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tv   Headliners  GB News  January 30, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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good evening. it was gb news is in a moment headlines. but first let's bring you the latest news headlines. and teachers and firefighters are the latest pubuc firefighters are the latest public sector workers to announce they'll strike in dispute over pay. firefighters have today voted for their first nationwide strike over pay in 20 years. the fire brigades union saying it won't announce strike dates, though, until after it meets with its employers to allow for improved offers to be put on the table. but teacher strikes will go ahead on wednesday in england and wales after last minute talks between
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unions and the government failed . union leaders say the education secretary squandered an opportunity avoid strike action , but gillian keegan action, but gillian keegan disagreed . we've been quite disagreed. we've been quite engaged over a long period of time and it's difficult because we want to halve inflation and they to have rises that will fuel inflation, but we all have in constructive discussions about pay, about workload , about about pay, about workload, about how to make sure that we can retain and recruit teachers . i retain and recruit teachers. i meanwhile, tonight, hundreds of union members gathered outside the gates of downing street protesting for their right to strike. members of the rmt the fire brigades union and the communication union were among those demonstrate against the anti strike bill going through parliament this evening which guarantees minimum levels of service for the public during penods service for the public during periods of industrial action . periods of industrial action. the health secretary has today .
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the health secretary has today. £1 billion in extra funding to boost nhs frontline capability . boost nhs frontline capability. steve barclay says the government work to bring response times to pre—pandemic levels . the plan also includes levels. the plan also includes 5000 more hospital beds , 800 new 5000 more hospital beds, 800 new ambulance says as as expanding urgent care to place in people's home. labour though says the plans aren't to tackle the problems in the nhs. plans aren't to tackle the problems in the nhs . and the problems in the nhs. and the prime minister has today been defending handling of the nadhim zahawi tax row, saying he thinks he acted decisively . rishi sunak he acted decisively. rishi sunak has been under pressure today to reveal precisely what knew about nadhim zahawi always tax affairs. the prime minister says he sacked the conservative party chairman yesterday straight after the ethics inquiry found there had been a serious breach of the ministerial code . all of the ministerial code. all questions started coming to light about . questions started coming to light about. nadhim zahawi you know, i ask the independent
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adviser to get to the bottom of it and to provide me with the facts. i was able to make a very quick decision that it was no longer appropriate nadhim longer appropriate for nadhim zahawi and that's why he's government, and that's why he's no longer there. that's what done. it relates to things that happened well before i was prime minister. happened well before i was prime minischange what happened can't change what happened in the past . and lastly, the search the past. and lastly, the search for a woman who's gone missing in lancashire whilst walking her dog will enter fifth day tomorrow. 45 year old nicola bouus tomorrow. 45 year old nicola boulis was last on friday on a footpath in michaels on wye . she footpath in michaels on wye. she was walking her spaniel dog before she went missing, although her dog and her mobile phone have been found. police say they're keeping an open mind what might have happened her, but they don't believe . ms. but they don't believe. ms. bailey was attacked . that's you bailey was attacked. that's you up to date on tv online and dave plus radio with gb news tonight the people's channel where now it's the people's channel where now wsfime the people's channel where now it's time for headlines.
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hello and welcome to headline is the best review show on the telly. i'm nick dixon. andrew doyle is locked in a cupboard. no one knows how he got there. we'll just have to do with me. but not just me, of course. because i'm joined by two headliners. right headliners. legends right wing leo . i read twitter leo kearse. i read on twitter and north west london's third most famous hand model. it's jonathan kogan. there they are , jonathan kogan. there they are, the money makers. i'll be going through the top stories with those gentlemen a those two fine gentlemen in a moment. but first, let's look at tuesday's so tuesday's front pages. so tuesday's front pages. so tuesday's mail, why we have to cut taxes and go for growth. that's from the imf the financial has brussels financial times has brussels counters us green subsidies with push to ease kerbs on state. tuesday's times parents in limbo over classroom . we're doing that over classroom. we're doing that in a minute. the sun 8 million chelsea stars and word shame tuesday's no time to lie and about boris and putin. and the
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daily star. we've really hit the skids. and that's a toilet based story. and those were the front pages. story. and those were the front pages . so story. and those were the front pages. so let's . all right. pages. so let's. all right. let's kick things off with the front page of the daily mail, leo. yes, we've way we have to cut taxes and go for growth. so pressure is mounting on the chancellor as the imf said that great hit in the nineties with its unbelievable. and they claim that uk faces the worst that the uk faces the worst slowdown nations so the slowdown among nations so the economy is going to contract by 0.6% apparently. and this is exactly we weren't going to cut cut taxes and go for growth and liz truss was appointed. i mean, she wasn't really elected was appointed leader , she was appointed leader, she was appointed leader, she was appointed prime minister on a platform of cutting taxes and going for growth and everybody sort of freaked out the established freaked out. we're like new, new. we kind of this this wasn't approved by the world so they got rid world economic so they got rid of then installed rishi
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of her and then installed rishi i the know wef i love the you know it's up wef reference in minutes into reference in like minutes into the show like one minute it is don't play into oppositions hounslow you know you're hounslow but you know you're right mean which we didn't right i mean which we didn't because ricci's the other day said an idiot if you said that you're an idiot if you want tax. apparently the want to cut tax. apparently the imf idiots okay, imf are idiots. okay, very confused. we've become imf are idiots. okay, very corvery d. we've become imf are idiots. okay, very corvery reliant we've become imf are idiots. okay, very corvery reliant on we've become imf are idiots. okay, very corvery reliant on spending:ome imf are idiots. okay, very corvery reliant on spending and; so very reliant on spending and printing out fake money, haven't we. and got we. and yeah. and we've got massive inflation. although i also other that also heard the other day that falling going falling inflation is not going to i'm very, very to be problem. so i'm very, very confused. jonathan, confused. but jonathan, i hope you clear up well, you can clear it up for. well, you can clear it up for. well, you know, i've it 25 seconds so i think bring liz truss is probably the most practical thing we can do well so printing money is bad and not printing money is bad and not printing money is bad but are we just generally in trouble .7 yeah, we generally in trouble? yeah, we need to cut and the tory party need to cut and the tory party need to cut taxes. they going to survive. but economically we cut taxes. leo, you economically we could cut taxes . think we could could cut taxes. think we could and i don't think we need to fund it from massive borrowing. is liz truss hinted this was is liz truss hinted this she was going what we can do is going to do what we can do is cut the public sector it's safe to cut jobs the public
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to cut jobs in the public sector because one they don't do anything by by and large, i anything by and by and large, i mean, some, know, mean, there are some, you know, firemen, police, do do. firemen, police, nurses do do. but all this but then you've got all this equality diversity equality and diversity and inclusion the inclusion officers and all the nonsense that easily cut. nonsense that we can easily cut. you easily you slash about you can easily you slash about all the top 80% and rid of everyone that people do . but the everyone that people do. but the reason cut it is because reason is to cut it is because there's a low unemployment there's such a low unemployment at the moment, the labour market is tight. not is actually really tight. not like when had like the eighties when we had high it's very high unemployment. so it's very hard and it hard to cut cut staff and it would help inflation. well, if we public sector we cut some public sector suppose in the trough i'm just smirking. you've already mentioned inclusion mentioned diversity inclusion and equality. if you mention fracking within the next 30 seconds, can leave seconds, you can just leave now. we need start fracking we also need to start fracking and then just say something about you about the woke snp and you covered move let's the covered let's move. let's do the front of times. shazam front page of the times. shazam yeah. so here's a story that is good news schoolkids the good news for schoolkids the country teacher strikes country so teacher strikes parents in limbo as union keeps school in dark. schools are school in dark. so schools are actually struggling the actually struggling to for the potential on this potential strike on this wednesday after unions told members to keep their head teachers the dark about whether or they would take the
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or not they would take so the heads schools don't heads of the schools don't actually going to actually know if who's going to be and who's not. be taking part and who's not. which means can't which basically means you can't then plan accordingly. so the government urged the largest government has urged the largest teaching union the nea to keep headteachers informed intentions before walkout. but advice before the walkout. but advice on the website stresses that members do to tell members do not have to tell their employer whether they intend do you know intend to strike. do you know that conflict opinions that a conflict of opinions whether or not they should inform teachers but i let's inform the teachers but i let's be school is dead. be honest school is dead. there's nothing you can't learn on like so hang on youtube like school so hang with your friends, your socialise property properly. but yeahi socialise property properly. but yeah i love that this is the thing. i mean during long with two years of kids being in two years of kids not being in and out the kids are and it turns out the kids are all fine mean, right they all fine mean, all right they can can't do anything off. can they can't do anything off. they stuff that they can't read stuff that terrible health issues. but i mean , teachers, i think they're mean, teachers, i think they're running a risky thing, going on strike. and then they might find out that actually we can fine out that actually we can do fine without just without them they're just glorified babysitters anyway, they i mean, they finish at three. i mean, what going to do? finish it, what are going to do? finish it, finish sort of finish it. one was sort of a strike they going to have they only half a day anyway.
