tv Headliners Replay GB News February 8, 2023 5:00am-6:01am GMT
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that this is a missing and that this is a missing person enquiry . international person enquiry. international news and king charles has sent message of support to president of turkey, saying he's shocked and profoundly saddened by the devastating earthquakes his country and across the border in syria. the earthquakes have left nearly 8000 people dead. rishi sunak has pledged the uk government's support to turkey's president, who has declared a state of emergency for three months in the ten worst affected cities . the foreign secretary cities. the foreign secretary earlier today confirmed three british people are missing and 35 others directly affected . a 35 others directly affected. a 77 strong british search and rescue team with specialist equipment and dogs is currently assisting with the rescue effort in country. the first 7.8 magnitude quake hit yesterday morning with a second major earthquake as an aftershock measuring 7.5 coming just a few hours later later today, the
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prime minister revealed his new cabinet following a reshuffle . cabinet following a reshuffle. he also created four new government departments . greg government departments. greg hands takes over as new conservative party chairman after nadhim zahawi was sacked . after nadhim zahawi was sacked. kemi badenoch is the new business and trade secretary lucy frazer becomes culture secretary, taking from michelle donelan , who's been made a new donelan, who's been made a new science and technology secretary. the business trade and culture departments have been broken down into separate units with shapps now energy secure secretary up to date on tv online and dab+ radio with gb news. now it's time for headliners . headliners. hello, i'm andrew doyle and welcome to headliners. the paper revue show with a difference. we wednesday's newspapers and we go through the
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best stories and acts like most paper shows. but the ones i left anyway. joining me tonight i have leo muck daddy curse and grandaddy monkhouse . let's take grandaddy monkhouse. let's take a look at tomorrow's front first. we're going to start with the daily mail who are running with now even could be gender. that's the church of england debating whether they should stop referring to god as . the stop referring to god as. the telegraph is running with rapists lenient sentence to be review this of course relating to the prosecution of serial rapist carrick and the guardian monstrous rapist ex met officer jailed for life after years of attacks from cover the times now life and death under the ruins. those are the obviously horrific earthquakes on the turkey syria border and the sun leeds way the fawlty towers return . this is fawlty towers return. this is comedy legend and to be presenter on gb news john who is writing a sequel series to the classic sitcom with daughter. and finally that daily star has britain in grip of a chuckle crisis apparently a lot of us
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can't remember the last time we laughed, and those are the front pages. laughed, and those are the front pages . so laughed, and those are the front pages. so we're going . to so pages. so we're going. to so we're beginning with the guardian . what are they leading guardian. what are they leading with today .7 yeah. so this is with today? yeah. so this is a unimaginably front page. they've got the picture of the turkish father holding the hand of his deceased daughter. there and above it, the story closer to home, the officer has been jailed for after years of sexual attacks on. women so david carrick he's been jailed jill for i think it's 30 years which i mean it probably will be to the of his life because he's 48 now but just on imaginable and there has been some criticism there has been some criticism the sentence is too lenient but just unimaginably horrific carried for 17 years. well he was a well he's a serving police officer and he's admitted 85 serious offences against including 40 rapes. so who knows, you know, how many more
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men came out after the sarah everard killing and then came forward and it transpired that this was a series , this this was this was a series, this this was the thing victim after victim told the court they were too scared to report him because he's a is a police officer a firearms officer obviously in a position of power and authority and, you know, he's going to believe, you know, the word of some know women against this, you powerful . yeah. it's you know, powerful. yeah. it's a similar story. people like harold people are harold shipman when people are and authority it just and figures of authority it just doesn't cross people mind actually anything it actually do anything about it even suspicions. even when they have suspicions. what think about reports? what do you think about reports? that untold that means that the untold damage it does to people's perception of authority is huge, incalculable evil and lasting. it is and the matter saying he should never have been a police officer. this is something that could potentially have been nipped in the bud. but how conceivable is that really i mean, you know, not easy it mean, you know, it's not easy it necessary to detect things. but they said they saw signs. well, yes. and i think the hiring methods and the way they work
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now is much different to when he i'm going assume if it was a 17 year campaign of sexual that was some time ago which begs the question are procedures better? are they tighter? would now be enlisted or allowed to join? well, i think that's what leo's suggesting , well, i think that's what leo's suggesting, is that well, i think that's what leo's suggesting , is that the suggesting, is that the standards today presumably are considerably better, although as we know , met come under such we know, met has come under such sort in barrage of sort of in a barrage of criticism in relation to this issue. so who knows. yeah. just when you think you know when is you know, it can be worse than that. i mean here's here's something is worse not something that is worse than not something that is worse than not so way, we are going so and by the way, we are going to try something new tonight. if you have any thoughts about of the or of our ill the stories or any of our ill informed, ignorant opinions about just drop informed, ignorant opinions abian just drop informed, ignorant opinions abian email just drop informed, ignorant opinions abian email views st drop informed, ignorant opinions abian email views atdrop informed, ignorant opinions abian email views at gb) informed, ignorant opinions abian email views at gb news us an email gb views at gb news dot uk. and later on. we're going to read out some of the best ones if. there are any good ones anyway. onto telegraph, roger. what are they running with and it doesn't look good ehhen with and it doesn't look good either. well it's so grim, isn't it? the whole earthquake business frightfully grim business is so frightfully grim . but the telegraph have led
