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tv   Dan Wootton Tonight  GB News  February 9, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT

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n0 spin, no bias, no spin, no bias, no censorship. i'm dan wootton tonight it's safe to say lee anderson's promotions , the conservative promotions, the conservative party deputy chairman, has told all the right people . i look all the right people. i look back fondly on the period of my life and i was unaware. lee anderson 630 p lee as a loose cannon and a liability and might just next all explain the hatred being expressed towards westminster's toughest talking mp or stand up for me lee as he's now known for backing death penalty shows the hatred of the left towards the working classes in my supercell panel will weigh in my supercell panel will weigh in joining me tonight. dominique samuels. sean bailey and amy nichols . and at 1040, fleet
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nichols. and at 1040, fleet street icon mckenzie will give his unfiltered on lee's call for capital punishment to return to save lula's person. stay tuned for that . at 1020, i'll bring for that. at 1020, i'll bring a world exclusive interview with comedy legend john cleese as he reveals bombshell news . the reveals bombshell news. the shock return of fawlty towers and takes aim at his woke critics and his first appearance on air here on tv news. will he allow the british fashion corporation to screen most famous comedy again? well, i'm going to ask him in just over an hours going to ask him in just over an hour's time. so stay with us tonight . also coming up, tonight. also coming up, ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy made unambiguous plea to britain for even more military yesterday. the writing on the helmet reads , we have on the helmet reads, we have freedom. us wings to protect it it . and with rishi sunak paving it. and with rishi sunak paving the way to send those fighter jets to why is potential escalation of horrific conflict so readily accepted without any
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political debate? well, we'll kick off the discussion the msm refuses to have at ten, as the bbc continues its sick rehabilitation campaign for shamima begum. do you think the isis bride is monster? wokeist. nannder isis bride is monster? wokeist. narinder kaur dares to defend the terrorist against ukip deputy leader rebecca jane arraf in the clash at 920 with the us. judge ordering the sussexes to be grilled under oath that was news could harry and meghan's reputation be crushed by samantha markle's court case when my royal mastermind they have the inside story on this lady, colin campbell and phil dampier analyse it all at 935. plus speak to the journalist and author ella whelan about taking author ella whelan about taking a sledgehammer to the bbc's trans echo chamber , as was left trans echo chamber, as was left to her to stand up for women's rights on questions like this. because if let go of that, not only is it bad women and not only is it bad women and not only for is it bad for collecting data at any , but it's collecting data at any, but it's also bad for in politics because
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also bad for in politics because a lot of these are feeding you whole load on them. okay so she's i'm in studio at 950. and on that note, as the women's already gains exposed is the horrific reality that biological women are now facing after she was forced to share a locker room with the trans competitor, leah thomas did not ask for our consent . but in that locker room consent. but in that locker room we around and there's a64 biological man dropping his pants and watching us and we're exposed to male genitalia and more on that as well as more newspaper front pages and neil oliver makes a special as i crowned the final greatest person in uni and jackass of the week this is dan wootton tonight let's go . let's go. so one of the biggest stories of this week has been the return of fawlty , the woke karate. hate fawlty, the woke karate. hate it. they say it's going to be
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terrible. wow. to the first time to speak for the first time about why he is bringing i believe, the best comedy all time back to television. john cleese here tonight. but all of that the news with polly middlehurst . dan, thank you. middlehurst. dan, thank you. good evening. more than 20,000 people are now known to have after monday's earthquakes in southern turkey and northern syria. around 70 members of the uk's international search and rescue team have the effort to try to find people in the rubble. hundreds thousands of people have been left homeless . people have been left homeless. freezing conditions with world health organisation warning many more could die without . shelter. more could die without. shelter. british charities today are appealing for funds help those affected by the disaster with the uk government saying it'll match up to £5 million to public donations . lancashire police say
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donations. lancashire police say their search for a missing mother of two, nicola bulli, has moved now . the sea. the force moved now. the sea. the force says it's now searching further downstream rain where the river water becomes tidal. officers have issued a 48 hour dispersal order for some locals on wyre after an abandoned house was reportedly searched by members of the public. trying to solve the case themselves, then posting footage on social media. the 45 year old was last seen 13 days ago walking her dog . now days ago walking her dog. now members of parliament will get a 2.9% paying increase from the 1st of april. that would bring their overall salary from around £4,000 to 86,000. the independ parliamentary standards authority . the pay increase for authority. the pay increase for mps was the same as the average increase in pay for public employees last year. former culture secretary nadine dorries announced she's standing down as
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announced she's standing down as an mp at the next general election. mr. morris, who represents mid bedfordshire and has been an mp since 2005, said she's loved serving her constituents for the best part of two decades. ukraine's president volodymyr zelenskyy has been an eu summit in brussels today. he's been lobbying leaders to provide more to ukraine in the fight against which he's referred to the biggest anti european of the modern world. here, number 10 says it won't send fighter to ukraine if that puts the uk at risk. meanwhile foreign and defence secretaries are in rome meeting their italian counterparts to discuss galvanising support for. ukraine and lastly, burt bacharach , one and lastly, burt bacharach, one of pop music's greatest ever composers, has died at age of 94. he wrote hits, like i say, a little and walk on, as well as movie themes , including what's movie themes, including what's
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new pussycat , the look of love. new pussycat, the look of love. his publicist says bacharach died surrounded his family at his home in los angeles on wednesday . you up to date on tv, wednesday. you up to date on tv, onune wednesday. you up to date on tv, online and dub plus radiant with gb news. now dan wooden has done one tonight . one tonight. how pathetically predictable. after a former miner turned red wall tory who understands the real facing brits today and is about as far from the westminster establishment as you can get well after he becomes tory party chairman , the msm and tory party chairman, the msm and political class go into overdrive to deride him , to mock overdrive to deride him, to mock him and to belittle him . the him and to belittle him. the treatment of lee anderson who coincidentally is a regular on