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only work half a day anyway. yeah, i know. they really made themselves teachers unions, lockdown. the teachers unions, i of i mean for balance i probably have to say they're good they mean else has mean someone no one else has said good. doesn't said they're good. just doesn't even them. i i mean, even like them. i i mean, they probably out because probably felt out because everyone is everyone else in the country is on yeah, is there on strike. yeah, but is there anything what you're anything good about what you're saying? actually on to a bunch saying? i actually on to a bunch of lessons just on of lessons during i just went on school and just did the school buses and just did the lesson cause i wanted to brush up checking on the trade up on checking on the trade stuff, just stuff, but like it was just well, creepy guy well, do you like a creepy guy that near a school that hangs around near a school but you're doing it online pretty yes. that's of pretty much. yes. that's that of that's my summer that's how i spent my summer vacation, to speak. vacation, so to speak. all right. did you find right. well, what did you find in that eight in the lessons that eight squared plus p squared equals c squared, didn't know squared, which i didn't know before? two plus equals before? a two plus two equals five is a nuance. five as well, which is a nuance. all that aside, the first all of that aside, in the first section, declared section, johnson's declared school declared school debt and declared himself basically a threat to the public. let's do the public. so, leo, let's do the metro. metro has no time metro. so the metro has no time to lay . so boris boris's claim to lay. so boris boris's claim that putin threatened him with a missile strike and an extraordinary phone call in the run up to russia's invasion of
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ukraine. and it was this this this threat that made boris think that the invasion was actually going to happen because remember they were build a troops on the border, but nobody really believed that he was going to do it because we saw crazy. but do the missile strike of boris seems to be you know it's a pretty idle because how do know he's going be do you know where he's going be he at any one of his he could be at any one of his rich friends houses the kef when the coach fired fired the coach fired shots fired of your own and yet so this is the claim is made in a bbc documentary . mr. putin's documentary. mr. putin's interactions with world over the years because there's a lot of them especially macron in france they're in close contact they're still in close contact with speaking and speaking with them speaking and speaking to but the kremlin to a frequent but the kremlin spokesman that boris his claim was a lie and it's hard to know who to believe because those are both people who lie consistently . so i'd like to think that both line. but in this case, one of them must telling truth. them must be telling the truth. yeah, it feels like it's part of bofisis yeah, it feels like it's part of boris is speaking he's now boris is speaking to he's now doing i feel doing documentaries like i feel like sort of after like boris is sort of after dinner could get us dinner speeches could get us nuked, like
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nuked, you know? i mean, like you to spilling the you just got to spilling the secrets. well, secrets. what putin well, you know, don't want to hurt you, know, i don't want to hurt you, boris, but it would take a minute if i to. it minute if i wanted to. is it classic? it's like when he got that dog merkel was that big dog because merkel was scared dog. you scared of dogs. i have dog. you just. dog, it's just. i like my dog, and it's just. i like my dog, and it's just deliberately it. just deliberately did it. i mean, imagine what trump would have in reply it. probably have said in reply it. probably bombed moscow immediately, but yeah, allegedly, yeah, i don't know. allegedly, totally. the wrong. moscow. yeah. you think like yeah. do you think it's like john? what is john? did you think what is boris? sort of like he's boris? is it sort of like he's still the pm. he's, he's selling books. is going books. yeah. this is it is going to to have a to have, it's going to have a list all those conversations list of all those conversations that he's had and it's going to be and one of be interesting people and one of them to about the them happens to be about the risk us you risk of us getting you to oblivion. i suppose i'd oblivion. so, yeah i suppose i'd do right, well, do it. yeah. all right, well, that's interesting that's a pretty interesting story, but we're going to have to to a kind of ridiculous. to go to a kind of ridiculous. oh, that. what we oh, no, we'll do that. what we do the store now. so we do do in the store now. so we do that one about toilet that one. the one about toilet papen that one. the one about toilet paper, so. it's paper, i think. i think so. it's kind absurd because had kind of absurd because we had this was panic this thing, everyone was panic buying, now buying, toilet paper and now they're panic, not cause like it's just, you know, the story. it's so i've it's something special. so i've got minutes about got to talk for 2 minutes about this of a of toilet this one image of a of a toilet roll. so britain's cutting. you
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can it seem to accommodate can do it seem to accommodate you can you can stretch for toilet so britain's cutting back on bog roll during the cost living the good news living crisis and the good news is is offering free seven is star is offering free seven sheets of slippers open daily bog roll which is full. that's what the daily star was anyway is. that all we've been using all these years. how dare. but there are also other good newspapers can be used as bog roll guardian. so. yeah, no, it's it's all it's all. it's all. it's all people are worried about the cost living crisis, cutting cost of living crisis, cutting back i think back on the essentials. i think you use toilet you should probably use toilet roll. know, ultimately roll. it's, you know, ultimately it's using towels. it's better than using towels. my it's better than using towels. my girlfriend said. yeah, it's fine. nice you cut fine. it's nice to have you cut back because most of your back on because most of your money your money goes on hand for your second well, second career. well, i distinctly. your first full distinctly. your first so full of vaseline every night. yeah anything have cut anything you've couple have cut back if anything cut . i back on or if anything cut. i don't know you pull it about the cost of living. i've turned off turn the radiator off in the spare room and shut the door. yeah that's the ukrainian recipes . and they're going to be recipes. and they're going to be called masturbating . we're not
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called masturbating. we're not taking we're not taking one. and unless they're going look after a baby, we're not taking one in. but i think, you know, other countries, they have hose. if countries, they have a hose. if you the middle east or you go to the middle east or southeast have hose. southeast asian, they have hose. well, scorcher. feels great. well, scorcher. it feels great. no, a hose no, it's a it's a hose with a scoop on it. squish like a hose with trigger it on a spring. with trigger on it on a spring. spnng with trigger on it on a spring. spring water. yeah, i know what you mean. are, you know button these travel. have you ever been to japanese to one of the japanese toilets where you? where it sprays you? it's unbelievable, so unbelievable, right? it's so good. but this hose should good. but this this hose should have feel so have them here. you feel so clean. i think that's the only problem water is so cold problem is the water is so cold your testicles with your skull bone an hour. if you bone 60 miles an hour. if you sprayed scottish water anywhere near your perineum like we're in the kind of knockabout fun last section you're already section of you're already feeling stuff they've given us four stories and one of them is the daily star and we've got to do 2 minutes on it. we should have on. imf. never have them on. the imf. never mind. the page mind. that's it. the front page is coming up after the break young people lack confidence. donald trump borrows policy donald trump borrows a policy from and rishi sunak from the simpson and rishi sunak has waiting has a slash nhs waiting time. see .