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with a slightly life with a slightly more life affirming line, which is the baby that pulled from the rubble . someone survived and then suddenly miraculously , quickly, suddenly miraculously, quickly, tragically, her, her, his, the baby's mother is dead , as indeed baby's mother is dead, as indeed is the whole family as difficult to know what's everyday minutes over thousand people killed . 7.8 over thousand people killed. 7.8 magnitude quake it's absolutely but you know and they've still you know obviously they're still putting people out there still heanng putting people out there still hearing the death toll hearing voices. the death toll rising the aftershocks to rising and the aftershocks to deal there are you deal with there are all, you know, all things like know, all sorts of things like that mean, they are, know, that i mean, they are, you know, a this be to do sometimes a lot of this be to do sometimes with infrastructure. these buildings aren't on built to these. know lived these. well, you know i lived vancouver prone is vancouver which is prone to is going get a huge earthquake going to get a huge earthquake at and flats at some point and the flats they've got wires crisscross and you've been somebody's living they've got wires crisscross and you'vithere'ssomebody's living they've got wires crisscross and you'vithere's a mebody's living they've got wires crisscross and you'vithere's a big)ody's living they've got wires crisscross and you'vithere's a big wires living they've got wires crisscross and you'vithere's a big wire going; room there's a big wire going across it like you're an oil rig andifs across it like you're an oil rig and it's because to give and it's because it's to give structure and flexibility. you know footage of know looking at the footage of buildings, a lot buildings, there's clearly a lot of lot of concrete and, you
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of a lot of concrete and, you know, those are those high rises just, you know, tend people are pool just, you know, tend people are poonl just, you know, tend people are poor. i mean, it's poverty yeah. so a known earthquake so it's not a known earthquake zone. were zone. apparently the risks were not to be high not perceived to be high historically know seen tremors there before castles there as old as like 2200 years of no you know been completely destroyed. so obviously i mean come of the blue i mean there's also we should say on this front cover this picture about the lords and their this is an interesting story . yes, this is the story. yes, this is the government which has been killed off by an alliance , labour, lib off by an alliance, labour, lib dem and crossbench peers in the house of lords. dem and crossbench peers in the house of lords . and it was house of lords. and it was a government amendment which attempting to make marching specifically illegal as an attempt to cut down on serious disruption brought about by environment, we should say it was quite a close vote. it was 540, 240 yeah, but the pay is are basically intervening here because we've had all sorts of examples of the tory government
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trying to push through quite draconian measures such as the police crime and sentencing bill. and then because they couldn't that through sort couldn't get that through sort of a adopted amendment, couldn't get that through sort of a adopted amendment , the of a adopted amendment, the pubuc of a adopted amendment, the public bill, and now the public order bill, and now the pay public order bill, and now the pay down. but pay is shutting that down. but leo, mean, look, you leo, i mean, look, i know you get annoyed insulate . yeah. get annoyed by insulate. yeah. and environmental activists, but there already tools to deal there are already tools to deal with damage structures with criminal damage structures . so no, but someone walking slowly or making a little bit too noise. come on, this. this is what the this is what the police said. oh, we kind of raised them because they're still moving. they said they're on you're not on a road the wall. you're not supposed walk in a road this supposed to walk in a road this is not for balance they could at least decriminalise running them over know it's a over and then you know it's a win is that we get we get to win win is that we get we get to work also their work on time and also their carbon footprint is reduced to zero that some the zero except that some of the proposals put forward by the home year home secretary last year regarding things like regarding protests things like the decide the police could decide if something a too noisy something feels a bit too noisy they down. the idea of they could it down. the idea of a protest. mean, that's a protest. noisy. i mean, that's sort the point, isn't it. sort of the point, isn't it. i think something bit i'd like think something a bit i'd like to see, i imagine protesting using the art mime. wouldn't
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using the art of mime. wouldn't that well did arrest of that be. well did arrest of women protesting silently, women for protesting silently, for outside for silent prayer. yeah. outside abortion you would abortion clinic. so you would support she thinking support that she was thinking the thoughts and it the the wrong thoughts and it the politics going on here. yeah she's in a country move encourage them to move on to the daily mail leo what is the daily mail run with for wednesday's newspaper. well good could be going neutral about oh she missed the charge sheet they are she is a man but come on god's a man but the church of england because the church of england hasn't been doing walk stuff what would this non—binary priests and pride flags everywhere and all the rest of it they're now looking at me can god and non—binary breaking with centuries of tradition going back to think jesus and the bible bishops have a notice. they're lunging a major project on gendered language this spring. i mean, he's running the church a 14 year church of england is a 14 year old girl with blue hair is the suggesting priests can stop using he and when referring to god they can drop the phrase our father start of the father from the start of the lord's prayer. where were they
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going prayer is called going to put prayer is called father. what are they father. yeah. what are they going to call it? like are they them who are in diversity training, thy name. training, hallowed be thy name. well, man, he's well, he's obviously man, he's a beard. got a beard. beard. he's got a beard. i've seen picture plantations. has seen picture plantations. he has a seen pictures a beard. no, i've seen pictures on the one of the man saying i'm not representation . everybody not representation. everybody can be everybody in can all be everybody draws in with he's never the with a beard. he's never the sistine chapel. he's never clean . got like pink hair . he's never got like pink hair side, blue hair that say he's never looking like a non—binary. no, is roger. some no, that is roger. some theological precedent for this insofar as theologians the early church fathers did not conceive of god the almighty as necessarily gendered in the way that humanity gender. no that humanity is gender. no right. doesn't mean that right. it just doesn't mean that is. welby points out that is. justin welby points out that all human language about god is inadequate to some degree inadequate and to some degree metaphorical. depends on metaphorical. but it depends on your stance on this doesn't the reverend joanna stobart victor in the diocese of guildford. sorry said that some clergy want to refer god without saying he or him , particularly in prayers or him, particularly in prayers of for sins. but it's okay if he's sending plagues of boils