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this show. these past few days has exposed the left's of the working class. i look back fondly on the period of my life when i was unaware of lee anderson. he's a bit like a sort of shower head. he's like an out of shower head. he's like an out of control showerhead and everyone's going to get wet and at some point someone's going to say, why? you put him in say, why? why did you put him in a more prominent. rishi sunak thorpe a loose cannon and a thorpe is a loose cannon and a liability. leyland person is a great example of what is wrong with the conservative. it was left to penny mordaunt in the house today to take on the 30 p la clowns and unveil a far more appropriate moniker the in her party. like to refer to him as theo p lee , but i can tell you theo p lee, but i can tell you his constituents , many people his constituents, many people across the whole of the united kingdom refer to him as he stands up for me. he absolutely
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. now today's confected outrage age is around the fact leigh backs the death penalty. in an interview with the spectator. he said nobody has ever committed a crime after being executed . did crime after being executed. did you know that don't you. 100% success rate . now his position success rate. now his position on capital is not a secret . this on capital is not a secret. this is what he had to say on this very show last month about the illegal who stabbed to death the aspiring royal marine after hoodwinking soft touch authorities . is a is not a hoodwinking soft touch authorities. is a is not a man is a creature is murdered abroad is a creature is murdered abroad is commoner is told lies is has beenis is commoner is told lies is has been is been put in foster care is cost. the british thousands and thousands of pounds. is cost. the british thousands and thousands of pounds . and now and thousands of pounds. and now we're going to put him in prison for 2020 odd years in a cost of british taxpayer thousands and thousands of pounds again. that's not the answer. and you that's not the answer. and i you know, the answer is, and know, i think the answer is, and i'll say this with a heavy heart is at the of is probably at the end of a rope. believe in the death
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rope. i believe in the death penalty cases this. so penalty for cases like this. so these are not hiding anything. but hysteria today, of course , but hysteria today, of course, men rishi sunak had to in to the establishment and the msm and rebuke what they were saying . rebuke what they were saying. you say to you your colleagues, you want to bring back the death penalty in this country. well, that's not my view. that's not the government's view . now, the the government's view. now, the media coverage on this issue today would make you think lee is somehow on the fringes of society. but that's simply not true . a yougov poll from last true. a yougov poll from last month found , 52% of brits think month found, 52% of brits think the death penalty should apply in cases of multiple murder. with 49% backing it for child murderers and terrorists and 30% for all cases of murder. so even though i worry hugely about the risk of miscarriage of justice as someone policeman, uncle was
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killed by a violent career criminal , i killed by a violent career criminal, i understand why pubuc criminal, i understand why public for the death penalty remains so high. those politicians attacking lee anderson are actually attacking many of the people they are meant to represent . it's meant to represent. it's intellectual snobs , pure and intellectual snobs, pure and simple , to respond. now, my simple, to respond. now, my superstar panel, political commentator dominique samuels, the conservative london mayoral candidate bailey, and the writer broadcaster amy nicol . candidate bailey, and the writer broadcaster amy nicol. dominic, i think this is one of these stories the political and the media casts completely out of touch with most of britain, because i believe tell me if i'm wrong, but i believe you are in the 50% of the country that thinks the penalty is appropriate in. some horrific cases. yeah i believe it's completely appropriate , some completely appropriate, some horrific cases, particularly when it comes to depraved murders and particularly depraved child murderers. and i think we have to put this into
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perspective here and think about justice is. the concept of justice. let's take ian huntley, for example . you know, the man for example. you know, the man who committed the moors murders. he's he's now dead. who committed the moors murders. he's he's now dead . £10.4 he's he's now dead. £10.4 million spent on keeping that creature . let's let's move to creature. let's let's move to venables, the murderer of the baby james millions again spent on re—integrating him society only for him then to re—offend. does that sound like justice for you ? millions of taxpayers cash you? millions of taxpayers cash being spent on keeping child rapist murderers alive. i the evil exists. i think that some people are beyond the pale. and it is likely that i'm sorry. the end of the road . what would you end of the road. what would you prefer ? saving that money and prefer? saving that money and spending on the victims or people that really need it? or would you prefer millions of pounds on keeping scum? i don't even view them as human beings alive. and look, okay, there are
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cases it shouldn't apply. understand that there are cases where people are falsely accused. but there are when , you accused. but there are when, you know, without a shadow of doubt. and in these particular cases knew then of course, i think the death penalty should be an opfion death penalty should be an option . 100% sure . i think the option. 100% sure. i think the issue is that you see today how the media and actually i hate to say it sean many mps representing party the conservative party just completely of touch with the people . i don't happen to agree people. i don't happen to agree with lee's views on the death penalty. i think a vengeful state the wrong message to the people of that country. but of course he's an mp and he's a is a he's a member of our society and he's entitled to his view. what really disappointed me is the way that the media then tried associate his working class with being thick. he's working cost. he's not understanding budgets . that to understanding budgets. that to me more of lee anderson , me is more of lee anderson, isn't there? what what is isn't there? and what what is that reminding me of the way people treated around people are treated around brexit? know, all a
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brexit? you know, all of a sudden fake. if you sudden you were fake. if you vote remain. all those vote to remain. all of those kind of is the kind of kind of things is the kind of things people to women and black people didn't to people when they didn't want to them you know the them the vote and you know the reason really lee anderson reason they really lee anderson amy because was he was a member of the labour party for long time. he a minor. he is time. he was a minor. he is someone poverty stricken someone who was poverty stricken when was trying to raise his when he was trying to raise his family. so what did he family. and so what did he decide to decided to walk decide to do? he decided to walk to work every day. he was working seven days a week, by the decided to sell his the way. he decided to sell his car and walk to work days a week so he could feed family. this is a man who is genuinely in touch with the red wall. i think the sneering and the belittling and the mockery of lee anderson shames your of politics because what it actually is that you are embarrassed of the working . that embarrassed of the working. that is absurd . we don't we i speak. is absurd. we don't we i speak. no one has a problem with how he says we have a problem with what says we have a problem with what says and if . talk about what he
