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tv   Headliners  GB News  February 8, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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good evening. you with gb news. in a moment headliners. but first let's bring you up to date with the latest headlines. and the prime minister has confirmed
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is accelerating the delivery military equipment to ukraine. so it arrives in country in a matter of weeks instead of months. in his address to parliament today, president zelenskyy request british fighter jets to bolster ukraine's defences against. russia. soon he's to meet the french president, emmanuel macron and the german chancellor in paris. and speaking a military base in dorset earlier this afternoon, rishi sunak said nothing was off the table in terms of military all over united kingdom, ukrainian men and women are learning how to command and control nato's standard weapons . whether that standard weapons. whether that is in drone warfare , tank is in drone warfare, tank operations or , basic training . operations or, basic training. their dedication. courage and determination is . a credit to determination is. a credit to you and your country and also to me, your here today underlines and our two countries close and endunng and our two countries close and enduring friendship . we will enduring friendship. we will always be by your your staunch
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and unwavering friends. meanwhile governments and aid organisations from around the world are offering support to turkey syria after the two devastating earthquakes killed more than 12,000 people in both countries . the foreign office countries. the foreign office says british people are still missing following disaster. and downing street said afternoon the uk will continue assess the situation and stands ready to provide further term assistance as when it's needed . the partner as when it's needed. the partner of the missing mother of two, nicola bullae, has visited river bankin nicola bullae, has visited river bank in lancashire, where she vanished. paul ansel went to the field where her phone and dog were found near the river wyre as continue their 12th day of the search . nicola went missing the search. nicola went missing while taking her dog for a walk and after dropping her children off at school . meanwhile, the off at school. meanwhile, the private underwater rescue team that's been helping police has now pulled out of the search .
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now pulled out of the search. the former labour mp, jared has been found guilty of counts of fraud. all committed whilst he was in. the 41 year old who was a member of parliament between 2017 and 2019, was on for submitting fake invoices to parliament worth around . submitting fake invoices to parliament worth around . £24,000 parliament worth around. £24,000 to fund a cocaine habit . a jury to fund a cocaine habit. a jury cleared him of two other charges and sentencing will place tomorrow at leeds court . the nhs tomorrow at leeds court. the nhs patients are being hit hard by recent strike action data published by nhs england shows at least 137,000 appointments have been delayed due to industrial action over the last two months. with more than 49,000 postponed because of strikes this week, nurses and physiotherapists have been on strike intermittently over the last few weeks following disagreements with the government over pay and up to
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date on gb news, on tv, online and dab+ radio. this is people's channel. by now it's for headliners . headliners. hello. good evening. welcome to headliners. i'm simon evans. tonight we'll be taking a look at. thursday's newspapers orindeed look at. thursday's newspapers or indeed this morning we will be if you're watching the repeat, joining me tonight or tomorrow morning . now, at any tomorrow morning. now, at any rate, liam , daddy, kiss and rate, is liam, daddy, kiss and nick the big dog and it's the a—team. so let's a look at tomorrow's front pages . we start tomorrow's front pages. we start with the daily mail. as is traditional . now, give him the traditional. now, give him the wings he needs freedom. we have an image . go with that. yes, we an image. go with that. yes, we do. there it is. give him the wings he needs for freedom give him an outside his helmet as well. rishi sunak and vladimir
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zelenskyy they're sporting the latest in in that would be fighting headgear telegraph give him wings for freedom as well very similar headline paper uk warns putin we may fighter jets to protect ukraine they think helmet is off on this occasion the mirror i'd say give us your wings for freedom i wonder whether there were some sort of deal going on this headline the times i can't believe it give us our wings for that is linskey again in churchill and mo there and finally the daily star bucking the trend order of the wires . give employees a medal . wires. give employees a medal. £162,000 payout when they are booted out . say you'll never booted out. say you'll never guess mps those are front pages . so we begin with the male
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leader . . so we begin with the male leader. although to be fair, of course it could have been any single one of those newspapers, all the newspapers leading with this. so the mail says no, give him the wings needs for freedom because ukraine is now sponsored by red bull so as not sponsored monster much tougher stuff and b a zelinski over in the uk he's he's asking for fighter jet say so he's already got tanks so we're you know we're ramping up the level of the used be quite defensive stuff and stuff like the stinger missiles and the anti tank things and now we're getting more you know bigger more offensive and the trouble with the with fighter jets is they're really complex and complicated and you've got to train for a long time to use them . and russia's got a spring them. and russia's got a spring offensive planned for in a couple of months whenever spring starts. so even sooner i remember this time last year because the troops were massing on the border and that's a lot of discussion then about the climatic conditions having to be acceptable for an invasion take
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place. it turns out they do underestimate the extent to which their machinery for departure. yeah. most used anyway. yeah. but the west has the sort of strength of the sort of strength g of teasing the war over, so we're just sort of feeding zelinski feeding ukraine your bits of, bits you know , by bits of weaponry, you know, by piece. he's keeping the war piece. so he's keeping the war a kind of stalemate when we could just finish it, you know, very easily with the west, nobody beats the west, you no, beats the west, you mean? no, we're not. we don't we don't need to nuke moscow know need to nuke moscow just know a decisive victory the decisive victory in the battlefield. west wants battlefield. but the west wants to it sick, to tease. it is quite sick, quite cynical, because they want to deplete russia of military and them. and deplete exhausting them. i suppose to this the danger, the fear would be then if these jets are going to be supplied, they'll have to pilots as they'll have to fight pilots as well, at least certainly well, or at least certainly personnel to train people . we're personnel to train people. we're already ukrainian already training ukrainian pilots , so it's obvious pilots, so it's pretty obvious that they're to get jets that they're going to get jets at point mean we're not at some point mean we're not training sit in a boxcar training them to sit in a boxcar and pretend they're flying one so it out that that last so it turns out that that last year hit movie gun two was maverick in the swan maverick not in fact, the swan song we thought wouldn't fit it
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might it's not only a war of might be. it's not only a war of the drones. now, i maverick. was it good? it was pretty good it good? oh, it was pretty good for the but the kind of subtext was that jet pilots were like the 20th century dying breed. you . yeah. nowadays, you know. yeah. nowadays, everything from everything was controlled from the a man with the mouth the base by a man with the mouth . he very sort of . well, he was very sort of prose landscape we know about regulations so that dictates for balance. i have to be pro—putin tncky balance. i have to be pro—putin tricky one for me to be a putin apologist. yeah, all those are. i know. that's what they me on twitter. no, they don't. but i do feel bad for putin. he's got those massive tables. then you've to move house it's you've got to move house it's nightmare, yeah that's nightmare, isn't it. yeah that's my i thought you get one of them down the stairs but you know, on a serious note, i don't want our own top military have own military top military have said is capable said our military is not capable of defending ourselves. of even defending ourselves. yeah. how we're yeah. so does wonder how we're going war in ukraine, going to win a war in ukraine, what we're going to do, of course, is what we're going to do we're going to be do is we're going to pay be systems. all these other fantastic manufacture fantastic weapons manufacture actions that we've got rolls—royce new rolls—royce to build this new stuff, this gear. and stuff, to build this gear. and this when we're going a lot