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and. oh yeah, yeah. it's definitely so. why does anyone care? i the whole point is there have been all these hundreds of years of tradition where we accept the convention of referring to god as it's not a big deal. is this really anyone? i'm not even a jesus guy or anything like that, but you know, this is is know, this this is this is ridiculous. wokeism is now a new religion. to religion. and it seems to captured some of old captured some of our old religion's. ridiculous. if religion's. it's ridiculous. if anything, a tear. he came anything, god is a tear. he came up with idea that because he up with the idea that because he man created women didn't man he created women he didn't create transitioning or create non in transitioning or whatever but did create us in whatever but he did create us in his image would imply that his own image would imply that he's like us all women he's like us all the women should have beards as well some do, scotland . do, particularly in scotland. you going to move on you know, i'm going to move on to the sun next. what they going with? well, this what skin the baby born in the rubble and pulled out alive and then return of fawlty towers after . good of fawlty towers after. good heavens, is it 44 years? yes well, time will tell. yeah, good idea. and this is very interesting. of course, you know, we're currently with with john cleese on a new show for gb
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news, which will be filmed this yeah news, which will be filmed this year. very exciting. and he's writing this a new series kind of sequel to the series where bafil of sequel to the series where basil fawlty proposes with his daughter. and this is being written with his daughter, commander, as well. so you know, he is a stand—up and lives in australia . i'm not totally sure. australia. i'm not totally sure. i'm not sure either. but is quite exciting for us coming back as well of course really. you know clearly something you know it's clearly something in well . well, i in the air as well. well, i think that. don't the think about that. i don't the idea of bringing back old older shows as long as you put shows and as long as you put a new on them, you know, new spin on them, you know, that's funny. and that's kind of funny. and i don't think we new spin. don't think we need a new spin. i think problem is, nobody's developed sitcoms developed any decent sitcoms just the sake of being. just for the sake of being. i think fleabag was already the lesser decent uk sitcom can lesser decent uk sitcom i can remember really getting excited, but phoenix and but it was phoenix nights and that's going be over 20 that's that's going be over 20 is pretty good extras right yeah the office i mean 20 years the office but i mean 20 years old. i do love extras old. yeah i do love extras anyway but this does bring us on rather nicely to the cover of the daily . i rather nicely to the cover of the daily. i mean, what's all this about ?
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the daily. i mean, what's all this about? roger this is britain in the grip of a chuckle, apparently , 42% can't chuckle, apparently, 42% can't remember the last time they laughed. yeah, well there you go. experts recommend the daily star to cheer you up . i would star to cheer you up. i would have thought you'd rate that on the front page, but can't remember the last time. but it's not something you sort of write in your diary, is it? but you know, there is. that does lead in what you saying. in to what you were saying. i mean, is a point. there mean, there is a point. there isn't much stuff tv that's isn't much stuff on tv that's just about it. yeah, it's all in like comedy. if you see comedy on tv, on bbc or i mean, on tv, on the bbc or i mean, you're just getting lecture you're just getting a lecture on. intersectionality and climate not climate change. well, i do not like that. you know, i do like that. but, you know, i do think that's intended necessarily anyway. yeah. now you pages you know what the front pages are about do join us after are all about do join us after the when got aid the break when we've got aid waylaid, mental labour waylaid, we've got mental labour and of brit coyne. and the rise of the brit coyne. see you in a moment.
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welcome to headline as your first look at wednesday newspapers. i'm on my left is leo kearse on his left is roger. and on his left is camera six. that's you guys over there. and before crack on with the papers, let's have a look. you've been emailing some of your thoughts. we've got one from here, from andrew mullin saying, will there be plaque on the gate of be a blue plaque on the gate of the field where prince harry lost virginia team? we lost his virginia team? we weren't that the weren't talking about that the show. missed the show. so he's not missed the point was meant to what point that was meant to what we've been. but that's the question. it's question. question. it's a good question. an interesting from paul an interesting one from paul yarwood theology. yarwood about about theology. but, we about but, you know, we talk about gender neutral, says gender neutral, god, he says jesus bloke and embodied jesus was a bloke and embodied god persons, the god in three persons, the trinity. so the holy ghost. yeah. be gender. so that's an interesting theory. what specifically in bring interesting theory. what spe�*sortally in bring interesting theory. what spe�*sort of' in bring interesting theory. what spe�*sort of female in bring interesting theory. what spe�*sort of female on| bring interesting theory. what spe�*sort of female on the bring interesting theory. what spe�*sort of female on the whole the sort of female on the whole you she was diversity you think she was a diversity hire. yeah i think theologically disagree access nice one disagree with access nice one here from jacqueline swann had really today my dearest really bad day today my dearest dog passed away suddenly
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dog django passed away suddenly last week. sorry hear that be last week. sorry to hear that be missing him dreadfully so seeing andrew has given andrew lear and roger has given me really great lift how about me a really great lift how about that? compliment. sorry, that? yeah. compliment. sorry, sorry about the dog, sorry to hear about the dog, though. yes, horrible. but though. oh, yes, horrible. but just one from just just for balance. one from black mariah on twitter. why should watch and leo the should i watch you and leo the misogynist . tell me about how misogynist. tell me about how you got away . glamour i from you got away. glamour i from grimsby . sorry to hear that. oh, grimsby. sorry to hear that. oh, yes. maybe be happy. and if she does wednesday's independent under supposedly uk aid isn't going to the world's poorest so it's not being spent home. yes. so you knew that goes is becoming less on the world's poorest apparently today the typical recipient of uk aid and the income of the recipient is in line . the average world in line. the average world income of around 50% of people so round about the median median line or the average average line rather than the median. sorry got to get my statistics right. what does it take to go? the typical income came typical recipient's income came around. for around. the average figure for the % mean working .