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says and if. talk about what he stands , who he stands for. well, stands, who he stands for. well, it's certainly not people in poverty. it's certainly not travellers . it's certainly not travellers. it's certainly not steve bright . it when he smacked steve bright. it when he smacked his hat off and, it's certainly not that little chap from the alliance . so i think it's alliance. so i think it's absolutely ridiculous and very rich coming just end up for someone who travels and relishes taking the mic out of angela rayner's accent . which one of rayner's accent. which one of you is as well? when have i ever done that? no no, no, no, no . done that? no no, no, no, no. i've never taken the piss out of angela wright in his accent. i've spoken about her as a politician who is not suitable for high office because of the way that she referred, to all members of the tory party as scum and actually lot worse. scum and actually a lot worse. but never once mocked but i have never once mocked brexit. go away . go away brexit. go and go away. go away and because said and fight. because you've said it's happened multiple times. no. this. after this no. after this. after this you've minutes by and you've got 45 minutes go by and fight me example of when fight me. example of when i mocked angela writing is accent and you bring fine you bring it back because you've just made i can see you on that correct and
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true for there . so i want to see true for there. so i want to see the evidence of me mocking angela accent. what's in you regularly mock angela rayner as politician. now said later i said about i didn't. i said you mock her working class roots as do much of what you said. where is where is the criticisms of lee anderson and the thing about angela rayner is she apologised she what she said horror got she apologised for it. she what she said horror got she apologised for it . lee anderson apologised for it. lee anderson she apologised she got lee anderson has defended his 30 comments. he's what he says about and he's defended his chief white guy from the building . he has no interest building. he has no interest today to present from the bbc verbally. i mean all of that is irrelevant when you think about what has been done and said about the and this feels like an attack on people are not from the upper . well it is but that's the upper. well it is but that's what feels like to see certain
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people what it feels like to , people what it feels like to, people what it feels like to, people who are from a working class background. he has some resonance with them , great resonance with them, great residents and when he's spoken aboutin residents and when he's spoken about in this way, when he's to as being thick it stings because they are the people that it feels like it's been directed at andifs feels like it's been directed at and it's got coming from this familiar of people that did the same sneering the same down upon people to vote in brexit. and i don't think it's a coincidence that lee is clearly working is straight talk , and they are straight talk, and they are gunning for him and look i you you don't have to agree with every every single thing lee says , but it's refreshing says, but it's refreshing objectively to hear a politician just saying what they feel and speaking frankly lee, rather than running rings around themselves to try and not be attacked by the mainstream media when do talk frankly to people and say how is the result is? you get bullies like james o'brien attacking , you you get bullies like james o'brien attacking, you and talking down on you on his
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little lbc show i'm sorry but saying it like it is it's not excuse to be regressive simplistic and completely deal. but it is regressive . really but it is regressive. really simplistic, if you like. if this request doesn't exist. if it's that's your opinion. the part that's your opinion. the part that stings the part of james o'brien will have to reflect on he could linked lee's existence he's he's comments feelings the way in which he presents itself to being fake and james o'brien is someone who to say james is someone who trades on his own working class background. so you'd expect some kind of solidarity this cooking never ever please does he does not play ever please does he does not play the economics because have you showed me to carl you've got some work to do. you've got some you criticising angela won't take me very long. no, no , no. take me very long. no, no, no. you said i've. i'd mocked her. i said those the right and i'd been working. no you didn't. you didn't say that. so you go away. please when you come back at 10:00, expect you'll have some 10:00, i expect you'll have some evidence doing that . but evidence of me doing that. but she it never she won't because it never
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happened but still to come, as happened. but still to come, as and meghan a possible under and meghan face a possible under oath in a us court could samantha markle's bold be waterloo for the runaway my masterminds on this lady colin campbell and phil dampier have the inside story at 935. but first in tonight's clash with the bbc determined to rehabilitate shamima begum shattered public . do you think shattered public. do you think the icc right is a monster ? the icc right is a monster? broadcaster and echo goes head to head with the ukip deputy leader rebecca jane that started off the but of course your opinion on this matters to me so email me dan at gbnews.uk. vote in poll at tv news. the results coming after the .
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break time now for the clash magazine covers tv's specials, a podcast series outrageously claiming she's not a monster. the sickening campaign by the british corporation. the dangerous, hard turn. shamima begum into some sort of faultless celebrity just worse by the day . so this disingenuous by the day. so this disingenuous poll. because i'm not a monster. plus the vomit inducing 90 minute documentary called the shamima begum story has seen our so—called public broadcaster really turn into a propaganda machine for this stateless ghoul machine for this stateless ghoul. look at this . i feel ghoul. look at this. i feel british because i feel like i
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wasn't able to be british even though i wanted to be, if that makes sense. i didn't feel like i was accepted by society either because of racism and other things. it's hard wanting to integrate society , but integrate into society, but your family you it's family holding you back. it's like when you're in love and you just see the just you don't want to see the person's so you just person's faults. so you just like, push them to the back of your head or you just completely that are . you know, like that they are. you know, like i was in, in love with the idea of isis. so i just always made for them . so this war criminal is them. so this war criminal is has to believe her narcissistic narrative . we will forget the narrative. we will forget the heinous crimes. she deliberately travelled to syria to be involved in some spite bbc and left wing establishments efforts to rehabilitate shamima begum , a to rehabilitate shamima begum, a deranged propaganda campaign . my deranged propaganda campaign. my question tonight do you still consider shamima bagan to be a monster down at gbnews.uk . tweet monster down at gbnews.uk. tweet me at gb news. our running there right now . but to battle this right now. but to battle this out, deputy leader of ukip, rebecca jane and the reality tv
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star and social commentator sir nannder star and social commentator sir narinder kaur. rebecca jane i've got to be honest, the bbc , i'm got to be honest, the bbc, i'm not falling it. i'm not falling for their sick propaganda campaign. it's very obvious to , campaign. it's very obvious to, me, that shamima begum is a monster , regardless of what monster, regardless of what they're trying to tell . yeah they're trying to tell. yeah absolutely. i couldn't agree with you more , dan. for me, this with you more, dan. for me, this woman completing the ultimate terror attack. because what could be worse , you know that could be worse, you know that they complete terrorist types and kill in our country. what even better for them is that they one of our own, they transfer warm her into their pulpits . she then ends up coming pulpits. she then ends up coming back to for giving britain, the bbc and a whole pr, a marketing campaign for her and therefore comes back and in my opinion could complete the biggest terrorist attack that we have ever seen in lifetimes. we have to be careful about what happening with this with this woman. do i believe she's a monster ? yes, i do. i think that