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this is when we're going a lot of moving, especially in of people moving, especially in the people know where the right people know where we're ukraine all this we're giving ukraine all this money. we be of money. we should be free of whatever. but but i mean, this isn't not giving isn't we're not really giving them we're saving them money. we're saving ourselves money, because otherwise this stuff would be in storage we'd be storage here and we'd be spending we freed spending to keep it. so we freed up yellow storage facilities up big yellow storage facilities to our jets and can get to keep in ourjets and can get newer better stuff . mean you newer and better stuff. mean you have to say america is supplying ukraine with amount of ukraine with a huge amount of arms weaponry one kind or another and it's part of their strategy for the last 50 years at least, isn't it 70 years? i think the military industrial complex , you know, permanent. complex, you know, permanent. wolff permanent peace keeps people employed. it's very well for them. maybe it is about time that britain got on board with that. well, i'm one of these hippies wants to just end hippies that wants to just end the just and my the war, so i'm just and my position. yeah, can't position. yeah, but you can't negotiate somebody negotiate peace with somebody like putin. he has to be destroyed crushed into the destroyed and crushed into the into the tundra. well to go around this a few times, but there is there is no that doesn't feel like ever been a moment when it was like like
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it's negotiated out. yeah it's been negotiated out. yeah at point he is probably going to it is going to to a to an it is going to go to a to an ultimate crushing know it's ultimate crushing you know it's video mode isn't it. yeah. video game mode isn't it. yeah. you know . yeah i do, i do. just you know. yeah i do, i do. just always find in an era of nuclear weapons, how is it one i was at one on the us just there's i mean nuclear weapons are really off the table putin can't use nuclear with a completely annihilating russia and himself and i think as much as the people him the command structure that he's got they'll do what he says up to point they won't annihilate their own families . annihilate their own families. some weird old guy says . so i'm some weird old guy says. so i'm going to be honest, one one of the things that concerns me is that i the things that concerns me is thati do the things that concerns me is that i do think there is a certain sentiment that certain amount of sentiment that wants go on to see wants to see putin go on to see him punished and ultimately to see either, you know, see him, either, you know, like, you kicked power, very you know, kicked out power, very possibly some sort of possibly held up in some sort of international war crimes or whatever. i remember the whatever. i can't remember the last somebody like putin last time somebody like putin was in somewhere was removed power in somewhere like replaced like russia and replaced something ceausescu. it something better ceausescu. it never ceausescu yeah, never happens. ceausescu yeah, that about the last
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that probably about the last time. yeah. so 91 over 30 time. yeah. yeah. so 91 over 30 years ago. i find it very strange that people on the right you know through lockdown. i was on their side. they were for freedom in this country. now they've transferred they've sort of transferred that to some of to supporting putin. some of them. and i find it very strange we. see, we see things, they say things to me like, oh, look, ukraine of new nurses ukraine is full of new nurses and white supremacists reasons i'm coming our eye already like ukraine convinced me it ukraine stop convinced me it sounds like a straw man of people speech mean the same people speech i mean the same serious like peter serious people like peter hitchens talk about ways we could the war being could try and end the war being putin apologists. say putin apologists. so i will say it extraordinary how many the it is extraordinary how many the people opposing people who have opposing political this political you have this ridiculous of talking ridiculous way of talking it. let's find this to the same level. that woman . we have a level. that woman. we have a look at the financial times now who is being drafted , that one. who is being drafted, that one. and so i'm good they are tiny stories. this is this is the tiny group there's an indian huge you conglomerate company doesit huge you conglomerate company does it controls ports and g mines it's all around the world
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got mines in australia and stuff but they've were worth in november 2022 they were worth $280 billion. so this is a this is a big deal. those they say that's about six twitters. so no, they're sitting they've lost $100 billion of market value and they're down, you know, less than less than what they were in november . and in fact, they've november. and in fact, they've lost $240 billion of market value because this short sale is small investment firm , small investment firm, hindenburg, research and said it had done analysis on a tiny bug in the market. would you want invest in not look to see if you managed. yeah but they're the short sellers so they l.a. something goes down in flames because make lot of money because they make lot of money from from companies collapsing. so interesting they've so it's interesting they've they've says they've released a report says you adani is you know the adani group is they've doing accounting they've been doing accounting fraud debt and yeah and fraud and debt and yeah and they're sitting all these losses and that's led an absolute slump and that's led an absolute slump and the adani share price which they're making a lot of money
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but and is hindenburg research are they are the amping up to make more you know can you just i find that very provocative dramatic name in new delhi tunick's titanic fund manager ordinary and if you got somebody on the call of duty then. yeah, well, i've got the nerd story yeah. watchdog ends marks of 75 billion missions when this call of duty maker and it's this merger or potential merger between blizzard and activision blizzard and microsoft and the competition and markets authority don't like it because they say it could end up with call duty only being available on x box and that wouldn't be right and then the problem right and then but the problem is people this impact is some people this will impact our games market and that we're trying to be silicon valley we'll death valley we'll end up death valley because we and block because this if we and block this boys this the us big boys are threatening because it's threatening us because it's worth a year. it's an worth 5 billion a year. it's an extraordinary amount of money. now i still know, we've been now i still i know, we've been talking about years. the talking about it for years. the fact that games industry is fact that the games industry is bigger now, bigger than hollywood now, but it's still absolutely mind boggling. spend
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boggling. many people spend i suppose it's the copyright control, but as much as anything elevates hollywood elevates because hollywood content , we call it now becomes content, we call it now becomes free very quickly, doesn't free very, very quickly, doesn't it? doesn't know it? it doesn't seem, you know what like movies with what i mean? like movies with books everything. i think books and everything. i think it's very easy to transfer intellectual property in hollywood studio, but hollywood to another studio, but with some of like call of duty, the whole supply, i mean, building computer games like building a computer games like building a computer games like building a computer games like building a submarine. so building a submarine. there's so processes , all the processes involved, all the technology, all the layers of technology, all the layers of technology it sits on. maybe we should give some of those to zelenskyy as well . if like zelenskyy as well. if it's like a submarine could be. well, i think i look call of duty. a submarine could be. well, i think i look call of duty . yeah. think i look call of duty. yeah. if both sides into thinking they're carrying on you're just looking at a lot of the they've they've got looks are guided drones guided missiles that are like cold duty levels where you you've got the goggles on you're literally flying it into a tank. well i mean we do a lot i'm well i mean we do hear a lot i'm sure this this a story sure this is this is a story that crops up every so often of young who have basically trained themselves be high level themselves to be high level weapons just on video weapons operatives just on video games. other fella