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the poorest% mean it's working. this means it's working places historically that which bringing it to a certain lifted out of extreme poverty it's working but then when you move your aid to somewhere else actually all the aid goes to overpaid charities. in the end you always want to call it that. so all of it of an awful lot. it nowadays goes to putting up the seeking families in hotels all around the uk reinvested in domestic. well i mean that's the point isn't but this is something the article points out that the home office has been spending a lot more. it's actually sort yeah. costs on taking to the country on sort of taking to the country so sense it makes sense so in a sense it makes sense that would deduct of that they would deduct some of that they would deduct some of that from foreign aid. yeah, because we've just moved the recipients our shores. so recipients to, to our shores. so he's not becoming stingy. he's not becoming more stingy. we're just redistributing it. yeah. been yeah. although it's been redistributed country, redistributed in our country, so going benefits, you going to reap the benefits, you know, all hotel that are know, all those hotel that are getting these massive getting these, these massive filling their hotels with their with illegal immigrants, we're going to dividend from going to get a dividend from that. what it doesn't do is project power. you say project soft power. and you say in theory i'm quite favour of in theory i'm quite in favour of that. quite a nice idea that. that's quite a nice idea because recoup that
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because you recoup that in cynical economic terms. so i trade opportunities. yeah that's traditionally how you would justify charitable justify but as a charitable exercise , there's an effort to exercise, there's an effort to get people of extreme. get people out of extreme. unfortunately, as you've touched , it creates a culture of exactly ex sites local corruption industries and undermines local markets as well. so if you're to flood the market with food, then people who provide the food and sell it are going to not be able to do that anymore so often doesn't work any term. going to work any term. we're going to move to wednesdays guardian move on to wednesdays guardian next. looks next. roger, it looks like labour an actual labour come up with an actual policy . yes, this is quite policy. yes, this is quite interesting. it's very hard to find with this is find fault with this. this is jonathan ashworth, the shadow work and pensions secretary, who revealed labour plans to help reach to thousands of people with addiction. mental health issues written off by the department of work and pensions . now, this is quite good, it seems to me, because we currently have, i believe, 450,000 people on long term
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sickness benefit an enormous drag upon the economy which is struggling for labour and consequent to give people some of help, some sort of lift out the cycles that they find themselves within seems to me quite a good idea . this is on quite a good idea. this is on the front page of the guardian and of course it doesn't pretend to be much more than a prospectus for a future labour government. but notwithstanding that place. that it's quite a safe place. mediclinic the mediclinic would say that the most sort of benefits you have in this regard, the more likely are exploited by people are to be exploited by people who work. who don't want to work. i imagine you're going to come from that kind of angle, but i could be wrong. i was going to say that. andrew okay. so yeah, no, ever to, no, i mean it is easier ever to, to to give a self the to be able to give a self the game the system hears of diagnose what adhd of diagnose what adhd or one of these things that you know pretty much everybody has or can fake. then you fake. and then and then you don't have to work. get don't have to work. also you get nhs grade medical better but of course health course there mental health is real people problems real and people have problems and know you should help the and you know you should help the people actual problems yet
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people with actual problems yet but in times of if you but you know in times of if you take somebody with mental health issues and dump them on a desert island, of a sudden they'll island, all of a sudden they'll be out. i can go be like, oh, it out. i can go out and forage for food and i can go and collect some water. well, maybe, maybe coconut milk has healing properties that we don't again, a don't know. once again, it's a cultural dependence. what cultural dependence. that's what you're isn't it? you're talking about, isn't it? and or should perhaps and you could or should perhaps encourage then encourage self reliance and then we'll get results and people who would find themselves in cycles of despair suddenly find that they themselves of they can get themselves out of it. they are incredibly profound to take this positive. but i'm going to the mail now going to move on to the mail now and should sell all my and leo should i sell all my bitcoin to brit coins ? it's not bitcoin to brit coins? it's not for sale just yet . and so the for sale just yet. and so the bank of england and the treasury are weighing up the issues involved, creating a digital pound. they're going to create a cryptocurrency . they've dubbed cryptocurrency. they've dubbed it brit coin and daily mail, which i hope catches on. that's good. it reminds me of it's got liam gallagher on the front of it. you look great. so it could be in use by the end of the decade so expect in 18 if
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introduced the digital pound would be issued by the bank of england and could be used to make payments in person or online. it would be interchangeable with cash bank deposits issued deposits and be issued denominations upon sterling. just that already? just don't we have that already? exactly yes, i wouldn't even say so too old to understand what so. too old to understand what this is about because we have that. i pick up my mobile that. i could pick up my mobile phone now transfer phone right now and transfer money you instantly . you money to you instantly. you know, the interest rates on this. you look at interest on oh so it's based on digital currency it's like money but worth yeah right. it's worth oh yeah right. it's something that fintech can make a bit more money out and we get nothing to understand bitcoin and how was far as i can and how it was as far as i can see like fake currency that's see like a fake currency that's in aether. yeah is that and in the aether. yeah is that and you just sort of basically i mean mind is it not mind. there's this awful fella who's billions on some sort of tape in south wales cropping up in the media i think is an actual mine. is it mine for your hard drive is hard drive. no. yeah. and so you've got servers that solve complicated algorithm and the when they solve the nail file
