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tv   Headliners  GB News  January 29, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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channel i'm radisson in gb newsroom and we start with some breaking news. 83 migrants have been rescued by the french coastguard after got into difficulty whilst trying cross the channel. 54 people were rescued from one small boat, 29 from another . small boat, 29 from another. they were taken to the port of calais and at least one required medical . we'll bring you more on medical. we'll bring you more on that story as we get it . the that story as we get it. the labour party says sunak still has questions to answer following his sacking . nadhim following his sacking. nadhim zahawi, the prime made the decision after ethics inquiry found that party chairman had
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committed a breach of the ministerial. mr. committed a breach of the ministerial . mr. zahawi has been ministerial. mr. zahawi has been facing questions over his tax affairs after admitting that he paid a penalty to hmrc for an error. chair of the labour party , anneliese dodds, says she's written to rishi sunak . what did written to rishi sunak. what did he know? and when about that enormous that nadhim zahawi was negotiating with hmrc , the huge negotiating with hmrc, the huge penalty that he had to pay pointed rishi sunak's say in parliament that all questions had been answered about this affair on. why on earth is prime minister holding up rogue's gallery of conservative ministers with others who obviously have broken security rules, who are subject to allegations of very serious bullying ? and yet the prime bullying? and yet the prime minister seems too weak to act against them ? it's been against them? it's been announced today that no newly convict head transgender person with . a history of violence with. a history of violence against women will be placed in
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female prisons . scotland. the female prisons. scotland. the temporary measures aim to ensure the safety of inmates, while the management of trans prisoners is examined . the decision comes examined. the decision comes ahead of an urgent review into lessons learned by the case of convicted double isla bryson was originally sent to a women's prison . a 16 year old boy has prison. a 16 year old boy has been charged the murder of a teenage girl, hexham. 15 year old holly newton was in the priest pupil area of the town on friday. she died in hospital. the 16 year old boy was also injured in that attack. the accused, who can't be named for legal reasons, has also been charged with . attempted murder . charged with. attempted murder. the will publish an urgent emergency care plan tomorrow to try to tackle pressures on the nhs. it comes as the health department announced plans to build virtual beds for tens of thousands of elderly and vulnerable people in their own homes , the health secretary
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homes, the health secretary says, shifting care away from hospitals will waiting times. however shadow health secretary wes streeting is accusing the government of sticking politics. it seems we've gone from 14 new hospitals to hospitals at home. i think a lot of people will say, well, how will i be able to be treated in my own home if the government's half the number of district nurses who are essential to provide in the community? i think this is a government that's run out of steam, run out of ideas and isn't able to deal with the fundamental problems of the nhs . so they're resorting to sticking plasters and finally members of britain's hindu and indian communities have been proteges . bbc buildings across proteges. bbc buildings across the country over a documentary on narendra modi , bbc show on on narendra modi, bbc show on bbc . well, people gathered in bbc. well, people gathered in london and birmingham in response to the programme, which examines claims over the indian
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prime minister's role in riots in 2002, in which thousands of muslims died. protesters are calling for a boycott , the bbc calling for a boycott, the bbc and for it to be defunded or on tv online and on dab+ radio. this gb news. time now for headunes headlines. hello and to headliners. i'm your host, stephen. and joining me on this voyage through monday's headlines are my fellow comedians josh howie and scott shapiro. and let's take a look at tomorrow's front pages . first at tomorrow's front pages. first of all, we will start with daily mail. putin's threat to kill boris. monday's telegraph goes with pm sacked zahawi without a fair hearing monday's i sunak's allies blame johnson for tory after the pm sacked zahawi the
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times zahawi axed as sunak gets tough on standards. monday's mirror tories engulfed by sleaze rotten to the core. monday's express boris putin told me i could kill you in a minute. and finally, the daily can't judge a baywatch pinup gal by her cover. pammy the librarian and those from pages . let's try and make from pages. let's try and make some sense of those taking us to the front page of the telegraph . joshua they go, they go loads of stuff, get old telegraph. they go lots of news that all the news here obviously the big story why being sacked and story is why he being sacked and it's to see how each it's interesting to see how each paper with slightly paper gone with the slightly different angle . telegraph different angle. telegraph is saying unfair saying that it's unfair essentially it was without a fair hearing arguably it's too late . i mean it's been going on late. i mean it's been going on now for quite some time. and actually, the sun open them. they found seven breaches of the ministerial rules. it was a full page report. it's pretty. so we
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had to go. i was kind of a little bit scary about what's is actually how so he has tried to of stop the press from reporting on this in the past and i think thatis on this in the past and i think that is the real danger that hasn't been reported as to how much he was using his money to kind of keep a lid on this for a long time and this has been ongoing for a while now. and when you look at the money involved he paid 4.8 million tax which he hadn't paid and 1.1 million as a penalty . this is million as a penalty. this is we're not just talking about a couple hundred quid, a couple of thousand, a couple 100,000 quid. we're talking about millions of pounds and this doesn't pounds here. and this doesn't happen accident as you happen by accident as such. you know, accountants know, he accountants and whatnot. well i mean, whatnot. yeah, well i mean, one of the arguments this is of the arguments against this is people angry at are people saying those angry at are angry because he's rich, that there's a certain type of brit that seems to hate people with money the money and that ignores the argument this is to with argument that this is to do with why you the job as as why would you take the job as as you well had it as you may well have had it as chancellor you know you're about to be fined hmrc. you're
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to be fined by hmrc. you're already paid one. there are other questions actually. so i disagree. the disagree. it's not about the size those money. if he owed size of those money. if he owed a couple grand , then the same a couple of grand, then the same problem. if you're suing a journalist to them journalist to stop them investigating , how euro investigating, how much euro does how much you are? does it matter how much you are? the in the journalist, i the problem in the journalist, i guess talking about guess i'm just talking about scale. could understand few scale. i could understand a few thousand pounds when we are deaung dealing with millions. if it was a thousand pounds and they a few thousand pounds and they got the figures a bit wrong. but this of such this is obviously of such a scale that it doesn't seem like it scale that it doesn't seem like h been scale that it doesn't seem like it been you working it could have been you working with calculator drinking with a calculator and drinking coffee. you're on screen. you missed that. you missed that point, that button or that zero. do miss zero? so you do you miss six zero? so you know, shaking a little know, if you're shaking a little bit, don't have bit, oh that coffee don't have that coffee. and that's that much coffee. and that's exactly the kind of person you want chancellor of the want as. the chancellor of the exchequer. i mean, exchequer. exactly i mean, i think rishi, our nick is think rishi, i think our nick is angry because receives an account he's like, account himself and he's like, how up like how could you screw up like this, both know important this, we both know how important numbers and now i'm going to numbers are and now i'm going to fire you over this and it makes look you know? so think look bad, you know? so i think it's been tough hundred days it's been a tough hundred days for days. yeah for ish of 100 days. yeah a tough but also this is a