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games. yeah like the other fella is a football. football is running a football. football team. right . team. yeah. yeah, that's right. yeah. finish. all women yeah. so let's finish. all women say models top. the only say, the models on top. the only newspaper not to be carrying a direct zelenskyy quote. yeah, that's all orders. order of the was it and this is about medals so mp is as you said in your intro have said that mps should get more money when they leave. they should a special medal and they should get hundred and 62 grand this because grand because this is because they've out in they've been hanging out in brussels. been speaking to brussels. i've been speaking to german or whatever their so—called is in germany so—called mp is in germany and way a country. and anyway, it turns they get like 162,000 turns out they get like 162,000 if they serve years, whereas if they serve 18 years, whereas we . like 5250 or. we get something. like 5250 or. yeah, yeah, exactly . which is yeah, yeah, exactly. which is equivalent to one month's salary. so obviously our mp is going hang on guys. what's going here. even australians get between that's between one and 60,000. that's not even proper country. so yeah, germany in australia yeah, then germany in australia they do a much betterjob. this is they're not telling canadians argument is it. it's the, it's the, it's dog before the car or whatever problem is i whatever but the problem is i would spend
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would like see mp spend remunerated this country, i remunerated in this country, i would like to see it elevated to a status role that the best a high status role that the best will come out of university and think you know what, i might have at politics. i, i have a crack at politics. i, i can money there. i'll can make some money there. i'll make for and not just be make a name for and not just be humiliated and make. but humiliated and make. yes, but you've i know you've got to i don't know you've got to i don't know you've got to create the incentives and, then get new people in. you can't have the people in. you can't have the people in. you can't have the people in themselves over people in there themselves over a or whatever a golden handshake or whatever over make. over golden you want to make. yes, in politicians, yes, i agree. in politicians, especially prime be especially the prime should be paid this is paid more. yeah, this story is still annoying. yeah so they got to up. say the term after to set it up. say the term after next they'll. be a whole new batch rules and anyone who batch of rules and anyone who comes elected in time. comes in and is elected in time. competent people from 24. competent people only from 24. but the trouble is that makes a career makes a job and i think career makes a job and i think career politicians people do it with any experience in the business make terrible business world, make terrible politicians, first, politicians, experience first, but get paid more they but they get paid more when they get it. yeah. and well, maybe go back to the house of lords and just make property , i mean just make your property, i mean that to work the that seem to work around the world those days anyway. so that seem to work around the worl you those days anyway. so that seem to work around the worl you know days anyway. so that seem to work around the worl you know what anyway. so that seem to work around the worl you know what the nay. so that seem to work around the
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worl you know what the frontso now you know what the front pages are all about. joining us after the break, we good news for uk. well, kind of double for the uk. well, kind of double standards anti—terrorist standards in anti—terrorist ism no surge in young no surprise and a surge in young people to see you in people claiming to be see you in a of minutes .
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welcome back to headliners. i'm simon evans and. on my left, leo kearse and nick dixon ready to get stuck in we start there with the daily mail and perhaps the weakest dose of good news you can this side of an actual placebo yes so britain will avoid the this but it will avoid the this year but it will still feel like one for households struggling with the cost living according to the cost of living according to the think tanks. this is better news than other week. the imf than the other week. the imf said britain's going have a said said britain's going have a recession is going to be the worst performing economy in the g7 worst performing economy in the 67 i worst performing economy in the g7 i know these people, the national institute of economic and research say that and social research say that we're not going to have a recession she's actually funny
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enough for a short fat enough stands for a short fat nicer nicer person. oh yeah i pronounce that nicer. yeah no it's nicer . i pronounce that nicer. yeah no it's nicer. i think these are mother brown and but yes. so 7 million uk households won't enough to cover all the planned energy and food bills over the coming year as inflation continues to. i'm not sure the rate of inflation is coming down. it's more of a you know, inflation is more of a supply problem. so especially with, you know, some people getting fired and economy it's and going, the economy it's going to free up labour going is going to free up labour market still needs some pressure. a bit too pressure. it'll have a bit too much i think that's much money. i think that's mostly that was i mostly gone. that was what i said was that i think i've ever heard you see people with too much to take to snatch much money to take off to snatch that same the last that milk the same the last few months have certainly rebalanced that problem but i'm not sure how well it's become. i mean will a recession, but will avoid a recession, but it'll like it's like it'll still like one. it's like saying won't be sexually, it'll still like one. it's like sayiit'll won't be sexually, it'll still like one. it's like sayiit'll feel/on't be sexually, it'll still like one. it's like sayiit'll feel like be sexually, it'll still like one. it's like sayiit'll feel like you;exually, it'll still like one. it's like sayiit'll feel like you have.ly, but it'll feel like you have been any better. you know, it's a sort of philosophical question, the argument question, but the argument here is between whether we'll actually have recession or , actually have a recession or, whether we'll growth or whether we'll have growth or not. but it'll still feel like
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because inflation they'll still feel haven't just kind feel like we haven't just kind of academic to me anyway. you know, bank england is know, the bank of england is more but even the more pessimistic but even the optimistic version is it'll still like we've still feel like we've had recession i mean recession but they do i mean obviously, you know, market sentiment and, consumer sentiment, important we had sentiment and, consumer s don'tent, important we had sentiment and, consumer sdon't know, important we had sentiment and, consumer s don't know, you nportant we had sentiment and, consumer s don't know, you were ant we had sentiment and, consumer s don't know, you were anyoung ad i don't know, you were a young man, the feel good factor man, but the feel good factor was the early was discussed a lot in the early years of the blair administration. he came in and he perfectly because he timed it perfectly because actually had got the actually ken clark had got the economy square he economy pretty square and he inherited good time and inherited a good time and immediate everyone just started feeling lots of money. feeling spending lots of money. it virtuous circle it became a very virtuous circle but you do kind of get that at the peak of like a boom and then you know business cycle. we you know the business cycle. we all you go back into all understand you go back into recession my is that i don't think we had a feel factor of having one one that was lost there was a crash and then it's just been miserable since to be very fair liz truss tried her best she's back as if she were there with a recent statement and actually it says as it says here with corporation tax set to rise one of the reasons for the