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monster? yes, i do. i think that our children are in danger. i think society in danger. and i think society in danger. and i think that the bbc have got a lot to answer for and it needs to stop . narinder kaur how on to stop. narinder kaur how on earth, can you defend begum? well, you know, i was the same as you both before i saw this documentary and this is an investigative and piece of journalism shaped by one of a dance done . i watched this dance done. i watched this documentary and my sister died and there's a lot of questions that we all as a nation need to ask ourselves and take responsibility. what's girl, a 15 year old, was groomed online , radicalised by grown men . , radicalised by grown men. whose fault is that? the better screen academy in 2014, two months before she left. conducted an assessment where they revealed to police and warned them that miss begum, a 15 years of age, was risk of being radicalised. she left two months later. now a 15 year old hold. my daughter is 15. they
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are impressionable. she is a victim here . this is not pr to victim here. this is not pr to turn her a celebrity. we need if you watched that documentary , you watched that documentary, you watched that documentary, you would have also seen the true shamima begum before she got all of her pr and their mates at the telling her what to say in order to be allowed back into the conversation. did you see reacted that you see see how she reacted that you see how reacted when she was how she reacted when she was asked by the journalist how she felt she was with all felt about she was with all those british including girls. the manchester arena what was all she had no remorse . she had all she had no remorse. she had no remorse. and that was disgusting. however she'd been, she'd given birth two days earlier and that just upset quite a. so your hormones are all over the place that girl at 15 years old was she's not an isis. she was a child bride into sex slavery. we open our eyes to the risk our children all online here. she was groomed online . here. she was groomed online. you cannot deny that this is the
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she was radicalised so this is the fault of the uk because some sort of racist hellhole . i sort of racist hellhole. i didn't say we're not going to bnng didn't say we're not going to bring race people's back. the documentary won't be citing a news screen with the documents. police the responsibility to the parent to tell stories talking to me. he's not talking to is talking to me. you give me a second two way conversation been going on so yes of course it's going on so yes of course it's going to be britain's and all the rest of it. you know what? i've got two daughters myself , i've got two daughters myself, the grand old age of six. they right from wrong. at the age of ten, they if they commit a crime, they're off to prison at the age of 15. they absolutely know they clear up to syria know if they clear up to syria and join isis, they were going to repercussions and to be severe repercussions and the are you're not the chances are you're not allowed to get back in and what's that i would what's the point that i would like make of all of that? like to make of all of that? she's clearly a risk to our people , of our country, our people, of our country, our children, our family, enough friends. she can't help . she can friends. she can't help. she can be knocked on narinderjha i'm
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not doing well . is that small not doing well. is that small risk ? whatever. even if it's risk? whatever. even if it's a huge risk, why should we even take 1% cent left? because we see risk. rebekah because she 15 and legally and morally we have and legally and morally we have a responsibility to that so that mi5 a responsibility to that so that m15 you know better than the home office you know better than sajid javid, the home secretary , the time who said if you know what i know you would on this. we don't know about that. shamima back it back to the old saying genocide. say saying that it's genocide. i say let children uk decide let it children uk judge decide because the end of the day she's a british born she should not be stateless . should a stateless. she should have a citizenship brought back and tried in this country. that is what because she's so , so what because she's so, so remarkable. i've got a 15 year old daughter, my 15 year old wait till your daughter's bit older. they are impressionable. yes. she thinks she has a advantages. your daughter have had . you've got to look at her
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had. you've got to look at her background , her class and background, her class and everything she's gone through in life. we didn't know she was vulnerable. you seen a 15 vulnerable. so you seen a 15 year old girl. they can't think. rebecca, respond to please. no on terror. what my children have been through. you've got no idea what i've been through. you talk. you can talk about your own, but don't talk about mine. for want protect my for me want to protect my children? you even just said if she's this grow up, she's 69. okay no narinder kaur knows better than i am i5 about whether shamima because you decide you do you i think it's uk judge decide that what we as a nation we need to look at the responsibility we hold to our girls who are under age of 60 and vulnerable to online grooming . it is clear she was grooming. it is clear she was radicalised how the heart. yes she did some stupid things. we are not. she but she was a benign . she was a benign is very
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benign. she was a benign is very interesting. i would just make one final point. it's very interesting that you are so focussed on the rehabilitation. she may do also believe in the rehabilitation rehab dilatation of jihadi jack betts who was a white, middle class teenage . why white, middle class teenage. why not? he was radicalised. yes, why not? they should if they. they should be. if they were under age. shamima begum was 15 years old. she was under the kurds legal fight. years old. she was under the kurds legal fight . you can go kurds legal fight. you can go and join a death . no, that's and join a death. no, that's going to conduct the beheadings of british aid workers . she was of british aid workers. she was a benign many teenagers. she a benign man. then you can be welcomed back. no outcome. gone to trial was society is not welcome , not welcome, not welcome, not welcome, not a celebrity to the debate. reality tv's star social commentator into the deputy leader of the ukip party. rebecca jane so who do you agree with on this is former east spy shamima begum monster stewart says she was victim of grooming and we in the uk are on a nation built on christian values. should
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remember the power of forgiveness . he's very much with forgiveness. he's very much with nannder forgiveness. he's very much with narinder on this, connie says. personally, couldn't . she did personally, i couldn't. she did a bad thing. but people a very bad thing. but people often do, especially young people. but from john is clearly a monster . people. but from john is clearly a monster. anyone who calmly accepts religious executions as the means to power is one, and your verdict is now in. 90% of your verdict is now in. 90% of you believe she, amy reagan is a monster just 10% of you saying she's not. now coming up as journalists , ella whelan found journalists, ella whelan found herself to speak up for women's rights and she was recorded in the bbc studio in question time. she'll take a sledge , however, she'll take a sledge, however, to the corporation's trans eco chamber at 950. but our world masterminds are up next. and with us, judge harry and meghan to be quizzed under oath. could the sussexes carefully created reputation be ruined ? by reputation be ruined? by samantha markle's brave legal challenge, lady colin campbell phil dampier. they are with me straight after the break. don't go anywhere .