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tough one. but also this is a conflict of interests that was obviously you're the you were in charge taxes. yeah. charge of taxes. yeah yeah. yeah. your haven't been yeah. your taxes haven't been paid so there's paid properly. so there's hypocrisy, but hypocrisy, as you say. but again, we're rishi again, like you say, we're rishi sunak whole thing. he's sunak like his whole thing. he's going government going to lead the government with professionalism with integrity professionalism and we're and accountability and all we're seeing, he's getting all angles after his wife had sort of bent the tax wise already . i mean, the tax wise already. i mean, these are two people now that are sort of bent the rules in their own favour. and we're just used tories kind of reaching used the tories kind of reaching with and with their big hands and scooping up the cash and putting in pockets turning in their own pockets and turning up and saying we're right, a doctor is going to come to your house. are no hospitals house. there are no hospitals left. sorry, there's no bus system sir, you're sorry, system left, sir, you're sorry, you're starving. oh and here's bread made out of beans. that give you're give to poor people. you're going eat that, too. that's going to eat that, too. that's enough that. yeah. more on enough of that. yeah. more on that it's not. it that later. just. it's not. it just good. you just doesn't look good. but you have wonder, they're spending have to wonder, they're spending so on story. what so much on this story. but what about brexit, what about industrial problems are strikes foodbanks, infighting foodbanks, tory infighting the general election coming up that's corner too. that's around the corner too. i mean got lot of mean they've got a lot of i think there's a lot of reasons
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for party to step back for the tory party to step back and reconfigure the think and reconfigure the do you think they should like you know they should just like you know what labour you take what guys labour you just take it. up here we're sorry it. well we up here we're sorry i think this many years i think i think this many years i think i think this many years i think i think they might be a relief within couple of days the within a couple of days in the spa some hydration maybe spa maybe some hydration maybe think all things on a little think all the things on a little massage. know when you've massage. well know when you've had a bad show in redding and then sit green room then you sit in the green room afterwards. you think i'm a terrible but you know, terrible comic, but you know, you of days to you see a couple of days to yourself, know, you call a yourself, you know, you call a friend this feels like a very specific saying you specific story just saying you spoke between the suddenly you're the best company i think they break from they need a break from themselves. worst themselves. we're our own worst enemies, so you step enemies, aren't we? so you step back. else on the front back. anything else on the front page with. yes. so there's labour law labour going to block the law keeping schools open. this is keeping schools open. so this is obviously got strikes obviously we got the strikes out this week and as a government trying to introduce a law saying that they can't do it. so labour is saying, no, no, support is saying, no, no, we support people because got labour people because we've got labour and then there's and our title and then there's nothing sturgeon makes u—turn nothing sturgeon makes a u—turn on trans prison rules which are going to be covering day. and
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there's also an interesting here about london school about university london school of economics are going to cancel the word as it's too the word lent as it's too christian so they because it's light and there's a lot of international students they see that as somewhat exclusive if that as a somewhat exclusive if paid all this money to come to uk or to come to a different culture. want culture. i'd want my differences. good you what differences. good you know what i mean? be like, hey, i mean? i'd be like, hey, where's where's christmas? where's my where's my christmas? where's that's where's where, you know, that's the pleasure of being in a different culture, how they just getting in of getting rid of it in terms of the they're doing it for 40 days. yeah i can see how i mean i was a christian joke from a jew about how i meant to the past participle of lend. yeah. they banning that one as well. honestly can't say anything these days. that where the these days. is that where the line take the line? line we take for the whole line? so move on the daily mail. so let's move on the daily mail. scott, what have they got for us on the front page? putin's threat to kill boris. i don't to hurt you, can kill you hurt you, but i can kill you with a missile. apparently, putin to assassinate putin threatened to assassinate bofis in putin threatened to assassinate boris in the up to boris johnson in the run up to the ukrainian war emerged. it says the former prime minister said that russian leader had
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bragged it would take only a minute to kill him with a missile after he warned him to stay out of the ukraine because he was he's about to strike and he was he's about to strike and he wanted the british to say he's he's made threats he's he's made these threats before. i mean, kgb is before. and i mean, kgb is probably true. i think he he's probably true. i think he he's probably pretty good at killing people. know, people. and i think, you know, bofis people. and i think, you know, boris easy target. boris is kind of an easy target. i can run very fast. and security, this country is a bit lax. we've seen that in the. so i know. i mean, i don't i don't know. i mean, i don't think about putin is think the thing about putin is he doesn't make empty he doesn't really make empty threats, kind of threats, does he? he kind of goes through with what he says is going to through what he is going to go through what he didn't he hasn't. if didn't or he hasn't. well, if think boris, you think it's coming, boris, you think it's coming, boris, you think well is he's think it's going well is he's got boris go away with it. so i what putin's intention to what putin's intention was to invade the ukrainian and everybody back and not get everybody step back and not get in because we've in his because again we've learned is going to learned that putin is going to take three take about three days, especially thought especially because he thought europe like europe was out of his way like they had done in crimea and in georgia. he thought, no would do anything. and instead they did and it's taking and instead it's taking longer every putin look worse every day makes putin look worse and and weaker and weaker
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and worse and weaker and weaker and worse and weaker and weaker and course, he's and weaker. so, of course, he's and weaker. so, of course, he's a he's going threaten a bully he's going to threaten all first. i'm boris all the leaders first. i'm boris isn't the only one he threatened and only did it and i'm sure he only did it because trump wasn't office. because trump wasn't in office. because putin, weirdly was afraid said, afraid of trump and said, i would never done if he'd would have never done if he'd been re—elected because would been re—elected because he would push his push button. he had his trembling and i know that trembling finger and i know that he would have gone through his threat. trump saying threat. and now trump is saying now election campaign now with his election campaign being is we're on being announced, he is we're on the a nuclear i'm the verge a nuclear war. i'm telling you now, we're on telling you right now, we're on the it. he's using the verge of it. so he's using that threat as well. you really think that trump would done more than done in terms of than biden's done in terms of sending equipment and whatnot when the when trump was shown around the pentagon the pentagon famously by the generals, being pentagon famously by the genera to being pentagon famously by the generato run being pentagon famously by the generato run it, being pentagon famously by the generato run it, when being pentagon famously by the generato run it, when heeing pentagon famously by the generato run it, when he and vetted to run it, when he and hillary the last two, when hillary were the last two, when they're running against each other, famously this other, trump famously said this was the new york times was part of the new york times when showing a country when he was showing a country the with, say, the us disagreed with, say, nonh the us disagreed with, say, north trump can we north korea. trump said, can we just them? and the generals just nuke them? and the generals famously not famously said, well, that's not really is really alternative, is it really? us? trump likes really? for us? so trump likes the idea of nuking people. well, does he that? but does he does he like that? but does he like of nuking which like the of nuking russia, which he arguments there that he there's arguments there that there's about
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there's intelligence about connections. it's weird, isn't it? makes threats it? i think trump makes threats too. but think with trump, his threats are immediate and threats are very immediate and he's child, you know , he's like a child, you know, punches that are punches at people that are closest him i that closest to him and. i think that putin for long time has putin for a long time has had a problem with the eu and like to eliminate it some of the leaders. so, you know, that's another story here. but esther rantzen, bev, a legend . yeah, rantzen, bev, a legend. yeah, it's got cancer. it's very sad asia is old and i know this is one of those sort of perennial well, it's part when someone so famous. yeah. well it's so much part of the fabric of our country it sort of is isn't it like that you dirty they're not famous anymore. they're in that differently . she says she's differently. she says she's optimistic about her treatment . optimistic about her treatment. well, so. i got to well, i hope so. i got to interview about five years ago. i got to interview her once on breakfast and it just breakfast show and it was just so cool for no other reason than i remember being a kid watching it telly yesterday. i on it on the telly yesterday. i on her show. no, i when i was about 20 and i said, i'm never married and who married, it and people who are married, it is i'm my best play is well, i'm my best man. play that. is well, i'm my best man. play that . and now keeping it light.