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in three. welcome back to headline is i'm nick. i'm here with top gs leo kearse jonathan cogan tuesdays now and rishi set to slash nhs waiting . well they come down to waiting. well they come down to 12 years now leo. yeah let's hope so. we can get seen before we die in the carpark. hope so. we can get seen before we die in the carpark . but we die in the carpark. but experts have warned that this plan to slash the waiting times doesn't address vacancies. apparently one in ten roles in the nhs isn't staffed and th e £1 the nhs isn't staffed and the £1 billion pledge has been placed by rishi sunak isn't new money. it is old money. it's money that's already been pledged . that's already been pledged. it's like you meant shelling. it's like you meant shelling. it's like you meant shelling. it's like saying here's the fiver i'll give you. here's a favour , you're just giving you favour, you're just giving you one your own favours, which are great. i'd love to do that, but
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but you're not. to me, he's going to promise . well, i'd going to promise. well, i'd never never borrow money off never i'd never borrow money off you. but brexit is going to promise 800 new ambulances and 100. those can include hundred specialist mental health vehicles and 5000 more hospital beds. he's also going to get a push towards community health vehicles like the like the mystery bus for me i've got to say it's crazy driving around. yeah they're talking about hospitals at home which is kind of like the new work from home. you just move hospitals into virtual wards. yeah, virtual wards and community care, which , wards and community care, which i , wards and community care, which , i mean, it sounds like a full bath and you know, there's going to be people dying in their to be people dying home in their beds. but it does does make beds. but it does it does make sense. not just of use of sense. it's not just of use of virtual doctors because it's we have to get and i think one of the things actually put the vr headset on just like a nurse giving you a sponge bath. it is quite good experience. yeah, quite a good experience. yeah, it sounds you. what? it sounds like you. so what? what that? because what this touch on that? because what a what troubles me here is a couple things. is that he
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couple of things. one is that he doesn't actually. well, what is it someone saying without investment it won't investment in staff it won't make any difference? and the other criticism i've got is that he doesn't give numbers. he doesn't really give numbers. he ambulances he gives numbers of ambulances going but not how much going to buy, but not how much the going come the waiting list is going come down. so when reform down. but yeah, so when reform i mean to us we really know how much a dent that the much of a dent that isn't the problem. reform at problem. yeah. because reform at a going to get a not that they're going to get in we'll get an in but they said we'll get an actual this is how actual figure of this is how short you're lists will be this you're not like i'll buy you're not just like i'll buy some yeah yeah. and some ambulances yeah yeah. and it doesn't give you the precise number also saying that number then i'm also saying that the engulfed the health service is engulfed in of a crisis. in its worth of a crisis. then we have something bit worse. we have something a bit worse. couple of years ago was there we have something a bit worse. cou a e of years ago was there we have something a bit worse. cou a bitf years ago was there we have something a bit worse. cou a bit mores ago was there we have something a bit worse. cou a bit more itago was there we have something a bit worse. cou a bit more it butwas there we have something a bit worse. cou a bit more it but that:here not a bit more it but that didn't bring the nhs to its because that we because at that point we still had capacity lots of had the capacity print lots of mystery right so just mystery money right so and just chuck we can't chuck it in each which we can't really that anymore because really do that anymore because of inflation. i mean at nhs of inflation. i mean at the nhs really is, people always really is, i mean people always say dire straits, say the nhs is in dire straits, but there's a one and say the nhs is in dire straits, b|half there's a one and say the nhs is in dire straits, b|half hour there's a one and say the nhs is in dire straits, b|half hour wait there's a one and say the nhs is in dire straits, b|half hour wait forere's a one and say the nhs is in dire straits, b|half hour wait for ans a one and a half hour wait for an ambulance can years , ambulance you can take years, literally years get surgery . literally years to get surgery. and is absolutely and the management is absolutely chaotic and shambolic . so, you chaotic and shambolic. so, you know, ambulances are piling outside the hospital. the
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discharge, the patients into the hospital. so, i mean, i'd love cancel my subscription. the i'd love to i'd love to go with another provider. i can't unfortunately because of because we were betrothed to the yeah i hear it's a flawed system , but hear it's a flawed system, but let's move on to another fairly big story. the independent and young to broke to young people are to broke to have jonathan well, if my have kids. jonathan well, if my trip to thailand told me anything, it was free. anything, it was actually free. so too much to so there's not too much to about. but yes, with 45% of people of young people actually fear of young people actually fear of young people they will never earn people fear they will never earn and off to start a family, a survey has said so nearly half of to year olds in the of all 16 to 25 year olds in the uk feel will earning uk feel they will never earning up support a family the up to support a family amid the cost of crisis and cost of living crisis and looming recession. a youth charity revealed. the charity revealed. so the prince's trust said that the age groups happiness and confidence that's level since that's the lowest level since the the research 14 the start of the research 14 years ago. but that surprise me that you know mental that generally you know mental state wellbeing the state and the wellbeing of the youth over the youth has descended over the last 14 years with everything that we've all been through collectively a as if collectively and as a way, as if a youth i once was you youthful
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i'm 42. i'm all right thank you but i've it's a it's a cruelty free lotion so it says the report reveals a 50 some 57% of young people said the cost of living crisis their biggest worry for the future that for a young person of 16 to be worrying about seems a bit excessive. that wasn't my biggest when was 16. biggest worry when i was 16. yeah, those are rich. no, yeah, those kids are rich. no, not still , you know, not rich. i'm still, you know, i'm very bright, right? yeah no, i'm very bright, right? yeah no, i'm a nuclear war. yeah, i'm still a nuclear war. yeah, the asteroid . it's okay. out the asteroid. it's okay. out into the metaverse of living and, you know, not having enough money. it didn't stop you having a child. it is so. money. it didn't stop you having a child. it is so . yes. is this. a child. it is so. yes. is this. i'm young so. yeah, i'm not. but i'm young so. yeah, i'm not. but i mean, this is a serious problem facing the face in the country and exist financial problem for the countries fertility rate in the uk is just a fraction over 1.5 and to renew well to actually maintain population, we need 2.1. women need to be having unable are 2.1 children. i'm not suggest we institute a handmaid's tale style you know we getting women
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pregnant but we do need babies we need to incentivise people , we need to incentivise people, especially young people, because they're who actually they're the ones who actually have have babies . have babies to have babies. unfortunately, government operates year timescale operates on an a year timescale and. they see the country as an economy so they don't really want people having babies because. big drain on because. they are a big drain on government turn government resources. they turn 18 and the labour force . so 18 and join the labour force. so the government we rather the government would we rather people don't have babies. they just import workers from the overseas . but that means that overseas. but that means that overseas. but that means that over time over a generation or so your country is going to lose the culture and the values and the culture and the values and the and the, you know, the thing that makes a country and it's just going to become, you know, the sort of the globe, this the sort of the this globe, this island global island full of people from overseas. i know. that makes me say, look at bigot. why do while bigot. you know, why do while amazonian tribes like to preserve their culture but you know british people aren't well it did you sound like a big inqu it did you sound like a big insult chuck schumer announced that that was the actual policy of the day. the democrats in america said we're going to have