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economy's she actually economy's weakness she actually wanted to freeze it at 19% and not have that rate. and now people go, hang people are starting to go, hang on. i set a point on on. so i set a point on something. yeah. and freezing tax so even tax bonds, you know, so even though thresholds though the thresholds for income tax aren't going tax and other taxes aren't going up. they're still going up real terms because inflation is pushing more people pushing more and more people over threshold. absolutely over the threshold. absolutely i think turn it think they're going to turn it around the election. around in time for the election. it's a little bit an it's a little bit of an adjustment in. case, at adjustment in. this case, at least we have another story in the telegraph . nick, no one's the telegraph. nick, no one's great surprise might great surprise prevent might have named avoid it have been better named avoid it by sound of it yeah and by the sound of it yeah and we've twice before what it we've told twice before what it seems prevent prevent. seems like prevent or prevent. and often cases they're and often in some cases they're actively abetting which we'll and often in some cases they're activeljto. )etting which we'll and often in some cases they're activeljto. butng which we'll and often in some cases they're activeljto. but yes,hich we'll and often in some cases they're activeljto. but yes, it's we'll and often in some cases they're activeljto. but yes, it's rightl get on to. but yes, it's right terror type on the head. i won't read, but basically it's a review that's found that prevent has operated with a double standard. is william standard. this is william shawcross. done and shawcross. he's done this and he's when comes he's saying that when it comes to right wing stuff, they use very broad definition. but when it to islamist terror, it comes to islamist terror, they of ignore it. they sort of ignore a lot of it. so though 80% of live so even though 80% of live investigations, the counter—terror are from counter—terror police are from islamist plots, only 22% prevent
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referrals from that. so there's something clearly going here and they really just exist. astonishing part is in in some cases prevent gave taxpayer his money to islamist groups that have supported taliban. it's like you've had job in your name called terror it's looking to fund terrorism it's the one thing we didn't want to happen. instead is mind boggling. it is extraordinary . obviously, you extraordinary. obviously, you know, there are the you know, the self self defined self self—appointed community leaders. yeah and oh, don't worry, i've got i have the ear of the of the muslim. yeah, i'll do scotland . yeah. i'm a do scotland. yeah. i'm a spokesman for scott. they also though have i mean it's the usual thing as it was with the grooming gangs. fear of islamophobia. yeah you have to, you have to recognise and applaud to some extent islam is pr last 20 or years it's pr over last 20 or 30 years it's been you know, really success. well mcpherson report well the mcpherson report they basically all public institutions got institutions you know you've got to careful of racism to be so careful of racism racism worst thing you can
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racism the worst thing you can possibly do you know. but possibly do really you know. but it'll interesting how it'll be interesting to see how pubuc it'll be interesting to see how public immigration public opinion to immigration would if the police would change if the police didn't have they stopped thwarting terror attacks islamist terror attacks. i at the moment they're putting so much effort, so much money into into stopping them. but, into into stopping them. but, you know, invited people from cultures you know , don't cultures that, you know, don't necessarily love western liberal democracy . you know, people have democracy. you know, people have come here and know we've this problem with islamist terror well this sort of public is still all key because . we're still all key because. we're doing all this work to suppress dissent. no seeing exactly how risky is in the long term. hope, of course is that they're just won over by consumerism because obviously don't have sort obviously we don't have any sort of really powerful alternative cultural voice it seems more effective than prevent doing i think it is shot. yeah over to the guardian. it like the general drift was literally everyone being registered disabled taken another significant amount of . yeah significant amount of. yeah that's true so there's been a surge in young people declaring
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themselves disabled in england and wales as this comes after the 2021 census included mental health and it's question of disability for the first time so one in seven women in their twenties have been classed as disabled because you know, you can know you know, you can just see i've got depression, i've got adhd you got, you know, got adhd you have got, you know, anything you know, anything that all you know, millennials to millennials in zoomers seem to seem suffering from made seem to be suffering from made it easy to become because it very easy to become because of adhd it's actually people of an adhd it's actually people people want to get diagnosed with adhd . oh all my friends with adhd. oh all my friends have been diagnosed with adhd because in the nhs grade for free, yes or no on a prescription it's? a it's a scam to some extent . yeah, yeah. and to some extent. yeah, yeah. and then you can do the old freaks is what you've just said. basic comedians, you know comedians they have. yeah. obviously it's also we've made it a desirable to sort of, you know, have some sort of mental health issue. there's too not onerous not not too taxing . it gives you a place too taxing. it gives you a place in the oppression pyramid. yeah. yeah, it gives you a place yeah, it it gives you a place gives you something to, to see,
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you know. oh i'm a i'm a comedian with adhd or. i've got, i've got this. it's like being, you genderqueer or you know, genderqueer or something clear on this. you know, genderqueer or sorsaying] clear on this. you know, genderqueer or sorsaying 1.2 clear on this. you know, genderqueer or sorsaying1.2 million|r on this. you know, genderqueer or sorsaying1.2 million people s. you know, genderqueer or sorsaying 1.2 million people now so saying 1.2 million people now aged 24 in england, aged 10 to 24 in england, wales, declare disabled. declare themselves disabled. that's than double the that's more than double the number a decade yeah. they number a decade ago. yeah. they can't be claiming disability can't all be claiming disability benefit. hope would benefit. i would hope that would . it's different set of . it's a different set of criteria. sort context. this criteria. you sort context. this is sort of self identified. this is sort of self identified. this is just like a survey is disabled just like a survey generally so they haven't convinced this convinced a doctor. so this comes from a radical shifting of the increased . the goalposts has increased. yeah. included yeah. because they've included mental health for the first time and this is in the guardian by the way, which turns read in the guardian mental illness guardian council mental illness and well that's, and the survey. well that's, that's really thought that's all i had really thought . so nick, let's come to you now the times and i has one man who many suspect of being diminished, if not actually disabled. he denies anything to worry about. yeah. old old joe biden . so this is the address biden. so this is the address what's it called? state of the union. you know, that's the key part, the story. and he said, let me finish a job. and he's
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clearly indicated that he's going to run again. he's talked about blue collar about this blue collar blueprint, almost blueprint, america, which almost sounds trumpian, he's sounds a bit trumpian, and he's claiming for the economy claiming credit for the economy back. it's just that back. really, it's just that it's . that's it's post—covid. that's all that's and that's happened there. and it was rowdy. say what was quite rowdy. people say what he marjorie taylor, he called marjorie taylor, greene liar. didn't he greene shouted liar. didn't he talked young woman who talked about a young woman who died fentanyl and died of a fentanyl overdose and someone the border someone you'll fault the border and things like this. so it got quite wild. then sarah huckabee came and did the response and came up and did the response and she said, no longer a she said, that is no longer a choice between left and right is simply normal or crazy. yeah, there booing was it there was all booing it was it was quite you know it was it was quite you know it showed where are in showed where where they are in america you know it didn't america and you know it didn't to me i feel like that is unusuali to me i feel like that is unusual i can't how you run them in the past but they're normally a yes yeah i a bit more dignified. yes yeah i mean took trump's speech, mean nancy took trump's speech, which this was which was annoying, but this was proper this was proper booing. this was like house commons of house of commons sort of jeering. yeah so in a way, it's not surprising as we're not that surprising as we're used to but it does show the used to it, but it does show the escalating america and escalating of in america and what tried to do say, what biden tried to do was say, we to each other not as we have to see each other not as enemies, fellow americans. enemies, but fellow americans.