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that. and now keeping it light. let's take us through the financial times. josh so again, they're covering the story about why he the other, they've got a picture at the top yeah that's harden israel this is one of the only papers i see who's going to this on the front page but on holocaust memorial day shabbat as well. friday a palestinian terrorists went into a synagogue and murdered seven civilians, one of them 14 years old and newly couple as well . this is in newly couple as well. this is in response. well, not that it makes a difference, but there had been a idf, israeli defence force operation within jenin is like a hotbed of extremism and they had killed eight terrorists. so there's been this weird thing of equating somehow these eight terrorists and their photos of them with their guns and all happy and then members of, terrorist organisations and these innocent civilians who are at prayer on holiest day and is holocaust memorial day. so obviously and any country who
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would deal with that would expect to respond and we'll have to see what it is i don't violence begets violence and whatnot but . these are civilians whatnot but. these are civilians killed and israel has a right defend its borders and i'm sure they will. i'm we'll see if that continues to be on front pages as you say something on one. yeah, one page. well yeah. people don't they don't mind that jews they don't like them jews fight back and we'll fight back. jews fight back and we'll fight back . i jews fight back and we'll fight back. i don't like dead jews fight back and we'll fight back . i don't like dead jews . back. i don't like dead jews. well, it's going to be a heck of a year from that . the daily a year from that. the daily star. josh, bring a room . what star. josh, bring a room. what are they talking about? yeah. cameron so she's jewish . she's cameron so she's jewish. she's jewish and israeli and. so she's a yes. she's a don't judge me by my cover. my beautiful cover . my cover. my beautiful cover. the polls after beautiful i guess which word you're going to go for. and i was wrong and my beautiful red cover and opening
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that cover and she's written a book which is a bit of a tell all it was is obvious that she's she's been famously quite smart a long time. you see her being interviewed and whatnot and she's saying that before was going to became like a model and went telly an actress and went on telly and an actress and all this. she to be a all of this. she wanted to be a librarian, believe it. librarian, totally believe it. but is famously clever but she is famously very clever and she's that book. and she's written that book. i she's it by herself, i.e. she's done it by herself, i.e. without like , you know, prince without like, you know, prince goes, harry goes , yeah, yeah. goes, harry goes, yeah, yeah. thank you for , you know , she's thank you for, you know, she's had a tough and quite interesting life as well. sex and you know that's traumatising has hepatitis c is that. yeah yeah yeah but if she probably would have gone down the librarian path i'm guessing wouldn't have happened to her. i don't know of many who've had sex tapes leaked how many emails that they don't like to speak. i think you've kind of out of that all the way through. yeah so it's a delightful mental image. well, that's the front page of source of join us after break for tired teachers teetering on tantrums. sturgeon starts making
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sense throws it and donald trump is back and this he's angry crumbs we'll see you in a minute
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welcome to headliners. i'm stephen allen joining the two wonderful comedians, josh jay money, howie and scott shlomo shapiro . monday express will on shapiro. monday express will on josh when it comes to scotland's policy on trans prisoners, it's all about security. hey, hey . all about security. hey, hey. okay, win there you draghi even know that means ofcom sturgeon climbdown scots prison service halts all of transgender . this halts all of transgender. this is why it's not been a good week for sturgeon. she has basically after her sort of all trans women are women now it's oh no
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oh trans women the ones who've got willies and are rapists maybe then women face tattoos , maybe then women face tattoos, maybe then women face tattoos, maybe not. so the thing is that this all on the when they in scotland they put through their self self—feeding laws which then the uk government of kiboshed and said hey wait a minute no we're not gonna allow that to happen because it challenges the equality act. what's is that what's happened then is that after scotland saying, well, you know, no, no one would ever misuse these laws, literally days later , oh, he's a double days later, oh, he's a double rapist going into a female. and then after that it turns out there are more like sexual aggressor of biological men with intact males within the women's prison and being transferred . so prison and being transferred. so it's shine a light on and now they've to go, oh, okay, we're going to stop. we're going to have a look at everything now. well, first they did say what they they won't transfer someone with a history of sexual assault biological male into women's prison. saying prison. and now they're saying we're all of it
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we're going to get all of it because was like, no, why because it was like, no, why don't you just get all of them like doing you know. yeah, well, they've anyone they've said that anyone currently convicted currently from now convicted won't transferred a female won't be transferred to a female prison. yeah that, that's basically moratorium . basically just a moratorium. they get house in order, they get their house in order, isn't they all. but until isn't it? they all. but until they reviewed the rule is that they reviewed the rule is that they won't be put down. you have to think of a practicality thing is become because male is just become because male prisons are overwhelmed and they and women's prisons aren't . is and women's prisons aren't. is that no, i think they that when. no, i think they think thing think it's a safeguarding thing where want this part where they want this part of this kind of this sort this be kind part of this sort of immigration itself into these institutions . and this has been institutions. and this has been ongoing for years. but there's a horrible article that came out today with this woman ex—prisoner talking about what life is like on her block with these to trans women in top males that she had to live talking about how scared she was of being constantly one of them was in there for murder. one of them was in there for domestic violence. she would see them naked, aroused the showers. this is not are already is not these are already neglected in lots of cases .