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to fill this with immigration. yeah, many have yeah, so many countries have this a very low this italy us has a very low birth rate. japan, low. so birth rate. japan, japan low. so yeah, really sure. i'm yeah, i'm not really sure. i'm not you mean, not sure what you do. i mean, i was right. i was like, i don't have enough money to have kids. and all the time. and i'm working all the time. i don't have time, which is don't have enough time, which is amazing. takes you amazing. and so it takes you a time. yeah, yeah, yeah. exactly in i didn't in those strokes i didn't i didn't know the way to cut to which not even to which i've not even managed to get shoes are full in get shoes. my shoes are full in the past and they ahead of the past and they get ahead of to buy anymore all money. i'm honestly kind a people honestly i'm kind of a people link honestly i'm kind of a people unk yeah honestly i'm kind of a people link yeah can we do link up. yeah yeah can we do that you some slack. that crowdfund you some slack. let's times though and let's do the times though and update miners update on trans miners in scotland let's turn our scotland. let's turn to our scottish expert . i'm not scottish trans expert. i'm not saying are trans, leo, but saying you are trans, leo, but an trans. i am trans. an expert on trans. i am trans. so i didn't want to say i'm a i'm a woman, because in scotland, all you need to is scotland, all you need to do is you're woman you're you're a woman and you're a woman. so the scottish just justice secretary, keith brown, and says that are no and it says that there are no trans inmates in scotland's females jails who are violent towards this week he because lisa this week the one last week before anybody said wait a minute maybe you shouldn't a
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violent meals you know males who are convicted of violence against women and female is always in my position but i'm a right wing radical. yeah i mean they see you know, people said, oh, these are these women in scottish scottish are scottish scottish prisons are vulnerable. and like you vulnerable. and it's like you george cohen the women in prisons. those the prisons. i mean, those are the three those words, right three those three words, right there. they're not there. no, see, they're not vulnerable . you know i vulnerable. you know what i mean? liberated the mean? i liberated the transgender when you transitioned during his court case, would been the case, he would have been the most woman in that jail most feminine woman in that jail if it actually if you actually beenin if it actually if you actually been in there, actually did make it. basically the it. so yeah. basically the scottish government has announced a pause on trans prisoners have history of prisoners who have a history of abusing sexual abusing women, including sexual violence in female jails. it violence in female jails. can it make . but it violence in female jails. can it make. but it goes violence in female jails. can it make . but it goes against the make. but it goes against the snp's ideology. their ideology was you to women, you're a was if you to women, you're a woman we're going to make it woman and we're going to make it really to really easy for you to transition. and you transition. and obviously, you know , predatory men exploit know, predatory men can exploit this . so no, the know, predatory men can exploit this. so no, the snp are backtracking there's an amazing interview with nicholas sturgeon who's called yeah she said who's called out yeah she said she transwomen are women she said transwomen are women but these transgender women
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they're not going to play in female prisons. it's whoa, female prisons. it's like, whoa, are i the are they women then? i mean, the female you're saying female prisons. so you're saying this as soon as they enter a prison, they stop being women like yeah , what is like what is a yeah, what is what is a woman. it can be based on geography. what you have to go to nicholas sturgeon. she decides court, a decides on an ad hoc court, a case by case whether you case by case basis whether you are currently work kind of tells it. also understand why it. but i also understand why it's a pause. just stop doing this, and good that there's this, and it's good that there's a this is pause a pause yeah, this is no pause to the policy. to want to just end the policy. what you think the what do you think was the trigger for to be trigger event for it to be addressed now? this is addressed now? because this is was going in with a on was that guy going in with a on his side he's actually done a lot for women prisoners you could . i say what you mean. could say. i say what you mean. is of martyr takes is this sort of martyr takes this angle. you're going with it. that's all i'm saying. i'm saying sort of high saying that his sort of high profile case has changed this too it's made it impossible to maintain this ridiculous position. exactly yeah. okay. well, we've done that once. so let's daily mail. and let's do the daily mail. and christians older, christians are getting older, is that yes that that correct, jonathan? yes that is correct, apparently so. the shifting beliefs were laid bare
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today with census figures showing average age of showing the average age of christians has hit 51. so the age has risen from 45 the age has risen from 45 at the time of the last huge survey in england and wales in 2011. so for first time, the research for the first time, the research in 2021 that more of those in 2021 found that more of those aged had no aged under 65 said they had no religion than a christian. so biased. statistically, this is not a christian nation anymore . not a christian nation anymore. obviously, culturally that isn't the it's sort of founded on christianity. it's come from the biblical lessons and such, but although the age profile for other religions was also up, christians were by far the oldest. but muslims are an average just 27 now. so obviously there's different, i guess, birth rates between different cultures . the uk nick, different cultures. the uk nick, you're a euro christian man. have you found that christian communities, people are getting older, there's not as many young people joining. yeah i mean. well, not saying well, it's not i'm not saying found have found is found it. what i have found is that are turning that young people are turning off because the off christianity because the church so church that is so cringe so people some some of the young most hardcore christians know don't go don't even necessarily go to church, although they certainly
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don't conventional don't go to a conventional church churches church as like anglican churches church as like anglican churches church gone for this thing of like be totally inclusive like let's be totally inclusive and liberal and light and totally liberal and light and totally liberal and modern. but it hasn't worked because church and modern. but it hasn't worked be
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break back to headline news. let's get straight into tuesday's guardian. it looks like it's time dust off those french bookstores i've been practising okay. here we go. japan's cursed treasures important pile of false post—gazette bomb avec le . that was amazing. i can tell you one hand model. thank you. thankin you one hand model. thank you. thank in the model domain . thank thank in the model domain. thank you.so thank in the model domain. thank you. so uk business groups call for more foreign language teachings colleges. so business groups and language are calling on ministers to make linguistic skills part of vocational skills a core part of vocational training . after research found skills a core part of vocational trainin people r research found skills a core part of vocational trainin people are ;earch found skills a core part of vocational traininpeople are unableound skills a core part of vocational traininpeople are unable study young people are unable study languages, a large number further education colleges so report by the british academy published on monday show that despite importance of linguistics in many jobs, the ability learn french, german ability to learn french, german or let alone common or spanish, let alone common languages, have become a postcode lottery. depends postcode lottery. so it depends
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where depends what where you live and depends what school i'm school go to. now, if i'm completely honest, i to completely honest, i went to a language college so you had to do to like i had to do french and spanish for gcses and don't learn it in school. you do not learn it in school. you do not learn school. you learn on duoungo learn school. you learn on duolingo by living in that duolingo all by living in that country. you need country. again, you don't need to it online. the to learn it to do it online. the app to learn it to do it online. the app is free. yeah because this is conquered don't is why we conquered the we don't need it. we've always need to learn it. we've always known this, we speak english. unless going to be chinese unless it's going to be chinese or something, not french. yeah. and the whole and this is this is the whole idea a much better idea this a much better idea? why countries learn why not other countries learn engush why not other countries learn english the best. the best you know, is the best language. because this one is the lingua franca the business world. i franca of the business world. i know not know lingua franca is, not an engush know lingua franca is, not an english word undermines english word which undermines point. what's esperanto is a made up language that's apparently combines all different languages together and so. like the eu of so. so it's like the eu of lying. yeah like a leftist utopian that out. utopian scheme that work out. i won't speak this thing. and i was like, don't like it. was like, no, we don't like it. yeah i mean, look, it's a postcode lottery, but all education, this country is a postcode since down postcode lottery since shut down the that's the grammar schools. and that's my have the grammar schools. and that's mjget have the grammar schools. and that's