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algorithms get a bitcoin. algorithms they get a bitcoin. but but basically the problem with digital currency is it can be restricted. the government can say we've got to spend within this timescale well within this timescale well within geographic area on within this geographic area on these specific things . so it these specific things. so it gives the government more control us. so there's nothing in it for us then. no, it doesn't sound good . me okay, we doesn't sound good. me okay, we got move on. roger got to move on. roger wednesday's guardian now has a story. google sending people the opposite results , which is a bit opposite results, which is a bit like our booker typing in cme in this is this is quite interesting story perhaps i'm not sure whether it's a story or not sure whether it's a story or not this is about how low income women in united states who google abortion clinics i'll be targeted . by anti—abortion targeted. by anti—abortion crisis pregnancy centres via the google advertising algorithm . google advertising algorithm. okay now we all know that advertisers target specific demographics. perhaps there's
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not so much in that . well, they not so much in that. well, they imply sinister here . well, imply sinister here. well, something sinister is going on because are. yes as far as i can see these crisis centres are contravening pre—existing google advertising rules. this is about advertising rules. this is about advertising regulation. it's actually been people have been pushed into abortion crisis centre links. yes in states particularly where abortion is extremely limited when they are attempt to access abortion clinics and this sort of thing ready to be politicised in this way. now i'm not i'm not so sure it's being politicised. i mean i think these anti—abortion clinics or crisis centres are being put in a completely negative light when fact they're being maybe pushed on or advertised to low income women because low income women might feel that they have to have an abortion. they don't have the resources raise the child. resources to raise the child. whereas, perhaps whereas, you know, perhaps at least the centres they offer the resources and the support to
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help raise so i don't help you raise child. so i don't think necessarily 100% think it's necessarily 100% evil. okay going to stick with the guardian now and leo, did your daughter take the nursery spot this is humza yousaf who's , an snp politician . there are , an snp politician. there are some words that should strike fear in any scotsman . so he sued fear in any scotsman. so he sued . he's the former justice minister who brought through the hate crime bill was an appalling of legislation. he's a very authoritarian autocratic man and he's the is the health minister . i believe he was suing a scottish nursery firm for racism . he said he said his daughter was denied a place because of her muslim sounding name and he was being discriminated against on the basis his personal on the basis of his personal terms. the owner of the nursery was in fact asian. he was just being against being discriminated against on the his personality the basis of his personality before all of those to be the punchline anyway. and it's quite incredible, isn't it, that, you know, when people these allegations, they often don't do some basic. yeah, you know what i as you say
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i mean? so the owner as you say of the of the scholars nursery three is called bucha fouda. also a south asian sounding name . yes, he's of south asian origin. and she was saying i can't believe they didn't just phone i have this basic, phone up. so i have this basic, simple misunderstanding. yeah. instead and this is a quote. they colluded in a half sting operation, then mounted a vicious and cynical campaign against the national against us in the national media. what of do media. what sort of people do that whatsoever , although i'm that whatsoever, although i'm delighted by how defiant and furious she . good for her. well, furious she. good for her. well, he's got a history of complaining about racism and using, you know, the law to punish people who've mean previously it looks like the genuine there has been merit to his allegation somebody shouted racist abuse or something that could be interpreted as racist does that that's racist and you deal with those reasons but you don't a nursery. yeah don't target a nursery. yeah under basis whatsoever just under no basis whatsoever just because you're you he's weaponise the suspicion of prejudice that's yeah that's. what's happened to victimhood and is used that cynically i suspect in with the media as well here by the regulatory
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bodies it's pretty grim i that coming from a man as well humza yousaf as you said, justice secretary this secretary pushed through this incredibly speech incredibly draconian hate speech legislation that included a clause you be clause that said you be prosecuted things you in prosecuted for things you say in your it was your own home. yeah, it was considered hateful. it had a section on public performance of a play, and he was particularly worried religious discrimination and other and that kind of thing. in other words, to push words, he's going to push blasphemy laws by that was effectively what they say. i need you know, i don't trust this man. no the whole this and the all the legislation that they they've they steamroll they've just railroaded through parliament because effective because there's no effective opposition snp in opposition to the snp in scotland. it works too scotland. so it works out too well recently. no. well for them recently. no. well, the thing. if have well, that's the thing. if have too much room, you know, sometimes too much rope too much room, you know, somthenes too much rope too much room, you know, somthen we too much rope too much room, you know, somthen we had too much rope too much room, you know, somthen we had alec 0 much rope too much room, you know, somthen we had alec some:h rope too much room, you know, somthen we had alec some of'ope too much room, you know, somthen we had alec some of the and then we had alec some of the other day talking about how basically nicola snp basically nicola sturgeon's snp taken independence taken the cause for independence back because all back decades. yeah, because all of sudden now lost all of a sudden now they've lost all these that. no no these that. it's no it's no longer 50% margin it longer the 50% margin when it comes independence comes to an independence referenda. erm and that's referenda. erm yeah. and that's because all this gender because of all this gender identity how identity nonsense. yet how unpopular snp unpopular will the snp government before government have to be before they punished the polls?
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they are punished in the polls? you much seems be you know, so much seems to be going wrong for them right now. particular of course for gender identity legislation. this identity legislation. but this and other factors seem and so many other factors seem to savagely indict them as a competent government, and yet they retain a grip on power which seems unshakeable now for now . shall see. anyway, we made now. shall see. anyway, we made it to the halfway point. remember to email any thoughts that you have to gbv use at gb news? no nude pictures, please. we'll get them in the second half along with designer babies and, french toxic masculinity the worst kind . so in a few the worst kind. so in a few minutes .