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neglected in lots of cases. women i know they're in jail, but they're there usually for a reason. and it's amazing then that people that they're going to put put male intact people however they . well, i think some however they. well, i think some of these the percentage i saw, too, is that trans people in prisons are between 14 to 19 times more likely to be raped than someone who's in trans. so maybe they're trying get them out of that situation. well, then need to protect then then they need to protect them estate, them within. the male estate, rather transfer them across rather than transfer them across to the female estate , where to the female estate, where actually there's a higher proportion , about 10 to 11% of proportion, about 10 to 11% of men, biological men in prison are there for sex crimes. there's a higher proportion of the trans women of after sex crimes. i think about 40% or something. so there's actually more chance maybe a trans prison or something or oh , just, need or something or oh, just, need protection? of course they do. for the. but putting on these women, say maybe women, you say that maybe they should be kept safe, separate for their own safety is actually
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what happened with this terrible story, the one that's been in the news, actually, the headunes the news, actually, the headlines always say he was put in prison actually in female prison but actually kept isolation. no wasn't kept in isolation. no wasn't in isolation. was the isolation. sorry. he was in the segregation unit. that's not isolation. was in there with isolation. he was in there with other women which which is before they then go into the actual get their permanent stuff so he was in a space with so that he was in a space with other women. and so something needs while are made needs to be done while are made there it a case by there policy was it on a case by case basis do you disagree with that because hopefully the right decisions be made. i mean decisions would be made. i mean you the right decisions you agree the right decisions are be she won't are made he won't be she won't be going to think a female if be going to i think a female if biological males should be in women's prisons, that should a thing. now, as you say, there are cases of women of transwomen who are being abused in male prisons . who are being abused in male prisons. that's for who are being abused in male prisons . that's for the who are being abused in male prisons. that's for the male prisoners to be sorted out. whether how they put in that whether and how they put in that to onto women where to offload them onto women where it's not that trans people are risk to women, men are the risk. so let's test the blanket rule that you try and put in place if we think of the most likely to
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break that rule scenario someone who's had all the surgery that you could possibly and is in there parking would you there for parking would you still because their cells and you define as a biological you would define as a biological male that they should be in the male that they should be in the male prison as scott said they should be safely should be safely in the male prison. and by the way, of what we by the way, 95% of what we understand as trans women are fully intact males. no, but how about and these are so you're talking about the one or 215 trying to find. no, no, no, no. but i would say, yes, there is a rule biological men should be in male prisons. like you say, male prisons. but like you say, that's the example. but the reality is 95% of trans women are males with the penises and who haven't had any surgery . i who haven't had any surgery. i suppose i was trying to argue against a blanket rule and more for case by case because i'm not free. then i think you get that person will have. but a greater strength, biological strength and men biological men and also men biological men commit crimes at the same rate as well. so 98% of rapes or
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whatever of sexual violence caused by men, biological men . caused by men, biological men. it doesn't matter if you're trans identifying or not. i'm sure we will return to this topic, please. next. minutes. topic, please. next. 3 minutes. monday's guardian scott will teachers be going on strike that ballot result is for me, not you. oh, right right. ballot result is for me, not you. oh, right right . teachers you. oh, right right. teachers are at the end of their tether as reported in the guardian. the nea general secretary says ahead of wednesday's strike the teachers are undervalued underpaid, overworked and poorly dressed. i've seen the strikes . dressed. i've seen the strikes. they just they don't look good. they just they don't look good. they don't look good. they love your hair. i feel for those kids and on the very first, it's going to be a big strike half a million workers across the pubuc million workers across the public sector are striking and retirees government continues to face a relentless wave of industrial unrest and they seem unable to even come forward with any offer. what ever they have said . rishi and his chancellor said. rishi and his chancellor jeremy hunt , have repeatedly jeremy hunt, have repeatedly insisted that they not insisted that they are not willing to reopen the current settlements for public sectors. workers claiming doing so workers claiming that doing so could stoke inflation. but these
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workers, they want more than the average rate. a rate of their payment of 5. they want more than that because. if they were to receive that, then their salaries would continue to go down and over the next ten years, salary, pay years, their salary, their pay would actually decline by 60 £600 by giving them anything less inflation rise , less. an inflation plus rise, which is what they're asking for. you know. so bad. for. you know. so it's bad. i mean, i think it just looks it's they were worried about this this zahawi thing. and i think that was terrible for them for the last week. but has been the last week. but this has been looking for months for them looking bad for months for them terrible press. all terrible press. well, all of industrial action. yeah. yeah. i mean, a lot of people mean, i know a lot of people argue on this story saying most teachers didn't actively vote to strike. nature of strike. but that's the nature of voting, i mean, no ever voting, is it? i mean, no ever then with. well most then follows up with. well most people vote for people didn't vote for a conservative government it's interesting how they pick and choose. 34,000 new choose. they have had 34,000 new members eu. but look, members join the eu. but look, the government is a tricky the government is in a tricky situation and they are trying to keep inflation down and the reality all of those reality is to give all of those pay reality is to give all of those pay rises will have an impact on it. they're play a it. they're trying to play a waiting game they are and
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it. they're trying to play a wrising game they are and it. they're trying to play a wiis lookinge they are and it. they're trying to play a wiis looking increasingly are and it. they're trying to play a wiis looking increasingly more|nd it is looking increasingly more so that will come down so that inflation will come down by end of year, in which by the end of the year, in which case can really go straight case they can really go straight then. now that isn't to say that pubuc public workers public servants like like like teachers, like nurses, don't more money. they don't deserve more money. they do. they do do hard jobs . but at do. they do do hard jobs. but at the same time, as parent who the same time, as a parent who has told for years that has been told for years that each day in school counts and whatever feels like, suddenly whatever it feels like, suddenly it's a little bit like all so this day doesn't towards their eventual develop these teachers can't pay their energy they can't pay their energy they can't feed themselves either. you know also it's like there's always paid, what, almost 6 million they could just take some of this. we get the tories to pay their taxes that might help my son. obviously they say, you know, teachers claim that they work so hard in the holidays. why they strike on one of those days. yeah. think of the kids would get in all the kids and would get in all the kids and would get in all the so it's actually the newspapers so it's actually blows up but the good news is that wednesday when black that on wednesday is when black panther out on so panther two comes out on so that's day . so yeah, it's a that's all day. so yeah, it's a good lessons in that monday's times josh and a politician as