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mjget into have the grammar schools. and that's mjget into the have the grammar schools. and that's mjget into the show. have the grammar schools. and that's mjget into the show. but have the grammar schools. and that's mjget into the show. but move to get into the show. but move on and do the daily star because is good simpsons is a good one. the simpsons predicted presidency. trump predicted presidency. now trump is the is borrowing ideas from the simpsons. well, simpsons. they are? well, according they say according the star. so they say donald plans a simpsons donald trump plans a simpsons style over protect style dome over us to protect against putin's deadly nukes. so said he's basically running for president is launching his to become president in 2024 and he said he'd a state of the art next generation missile defence shield all over the us so it's not he's not going build the iron dome right but this this sort of yeah exactly israel's iron dome was shoot stone successful shoots down pretty much all the rockets and it's a big beautiful dome they're trying to see that is lucas doing he wants to build this dome it's like no he doesn't want build dome. he wants want to build a dome. he wants a missile that actually missile defence. that actually makes of i can't makes a lot of sense. i can't believe. we have it believe. we don't have it already. mocked. the already. also be mocked. the wall is a great wall and the wall is a great idea such idea. the idea. such a good idea. the democrats finishing it it's democrats are finishing it it's yeah. language. he yeah. it's trump language. he uses appeal uses popular language to appeal the masses. big, beautiful wall big dome. i like it. big beautiful dome. i like it. i get it . yeah. and it's i hope
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get it. yeah. and it's i hope it's not like the millennium dome, jonathan and i was just remembering my the remembering my time at the millennium was, was millennium dome. that was, was a lot i was ten or ten lot of fun. i was ten or ten years old and we went to the relaxation zone people relaxation zone and people got kicked laughing too kicked out for a laughing too much. wasn't very much. and it wasn't very relaxing. well, did it how relaxing. well, how did it how do think money well spent do do you think money well spent do you would been you think. we would have been like think be like more do you think we'd be in better position in a better position geopolitically with in geopolitically with trump in terms his terms putin not trying his tncks? terms putin not trying his tricks? that's always want tricks? that's what always want to know. would either bit to know. i would either a bit better or a lot worse. i could go one of two ways. yeah, i think it'd be way. but i mean, what is biden's position or what is biden's position on or on anyone his on anything? anyone know his position yeah. position on anything? yeah. biden's position. gentlemen position to be tease position seems to be to tease the as long as possible the war out as long as possible to. russia economically to. deplete russia economically and militarily. but the trouble with that is it's also depleting ukraine and it's throwing, you know, ukrainian men into this meat grinder. so, know , the meat grinder. so, you know, the west the power to end west has got the power to end the war pretty immediately. i mean, biden just he's not mean, biden just said he's not going f—16s to ukraine going to give f—16s to ukraine and it should. i know people complain the us is always moaning that we're giving in is
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going much. it's not. going to cause much. it's not. it's saving money going to cause much. it's not. it's we're|ving money going to cause much. it's not. it's we're getting money going to cause much. it's not. it's we're getting rid�*ney going to cause much. it's not. it's we're getting rid�*ne'our because we're getting rid of our old that have to pay old tanks that have to pay to keep storage. you're pro keep in storage. you're very pro ukraine. yeah i've noticed that. it's bastion . not saying that it's a bastion. not saying that i'm pro—russian. let's be very clear. of western clear. front line of western liberal . yeah. mean, clear. front line of western libe actually . yeah. mean, clear. front line of western libe actually speaking ah. mean, clear. front line of western libe actually speaking to. mean, clear. front line of western libe actually speaking to oneiean, clear. front line of western libe actually speaking to one of n, i'm actually speaking to one of trump's closest confidants in a couple of days. i'm going ask couple of days. i'm going to ask about can i. so not kind about it. so can i. so not kind . but i saw something with trump on so good in of how on twitter was so good in of how well trump connects with people compared goes into compared to biden. he goes into an fashioned joint. it's an old fashioned joint. it's already most american thing already the most american thing in goes in. in south carolina. he goes in. and the woman at the counter says, i pray with you, sir? says, can i pray with you, sir? and then she prays with him and touches his and he's touches his arm and he's touching donald in touching all the donald in a burger sounds like burgerjoint. it sounds like praying. that's most praying. is it? that's the most american i've seen american thing i've ever seen and doesn't have that and doesn't just have that popular think it's popular appeal. you think it's not though? it's not about the dome, though? it's not about the dome, though? it's not know. is not about the don't know. he is a he's a he's much a you know he's a he's much beloved he is hated. beloved and he is much hated. he's the most polarising figure of i'd say. of all time, i'd say. absolutely. out a too absolutely. i came out a too strongly there. for some strongly there. but for some people so tuesdays people like biden, so tuesdays times now and i won't support
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this of course, our rival this of course, but our rival the suffering from the bbc is suffering from uninformed groupthink and economic . yeah, who'd economic ignorance. yeah, who'd have thought economic have thought so? economic ignorance threatens ignorance. the bbc threatens impartiality according to a review of bbc reporting, the review of bbc reporting, the review said the main issue is lack of impartiality caused by uninformed groupthink and lack of confidence . challenge of confidence. challenge arguments often given an extra twist by hype mean. on the other hand. twist by hype mean. on the other hand . why? why would you need to hand. why? why would you need to understand market forces when you're a communist, funded by a regressive flat tax? you do need actually appeal to anybody. you don't need to a market for your programmes because . you get the programmes because. you get the money anyway . but yes, it's money anyway. but yes, it's interesting to know that the bbc is absolutely without any merit its interest in this piece. i mean it found there was sometimes bias towards the left and the right the bbc . sometimes bias towards the left and the right the bbc. i find that incredibly hard to believe. i just they i think that's partly just they didn't is the left didn't like corbyn is the left part. bbc is just part. jemmy the bbc is just establishment, isn't its establishment, isn't its establishment on brexit, on covid it didn't really challenge the narrative properly. and to be fair, i know people who be very fair, i know people who
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were the scenes at the be very fair, i know people who were and the scenes at the be very fair, i know people who were and they he scenes at the be very fair, i know people who were and they will:enes at the be very fair, i know people who were and they will:enethis the be very fair, i know people who were and they will:enethis and bbc and they will say this and they're a bit unhappy. not bbc and they will say this and theofa a bit unhappy. not bbc and they will say this and theof themi bit unhappy. not bbc and they will say this and theof them say unhappy. not bbc and they will say this and the of them say that, ppy. not bbc and they will say this and theof them say that, but not bbc and they will say this and the of them say that, but ant bbc and they will say this and the of them say that, but a lot all of them say that, but a lot of them are unhappy. and they say that, know, they try and say that, you know, they try and be they also that be impartial. they also say that at all like some at the bbc, are we all like some of like at home, of them? we like ukip at home, but they like woke in the but then they like woke in the office just to of like every job. what you think jonathan? job. what do you think jonathan? what mean be impartial what does it mean be impartial when opinion on when you have an opinion on something you're something if you're if you're doing, economic doing, you know, economic and you case you you think something is case but a in right leaning but that has a in right leaning or leaning of skews or left leaning sort of skews sound to it . what do you do sound to it. what do you do then? you can't perfectly then? you can't be perfectly there it mean to be there is what does it mean to be properly there's , you know, properly when there's, you know, facts you believe in? yeah very, very hard to be completely impartial. and that's partly why we should just shut the bbc. yes, kidding . guys, it's great yes, kidding. guys, it's great to competition to have competition in the market should. market currently. no, we should. i are those people i mean, those are those people who bbc into who work. the bbc would go into the and be, you the labour market and be, you know, placed somewhere know, they'd be placed somewhere . productivity . they provide more productivity , the economy. it would be great. and we'd also save people 150 year, which , you 150 quid a year, which, you know, household could know, every household could do with the moment. so