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people are weary of division. and you. yes, but you've and yet you. yes, but you've stoked division. of stoked that division. terms of support exactly support was semi. well exactly you overcame the you said we overcame the greatest to our democracy greatest threat to our democracy the war. and now i mean if the civil war. and now i mean if we believe that and that's the angle then angle you're going to take then but can't one but you can't say that one second and the next minute second and then the next minute say join hands. you say let's join hands. you mentioned, you know, even even for somebody, know, for somebody, you know, undergoing face of undergoing demands the face of dementia , see the dementia to, see that the january a serious january six was was a serious military attempt. military coup attempt. ridiculous says let ridiculous when he says let me finish job i'd be amazed if finish the job i'd be amazed if they could finish his lunch so . they could finish his lunch so. we more story . they could finish his lunch so. we more story. think we we have one more story. think we can get in before the break. oh, we're going to go to the bright side. apologise. that's part two. we that story two. don't we will do that story in couple of minutes, jim. in a couple of minutes, jim. we'll talk about spaces for we'll talk about safe spaces for university human university students, human clones how the could be clones and how the moon could be the saviour of humanity. we'll see you in a couple of minutes .
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welcome to headliners, leah. we will do story now in the times. it looks like yet another conspiracy theory is being downgraded to theory . well, it downgraded to theory. well, it depends. i mean, it depends this this guy, this investigative journalist , this guy, this investigative journalist, hersh, i mean, he's won pulitzer prizes stuff in recent he's 85 now, which recent years. he's 85 now, which is actually older than joe biden. and in recent years, his journalism come under some criticism for being a bit far fetched and relying on on, you know, dubious sources. but he says that the us bombed the nord stream gas pipeline . if you stream gas pipeline. if you remember, a few months last year when it was the, you know, explosions destroyed the pipelines that bring gas from russia to i think it's germany it's 10 minutes and people it was the media spun this narrative that it must have been russia but then people said you know, russia, i mean, there there's not very many incentives , do it. they spent , russia, to do it. they spent $20 billion building it. they're still making money off it. and can cut it off any time. no one
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they've got, they've got the top. and also, they're the two incompetent to do know, to incompetent to do you know, to have divers down and lay explosives, dead. what explosives, not dead. what is the us. blew up and the us. if the us. blew up and blamed russia, it would blamed it on russia, it would break dependency on russian break you dependency on russian gas. it would stop that money flowing eu to russia. flowing from the eu to russia. we weaken and also we can weaken russia. and also it that the us could it would mean that the us could sell into europe and sell their gas into europe and also raised the reason the price of the price of gas. but you know i mean this is a theory and this is you know, i mean, i know you believe it. if you believe all the also be fair is mean. victoria nuland joe biden are both literally on youtube saying they're going to do it. yeah so that's the thing is there's not really a conspiracy say at the time said there's no way it was russia that was sort of like pressure on you not say that kind of it felt a bit edgy even it obviously wasn't but you're saying is journalism is now frowned was frowned upon. that was all journalism now frowned journalism is now frowned upon. biden and nuland said biden said it and nuland said it, point out. and what's it, as you point out. and what's interesting they say you interesting is why they say you think just biden being an think it just biden being an idiot no it claims here and it
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makes it was so it's makes sense that it was so it's no longer considered a covert operation didn't have to operation so they didn't have to report yeah. so by report to congress. yeah. so by saying to do saying we're just going to do this, is no longer classed as this, it is no longer classed as covert. and biden said, if russia invades, they'll no longer nord stream two. longer be a nord stream two. we'll end to it. so we'll bring an end to it. so they were subtle about i they were subtle about it. i don't know that's don't know why that's a conspiracy. he didn't say, we're going blow it up. he said, going to blow it up. he said, put end to it. we will stay put an end to it. we will stay steady, we have we will steady, wink we have we will finish he i mean, finish this. but he i mean, there are number of possible scenarios of scenarios i've seen lots of conversations from before. it sounded knew what they sounded like they knew what they were about. in this were talking about. in this example, does have quite example, he does have quite detailed might say it's information, be information, it might just be fantasy not just going. fantasy but he's not just going. i americans. i reckon it was the americans. he's quite specifics he's got some quite specifics scenarios out involving scenarios mapped out involving what like norwegian what sound like norwegian seal essentially actual essentially rather than actual seals . yeah. them seals. yeah. to give them a heanng seals. yeah. to give them a hearing like marines, you know, norwegian divers and so yeah. and quite a convincing and plausible sort of timeline and how would all have been how it would all have been achieved . one thing i mean, he achieved. one thing i mean, he was most famous won his pulitzer for my lai in for exposing the my lai in vietnam, is one of the
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vietnam, which is one of the biggest stories the sixties. biggest stories of the sixties. mostly, in the mostly, yeah. those in the pacific america and what pacific about america and what would have been a conspiracy theory until he proved it was true the ones he's been a little bit dubious about more recently are osama bin some of bin laden having been by pakistani forces and held ransom for many years before , was finally assassinated before, was finally assassinated or whatever. and yeah, that was quite interesting. but also about syria sitting down on syria and, whether it was assad who used the chemical weapons, the gas on his own, his own people, which i've seen. but again , plenty of plausible . so again, plenty of plausible. so i think there's not doesn't sound total whack. we're not talking like it's the rothschilds or this one seems perfectly possible. why would russia do it. yeah yeah . possible. why would russia do it. yeah yeah. i mean possible. why would russia do it. yeah yeah . i mean there's it. yeah yeah. i mean there's no. but then why would russia with invade ukraine is with russia invade ukraine is the thing for putin and the most thing for putin and russia that could possibly happen. so make me want to go to the mail. seems like the daily mail. it seems like the daily mail. it seems like the criteria for the selection criteria for reparations force might be reparations task force might be somewhat slight. yeah. boston force appoints 2/11 graders and