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excepted fault it's happened to make a blue plaque it's incredible michael gove we are to blame on grenfell now he's presently the housing secretary and he says a faulty and, ambiguous government guidance allowed the scandal to happen. so he's been forthright on this . the tragedy happened very close to where he actually lives and the impact of it has huge not just obviously for the families , the people who died, families, the people who died, but happened since then with these other buildings that have had cladding on it and the bills being sent to these people who had bought these flats and homes in, good faith and was suddenly being given like in, good faith and was suddenly being given lik e £400,000 being given like £400,000 residences yeah. so been residences says, yeah. so been a huge this has been going for on so he's basically saying yes messed up i.e. the government allowed these loopholes there that were then exploited by these companies what he's doing and play to him is that he basically said if you want continue in this business of
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making homes you have to sign now and to the to it to pledge that you will sort this out and pay that you will sort this out and pay for so that he's basically blackmailing those companies that have made and millions of pounds and you have to sort out because they did a sort of voluntary thing and it didn't work. so none of those companies, i think, did it. now, he said, you want to sign business, this is what you've got surprise, got to do. and surprise, surprise, one of the surprise, i think one of the biggest companies straight away as like we're going to sign as like yet we're going to sign up this what's needed and up and this is what's needed and that i think very good that is a i think a very good thing also talking about trying to system to sort out leasehold system which backward which is incredibly backward in this country. what you this country. you know what you read you like michael read this when you like michael gove.i read this when you like michael gove. i never would have considered myself like a fan his as but just comes as such, but he just comes across a very plain across like a very plain speaking yes, but speaking politician. yes, but he's actually has he's someone actually has results. thinks of he results. he thinks of how he shouldn't resigned. he's shouldn't have resigned. he's he's of zahawi. you he's on the side of zahawi. you know, there's he comes in he's one step forward, one step back. i can't help but deflect some blame. but the money necessarily solve problems people who
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solve the problems of people who can't haven't been can't sell a flat haven't been able sell a flat. the is the able to sell a flat. the is the mortgages have had continue to be paid because can't get be paid because you can't get a mortgage on a place without a certificate you certificate which means that you can't sell it. and now with interest going up, that means thousands of pounds people thousands of pounds that people have they have had to pay for places they can't sell, not because of their fault. that money won't feel anything. live anything. they're afraid to live in, right? in in, actually, right? yeah in some then the cost some cases. and then the cost for walking for waking walking and stuff. yeah. side issue there. yeah. it's a side issue there. let's move on to monday's scott and donald trump is angrier than even and donald trump is angrier than ever. angry really ever. one angry he's really angry . he's ever. one angry he's really angry. he's gripping his little tiny and waving them in the air. it's too for him to have announced. but he announced candidacy for president and. so that's he says, you know, they're afraid of me my own party won't back me. but that's because no one's announced any candidates. republicans are candidates. the republicans are still scrambling take over still scrambling to take over the house and do what they can with that . so saying know with that. so he's saying know there's been a lukewarm reception to his announcement. people don't really care so much and his own whatever that twitter thing he's doing that
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thing truth social that it's not getting very ticks so people aren't really following a much i think the party of that he kind of re—established it feels like they need to move on from him i think they think he's toxic and so they're looking at other people like the governor of florida. they think desantis really has chance. ron he's really has a chance. ron he's only 44 and pretty brutal . only 44 and he's pretty brutal. and he's he's he's both manic and mimicking trump in his own campaign. so i think that they're looking at him, i think they're looking at him, i think they want a girl. nikki haley is very fashion right now. they like her. the i think they want someone young and fresh. and i think they trump is a bit too stale and he knows that and he doesn't want to feel irrelevant , but, you know, , you know? but, you know, you're a big trump fan. what's your take on this? well, yeah, i mean, me he doth mean, let me think. he doth protest, too. he's calling it early. that was very early. yeah, that was a very lukewarm response. very many lukewarm response. not very many supporters turning up in times of political supporters from the republican would have republican party would have expected, like if they were behind he have had
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behind him, he would have had a lot faces there. and he's lot more faces there. and he's not doing very many rallies. he's playing golf. yeah. he's he's playing golf. yeah. florida of so florida and he sort of and so the numbers that he's saying the numbers are that he's saying they be he'll do they will be in july he'll do they will be in july he'll do the big rallies bigger and better. there are financial better. but there are financial issues he into this issues where he gone into this so that now legally can't so early that now legally can't use money that he use some of the money that he has towards it. think has saved towards it. so think he keep those costs he wants to keep those costs down well because it's down as well because it's probably coming out that closer to home, also just feels to home, it also just feels like it him something to do it gives him something to do that's declared early that's why he declared early because about because that way we're about him. this is exactly not he cares we do. yeah. america cares what we do. yeah. america is talking. lot of his is talking. but a lot of his biggest jailers, like rudy giuliani, he's charges now giuliani, is he's on charges now and lose his own and he may lose his own livelihood because livelihood anyway because he sees the law. so sees he's broken the law. so many times. so a lot of people are yelling for him before, are now very quiet are not now being very quiet or are not allowed even go out in allowed to even go out in public. fascinating stuff public. so fascinating stuff well, section well, that's it for this section . join in a meeting we'll . but join us in a meeting we'll be discussing plant but be discussing plant toxins, but not kind police not the fun kind police neutrality how everything in neutrality and how everything in the digital world is basically a ponzi scheme. we'll see you after the .