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it's time now to get the latest from royal masterminds lady colin campbell and phil dampier . and after a bombshell ruling by a us judge, the duchess of sussex has lost her legal battle to avoid evidence in a defamation case brought by her sister, samantha markle . sister, samantha markle. samantha won $75,000 in damages over what she says were false
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and malicious told by the sussexes in that infamous oprah interview in march 20, 21, as well as the hacking fee finding freedom by that really little bloke, you know, i mean , scobie, bloke, you know, i mean, scobie, if the case makes to court, then both meghan and harry be forced to be grilled in depositions unden to be grilled in depositions under, oath . now, it may well be under, oath. now, it may well be very difficult for. lady colin campbell you know a lot about this case, don't you? you have inside running on this. so what your verdict . oh i wouldn't say your verdict. oh i wouldn't say ihave your verdict. oh i wouldn't say i have told you i inside running but i do have some because i've been assisting samantha because various very well placed have beenin various very well placed have been in touch with me because intent on making sure that justice prevails and that the truth will see light of day and they had their lawyer and i'm
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speaking about people at the absolute top level of society internationally who have been calling legal brains from all the world and they have been giving information, which i have been to samantha , because the been to samantha, because the reality is that meghan and, to a lesser extent , need to be put in lesser extent, need to be put in in a position where they will be forced to speak the truth or face the consequences , because face the consequences, because if they are deposed or they tell lies , they can be charged with lies, they can be charged with perjury lies, they can be charged with perjury and might even end up in prison. i think a very remote possibility , but it is a possibility, but it is a possibility, but it is a possibility and they and they are lawyers will be aware of it because the reality is . but they because the reality is. but they have told so many lies and this case in no danger of being struck out. you know judge. oh
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forgot her name. it was . oh, forgot her name. it was. oh, honey. well what's honey. well, she's said that you know of the claims that be struck out, but in reality the substance of the is sufficiently sound that harry and meghan have to give depositions under oath , being depositions under oath, being televised to being taped. i mean, we have the prospect of meghan going by her roots and that's a very pretty sight . and that's a very pretty sight. and phil dampier i think key point that lady c makes there is that for a long time in many sort of establishment circles, this case was dismissed . love to dismiss. was dismissed. love to dismiss. samantha markle , don't they? samantha markle, don't they? because she isn't on their side of politics, but actually she's proven over numerous years . and proven over numerous years. and i am happy to say this. she is a woman of impeccable character. i believe she has always told the
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truth and all of a sudden this looking pretty for harry and meghan, because as lady c says , meghan, because as lady c says, this case may not be struck . this case may not be struck. yeah. good evening, dan. i'll tell you what i says to people i wouldn't want to be up against who've got together. lady c and samantha markle what work. so really combination. i mean honestly to meet honestly would not like to meet them court but now harry and them in court but now harry and meghan agree to start in the legal they? so legal actions, aren't they? so it's going to be fascinating to see they like when they're see what they like when they're the i mean, to be the receiving end. i mean, to be honest, isn't that much. honest, $5,000 isn't that much. so surprised if so i wouldn't be surprised if harry meghan and settle harry and meghan try and settle this of is what i do. this out of is what i would do. but i you know, lady c's, but i think, you know, lady c's, right. samantha markle has got bit between her teeth and she wants her father as wants to kill her own father as one witnesses. she wants one of the witnesses. she wants them to that wants them to admit that she wants harry and meghan to admit that the queen wasn't a racist and that king charles isn't that king king charles isn't a racist. so it be an racist. so it could be an incredible court and of incredible court case. and of course, good lawyer course, a really good lawyer could really them could make them really kick them around court and put them on
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around in court and put them on the spot? could be very, very the spot? it could be very, very nasty them goes ahead, nasty for them if it goes ahead, of and it is important of course. and it is important that you do mention thomas markle, because he had markle, because before he had really stroke, which really unfortunate stroke, which at moment robbed him of his at the moment robbed him of his ability to speak . at the moment robbed him of his ability to speak. he appeared on this show and said he would absolutely appear in court to back samantha in this case. so he remains a key part of the case as well. but look, i want to move to that coronation now because if harry and meghan do attend in may, they may well be denied the spotlight. they so desperately crave. so this is according to vanity fair magazine that says the sussexes can expect to be treated . can expect to be treated. princesses beatrice and eugenie , so they will attend royal events but won't be visible or appear on the buckingham palace balcony. c what do you make of this report? well reality is, of course, if and meghan do end up coming and there some doubt that they will. but my understanding
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is that it is possible , maybe is that it is possible, maybe even slightly that at least he will come and possibly be she they need be they need to be treated with sufficient respect as would be warranted by their position . but the reality is position. but the reality is coronation dance used to be done by oh you your precedence was your order of succession to the throne and also , you know, the throne and also, you know, the dukes were not seated with the royal duchesses. they were kept separate. so it will be very interesting to see what queen comes up with because of course, he is chief enjoying things and, modernising things. so let's see what he comes with. phil dampier , do you think harry and meghan would actually accept that ? would actually accept that? because that's the only flaw to me in this whole report charge. they might not come if they know
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they're going to be treated. beatrice and eugenie . well, if beatrice and eugenie. well, if they don't come, i think that's good.i they don't come, i think that's good. i will be glad. but if they don't i think they'd be treated like beatrice. and eugenie, in fact, i think they should actually with them should actually sit with them because actually quite because they're actually quite friendly with them. i mean, eugenie out canada. their eugenie was out in canada. their romance revealed to romance was first revealed to the even reported the world. even reported recently move recently she might want to move back near them. so back to and live near them. so she's still quite friendly with them. so they could have a bit of a chat, they could get on right i think they would be, right and i think they would be, you would be you know, it would be appropriate all speech appropriate for them all speech gather. mean, some point, gather. i mean, at some point, harry have got to harry and meghan have got to realise longer realise they're no longer working, they're working, you know, they're not up in the pecking. they're very lucky to still have their titles be the of succession. to be in the line of succession. to be in the line of succession. to be honest. you i think be honest. so, you know, i think that's they should be. that's where they should be. second row. back second row back, third row. back with eugenie treat them with me and eugenie treat them exactly minded royals. exactly this like minded royals. very good point, brilliant insight as from our sense sation of royal masterminds, lady campbell dampier, who campbell and phil dampier, who will next thank you will back next week. thank you both. in tonight's both. but coming up in tonight's mediabuzz ukraine's president mediabuzz as ukraine's president volodymyr jets from
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multi—million pound jets from the uk, do we have no but to agree or could we sleep walking into some sort of dangerous here my super soft panel going to give my thoughts on this possible have two words used by the front pages straight ten. but first off to single handedly wiping floor the chinese wiping the floor in the chinese echo of question time echo chamber of question time last journalist author last week, journalist and author ella whelan going to join me ella whelan is going to join me to reveal what really happened straight after the .