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a blm college student to decide much money to pay back the community. and there i was thinking blm was a serious organisation, but apparently not so high school seniors williams and the nielsen fund, as well as 22 year old massachusetts university of massachusetts student carey maes, who seems to be the new kind of greeter of blm . bright and that's sort the blm. bright and that's sort the sort of what's the word grooming know, not in that way, but these these people because young people have easy brainwash . so people have easy brainwash. so they these young they get these young spokespeople they. yeah, spokespeople and they. oh, yeah, black is a big black lives matter is a big thing. must have reparations. thing. we must have reparations. and don't know and they're young and don't know anything. particularly anything. it's not particularly so. but you wouldn't. you wouldn't much grooming, wouldn't need much grooming, be convinced you deserve reparations. think reparations. yeah, i think i could probably persuasive. could probably be persuasive. but then speak to that. a face of but this reparations of it. but this reparations thing, i mean, because remember, it's talking it's been reported other talking about reparations. about distributing reparations. third going to third is there's going to be hundreds thousands dollars third is there's going to be hureach; thousands dollars third is there's going to be hureach person.|sands dollars third is there's going to be hureach person. andis dollars third is there's going to be hureach person. and i dollars third is there's going to be hureach person. and i was ars third is there's going to be hureach person. and i was like for each person. and i was like well, is obviously just well, this is obviously just some professors written some nonsense professors written this on a blog and other this on a blog and no other actually this is just actually do this this is just not doing as well. it's my
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absolute it will never end. there will no hole in that there will be no hole in that bucket telegraph. now, bucket thursday telegraph. now, leo and baron, formerly chris patten is giving a well—deserved beating to the university's by the sound of it. yes. so he says safe spaces are mine. he's the chief of oxford university. no, i didn't i didn't know they had a chief, although to be like top some. but but yeah, yeah, some. but but yeah, he's yeah, yeah. field i'd be a yeah. field marshal. i'd be a good he says the university good one. he says the university should have important role in should have an important role in championing speech championing free speech and shouldn't be. you know mollycoddling having mollycoddling students by having safe says that free speech safe. it says that free speech is of the most important is one of the most important values functioning, values in a functioning, liberal, democratic particularly and university says it's oxymoronic . it and university says it's oxymoronic. it undermines and university says it's oxymoronic . it undermines the oxymoronic. it undermines the ability to free debate. and you know, you shouldn't be free of the safe spaces used to originate it as a as a place for women and minorities to be free from discrimination. there's like this small area where you could gordon it's an old could gordon and it's an old isn't the phrase if i if i if it were to be used as would like it to be used would actually sense
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it should be a space where it's safe to say things and yeah reputation is going to be it's to be should be an unsafe space a place where can safely a place where you can safely exchange i mean, you . exchange without i mean, you. yeah, look, this is a good thing you obviously whenever you obviously it's whenever someone or someone like chris brown or someone like chris brown or someone in he says i'm an old fashioned liberal i that free speech tolerance are one of speech and tolerance are one of the important values an the most important values in an open society. problem open society. my problem is it's not winning. not working. we're not winning. that's why i talking to karl that's why i was talking to karl benson they more benson that they had more persuasive which persuasive target, which was that favoured postmodern that he favoured postmodern traditionalism that he favoured postmodern traditionasayr that he favoured postmodern traditiona say these, are just basically say these, are we just happen free speech? we happen to like free speech? we don't claim objectively don't claim it's objectively better. radical better. we accept your radical subjectivity and kind cultural relativism. say we relativism. i, i'm just say we happen to like free speech. these what he calls tribal gods. he you have to recognise he said so you have to recognise us as our own particular unique indigenous people now there's a sacred kind of ring around safe space. yes safe space, free speech. yeah arguing against i'm not of because not saying of space because they're winning it with this old liberal argument. it's chris patten. lovely patten. i mean, he's a lovely old geezer, he is an old geezer, but he is an old geezer and exactly the geezer and he is exactly the sort they've already written off. just if they're
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off. it's not just if they're going to listen to him like they might do, i don't hear anybody on now making a scientific dream that began with prince harry's paranoid for his essence and his is raised on debt. but it could work. yeah. human clones purposefully grow and to forgive people spare parts like hearts, lungs and livers could be the key to living forever. dr. alex strong cove. perhaps that was ironic of some name like that. it's a guy who's saying that? what we need is human clones. you need to have a clone. let's grow in separately for 15 to 20 years. and this where some of you guys might miss out because of i'll just make it. but of age. i'll just make it. but yeah, the document is he goes cloning, in my opinion the only way it but he says need way to do it but he says need many clones. not sure i many clones. i'm not sure i could with ten leo's, could cope with like ten leo's, but need many of. but but you'll need many of. but here's where i get stuck they'll have to disable their cognitive functions only functions so they could only be used he's talking used for organs so he's talking about of weird dead eyed about kind of weird dead eyed clones 20 clones sitting there for 20 years waiting for you to borrow
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an organ from their medically induced coma. basically yes. and it'll be like an iphone thinks you you'll just able you just you'll just be able upgrade your spare liver upgrade and get your spare liver or it's dull, or whatever so it's pretty dull, but the time, you know i'd but the same time, you know i'd like to be of queue. i like to be front of queue. i mean, to it you guru i mean, get to do it you guru i think he's been and still do obviously wrote a novel this scenario never let go scenario called never let me go in, imagined it was the in, which he imagined it was the technology available the technology was available in the fifties a sort of fifties. he wrote a sort of scene that was set in a boarding house where you gradually note a story boarding story like a boarding school, like college, like a residential college, which realise full which gradually realise was full of kids who sooner or later are going to carved up for going to be carved up for organs. never will found organs. i never will found it horrific dystopian. horrific and dystopian. i thought , i horrific and dystopian. i thought, i think compared to but it's going to be a lot of good. it really it sounds good to the person getting getting the kidney so it would there's a there's an illegal trade, a black and killing people or people the kidneys and people in the kidneys and getting their organs. so at least stop that . but yeah, we least stop that. but yeah, we can't we can't be playing god like this. how would you feel if you met clone? i do wonder about that. weird it's quite
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that. weird and it's quite interesting to and see interesting to meet and to see exactly happened which part exactly what happened which part of was genetic and which of the was genetic and which i think you would like your clone but. i just think it surely a clone is going to run amok and try be the primary person. yeah, yeah, the primary. yeah, yeah well, the primary. well they what happened well if they take what happened in right. and say in the simpsons. right. and say that must a like gattaca that must be a plot like gattaca or must be a sci fi movie or that must be a sci fi movie like it. yeah. revolt of like isn't it. yeah. revolt of the attack revenge of the clones attack of revenge of clone, too much knowledge . well, clone, too much knowledge. well, next, the guardian . i think this next, the guardian. i think this will be the last one for this section. yet another idea which i had in the pub years ago is like to just save humanity's baby guns all over again. yeah. a solution to the climate, mining the and heard like mining the moon and heard like of gates trying block of bill gates trying to block the things like that. the sun and things like that. this the idea that well this is the idea that we'll well we'll mine the moon we'll shoot out mine the moon and its dust to deflect and shoot its dust to deflect the sun. yeah. because it's the right grains in right size right grains in the right size for scattering sunlight away. all these terrible ideas it all of these terrible ideas it could and the world could easily and the world basically you know that we're letting scientists stuff letting scientists do this stuff but i'm bit disturbed by