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break welcome back to headliners monday's daily josh and surely our wi fi secure my password is bob sexy and no one's ever guess that. bob sexy and no one's ever guess that . oh, so you go though i've that. oh, so you go though i've got pulled in a 1000 secure. yeah. oh that's che. so why fidel let beijing see britain's secrets? this is a firm part owned by the chinese. they had access to secret information about britain's nuclear weapons because basically it was providing wi fi because basically it was providing wi f1 to uk's military headquarters and 45 other defence bases for three years. so this was by the mail on sunday and because of that they're saying that china could have like a comprehensive understanding of these institute these are military operations but also the people who are part
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of the military institution because obviously it's got their details and whatever they've done on wi fi could well have gone through to these chinese companies which really a kind amazing it's is this is the kind headune amazing it's is this is the kind headline where anyone can read it and go oh that's a bad idea. so how did they get that far ? so how did they get that far? you don't have to be really nerdy about it. another thing that wi fi can do it does error correction because the signal bounces your so wi fi bounces off your walls. so wi fi routers get a sense of where your walls are actually, you know, sonar sort of. yeah, know, like sonar sort of. yeah, yeah. they could work out. it's many us are still alive when many of us are still alive when you a story like this you read a story like this i think they're have taken this out any they want it to anymore. yeah take offline which yeah just take us offline which is it's weird is is worse it's a weird thing is the owner this company says the owner of this company says media forces is wholly owned by y finnerty, independent uk y finnerty, an independent uk based no or based company has no direct or indirect companies. indirect ownership by companies. and so all of article and so, so all of this article is then suddenly put into question that doesn't really explain. well, it is owned partly by the chinese government
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and run by them. so it is all right. and china has a law which is that chinese owned companies have to give their information to chinese intelligence . so to chinese intelligence. so they're saying good. basically if you worked , they've got your if you worked, they've got your details, they've got of my details, they've got of my details anyway. all one oh yeah i've got a weiwei router and yeah. yeah one someone's reading blog so let's move on to monday's guardian scott so implants being toxic , good men implants being toxic, good men being toxic, bad . yes, exactly . being toxic, bad. yes, exactly. thank you for i thank you yes. the plant toxin hailed as a new weapon an antibiotic war against bacteria because people use antibiotics too much . we've all antibiotics too much. we've all been told we're going to become immune to that is simple. we're going to drop dead from a flu so now they've got a new called alvaston that from a plant based thing called i'm going to try this be patient zen thoman you're welcome and it's a bacteria plant and it produces a thing that just dives in and
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just it just kills everything in the area, all bacteria is wiped out. they're thrilled about this. it was developed by. british, german and polish scientists who this has all been revealed in a paper in the journal nature cattle and it's a norwich research group in this country has helped develop too. and i think doctors saying, look, we need something in lieu of and so they looked around they found this plant based antibody you do feel good about this? i feel very good about this? i feel very good about this because. everyone's been sort of scaring us for a long time like, oh, we're running out of antibiotics that we're getting resistant. 1.2 getting resistant. think 1.2 million die 2019 million people die in 2019 because they have the because they didn't have the necessary resistance. they necessary resistance. so they were antibiotics. were given the antibiotics. it didn't this is huge didn't work. so this is a huge deal pharmaceutical deal and these pharmaceutical monies haven't really been investigated putting their money investing this because investing in this because i don't think they make that much money from it so this is a big deal they work too well. if you can a drug that someone can invent a drug that someone
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needs on a daily basis, needs to take on a daily basis, catching five days, you catching you in five days, you can't drink, then you're absolutely there's absolutely fine. there's no money back a little bit money to get back a little bit of a have a bit of a hippy. this this found on this like this was found on this like little plant many other little plant and how many other plants have gone extinct which could these saving could have these life saving implications humanity and implications for humanity and longer with us. but then penicillin discovered unlike an unwashed dish. so why are unwashed petri dish. so why are we doing dishes could saving we doing dishes we could saving people's leaving the people's lives by leaving the place? so things that we tell you what every every night, mondays, times don't take the police seriously . like in the police seriously. like in the episode of only fools and horses, where del boy thinks it's a stripper he's because that's one. that that's your favourite one. that was favourite . it's was everyone's favourite. it's three through the bar, but three falls through the bar, but that's majority. that's also a good majority. believe police don't take crime seriously enough. this was a poll that was made to investigate a bunch of different things and this has been the for this basically, you know, we know what's going on in that people saying, oh, the police are investigating all these or doing don't want to go into like
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woke culture these ridiculous statements and not not actually getting out there and crimes which is essentially a problem and also there seems to be a lot more antics and . social more antics and. social behaviour going on and that's to youth groups being closed, communities and whatever which has been put spaces over the last 12 years, i'm sorry to say, you sound like a broken record through the tory through austerity that those were literally that literally the first things that were down. they that were closed down. they that there consequences and there would be consequences and these the consequences and these are the consequences and social has massively increased and the police haven't stepped up to deal with it. so they've actually but they've a few actually but they've got a few interesting things here in this poll. they say most people would like parents be held like the parents be held accountable. number one. also for saturday tensions to come at school. i don't know who's going to pay for that. and also schools basically identifying these children a bit earlier. so this there are some interesting ideas. i don't know about
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saturday detention, it seems it's an awful lot of responsibility, again, to put on teachers and schools special and teachers and schools special and teachers feel overwhelmed , teachers feel overwhelmed, exhausted works outside as exhausted and works outside as well also, i think you know, well. it also, i think you know, i've done a lot of benefits for the police here in birmingham. and i hang out the police officers because they're fun, they're hilarious and they all tell me the same thing, which is you'd terrified knew you'd be terrified if you knew how trouble our community's how much trouble our community's in. nothing do in. youths have nothing to do after nothing do so after school. nothing to do so they say they're being radicalised . what they're radicalised. what they're actually doing is hanging out with you know, that want with people, you know, that want to hang out with them and give them something else to do other than be yelled at by than go and be yelled at by their so you, their parents. so like you, i think they need afterschool programs keep them programs and stuff to keep them involved in. involved and interested in. otherwise, when you're otherwise, you know, when you're a kids are scary really a bored kids are scary really scary. they are some reason 12 year olds are terrifying if you're going to walk past more than three of them. i know across the street. there's like three a basketball of three nuns in a basketball of flames guardians watch out flames mons guardians watch out for online scams on youtube. the show is described as funny. yes
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well people are being butchered. do you know what that means? no i know. me neither. i didn't know about either, but i'm know about it either, but i'm married. don't online married. i don't go online looking but there's looking for people. but there's a lonely men with a lot of lonely men home with £100,000 and crypto £100,000 in the bank and crypto currency. what happens is currency. and what happens is some named tina from some girl named tina from wherever gets online? yeah, yeah, yeah. been on facebook with her and she says, look, i'm lonely. grand. you lonely. you got 50 grand. you sure? do . got nothing to sure? i do. got nothing else to do. puts cryptocurrency do. so he puts cryptocurrency her account because, you her bank account because, you know, a friend of hers tried to commit suicide anyway, all these stories have stories happen. these guys have nothing going on. and nothing else going on. and then before know it , accounts before they know it, accounts are that meal that are cancelled. that meal that was going to be their first date is cancelled, and they is cancelled, you know, and they realise lost hundred to realise they've lost hundred to £120,000. one guy, one of the stories they talked about this article he, he committed suicide because he realised he'd lost his entire pension in this story and what, what it actually means is these companies have fake addresses in the uk they seem real if you're online looking at their website it looks great.