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with that at the moment. so yeah, abolish the bbc immediately is a move. but immediately is a great move. but yeah, does see some yeah, the review does see some interesting things. it says you know coverage of tax know so much the coverage of tax puts tax instead puts focus on income tax instead vat when in fact you know a lot of spend on vat than of people spend more on vat than they actually income tax . they actually on income tax. let's see what the bbc's economic analysis saw with a so would i for the six months till it abolished. yeah never going to have it tues telegraph now and shouldn't be and veterans shouldn't be referred heroes. that title referred to heroes. that title is reserved the production team on the headliners so didn't write these tonight guys write all of these tonight guys i brought last minute i brought to the last minute some them i wrote some didn't some of them i wrote some didn't see if you can tell which ones. jonathan mean. people jonathan you mean. the people in calcutta a day to put calcutta we pay $5 a day to put the and they are great productions for productions they are they for all and i you all you sometimes do and i you know i think it goes down a bit. yeah you know the graphics yeah yeah. you know the graphics don't properly that's don't get properly but that's fine. veterans fine. so i'm forces veterans should called heroes as should not be called heroes as label a hindrance so the label can be a hindrance so the new suggested that the new study has suggested that the implies will work for less implies they will work for less and can direct them into lower paying and can direct them into lower paying careers, which is actually producers actually just like our producers so actually just like our producers s0 is conducted , lot of so research is conducted, lot of experiments involving , 6500
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experiments involving, 6500 participants to examine veterans experience low rates of employment and earnings and their civilian . despite the their civilian. despite the persistent positive that they were heroes. so there's a bit of a contradiction here. everyone america especially likes the troops most people support the troops most people support the troops grateful to them. at troops are grateful to them. at the same time, they're not doing so financially , so well financially, economically. so it does seem to this it's almost like a reverse stigma that because i have been doing good things abroad and know fighting the good fight and, such they're not going to want to do jobs that serve their best interest. they're more communal minded. but is communal minded. yeah, but is that reason that that definitely the reason that the standard odd to the sort of as standard odd to me when i've read these essays , me when i've read these essays, people and jason people like middleton and jason , they come into the city , they come back into the city street . what they just is street. what they just find is the working world pretty lame compared to what they've done with . his so high level that with. his so high level that everyone's accountable does what they're going to say. they're going the working they're going to say. they're going i the working they're going to say. they're going iwas the working they're going to say. they're going i was juste working they're going to say. they're going i was juste wo and| they're going to say. they're going i was juste wo and an world. i was just lazy and an idiot. obviously gb news world. i was just lazy and an idioisobviously gb news world. i was just lazy and an idio is s01iously gb news world. i was just lazy and an idio is so d0|sly gb news world. i was just lazy and an idio is so do you gb news world. i was just lazy and an idio is so do you find gb news world. i was just lazy and an idio is so do you find thatnews but is so do you find that they're just they're thought of
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as so heroic that they don't need to be paid or something think they're hanging think i think they're hanging this the peg of being this on on the peg of them being called heroes. but i don't think that's the reason that they're they're lower they're sometimes getting lower paid and work a lot paid jobs. and i work with a lot of former love army veterans and the police and intelligence . the police and intelligence. and, you know, a lot of them go into to be they've got a discipline . you they get up discipline. you they get up early in the morning and they want but then the army want to work. but then the army tends to recruit from quite low income places. so everybody's got the best sort of education and the best background. so they've still got the carrying with them that, you know, lack of if can be a bit of privilege if can be a bit walk for a moment. so i think that's the that's what's bringing the salaries than anything salaries down than anything else. pretty hard else. and it must be pretty hard to you know, i mean to adjust, you know, i mean when you've been in wars stuff, then you're suddenly working with jonathan you're suddenly working with jonatiyou the drink . not that bring you the drink. not that that is. bring you the drink. not that thatis.i bring you the drink. not that that is. i thought it was crime pretty. right. all right, pretty. all right. all right, let's stick with telegraph let's stick with the telegraph and to be is and the latest thing to be is jane austin, leo. yeah. so jane austen novel has been given a gender study typing, trigger warning. this is the university
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of greenwich, which which warns its students . if i can't believe its students. if i can't believe there's a university in greenwich, it warns its students of sexism and toxic relationships and one of jane austen's books . but it doesn't austen's books. but it doesn't mention the fact that, you know, it's actually subtle ironies. and jane austen subverts the stereotypes of self and, you know, i mean, i assume assume anyway, i've never read it. obviously, it's a book for girls, but i mean, it was it was written in 1817. it seems to it seems be asking so little of the students seems to be assuming so little of the students that they have feed these trigger have to spoon feed these trigger warnings. has warnings. the professor has never their own children. and then the like then after the students like their children. it's a their own children. it's a tyrannical mother archetype and they they they must protect. and they must, know , coddle you on must, you know, coddle you on the practical mother archetype. you will all sort to be as no. so yeah, exactly. guys, i said that. so yeah, exactly. guys, i said that . she said to say trigger that. she said to say trigger warning, this is university. you must offended . must expect to be offended. that's what university is. it talks has toxic talks in the book has toxic relationships and well that's all comedians are. and what
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about thing that you say about this thing that you say there's there skewing like we there's no there skewing like we have this now me make this joke clarkson and everyone pretends it's serious. and jane , you just it's serious. and jane, you just pretend that people are just getting dumber. understand? they do are do not understand. people are actually dumber, actually getting dumber, especially . especially university students. i because so many i think it's because so many people to university. people are going to university. yeah, i also yeah, that's one reason. i also one is this works of one is this is this works of intrigue of warnings just intrigue of warnings is it just deliberately demoralise all deliberately to demoralise all of you know , has of the people, you know, has actually been totally brainwashed this ideology i mean you be so ridiculous to you have to be so ridiculous to be putting a trigger warning on austen. is happening? austen. why is it happening? yeah, that you yeah, you to assume that you know a year picking up know a year old who's picking up the book isn't going to know that it was written in 1817 and attitudes were slightly different then to read different then and then to read it it actually, you it to and that it actually, you know, propagating as know, is propagating values as opposed subverting in. jane opposed to subverting in. jane austen was a very clever i've got no much cleverer than these people. right. let's do people. all right. let's do tuesday's should the tuesday's mail and. should the church pride in church have some pride in itself, leo? so a church is in a row over . a itself, leo? so a church is in a row over. a plan to itself, leo? so a church is in a row over . a plan to show itself, leo? so a church is in a row over. a plan to show a pride flag on its altar over claims that pulitzer size is a place of
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worship and will lead to moral anarchy . so st nicholas church anarchy. so st nicholas church in leicester. at home the colourful flags there are colourful flags there are colourful blue that we can services, but then last year it switched them for a much larger permanent version. i mean there's a church it's not the guardian staff canteen during pride month can you know if there's one place i'd like to be a bit sort of old fashioned and stuck in the past and traditional is a church i don't even go to churches . i mean, even go to churches. i mean, sometimes if there's one, then i'll walk round the nice buildings and stuff, you know, just we've go, we've got pride , just we've go, we've got pride, we've got all this, all this other stuff why do we have to have it in churches as well can they stay be a bit. don't you they stay be in a bit. don't you normally put a flag when you normally put a flag up when you sort conquered something? normally put a flag up when you sort iconquered something? normally put a flag up when you sort iconqueitd something? normally put a flag up when you sort iconqueit seemsthing? normally put a flag up when you sort iconqueit seems like]? normally put a flag up when you sort iconqueit seems like it's yeah. i mean, it seems like it's the new ideology. it the new ideology. why does it have over the church? have to take over the church? you can have that. you can have that ideology. but why have that ideology. but why you have to gone well, to take over is gone down. well, who's is it the who's it up there? is it the people run the church or is people who run the church or is it then a council's up it then a council's put up or it's people the church. it's people within the church. it's, it's i think, i think