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especially this part termination shot whereby temporary cooling is abruptly stopped and the world left to rapidly heat world is left to rapidly heat up. so you're pumping out up. so if you're pumping out this then suddenly run this moon, then you suddenly run out stops for a the out or it stops for a day the world oh, and then rapidly world goes, oh, and then rapidly gets hotter. i mean, it's a terrible don't why terrible idea. i don't know why they're easily they're saying it's as easily adaptable dimmer switch, adaptable as a dimmer switch, which me a lot more which seems to me a lot more like a hotel shower. yeah certainly one of those you're going to get, you know, i suppose if the it depends how serious are going to get. we're all like slightly naturally sceptical about climate change. no, not totally. just no, i'm not totally. but just i'm the end of the normal spectrum. yeah. no matter if it does start to get serious, you know, it's good know there does start to get serious, you kno some good know there does start to get serious, you kno some things know there does start to get serious, you kno some things that ow there does start to get serious, you kno some things that ow “cane does start to get serious, you kno some things that ow “can have are some things that we can have are some things that we can have a down to. i don't know if imagine trying to turn off the sun, turn it back on again. yeah. totally i mean i'm yeah. totally yeah. i mean i'm from and climate from skull and i think climate could do a bit of changing, could do with a bit of changing, so it doesn't worry me. maybe of it could be deflected way. it could be deflected that way. yeah remember space mirrors being on, you being discussed early on, you know, don't know. know, but i don't know. i suppose it's question of suppose it's a question of scale, it? we tend to scale, isn't it? we tend to
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exaggerate large exaggerate our minds. how large a could yeah, that a mirror could be. yeah, that would between and, course, would be between and, of course, nuclear way of nuclear is a potential way of raising a of dust. well, that's good. that's it's looking like it's the horizon. so salute it's on the horizon. so salute these sites. maybe go . these sort of sites. maybe go. so by the so i'm disappointed, by the way, none what baby it none of you asked what baby it was. baby gone. baby an was. a baby gone. baby gone. an idea when we have babies idea i have when we have babies and they make mess feeding themselves. but spoons instead you they're a bit like you give them they're a bit like pit catcher's in baseball pit a catcher's mitt in baseball the wear and they the babies wear them and they can of like scoop can just sort of like scoop gloop their shoes their gloop their shoes with their little they like wet hands little they like like wet hands like a hand have webbed hey like a hand have the webbed hey have you painted this ? i have you painted this? i haven't. no there's a similar one which is for ears as well. you wear them in, the cinema, they're just literally like big. you and create you can get them and they create a much acoustic a much better acoustic experience. actually experience. you can actually them. well when go them. yeah. yeah. well when go to cinema. just for, to the cinema. no, no. just for, for people who are hard of heanng for people who are hard of hearing or if you want a for me because then would have as because then you would have as you the cinema they be you go to the cinema and they be free they'd all be free but they'd all be advertising another is advertising another that is coming so put them on and coming up so you put them on and there are little white bands like that and they cover your
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ears that eliminates sound ears and that eliminates sound of films of the good for disney films because anyone money to because anyone with money to waste maybe pick waste is watching maybe pick up sciamma's invest. well, sciamma's idea and invest. well, it's happen very it's going to happen very suddenly it comes. that's suddenly when it comes. that's part three this. after the part three over this. after the break shakespeare's break is shakespeare's globe goes well goes wokeist stage. well i'm afraid felt is dumb afraid as einstein felt is dumb for transphobia and the worst place to only to see very place to go, only to see a very shortly .
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i'm come back to headline is our final and quirkier section now thursdays times leo day another infuriating content warning on a timeless classic is they came for fawlty towers yeah and she she experienced globe theatre keeps doing people putting warnings in place so no warning on middle night's dream seeing it contains misogyny sexual references violence and race ism. i mean, stop trying to make
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please sound interesting and exciting. it's a good lead . exciting. it's a good lead. that's what i call the royal flush. yeah, yeah . that's that's flush. yeah, yeah. that's that's the dele . that's why i'm called the dele. that's why i'm called dele on twitter . but the dele. that's why i'm called dele on twitter. but yeah. see, i mean some of the, some of the words they see the word if you this it's a racist term for somebody from ethiopia which i'd never heard of it described as a racist term before it could be a term for somebody from ethiopia. yeah but it's hardly racist. it's just using the country of their yeah there's their origins. yeah there's certainly point and i mean certainly more point and i mean broader. i've actually been to the globe for a to see production. i know they do some sort of quite decent ones, but mine was they were trying to get back to kind of earth to the groundlings, up outside groundlings, queuing up outside and standing for a fiver. and just standing for a fiver. it supposed to be to restore it was supposed to be to restore the vulgarity . shakespeare, just the vulgarity. shakespeare, just to it . the polite drawing to rescue it. the polite drawing room countries that's all gone is this is where literary criticism and academia went wrong when they tried to impose these political. an annoying professor says funny professor here says it's a funny play, but it can be it can gloss
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over problematic gendered and radical racial dynamics. i mean, what are you talking about? the nineties are being accused of being racist. yeah. and the thing poked all this at thing is poked with all this at the end he said we shadows the end he said if we shadows offended think but this all offended think but this and all mended. when he says mended. you know when he says it's and he said he said it's a dream and he said he said what you say whatever comes what do you say whatever comes an exact but he said, an exact quote but he said, dream yeah exactly. he dream bro. yeah exactly. so he deau dream bro. yeah exactly. so he dealt shakespeare was dealt with that shakespeare was already time this already saying at the time this could but deal it could be offensive but deal it you for professor you know work for professor vanessa cordero, the one you regarded you who you quoted regarded as you who you quoted on that that was written a book about playing othello in a post—war racial america. so i think it's fair to say she's got the grift going on anyway. make reassuring news now in the times for council comedians , it can for council comedians, it can happen robots too . yeah this happen to robots too. yeah this is a i generated seinfeld band for transphobia so i watched some of this is called nothing. it's a very disturbing strange parody it's just weird robot people you know guys come out and say sort of disembodied joke and say sort of disembodied joke and say sort of disembodied joke and say the punchline and they just say the punchline of a joke audience laugh