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whoever is trying to win the of these people says i'm in love with you can. you invest a little in this or a little in that, and they do. and then the company suddenly disappears. the address actually someone's address is actually someone's home restaurant, home over a chinese restaurant, and something. and before and nor is something. and before you know it, all the money is gone. yeah, yeah. so real gone. yeah, yeah. so it's a real problem. we've about, you problem. we've heard about, you know, especially know, people seniors especially losing online gangsters, losing with online gangsters, basically, or being called on the phone and lured into these accounts. and it's just so weird week i've had lloyds bank trying to call me like five times saying, you know, being saying, you know, you're being pred saying, you know, you're being ripped when i call them ripped off when i call them today a sunday. don't know if today on a sunday. don't know if they're that's what they're like, that's what was calling be careful. calling you. be careful. i've never with this, never any dealings with this, but getting active. so but they're getting active. so be very, very careful. it's always been there. it's just the internet things faster. well, more than that. but it's actually world problem. actually a world wide problem. and article about and what this article is about is the uk like a hub for is how the uk like a hub for these shall companies, because it's so easy in this country to set you just need set up a company. you just need 12 and they're now trying 12 quid and they're now trying to put through a bill but of
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course with the government, everything as it is to basically say that you have be further say that you have to be further verifications do it. but verifications to do it. but at the you literally can the moment you literally can just put up 12 quid and you don't need to prove provide any proof id and whatnot so yeah, proof of id and whatnot so yeah, this who in a chinese this guy who in a chinese restaurant uk restaurant somewhere in the uk saying angry about saying i'm really angry about all because screwing all this because it's screwing my seven different my business up. seven different companies that this is their companies say that this is their address got all these address i've got all these people by demanding people coming by demanding their money i'm you money back and i'm just you know, chinese chicken. know, i sell chinese chicken. there's which is there's side part of it which is the of the people who are the lot of the people who are seemingly doing these scams are actually themselves these essentially slaves who are in these sweatshops in cambodia who are so low. they were full of work and then captured there and just to what they can. just told to do what they can. one actually identified one woman actually identified guy she said, look, he's guy online. she said, look, he's done. a date set. don't done. we have a date set. don't go date. don't give him. go on the date. don't give him. he's lost £210,000. he's already lost £210,000. don't any woman scamming don't any woman either scamming you. terrible i've you. i feel terrible this i've no . just shut down the no options. just shut down the whole thing. you know. and the problem that london has problem is that london has forever been a really has had a very strong economy because of
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what you could call money laundering because of the city that the laws easy here that the laws are so easy here is famous for in this country so trying to shut this down you have to shut down pretty much 50% of cash that flows through. well two mondays daily mail josh and nerds get harassed to indeed ex—google executives sues tech giant for firing him after. he rejected female bosses alleged now this sounds like the plot of disclosure i remember that movie with michael douglas and demi and this basically sounds like that he's a father of seven so he's obviously very attractive and tiffany miller rubbed , his and tiffany miller rubbed, his abdominals told him he had a nice and that her marriage lacks spice and that he obviously liked asian women because his wife was asian. he then reported that to hr. they didn't do anything and they said, yeah, we're not to do anything because you're a bloke and now he's suing them. but actually it goes deeper than that because he was also told by another boss, he
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said, obviously are said, obviously there are too many his many white guys on his management team and he had to fire someone a guy from his team to get a woman on his team, and then he into himself was then he and into himself was fired in this idea of diversity. so this sort of he sort of went along with that. and then, of course, he was the victim of that himself . so now he's suing that himself. so now he's suing them and he was the reason he was fired was once he turned this woman down, she said she went to hr. a few times, accusing him of microaggressions , accusations that , which were accusations that were but they were found wanting and but they did eventually fire him because considered him non—exclusive and is brilliant because he showed favouritism towards his highest performers and his bosses . performers and his bosses. that's your job. like used to do that's yourjob. like used to do that. oh as opposed to sort of because he said something like he commented about their hustle and was seen as being able to disable and i mean , you may not disable and i mean, you may not win as men. so yeah, so good luck google he sounds a bit braggy too saying . he's been hit
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braggy too saying. he's been hit on by a woman in the office. that's as braggy to begin. we've all been mentioning abdominals is a bit much as well. oh these are oh my people just can't get enough of i'm going to enough of this. i'm going to tell the secret to good tell you the secret to good abdominals do a shoulder stand because upside down the fat just washes away you just this isn't your neck. looks so much your neck. it looks so much better. yeah, yeah, i will do that the next i go to a restaurant here, we'll see you in two the final section. in two for the final section. we've beans toast. new we've got beans toast. the new excuse my homework and excuse how i did my homework and to if you want to live to live. if you want to live long, we'll see you in just a second .