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anyway want to do that. anyway if they want to do that. well if are the well maybe if it's, if are the people the, know, people who are the, you know, the who the church the people who run the church that be forced to that they should be forced to do. i want. yeah. and me do. what i want. yeah. and me and outnumbered london and we've outnumbered london democracy. we will. that's part three in the can as we say in the coming up in the final section we ask, are you a psychopath, leo? more that horrific smith video horrific sam smith music video and a story about the and we cover a story about the f while trying not say it so while trying not to say it so we'll .
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see welcome back to headline is let's get straight into it the tuesday's express sam smith's new music video been called unhealthy for society kids and presumably for anyone with eyes. leo yeah, yeah . his diet leo yeah, yeah. his diet probably is as well. so smith's hypersexualized new music video has been slammed unhealthy for society and kids . it's called
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society and kids. it's called called i'm not here to make and it's being accused of normalising i dunno what sort of disgusting it would be normalising . people and things , normalising. people and things, he says. suzanne smith's a pop star.i he says. suzanne smith's a pop star. i don't know why we've shown a picture about the way people have shown us in my timeline whole and i've timeline whole week, and i've been guys, showing been like, guys, stop showing me this. just shown this. and now you've just shown the those things , those things the those things, those things on nipples that actually for on his nipples that actually for the shock to his heart the electric shock to his heart because he is so fat. restart the smith he's a pop star is a fat bloke who calls himself non—binary even though non—binary even though non—binary isn't a real thing. he thinks the calls himself be them. it's okay to a family bucket, a chicken, because there must be more than one of them. richard madeley people have been it's amazing to watch people , it's amazing to watch people, try, and not misgender him try, try and not misgender him because . he's obviously a bloke. because. he's obviously a bloke. he looks like a darts, you know what i mean? he looks like he's on his way to giant haystacks in a in wrestling match. plus, it's impossible when impossible to say they when
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you're a single you're talking about a single person, work. person, it just doesn't work. yes. nonsense. yes. it's an absolute nonsense. it's this linguistic it's just this linguistic semantic trickery , like having semantic trickery, like having to rub your stomach and your head at the same time. but are we fools because it's had we the fools because it's had 2 million views. so is it all marketed or is he simply having a mental. call him. call him . a mental. call him. call him. and i think so. there's definitely of let's definitely an element of let's try this music is try and make this music video is degenerate as possible. i'm a musician. music videos. musician. i make music videos. i think . i did i think he's directness. i did i was actually me in the i'm on the body double as you can see, i'm husky boy these days. i'm i'm a husky boy these days. i'm not but you know what not on anyway. but you know what i think this music i think? i think this music video degenerate, but i also video is degenerate, but i also think it's how he wants to express that's fine. express himself. that's fine. wouldn't children. wouldn't show it to children. it's inappropriate. wouldn't show it to children. it's like appropriate. wouldn't show it to children. it's like the �*opriate. wouldn't show it to children. it's like the wholes. but it's got like the whole water. it's going to say that whole going people whole vibe going on and people spraying mouth. spraying water into his mouth. it's definitely evocative of it's definitely as evocative of that . i think that's that imagery. i think that's gross. the time, gross. but at the same time, that's you want to express that's how you want to express yourself it yourself as an artist, do it just, you don't just, you know, don't show. i saw people, people i don't think even our very own amy nicole, we love i think i saw on love amy. but i think i saw on twitter was being twitter saying song was being puritanical. if i can telling
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this saying this video and saying that he's living life would living his best life would be too my question. too far. that's my question. when to your. when does it come to your. i don't also, know don't know. and also, you know there's no age restriction to stop five year olds watching it. i get youtube videos, i mean, i get my youtube videos, which pee on. and which don't i don't pee on. and my are negative. my youtube videos are negative. they demonetised i've they often get demonetised. i've said it said something evil like, oh, it sounds you know, you need to sounds, you know, you need to do, know, well, start paying do, you know, well, start paying them. getting them. they started getting naked and on and put nipple clumps on probably move on. probably a good time to move on. probably a blanket apology for that bit . let's do the that whole bit. so let's do the metro and apparently dropping the work no longer. the f—bomb at work is no longer. shocking. wrote that shocking. whoever wrote that probably live news probably work in live news broadcasting . she put it to the broadcasting. she put it to the test you can . to have a show the test you can. to have a show the rules the f—word has officially lost shock value in the workplace so dropping the f—bomb at work is no longer shocking. in britain, the judges said phrases like, i don't give an f star stock. and now fairly commonplace and no longer have the shock value they once did. so employment judge, andrew so an employment judge, andrew gum beat me to rule such swear
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words to have a lack significance. so this came about a case where a lady has me to that romania she sued sap the software development company for unfair dismissal and discrimination and now she tried to sue them for a bunch of different things, saying they were just and i think racist and a few of the facts. but one of the things she complained about was that he dropped the f—bomb and i just said, so what. so, yeah, i don't know how did this even to court i mean what's going on. yeah i think that was a of it. yeah she was a part of it. yeah mean she was she saying was belittling she was saying was belittling and it discriminatory and she was saying was belittling ancthis discriminatory and she was saying was belittling ancthis dofriminatory and she was saying was belittling ancthis dof stuffatory and she was saying was belittling ancthis dof stuffatory 11d all this sort of stuff know i mean, you know, work with mean, you know, i work with andrew as a boss. yeah. andrew doyle as a boss. yeah. andrew doyle as a boss. yeah. and he hit, me and i didn't really care. i mean, i think, think a lot of i think it was a thing a lot of i listen to my wife network listen to my wife on network calls sounds like a talker calls she sounds like a talker an talker. an 18th century talker. all right i think the right well i think that's the greatest ever. let's the greatest ever. so let's do the next which in the daily next one, which is in the daily mail, i believe. and it's a it's about how far you should go to have surgery . you would you was have surgery. you would you was it worth dying , harvey, to save it worth dying, harvey, to save the planet. so, this has
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the planet. so, yeah, this has would the less honest would you accept the less honest mistake during surgery to see if the so dog to see it could reduce the world's carbon footprint up to point 1% footprint by up to point 1% which is a lot you know when you consider all the stuff consider all the all the stuff all the boats and planes and other that emma thompson travels on she's asking to not on while she's asking us to not do it you know, with people these are a survey to see if people would willing to receive less anaesthesia , the name of less anaesthesia, the name of climate and only tiny climate change and only tiny sliver . the extremely sliver of people. the extremely painful surgery . but yeah, i painful surgery. but yeah, i mean those people the sam smith music video. yeah but i don't say extinction rebellion. you know, where they're getting the hands all the way from hands cut off all the way from all the concrete glued all the concrete they've glued from a bit. a bit. they want anaesthetic. they're bunch anaesthetic. they're all a bunch of of just of hypocrites. they kind of just hate people, don't they? i mean, it's going to the it's going to it's going to the world's by world's carbon footprint by nought it's going to nought point 1. it's going to make . but make any difference. but they just want people have just don't want people to have anaesthetic during surgery. aren't people aren't they just a weird people hating coal and it does feel like i've got enough like i mean, i've got enough nitrous to nitrous oxide canisters to kind of zeppelins . nitrous oxide canisters to kind of zeppelins. i can't of filler zeppelins. i can't really say anything here.