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break ella whelan is tonight's outsider . now, at first outsider. now, at first minister's question today, scottish conservative leader douglas ross grilled scheme sturgeon as to how the dangerous double rapist adam graham was allowed to enter a women's prison, watch . the first prison, watch. the first minister says she doesn't have enough information to decide if this double rapist is a man.
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he's a rapist. he has a penis. what further information can the first minister possibly need when he comes out of jail? will nicholas sturgeon and her government consider , him a man government consider, him a man or a woman ? as always, queen or a woman? as always, queen nick refused to answer that very simple question, despite the fact the scottish public are in opposition, her trans extremism . that was plain to see when the pompous and biased debate showed time visitors scratched the in glasgow . the panel of the show glasgow. the panel of the show comprised of the triumphs india willoughby and the white political establishment on the whole. so it was left to the journalist and also the brilliant ella whelan to stand up for women's rights watch and the reason why it's important to , by the idea of fact being able to something that you can hold in your hands in society is because if we let go of that, not only it bad for women and not only it bad for women and not only it bad for women and not only for is it bad for
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collecting data, but it's also bad trust in politics. a lot of these are feeding you a whole load on them. okay well, i mean, this is essentially what you would hear in 1970s about a gay and that it was totally a to be with another man or alone. they never intended conversation rehashed and dressed up in a completely different way . so completely different way. so i love this was an absolutely farce night in conversation i found because up until now the british bashing as i call them, just tend to have these trans debates. and i guess you sort of or a sledgehammer to the orthodoxy that has developed around these issues on the beeb , how were you treated by them afterwards ? well, i'm i'm much afterwards? well, i'm i'm much more of a fan of the bbc than you are. i actually that the question time team ought to be
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commended no matter which way you cut it. this is an issue strikes fear into the heart . strikes fear into the heart. broadcasters and you know, it was run a very move i think that it was i think it was a step in a different direction that you're right. the bbc has up until now been overcautious about talking about this . about talking about this. perhaps some people might say it has been cowed . but there was has been cowed. but there was you know, this was a it was very professionally run . it was professionally run. it was everybody was given their hearing. and actually, that was a really interesting moment where we were discussing the case of adam , who now calls case of adam, who now calls himself isla bryson. and everybody i was the last to come in and everybody had used the name myla bryson up until that point. and when i said when i used his name adam graham , fiona used his name adam graham, fiona bruce said, you know who now calls himself charlotte bryson, which is fair enough, but in previous i think in previous moments that have been described as that naming and it would have
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been shut down, but think the question time team lots of other broadcasters now realise that particularly in this case but also more broadly, you know, it is not bigoted to talk about sex as true and irrefutable so i think that's to be commended indeed. and i think thank goodness they did have your voice there. i would say that fiona bruce appeared as a viewer, at least be incredibly nervous with the conversation. there were numerous times when she tried to dial down, but i wanted to show you all obviously remember this, that in case you didn't, this there was a really fascinating moment when i member of the audience came out to support ashley's position against india. will it be watched? what happened to not allow women and to female spaces for good reason? the good men and their predatory men? we not allow chinese and two females accessing that. i get fans and they're treated the chance and that's the fact . women have to
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that's the fact. women have to be safe . women and children be safe. women and children hostility . in my opinion. you hostility. in my opinion. you can't sex. that's my now she had the support of the audience from what i could tell but again that is not a view that the bbc will often put on air because women like her have been derided now as either transphobes or terfs by polite society, by the political establishment, whatever you want to call. for the past few years , that felt the past few years, that felt like a very significant moment to me. her intervention. it was, andifs to me. her intervention. it was, and it's a difficult one to get across because , you know, i across because, you know, i think the vast majority of people understand and believe that not all trans not even close to all trans people are a problem. you know that actually you know you don't want to go down the rabbit hole of suggest that and this is where perhaps i disagree with some gender critical feminists that simply
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being a space with a man being in a space with a man a problem or is a danger you know there's i'd quite like a lots of areas of life to be far more unisex because you know it gets you can get a bit tiresome hanging out with women you know so i'm silly but you know in general i think that we should avoid talking this a sort of avoid talking this as a sort of affair , a danger that she that affair, a danger that she that women wasn't really doing that. what she was saying wasn't actually part of the clip was where she said i remember her saying, i you no harm at all. and she and she wasn't she she wasn't feeding india. will it be or any of the politicians for the nonsense she she was being truthful. she was saying i don't have any kind of round with you all i want say is that sexism is for you i don't think you can change your sex and. therefore if there are places in society , if there are places in society, there's single sex, you know, for a reason, whether that's women of a religious faith hunting to go to the swimming pool at a certain time on their own, whether it's more intense spaces , rape, crisis centres or
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spaces, rape, crisis centres or , you know, whether it's the fact that we know that because of the trials and of puberty generally , most teenagers don't generally, most teenagers don't want to get changed in front of one another. boys and girls. that's not that's not controversial thing to or at least shouldn't be a controversial thing to say. no, indeed. no, no. look, it was interesting to me that the bbc chose to put in the levy on that panel trans side of things. i mean, you know, i absolutely don't believe in no platforming. people so fine if they want do that. but i guess i surprised because annie willoughby isn't a good face of . the trans good face of. the trans community. i mean, this is a woman who is announcing now twitter troll . she is incredibly twitter troll. she is incredibly aggressive and personally people who she disagrees with politically . i was quite politically. i was quite surprised that they gave her that position to be the face of the trans community, but they did. and she did urge, i guess, the old strategy of trying to say that you were essentially
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like homophobe from the seventies, which seems be one of her big attack lines , which is her big attack lines, which is a fact you make of appearance. well you know, i don't know india willoughby. i don't know. india willoughby. i don't know. i didn't get a chance to really meet with her. such a short space time. i have nothing to say about her a person . but say about her as a person. but in terms of the political , she in terms of the political, she made it during our interaction on the show, the argument that this is just like homophobia of the yeah. of years gone by the seventies eighties isn't true . seventies eighties isn't true. the thing that's markedly different is that gay people and lesbian people and that whole very progressive movement for increase in civil liberties, an increase in civil liberties, an increase in civil liberties, an increase in people's right to sort of celebrate of personal freedom never pretended that something was was that reality didn't exist. they left the fundamental problem that most people have with the current trans discussion is not dressing differently. it's people calling