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god sexually, might allah also be female? i'm sure my panel would love to . i like my head. would love to. i like my head. yes. let's just leave it just for time . nick identifies in one for time. nick identifies in one piece, jonathan, as when is the big dog? nick dixon back on tomorrow. just be patient . and tomorrow. just be patient. and we've got this from nick. nick's account. yeah, of course, bernie from qatar. where does leo get his shirts from? so i know where to avoid. oh this is actually a gift . this is a gift from my gift. this is a gift from my mother in law. i really like the jacket that's smoking, jack. thank you. he is looking sharp. i even. yeah, well, you i don't even. yeah, well, you know . all right, let's not know. all right, well, let's not have why not in have abuse. why not comment in the conversation anyway? we're going go for wednesday's going to go for wednesday's telegraph now , what's this, telegraph now, what's this, a pink floyd reunion ? oh, no, i pink floyd reunion? oh, no, i think that's unlikely. now i this this is the story of two this is this is the story of two dreary old rockers having a bit of a hissy fit at each other. this is soon realised they hate each other simply, i had no idea. to be honest you about the band's history, but i always thought i was dreadfully dreary
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person. so this is roger waters and floyd's roger waters has been accused of being an, and i'm quoting here, very carefully, an anti misogynistic putin apologist by former bandmate dave gilmore and his wife think your wife started it ? oh, really don't. then the husband obliged to pull it. he won. he wins an easy, easy weekend. was you think? well, i get sued for millions, but, you know, i don't have to. you know, it's bit like that. but it's i mean, we should you know, for balance point out that roger waters replied saying i've waters has replied saying i've been denounced as an anti—semite, which am and not anti—semite, which i am and not never been and never will never have been and never will be. capital letters. be. all in capital letters. yeah. undermines his yeah. see you undermines his argument a of argument by using a lot of caphal argument by using a lot of capital, which exactly what capital, which is exactly what an anti—semitic misogyny this putin apologist would do . it's putin apologist would do. it's so strange with this stuff. i think with twitter people forget, celebrities forget, particularly celebrities forget, particularly celebrities forget a public forget that it's a public platform. yeah is you are platform. yeah it. is you are subject libel laws if you do subject to libel laws if you do this. yeah think you know this. yeah i think you know the white throw things white casually throw things around even around an accusation around even if you there's lot of
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if you think there's lot of stuff know about people stuff i know about people there's putting there's no way i'm putting online. yeah know mean online. yeah you know i mean it insane. pauly addressed insane. pauly simpson addressed waters directly telling him he was anti—semitic anti—semitic was an anti—semitic anti—semitic to core . i think the to your rotten core. i think the rotten can get away rotten cause you can get away with. yeah is that subjective. i guess that's what it's about. yeah. mean he does have yeah. i mean he does have a history of criticising israel and singling out israel for criticism rather you know, criticism rather than, you know, the countries writing about israel would say israel which some would say might be worse. what might be, might be worse. what the human rights and. the worst human rights and. well, that's a debate for the courtrooms think anyway we're courtrooms i think anyway we're going wednesdays. going to move on to wednesdays. time's and time's next rorschach. and finally , joining super finally, joining evil super scientists . they destroy the scientists. they destroy the world. this is this is quite interesting. this is the chinese rogue scientist is described as charmingly . and i'm going to charmingly. and i'm going to mispronounce this very badly, but i'll do my very best. he jiankui, very racist. but i'll do my very best. he jiankui, very racist . always jiankui, very racist. always likely to happen. and he , the likely to happen. and he, the chinese scientist who is gene edhed chinese scientist who is gene edited babies who are now four or five years old. i think he's gene edited them by his own high
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tech boundary pushing methods so that they are not vulnerable to or immune hiv is for us benevolent intention. i suppose i think you know it's almost like a kind of inoculation much he's now having moral. oh yeah well not surprised cause this is how jurassic park started. they wanted the dinosaurs be instead of dinosaurs. we'll have chinese children. yeah could have slightly more terrifying, but. yeah, these other thing is altruistic. he's trying to make them immune. hiv infection. when you there's no indication these babies going to go on to do anything that would lead them to contracting hiv. and there is changing the method surely. yeah these are real. you can't play god with real humans and wow , god with real humans and wow, the changes that you make to you although you know people , think, although you know people, think, oh, these scientists know what they're doing, they don't any any messing around does with genes genes have multiple so a genes genes have multiple so a gene know one thing gene you know affects one thing can affect another thing can also affect another thing and interrelate in different ways. if you edit
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ways. so yeah if you if you edit the genes you be changing the genes you can be changing other things you actually other things you could actually put back in bottle put the genie back in bottle that's the question and when editing becomes a thing that potentially of course you can select the genes of your child to order, you can have bespoke children created for you and test. yeah metaphorically . i test. yeah metaphorically. i mean this is really just dystopian terrifying you know which of course why we have regulatory bodies with morality machines, china is human beings. china is way ahead with this stuff. i mean when i say way ahead, you know, they're advancing the technology because they can test on humans. they've got you know, we've got muslims in concentration camps it's what they this is far too grim for me this is a guy actually been impressive to me but i'm afraid got to move on to the male now. and leo, maybe don't let children make life changing decisions. a mother has decisions. yeah. so a mother has admitted regretting lifting four year old son socially transition to a girl and said real easing her mistake was like leaving a cult. so it's obviously a very
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progressive household . she she's progressive household. she she's she wishes stay anonymous . but she wishes stay anonymous. but she wishes stay anonymous. but she raised her two sons as gender neutral, a waste which was reflected in the clothes toys and language and she's at the team. she's a social justice organiser and facilitate and, you know, within all this are pronouns and gender. we were. yeah. and you know, this people people said this. i think it's going to be a new word isn't it. well this is become it's become a new religion with beliefs that can be and it's even got its own mutilation where you sterilise your cruz graham your child cruz graham researchers say this was in researchers say that this was in an interview on trigonometry. that's konstantin that's our friends, konstantin kazan foster. yeah, kazan and francis foster. yeah, we interview, this we did this interview, this woman believe she woman and i believe she was blurred protect the blurred out to protect the identity . but this blurred out to protect the identity. but this is kind of interesting, is that we had lot of people detransition as you know, people have gone through the talked the transition process, talked about how this happened when they young that they were very young and that they were very young and that they now they're they misled and now they're regretting some are suing regretting it. some are suing the nhs. i've interviewed a couple on my on my couple of people on my on my show and of these show more and more of these people out now and