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welcome back to headliners . welcome back to headliners. monday's independents got scientists are revolutionising baking and when you ask them what they do for a living, they can say, i'm in bread. right? you're right. the can say, i'm in bread. right? you're right . the project called you're right. the project called the raising the pulse , which has
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the raising the pulse, which has really it plans to encourage british consumers and food producers to switch to bread that contains broad beans, apparently broad beans are healthier than soy. most bread. in the uk, about 90% of bread is white bread and most of that bread is made with soy flour, which isn't as healthy as broadening flour and broad beans be grown in the uk as there's cheaper to produce and they're healthier . so they're going to healthier. so they're going to try this bread out on poor people and students if they don't be eating it don't it, we'll be eating it soon too. so it's just it's just cheaper bread. the economy's falling apart and we can afford it more. although the charges falling apart and we can afford it nthe. although the charges falling apart and we can afford it nthe same»ugh the charges falling apart and we can afford it nthe same ash the charges falling apart and we can afford it nthe same as they charges falling apart and we can afford it nthe same as they do arges falling apart and we can afford it nthe same as they do fores are the same as they do for other but it'll be other bread. but it'll be cheaper bread one might not understand. could understand. i thought we could grow over here anyway. grow bread over here anyway. it's thing, you it's like a thing, isn't. you can't bread. got to can't grow bread. you got to need soy and some soy and need some soy and some soy and soy doing the am i is this salad dough?is soy doing the am i is this salad dough? is this one of those things it feels of and things it feels of flour and then like with it, when they put talcum powder coconut, the talcum powder and coconut, the sweet they they sweet charcoal before they they they, in they, you know, they put it in there and they it up and
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there and then they it up and stuff. but soy can be a base cut. yeah. yeah, they cut it make it go further and soy comes from brazil and it's pricey. right. got all the right. so you've got all the travel as yeah. so travel costs as well. yeah. so this like a really good this sounds like a really good thing. i don't know how it doesn't talk about how it affects taste or whatever, but this those things like this is one of those things like chloride, where you chloride, the water where you can't fluoride can't look right, fluoride chloride, because wife chloride, that's because my wife is chloride. is my wife. give me chloride. and that would oh my that and that would oh my god, that would time. okay of would explain my time. okay of oh, i like it. smell like a swimming yeah that's what swimming pool. yeah that's what it is that it is? oh, it is. is that what it is? oh, god, yes. because, like, when you it's like you chlorides just it's like you're really just urinating. it says the team to consult, says the team plans to consult, work with members of just adventures, just advantage community. i even say it community. i can't even say it just communities. just advantaged communities. well, the well, as students from the university so going to try it university. so going to try it out this come first and then out on this come first and then see if they can and what your see if they can it and what your students will eat and then they get a bit high. they'll do it right. students hate right. so the students hate this. students have this. so most students have tried like a banana tried to smoke like a banana skin in case the room is true. i'll give you that much. this monday's mail, josh and monday's daily mail, josh and artificial can't
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artificial intelligence can't be that they failed that smart because they failed an s w or student an exam. yes, un s w or student fails after using open eyes chat 9 fails after using open eyes chat g pete to write an essay. can't even say what i wish that when they come. let's open our place and come up with this chat with better. just a better sort . so better. just a better sort. so annoying every time you beat whatever. anyway australian university student became the first to fail a writing exam . first to fail a writing exam. they was discovered using artificial a.i. essentially they did. you use artificial ? yeah. did. you use artificial? yeah. they went, oh well, we've discovered you, you know. so just deny it. like any normal person would do. but they actually never confessed as what i'm saying . actually never confessed as what i'm saying. but there has you know within find within educational institutions. there has been this big lie. oh, my god. what are we going to do? how in funny because as opposed to finding out the people like plagiarise in the past and they could the essay and see could of enter the essay and see with it previous use with snippets of it previous use this the chat gpt will just give
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you a whole new essay . that's you a whole new essay. that's what it does every time. it will give different essay so give you a different essay so it's harder to tell. so it's much harder to tell. so that's of the things we're that's one of the things we're talking this out talking about to sort this out is go back to written exams, is to go back to written exams, which i think is a great idea, but this is an essay. so the idea you to handwrite idea that you have to handwrite your essays. i mean just get the get write essay. well i get to write an essay. well i think idea is you would go think the idea is you would go into a room that would have internet and it'll be in the essay gbt0c it's going to have good memory . essay gbt0c it's going to have good memory. there are essay gbt0c it's going to have good memory . there are writers good memory. there are writers who . i mean, fiction who use it. i mean, fiction writers and they say, are they they experiment with it a bit. and i heard a story and really for a long, long over i think radio for seems long but anyway is a story about writer who she said you know the final line of her short story she did get from something like this because the final line that came up it was so odd and strange from out of nowhere that kind of made nice close to the story she had written. so, i mean, it's not all a thing, i think. and all a bad thing, i think. and students learning work with this maybe maybe it inspires them to
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write differently than write a bit differently than they i mean, they normally would. i mean, maybe different take maybe in some a different take on they wouldn't come on something they wouldn't come up own. i don't up with on their own. i don't see it's bad actually yeah, see why it's bad actually yeah, my edinburgh is going my next edinburgh show is going to written chap to be entirely written by chap dougie monday's daily dougie beattie on monday's daily mail's got and who to on mail's got and who wants to on forever. well exactly. know forever. well exactly. you know i mean , if i were, you know, i mean, if i were, you know, living in chad, i'd be dead because apparently the life expectancy of ten countries in africa, chad , is africa, including chad, is barely not really above barely above not really above 60. so no, but but the thing is, you know, this is a map that reveals life expectancy around the world, in the uk is about 80, in the us about 77. the high seismic expectancy is in countries hong kong, japan, australia . but you know, those australia. but you know, those after about 65, 70, you're kind of in pain the whole time. so what if i can really you're on painkillers. you don't even know where you are half the time and. no one's going to all people to do the sort of have sex with you or take your money online. so
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really at that point, put a bullet between eyes. bullet between your eyes. i mean, says life mean, it says here. life expectancy growth rating, race, the difference in countries it used to be wider like in used to be much wider like in poor countries it's about a 44 year difference now 34 year year difference now so a 34 year difference. so it's getting better rate in developing nafions better rate in developing nations the life nations it's like the life expectancy is growing at time expectancy is growing at a time when the 1950s. now when was 40 in the 1950s. now it's closer to 60. right. so it's closer to 60. right. so it's yeah you know and their expectation of living longer is increasing . well, some of these increasing. well, some of these countries were very poor, apparently in 1950s. people didn't really want to live past 40. and now they're hoping that will they see a future that's it's are it's biracial? so things are looking up from 40. it's looking up from past 40. it's already a drag . let's move on to already a drag. let's move on to this monday's express. josh this on monday's express. josh i guess is what you call a no guess this is what you call a no entry sign into texas pensioner forced to erect signs after men mistake a house for a brothel . mistake a house for a brothel. it's because she ain't outside and on the way around a red bulb hanging. yeah, right i yes, you unintentional. what did she think? well, so of supposedly she's been using someone's been using her address as prop maybe
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as a revenge maybe someone that she's really annoyed and this is the classic put put the her address within some sort of. i don't know how people i believe i had a friend on camera from america this is like a thing now that some stuff online that type this some stuff online and find people it's all and you find people way it's all like reviewed and they would definitely not me she might have been yesterday know been a until yesterday to know that's for wow that's it for today oh wow a quick look at monday's front pages. daily mail goes with putin's threat to kill boris. the monday telegraph pm sacked zahawi without fair hearing monday i sunak's allies blame johnson for sleaze after the pm zahawi the times zahawi axed as soon as it gets tough on standards, monday's mirror engulfed by sleaze rotten to the core and those where your front pages. so that's it for tonight. thank you very much to my brilliant guests, josh, howie and scott chaparro headline is back tomorrow at 11 pm. with andrew doyle, leo kearse and nick dixon. and if you are
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watching this at the 5 am. on after a heavy sesh that i can all i can say is enjoy yourself sit down enjoy breakfast which is on the way next we'll see you next time .
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at six. i'm ray anderson in the gb newsroom the labour party says rishi sunak still has questions to answer following his sacking of nadhim zahawi , the prime of nadhim zahawi, the prime minister made the decision after an ethics inquiry found that the party chairman had committed a serious breach of the ministerial code. mr. zahawi been facing questions over his affairs after admitting that he paid a penalty to hmrc for an error. chair of the labour party, anneliese dodds, says
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she's written

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