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impartial seem impartial but it doesn't seem like that's the area where you want to cut back on. you want if you're having surgery, don't you're having surgery, you don't want up and i hear want to wake up and i hear that's unpleasant, but that's quite unpleasant, but this doesn't sound lot, this doesn't sound like a lot, but quite a lot. and but point 1% is quite a lot. and if you to, know, if you add to, you know, starving of children in the developing see developing world, you've see 2.2. 1,000.1, the 2.2. what's that, 1,000.1, the 1,000th is quite a lot. yeah, yeah, yeah . and actually we've yeah, yeah. and actually we've solved less. you solved that one less. do you actually son and do you actually used a son and do you have psychopathic tendencies, jonathan? once you've jonathan? and once you've answered do jonathan? and once you've ans' story. do jonathan? and once you've ans' story. oh, do jonathan? and once you've ans'story. oh, i'll do jonathan? and once you've ans' story. oh, i'll write do jonathan? and once you've ans' story. oh, i'll write one do the story. oh, i'll write one manifesto and send it to everybody one time everybody in office. one time i'm considered psycho because i'm considered a psycho because this the sun do you this story in the sun do you have psychopathic tendencies ? have psychopathic tendencies? simple test reveals your score. so we tend to think of psychopaths as evil social outcasts, and there are an estimate 300 to 400000 of them working at the bbc , living in working at the bbc, living in britain. but they are not all criminals. psychopaths live among friends, colleagues, among us as friends, colleagues, even partners, but they are the kind of acts will all acts will remain. i actually think the also there's a test which is 27 questions and it kind of puts you on like an axis of how
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psychopathic are i always out as a total non psychopath. i just come as really great you come out as a really great you know, how to cheat the tests the results someone they go 2% less psychopathic that must be me look normally i'm more look look how normally i'm more normal than the average population. i'm purple one. population. i'm the purple one. yeah, too close to it. yeah, that's too close to it. that's close. oh, who's that's too close. oh, and who's this one? one looks dark. this one? this one looks dark. that's he's. where is he that's leo. so he's. where is he . a 10% more psychopathic. . he's a 10% more psychopathic. i knew it . it's at least 10% i knew it. it's at least 10% nonsense. it's at least he said, not me and naomi got jonathan i me. he said , what the population me. he said, what the population average 65. i knew. but i know i knew you did on purpose. i bet you rigged the and deliberately answer the most psychopathic way. that's kind of thing, which also psychopath. also makes you a psychopath. that's this that's the problem with this test. questions are test. all the questions like are you psychopath? or if see you a psychopath? or if you see somebody their head . somebody do stop in their head. all will all be all the questions will all be psycho. psychopath, any psycho. so psychopath, any genuine would genuine psychopath would make themselves normal . themselves look very normal. nick i see what you nick yeah, well, i see what you mean. a sort of reverse psychology think done psychology you think have done the test. very the dark triad test. it's very similar , it says psychopath. the
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similar, it says psychopath. the machiavellian heart, the narcissism excuse could tell . i narcissism excuse could tell. i ask girls to do on a date or something you just you find out quite quite early on but quite a lot quite early on but i come up very often. i come out a test meet girls do on dates. test you meet girls do on dates. i very the point i come out very upset. the point is i'm not a psychopath. but you guys total i mean, i think that's basically we've that's basically what we've learned. all right. i think that's a decent end to the show. we found out those about psychopaths. but thank psychopaths. i'm not. but thank you, guys. thanks to jonathan and probably all and leo. that's probably all we've for. but let's we've got time for. but let's have look tuesday's have a quick look at tuesday's front daily front pages. so tuesday's daily mail, why we have cut taxes. oh we've got to cut taxes and go for growth from the imf. the financial times brussels counters subsidies is counters us green subsidies is with push to ease kerbs on state aid fat boy not one tuesdays times parents limbo over classroom walkout . we covered classroom walkout. we covered that earlier the sun 8 million chelsea stars and words tuesday's metro time to lie that's the boris story and finally the daily star we have really hit the skids which is a
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story about toilet paper. so that's for tonight. thanks to leo and jonathan will be back tomorrow at 11. and of course , tomorrow at 11. and of course, if you're watching at 5 am, it's the breakfast show next. goodbye .
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what it was supposed to be. the big day for the nhs for our prime minister, rishi sunak. but of course everything's been dominated today by nadhim zahawi . the pm says he did decide . . the pm says he did decide. sibley will debate tonight . has sibley will debate tonight. has he actually got a. we show an exclusive interview with the boss of cuadrilla he may well sue the government over its u—turn on fracking policy in the nonh u—turn on fracking policy in the north of england. and joining me on talking points the man behind the english classic rise of the
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foot soldier andrew loveday joins me on talking points. but before all of that let's get the news with polly middlehurst . news with polly middlehurst. nigel, thank you. and good evening to you. our top story on gb news tonight, firefighters and control room staff have voted for their first nationwide strike over pay in 20 years. the fire brigades union said its members of experienced a 12% drop in real terms, earnings since 2010. last november , since 2010. last november, members rejected a pay rise of 5% and teachers have today vowed to go on strike. in england and wales on wednesday after last minute talks between the unions and the government failed . it's and the government failed. it's expected to be the biggest day of industrial action in decades, with up to half a million public service workers, including train drivers and civil servants, also taking action . union leaders say

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