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people are coming out now and a lot at the time parents are doing things like susie doing things like this. susie green, mermaid had green, the ceo of mermaid had her thailand to have her to son thailand to have genital against the father's wishes know a lot wishes right so you know a lot of people if they're going to if i can have to admit the gravity of this aren't they in to grow it don't have to it back and you don't have to the of this lady and the courage of this lady and it's interest story and it's a human interest story and my for her she's clearly my heart for her she's clearly the very best will in the world with very of with the very best of intentions. however, delusion i have wrong, might have been, have wrong, she might have been, however she did however wrong headed she did what thought the very what she thought was the very best and has seen best her children and has seen the and regretted it the results and regretted it that misunderstand that people misunderstand that they didn't realise that a lot of this can be done. of the time this can be done. really intentions when you really good intentions when you have experts have so many experts saying basically plays basically if your baby plays with then probably with dolls then he's probably a girl, then of course you're going along with it. and going to go along with it. and by way, they things by the way, they say things like, if you don't transition your they're going to kill themselves. of themselves. yeah, it's that of this tragedy of the this is the tragedy of the debate both sides both polar debate is both sides both polar opposite argument opposite sides of the argument are actually the side the are actually on the side of the angels. believe themselves angels. i believe themselves to be mean the greatest evil be as i mean the greatest evil is done with good intentions but
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i people are saying the i mean people are saying the trans rights activists say there's awareness of there's greater awareness of gender course gender dysphoria so of course there's increase there's this huge increase thousands increase. and in thousands of% increase. and in children transitioning and yeah, other people are saying it's a propaganda. you know, we've got this message being pumped into kids. you know, being transgender or queer is good and being or st is inherently bad. it's, you know, it's part of the whole critical what you separate bonng whole critical what you separate boring and i think that's something that children do exactly just exactly exactly is this just made know in the old days made it you know in the old days you got bullied if you were if you got bullied if you were if you one of those things and now you one of those things and now you bullied if you're you get bullied if you're not that you look at that was funny if you look at the range of sort of new pride flags for various sexualities. yeah the sexual flag it's yeah the sexual flag is it's like i think it's great. so it says i don't mean be in st says i don't mean to be in st colourful i'm to on colourful again. i'm going to on to the times finish this section. roger frenchmen really are the worst on that this another interesting manifestation of the worldwide crisis in this is a french road
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safety campaign because apparently aggressive male driving has has a surge since pandemic for reasons aren't obvious to me and it's a french road safety campaign which has the tagline, you don't have to do people expect of a man . a do people expect of a man. a father tells an be the man you want to be. well, there's been a lot anger since the pandemic, lot anger since the pandemic, lot of pent up anger. is that what it is? all of it. i mean, what it is? all of it. i mean, what they sort of thing is they're targeting men because men worse drivers just men are worse drivers just statistically. like statistically. it's true. like the majority car the vast majority of car accidents are by men, accidents are caused by men, particularly so, particularly young men. so, you know, your insurance know, that's why your insurance is stats here is cheaper if your stats here are truly shocking men cause 84% of fatal accidents in france, they constitute of those they constitute 78% of those killed road. but they are killed on the road. but they are amazing interest this. amazing interest in this. i mean, talking how mean, they're talking about how producing these adverts to try and tackle toxic masculinity. yeah. talk about yeah. and they also talk about this in aggressive and, this surge in aggressive and, aggressive behaviour. well that's are more predisposed that's men are more predisposed to aggressive behaviour and i don't think you're going to unpick 6 million years of human
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evolution few adverts. evolution with a few adverts. you you may able to tell me you you may be able to tell me that pretty obvious why you that it's pretty obvious why you know, 87% of who in know, 87% of people who die in french roads are male is because french roads are male is because french ride mopeds french men ride mopeds while drinking a space or smoking. drinking in a space or smoking. a was yeah in flip flops. a goal was yeah in flip flops. yeah. you know, helmet , know, yeah. you know, helmet, know, get yeah. right okay get behaviour. yeah. right okay we're going have a final break now. up we have now. but coming up we have got work spouse you really work spouse what you really don't want split from your don't want to split from your home and never ever feed home spouse and never ever feed the ducks and keep those emails in see you in a few minutes.
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welcome back to headliners. your first look at wednesday's newspapers. thank you . sending newspapers. thank you. sending in your emails about the stories , but quite a lot about the gender neutral , god story to gender neutral, god story to many, actually, i'm not going to read them all out. stuart says that justin welby is a heretic.
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that's a dumb, indictment that what's that got saying? oh, well, that doesn't make sense. well yeah. the pitchfork's promising prayers for the people working to save the people trapped in the earthquake devastation. of course, we agree with. and then linda has said leo kearse is getting stick tonight, i like him a lot, tonight, but i like him a lot, especially as we seem agree especially as we seem to agree about and he's about most things. and he's funny , too. thank linda. funny, too. thank you, linda. absolutely linda's right. he's a human toad. anyway, we're going to move on now to this story wednesdays mirror as a trick to not in your morning, is it, to watch the 5 am. repeat of headliners that would definitely help before the breakfast news. but yeah, apparently, according to experts, more stress occurs before 8 am. in the morning. well, i'm quite stressed right now, this expert has trick now, and this expert has trick that stop it from your day, that will stop it from your day, i should imagine. it's wake up atm. you've missed that stressful bit. well, let's not lie in. yeah, that's the whole point, because when you go to book a doctor's appointment, then there's no there's no point thing it is. you got to wake up
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between eight you've got a call between eight you've got a call between 8:00 and 8:01 am. yeah. so specifically when they say it is 723 is the most stressful time of the day. but it also says that during the day there are three dramas any life day. right. and i think that the dramas are what make life worth living, right? well, i think the nice are better. and so nice bits are better. and so these examples think of it being stuck traffic , up late, stuck in traffic, up late, spilling on burning food spilling things on burning food . i don't know if those eyes were food on fire, that would be amazing. tripping over in public which makes you feel bad but this is this improper this research was commissioned by rescue remedy . this isn't rescue remedy. this isn't science. this is a release. yes, it's something you know, somebody is. because you mention the name of the probably writ by aa. i mean, roger, these aren't real stresses off of. they should should my life. should they should live my life. this is not doubt whether these are real people. spokesperson this is not doubt whether these are rea|well—being;pokesperson this is not doubt whether these are rea|well—being;pokesjzoosn for the well—being brand zoos are on bus to cover stars like are on a bus to cover stars like an austin powers guide . yeah an austin powers guide. yeah none of this is realistic. it's
