two big, very big to this debate. on one hand, you have pubs, restaurants, i mean it's scotland they're known their whisky you have johnnie walker and other whisky brands are doing this and you want to go scotland to try their whisky and there's names everywhere and it brings so much to economy. they look like 2 million people before the pandemic. they 2 million people doing like property and tolls. and so these measures would that alcohol is treated the same way . treated the same way. cigarettes, for example, where you'd have to sort of black out the windows, you'd have to put everything in a grape packet with meat damage, your liver written on the skin of the nice bottles, the nice designs on advertise on the sides of buses or billboards or may even stop sports events and cultural festivals . they may even stop
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festivals. they may even stop them from accepting alcohol sponsored . right? right. but on sponsored. right? right. but on the other hand of the argument, you the fact that public health scotland, you have people saying well something has to be done to tackle the alcohol crisis in scotland they have a they still have a very severe problem i'm just trying to find a little more i'm going to have to move to paul in this. if you're going to paul in this. if you're going to comment this. yes. i think the point of this is it seems to me that i do wonder what the sturgeon knows, what's on with their because there's their country, because there's two to scotland, two reasons to go to scotland, isn't whisky and to isn't it, the whisky and how to learn of it. in theory, learn to drink of it. in theory, paul and it's not like this. it's not like an to end division. my in—laws haven't, i mean, you look down on any other police, us. well, you police, can you us. well, you said oh 700 an said diana yes. oh 700 an average of 700 people are hospitalised and 24 people die each in scotland from illnesses caused by drinking alcohol. no whisky though that's probably special brew or something like that. and also i should probably just say i refer a suggested i'm
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clyde, the author of a mantel article might have been a because he's talking about year old children having sex something just to be clear , that something just to be clear, that was just a joke or you know, that it wasn't serious. it didn't mean i just sort of worked from our legal team anyway, some of these men are next and an american complained about a welsh mountain that smells well, thank smells of urine. well, thank goodness, go to goodness, he didn't go to cardiff, a annoyance. cardiff, is he a wee annoyance. yes i a great american tourist, angry at welsh mountain that has no toilets and smell of way or urine is a story. so this is abouti urine is a story. so this is about i mean, this is this is directly a tripadvisor rating, which, by the way, 98% of the very positive . but obviously very positive. but obviously nobody's interested in the positive beautiful ratings. so we go straight to negative ones. so the complain sir, about the smell and lack of toilets and most interestingly and amusingly how exhausting the accent is. yep so the point this american
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tourist is making is that there wasn't a toilet there for him. the place awful and he didn't understand a word anyone but may i just point that mount snowdon is the busiest in the united kingdom and if you are going to have a lot of guests you don't want people defecate everywhere so why not build a toilet the mountain so it's covered like, you know, like looking at james bond. yeah. like a teletubby or teletubby, you know how the teletubbies for the toilet, but they don't have orifices anyway , we go to sunday's mirror and something shocking is caught in a doorbell. cam, no it's not mark dolan and is cycling spandex , although i've got four. spandex, although i've got four. if anybody wants to just email me , enlighten us then what's me, enlighten us then what's this all about? okay so you know how you can get those doorbell cams. you ring the doorbell and it straight through to your it goes straight through to your mobile can mobile phone so you can see who's calling it's a good who's calling you. it's a good security unfortunately , security device, unfortunately, a woman's in law was on a woman's mother in law was on the other end, slagging herself
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. yeah slagging her off to her of all this or something like that she and my husband as all were making jokes at my expense, belittling and of course all round vile. now, the interesting thing is we don't know the parties concerned , right? parties concerned, right? there's two sides to every argument . so we don't know what argument. so we don't know what she considers a belittling common. and she didn't say was policing because what if the woman was sat there like the mother in law was that they go ahead.she mother in law was that they go ahead. she gave us a lesson here and it was completely. but like thatis and it was completely. but like that is a yeah. justifiable. just careful say just be careful what you say there's everywhere there's cameras everywhere everywhere as chinese surveillance that's everywhere as chinese surtonight's that's everywhere as chinese surtonight's show that's everywhere as chinese surtonight's show but that's everywhere as chinese surtonight's show but let'shat's all tonight's show but let's take look. take another quick look. saturday's pages . the saturday's front pages. the sunday telegraph has hospitals at home plan to save the nhs the observer has i saw children face bullying and racism asylum the sunday mirror has conservative cash scandal top tories oil millions sun express has rishi at war over migrants. the daily
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12:00 am
hello good evening and welcome along to neil oliver live on gb news tv and on the radio set. tonight i'll discuss controversial plans to add fluoride to drinking water across england and wales. there's reaction as well to the department of education's latest guidance on remote learning home schooling for schoolchildren . schooling for schoolchildren. and in a few minutes, i'll give my thoughts on why the introduction of digital id for everyone in the uk is a terrible , terrible idea.
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