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themselves different names . it's themselves different names. it's not any of that. you know. the vast majority of people have a problem with. we've being forced to . say what they know isn't to. say what they know isn't true , that sex is real. yes true, that sex is real. yes look, i just want to finally show you this great moment where you struggle to get a straight from an snp politician. this you questioning transport questioning the transport minister, this minister, jenny gilruth this individual a man or a woman? i'm sorry , individual is a wreck. sorry, individual is a wreck. yes. i mean , i know that . i yes. i mean, i know that. i know. i want to know is to make the question of prison population safe. i have answered the question . so you haven't. the question. so you haven't. you haven't. but i just say that if i can cut it, the reason why i think they give jenny one more chance to answer the question is because i love your answer . i because i love your answer. i really would listen , dividual is really would listen, dividual is a rapist. that is most thing she wouldn't answer neither to sturgeon and that's their problem . and it's just so
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problem. and it's just so pathetic. i mean, if you think that if you really do believe your own policy in relation to this gender reform bill, say that you think she's a woman and then face up to the consequences of that position. i think it's exactly the that's your law exactly the that's what your law does and i think it is i think this is going to be the end of the line for the snp because they are now denying reality and also reality of also denying the reality of their whelan well their bill. ella whelan well done thank you so much. tell us done. thank you so much. tell us the story now. coming up at 1020, i'll bring you a world exclusive interview comedy exclusive interview with comedy legend cleese reveals news legend cleese as he reveals news about the shock return of fawlty towers and takes aim at his woke quotes in his first appearance here on tv news will allow the british fashion corporation to screen its most famous comedy again. well, i'm going to ask him about 50 minutes time, so don't anywhere . but first, him about 50 minutes time, so don'tukraine's1ere . but first, him about 50 minutes time, so don'tukraine's president first, with ukraine's president zelenskyy demanding multimillion pound jet fighters during his visit to parliament, agree with the speaker too far that risks escalating the conflict and. why is there's no debate on what is
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a really monumental decision by super we're going to tackle that and we'll have the first of tomorrow's news pages. we're back just 2 minutes time . back just 2 minutes time.
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it's 10 pm. i'm dan wootton. tonight the left wing establishment tory weds and the msm might be on an arms. i look back fondly on the period of my life when i was unaware of lee anderson. but sir paley is loose cannon and a liability . but do cannon and a liability. but do you agree with westminster's talking mp and the new tory chairman lee anderson that we should bring back the death penalty, please? street legend kelvin mackenzie certainly does, and he's going be on cancelled on why at 1040 plus. in a world interview. gb news is brand new presenter. john cleese speaks for the first time about the shock return of fawlty towers
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and hits back at the woke critics of the much loved british sitcom and with the war in the offing, the will of the comebacks, harry's be screened on its original home, the british bashing corporation. otherwise known as bbc. otherwise known as the bbc. will, i'm to sit down will, i'm going to sit down with the legendary monty python comic in about 15 minutes time. so do stand by for that . as president stand by for that. as president zelenskyy pleads the wings of freedom , should the uk supply freedom, should the uk supply ukraine with multi—million pound jets , or is this a cost too far jets, or is this a cost too far that could actually end up escalating? the conf? well, that's going to be a big debate with panel. next with my superstar panel. next tonight, joined dominique tonight, i'm joined by dominique samuels, bailey and amy samuels, shaun bailey and amy nicole . as civil rights nicole. as civil rights activists , al sharpton becomes activists, al sharpton becomes the latest america to give his unsolicited views about the monarchy . understood with meghan monarchy. understood with meghan was going through it with somebody black working in the school. see sweets for the first time and they treat you differently . so he right that differently. so he right that meghan markle was treated in a racist way because she was the
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first black senior royal and us swimming star riley gaines has exposed the horrific that biological women are now facing . after she was forced to share a locker with the trans competitor , thomas it's not competitor, thomas it's not asked for our consent, but in that room we turned around and there's a64 biological man dropping his pants and watching us undress , and we're exposed to us undress, and we're exposed to male genitalia and so our big world racism debate and more on that shocking story will be coming up in the media buzz. and finally, i say bring that to save the conservative party, but only is happy to see him on the comeback trail. find out why. when crowned greatest person when i crowned greatest person and jackass at 1050 and you need a jackass at 1050 we'll have a first look at the newspaper front pages in man moments polly moments right after polly middlehurst . dan, thank you. middlehurst. dan, thank you. good the top story on gb news tonight . good the top story on gb news tonight. more than good the top story on gb news tonight . more than 20,000 people tonight. more than 20,000 people are now known to have died after
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monday's earthquakes , southern monday's earthquakes, southern turkey and northern syria . turkey and northern syria. around 70 members of the uk international search and rescue team have joined the effort to try to find survivors . the try to find survivors. the rubble. hundreds of thousands people have been left homeless in freezing conditions with the world health warning, many more could die without shelter. prime rishi sunak says the government is doing everything it can to help. now, as a dad , parents try help. now, as a dad, parents try and find their young children in the rubble is . heartbreaking. the rubble is. heartbreaking. and we will do everything that we can to help turkey . i already we can to help turkey. i already said that to the president when ispoke said that to the president when i spoke him a couple of days ago and. what the governments also said that we will match all said is that we will match all of the countries donations pound for anyone give to for pound. so if anyone give to the disasters emergency committee, then the government will your pound will match your pound for pound and get that help to and we can get that help to turkey, syria to learn . turkey, in syria to learn. lancashire police say their search for missing mother of two, nicola burley , has moved two, nicola burley, has moved now towards the sea . the force now towards the sea. the force says it's searching further
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downstream where the river wyre becomes tidal. officers have also issued a 48 hour dispersal order for st michael's on wyre after an abandoned house was reportedly searched by of the public. trying to solve the case themselves then posted footage on social media. the 45 year old was last seen 30 days ago walking her dog dog . members of walking her dog dog. members of parliament will get a 2.9% pay rise from the 1st of april that will bring their overall salary from around £84,000 to 86,000. the independent parliamentary standards authority says the pay increase for mps was the same as the average in pay for public sector last year and the former culture secretary, nadine dorries, has announced she's standing down as an at the next general election . mr. harris, general election. mr. harris, who represents bedfordshire, has been an since 2005 and has said
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she loved serving constituents. for the best part of two decades. now ambulance service workers in england are going on strike again tomorrow in long running dispute over pay and staffing levels . around 15,000 staffing levels. around 15,000 staffing levels. around 15,000 staff will take part in the walkout with unison members balloting. another thousand over the coming weeks. balloting. another thousand over the coming weeks . the union says the coming weeks. the union says the coming weeks. the union says the government's it out and waiting for the next pay round not trying to negotiate a deal. but the government's they are having constructive with unions that set you up to date on tv onune that set you up to date on tv online and radio. this is gb news. now to dan wootton tonight tonight . tonight. time for tomorrow , you say. now time for tomorrow, you say. now in our media bouts , the first in our media bouts, the first front pages when they need help.