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all nonsense. and they move on. this is the metro now, roger and do you? oh, yes. you take to leo your lawfully wedded wife. how how exciting this from the much more august academically recognised research body krispy kreme have won a krispy kreme saying now simple or is it a row of a authority apparently we all have a work spouse and it makes work and life a lot better so got someone your particularly close to you in the workplace and. you don't tell your husband or wife about. i think that's what's going on and it problems at home but you don't you don't you don't bang about it and we don't like a bit of a flirt they say work spouse. i mean it doesn't it doesn't go beyond flirtation, does it? it's actually more competence airily. he christmas party. he knocks on a christmas party. yeah. the authority also yeah. the crown authority also all are off. yeah, totally all bets are off. yeah, totally . a of fumbling at. the . but a lot of fumbling at. the christmas fight, that's just
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infidelity, doesn't it? does does it. i'm afraid andrew so , does it. i'm afraid andrew so, yeah. have you got a conversation when you. well i absolutely wasn't talking about this so but it's in the male next and leo time to make divorce again. yes great idea. the taliban. we're going to bnng the taliban. we're going to bring it in i this whoever was trying to establish the caliphate but yeah an unhappy marriage is better for your health than being single or divorced according to a study . i divorced according to a study. i don't know if this was sponsored by mars bars but if you're if you're happily married, i guess try to be more depressed . oh, try to be more depressed. oh, no, this is just more is better for your health than being single or divorce because just being married is good for your health. even if it's an unhappy marriage, not still results in a far less. it depends how unhappy we're if we're we're talking mean if we're talking rose west talking sort of fred rose west levels marriage know that levels of marriage you know that that's where that's definitely where the happy sure there happy no are you sure there certainly living what one definition i mean i think yeah i think if you couple people
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tearing each other's throats out the time screaming it always reminding carly tearing up that's not that's a happy you know you can't tell that those you know when hear the neighbours screaming at each other through war that is other through the war that is better than not being married at all. and you can't me. all. and you can't tell me. well, them is still alive well, one of them is still alive so those messages apparently this is do your diet is better because sharing your sense also income it comes down to income doesn't it, because we all know how financial ruin us divorce can be more than a few. therefore all divorced your incomes higher therefore you're likely to be able to afford and indeed eat or is it that's food? is it to do with loneliness by people being alone? wow, that's something to do with it as well, isn't it? the pizza and all the rest of it, presumably on type two diabetes can't just a two diabetes can't just get a pet anyway, going to stick pet anyway, we're going to stick with a sticky with the mail now for a sticky rogen with the mail now for a sticky roger. what's this one? this is . yuck. roger. what's this one? this is . yuck . this is the . oh! ooh, yuck. this is the french answer to the it's interesting , actually, because,
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interesting, actually, because, of course, at the moment they are prepared to bring to parliament the online harms bill, which said covers a similar area. and the french answer is to have passports, whereby in order to access hardcore sites, you need some sort digital passport to prove that. you are 18 now, but this has been here, hasn't it? there's been all sorts of attempts to sort of verify, uses of and adult material. but the problem is kids have all sorts of way around these and you're not you're never going to have to do this. are you there? yeah. and got and we've already got the ultimate. to click ultimate. so you have to click on button that says you must be over 18 and you click on that proof. yeah. who's going to you be laying children. never like children lie. they're known for never lying. we have time for one more story. i believe this is wednesday's independent and a surprise this has bread to throw away what's so a nurse gives the lie to whole food bank nonsense doesn't have an a nurse has been
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handed a fine for feeding ducks she's been told it could be seen as flight tipping bye bye believe somebody from tonbridge and malling borough council this this little apparatchik jobs well the finger this little apparatchik jobs well the finge r £100 i mean the well the finger £100 i mean the clapping didn't last long, did it? basically basically they've outsource litter, policing and obviously somebody was misinterpreted. the guy went up to where they said but it's not litter feeding ducks it gets eaten. well they see because of because it's councils are awful and they should be scrapped . and they should be scrapped. then just console it. you just need truck going round need one truck going round gathering rubbish. but because they're . the going after any of they're. the going after any of they're. the going after any of they see no no buts so cigarette butts anything they're not just to sort they'll build up their records and make it look like there are litter. i mean all these people but 45 people have been tasered are genuinely littering alive happy with that. but this is obviously a message to protection of the regulations and this and i'm and a bit this guy and i'm assuming it's a man the
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assuming it's a man like the council officer wouldn't go after someone who's genuinely flytipping because he'd be big and and have a transit and scary and have a transit van. so, know, they go after van. so, you know, they go after little they're no little because they're easy no good all for good at that is all for headliners tonight. but let's take another quick at wednesday's front pages before we go the daily mail run with it now even god could be gender neutral. that's the church of england maybe england debating about maybe talking god with he him or talking about god with he him or not using he pronouns. the telegraph has met rapist lenient sentence to be review. that's the david carrick. the guardian has a monstrous rapist ex met officer for life after years of attacks that's the same story that the times has this tragic story life and death under the ruins. these are horrific ruins. these are the horrific earthquakes the turkey—syria earthquakes. the turkey—syria border, the has a fawlty towers return . that's john cleese return. that's john cleese writing a sequel , the classic writing a sequel, the classic sitcom. and those your front pages for wednesday that is the end.thank pages for wednesday that is the end. thank you so much for today, of course. and roger, thanks joining headline thanks forjoining me. headline is tomorrow at 11 pm. with is back tomorrow at 11 pm. with simon evans hosting . and nick simon evans hosting. and nick dixon is going to be there as
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police officer david carrick's 30 year sentence is to be reviewed for being too lenient . reviewed for being too lenient. good morning. at 6:00, it's wednesday, the 8th of february. this is breakfast on gb news with eamonn holmes and isabel webster . thanks for with eamonn holmes and isabel webster. thanks for your company. leading our news this morning. the judge said he took monstrous of women and monstrous advantage of women and acted as though he was untouchable now disgraced untouchable. now disgraced police david carrick 30 police officer david carrick 30 year sentence will be reviewed by the attorney general . three by the attorney general. three british nationals are still missing and the death toll continues to increase following
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