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of a joke and the audience laugh politely no one knows where politely that no one knows where the be. and the jokes are supposed be. and i'm sorry . the jokes are supposed be. and i'm sorry. ha ha ha. and i'm sorry. ha ha ha ha ha. and it's quite strange because gpt isn't obviously really woke. it won't . do a poem that's won't. do a poem that's pro—trump, but it will do pro harris and pro—biden poem and all of things. all these kind of things. and yet this yet it's up with this transphobia in show where the i said i'm thinking about doing a bit about how being transgender is actually a mental illness or how liberals are secretly how all liberals are secretly gay to their will gay, want to impose their will on or something about gay, want to impose their will on transgenderomething about gay, want to impose their will on transgender peopleig about gay, want to impose their will on transgender people are )out how transgender people are ruining this ruining the fabric society. this is what a comedian sounds like. sure yeah, exactly. and then but then then which of course, i've got to take it down. they've got to show the joke, jerry to show the joke, the jerry seinfeld . i says that is seinfeld type. i says that is only the room images and everyone goes home because that stuff funny that's how he says that's in his routine but twitch it did say that bill is in i which identified the transphobia but didn't understand if it was being done and ironic basically chatbot was cancelled. another
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way. now this is great so we don't even need to get our hands dirty getting cancelled we can just sit back and like learn the robot is going to walk up to her reason. i watched a few minutes this on it's on youtube having been shipped off to which is absolute utterly dreadful mean it may be only six months before overtakes you know . i do know overtakes you know. i do know what's on headline news say for a while killing leo news now in the daily mail and lgbtq finally jumped the shark. so they've got a very divisive shark that is covered than a pride flag , a covered than a pride flag, a shark statue decked out in the rainbow lgbtq. a plus two p flag . t colours represent . rainbow lgbtq. a plus two p flag . t colours represent. but it's also there's also good colours representing ethnic minorities . representing ethnic minorities. it's been slammed as garbage by a prominent politician. those an australian accent. however, the australian accent. however, the australian museum sydney said staff have been blown away by an outpouring of love for his exhibition named uproar grace shark. i'm surprised he's the shark, because of course they're
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known for being great whites, which are very problem free. so no, if you look at it look. so it is actually a good metaphor. wokeness, because the outside wokeness, because on the outside it but it's it looks ridiculous, but it's actually incredibly dangerous. yeah other is yeah and also the other thing is like a shark, it has to keep moving forward extraordinarily because, you know that was the same claim to progress flag that laurence fox of this very station rearrange into a swastika . i remind people swastika. i remind people i think the shark is actually a much better use for it. i think that yeah extraordinarily i would like to see i one of those dangung would like to see i one of those dangling from my rear—view mirror. nick, i'm glad you said pointless , pointless survey news pointless, pointless survey news . now, in the metro there are circuses , dances in which a circuses, dances in which a funeral is a better date than a mcdonald's, it seems. yes mcdonald's. it's second worst place to go on a first date. the worst is the woods . the worst worst is the woods. the worst has actually been voted as cinema. so this was tombola for some reason as 11,000 of their players lost that. oh, you're having a rubbish time. i got to go back this way alone and i
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think i was on a date. but yeah. so yeah. so they're saying mcdonald's is only second, cinema is top. so i'm quite surprised wasn't attending a funeral she was in there who has been on a foetus online. i saw that file. would bond that same file. you would bond wouldn't it would be quite wouldn't you. it would be quite it would be a real thing it would be quite a real thing to do. there's free food yeah, there's so it's cheap there's free food so it's cheap to people criticise going to get people to criticise going to get people to criticise going to pub. so funeral pope was to the pub. so funeral pope was it worse than fuel bill. but i think going was perfectly reasonable. i am i am i am i some sort crazy as me people really struggle to answer these seriously let's squeeze the last in we got a minute left england's 50 worst places to live revealed. yes, the revealed the worst places to live in the uk and the top ones. luton, i think it's often born in luton really. you move down, you move down. yeah. and then peterborough , portsmouth, slow, peterborough, portsmouth, slow, then it gets onto i mean, the old middle terrible place. but then aylesbury all the so that's quite nice. andover i mean swindon, vauxhall, bournemouth amazing this it's a number nine
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in chelsea is number 50 and chelsea henley on thames is number 30. i it's cumbria. nowhere in that way because we're but you know towns i suppose that's how i guess it just doesn't bridges yeah sheep can fill in a question in tonight's show thank you to my guest. let's take another quick look at thursday's front pages before go to the daily. now, before we go to the daily. now, give wings he needs for give him the wings he needs for freedom telegraph. give him wings i paper uk wings for freedom. i paper uk warns putin we may send fighter jets to protect ukraine. mirror give us your wings of freedom times give us our wings of freedom. and finally the daily star order . the west exclusive star order. the west exclusive mps their wings of freedom, but a medal an d £162,000 pile when a medal and £162,000 pile when they are booted say you'll never guess mp those are your front pages. that's all we have time . pages. that's all we have time. thank you very much to my guest leo kearse and dixon headliners his band tomorrow night with the big dog dixon in the hosting seat , scott cooper and josh
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big dog dixon in the hosting seat, scott cooper and josh and remember that if you are watching the 5 am. repeat, stay tuned for the breakfast show just after the break. have a great day. good .
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us president zelenskyy demands combat aircraft. it looks like sunakis combat aircraft. it looks like sunak is going to are we doing the right thing or risking escalation? we'll look at the prevent report, a review on it all. we worrying too about right wing extremism and not enough about islamic extremism. a gb news exclusive into grooming gangsin news exclusive into grooming gangs in the north of england. that's going to make for very, very sobering viewing . and very sobering viewing. and joining me on talking points, comedian daniel israel o'reilly
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, he was pretty much the first comedian to be cancelled from uktv, but he's managed to revive and rescue his career. uktv, but he's managed to revive and rescue his career . we'll and rescue his career. we'll find out how. but all of that comes after the news with polly middlehurst . nigel thank you and middlehurst. nigel thank you and good evening to you. the prime minister has today confirmed the uk is accelerating the delivery of military equipment to ukraine so it arrives within days and weeks instead of months in his address to parliament earlier, president volodymyr zelenskyy requested a number of british fighterjets requested a number of british fighter jets to bolster their defences against russia. speaking at a military base in dorset earlier on today, rishi sunak said nothing was off the table in terms of military assistance. all over the united kingdom. ukrainian men and women are learning how to command and control nato's standard weapons. whether that is in drone warfare, tank operations or bafic warfare, tank operations or basic training , their dedication

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