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now, says the metro, as it launches an appeal for donations to aid the turkey syria rescue efforts. as the death toll approaches, 20,000. the with news that untreated sewage is being discharged directly the river combe by thames water. my staff panel back with me now political commentator dominique samuels, the former conservative london mayoral candidate shaun bailey, and the writer and broadcaster amy nicol . now the broadcaster amy nicol. now the president of war torn for , president of war torn for, ukraine the maslansky, made a historic visit the uk yesterday and he used the occasion to make this unambiguous plea for even more military support. this unambiguous plea for even more military support . yes yes , more military support. yes yes, i our . is the more military support. yes yes, i our. is the helmets of our real ukrainian pilot . i our. is the helmets of our real ukrainian pilot. he is one of our most successful assets
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and he's one of our kings and the writing on the helmets reads. we have freedom . give us reads. we have freedom. give us wings to protect it . zelenskyy's wings to protect it. zelenskyy's comes despite rishi sunak seeming to have ruled out increases in defence spending. brits facing a severe cost of living crisis and a dangerous invasion of illegal. living crisis and a dangerous invasion of illegal . you may invasion of illegal. you may sound cough then that will get what he wants, but the expert aren't so sure . there's a bit of aren't so sure. there's a bit of symbolism involved what he's asking for at the present . asking for at the present. actually, the ukrainians very good building things themselves . you're going to look at .you're going to look at everything but in some cases you're up against reality rather than anything else. the fact is that we haven't air power and in the negotiating context , ask for the negotiating context, ask for the negotiating context, ask for the fast jets . you get the fast jets. you get helicopters and you get missiles to do with that , you know that
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to do with that, you know that the sky is quite experienced, that that he's he's got a huge emotional following . so despite emotional following. so despite that dose of reality the in parliament even the king all unequivocally backed zelenskyy's plane most disturbingly no one seems to have bothered to engage a single second of meaningful debate about what would be a monumental geopolitical decision that could have huge earth shattering ramifications . so shattering ramifications. so i think it's time to have that discussion now. should the uk ukraine with multimillion pound jets or is that a cost too that could actually end up escalating the conflict ? dominic samuels the conflict? dominic samuels i completely believe that this decision will escalate the war, and i think we need to have a long, hard look whether we can afford be doing all of this and for how long. i mean, you mentioned that rishi announced that he's actually not to increase defence spending when there's literally a war on on our doorstep . does that make any
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our doorstep. does that make any sense to you ? does that sound sense to you? does that sound like a sensible decision ? we like a sensible decision? we have been routinely reducing the size of our army. have been routinely reducing the size of our army . does that have been routinely reducing the size of our army. does that make sense? not replacing our weapons stocks . meanwhile, you've got stocks. meanwhile, you've got boris, the buffoon going around demanding that we send everything we've got to them . everything we've got to them. can we afford to do this? i think, you know, look, i understand that ukrainian people are suffering . i completely are suffering. i completely understand us. even the french president macron said we need to ensure , but we are actually not ensure, but we are actually not depleting own forces. macron said arms supply was not deplete. french forces. we need to think about that in our country as well and think about whether or not we should be putting ourselves first. and that's a real question. shaun bailey, you disagree with dominique, don't you, on this ? i dominique, don't you, on this? i think so committed , think we've been so committed, the ukraine. and if going to keep that commitment, we have to look it. now, i wouldn't just send it's send jets at this point. it's a long commitment, a very long term commitment, a very expensive commitment. and ben
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wallace has said that we can achieve the same military outcomes through providing advanced missiles , which would advanced missiles, which would be significantly and, be significantly cheaper. and, of wouldn't of course wouldn't need any significant manpower from britain's point of view on the ground stop half ground but we can't stop half way. if we want this to war end, we have to demonstrate to russia that we are prepared to back ukraine. but will i will say this. providing jets would be a significant uptick from us and have to think very carefully before doing that by does allow us say to the russians, look we can will do this, but please put us in a position where we don't have to. it very disturbing, though , when there is just no though, when there is just no political debate in our parliament between all of our major parties whatsoever. because i think about the last couple of years and i think about the moments where there has virtually no political opposition . the ridiculous covid opposition. the ridiculous covid that are costing country dearly and the covid vax and the
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vaccine where there was absolutely no opposition action to jab very, very young people didn't actually need to be vaccinated to fight against an illness that would not have had any real harms to them. and i'm any real harms to them. and i'm a bit concerned that increasingly now we seem to having one political orthodoxy about most political . i would i about most political. i would i would to not have a deep debate is always problem say oh well hold on hold on but nobody's made a commitment to change current stance that the pm he's not going to do that for the time being. rishi was very clear about that. we are not going. he was extremely enthusiastic. the press, was no politician press, he was no politician brave enough say publicly brave enough to say publicly actually . no, there's a limit. actually. no, there's a limit. now you're with sean dominic on this, is that right? i mean , this, is that right? i mean, completely. i think that when you look at the whole story of how this invasion came to be that moment that crimea was and that moment that crimea was and
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that they into crimea, the reaction was these non decisions this soft approach is the sanction . we've we've done all sanction. we've we've done all that and i think hard defence is our best security because . we've our best security because. we've tried everything. so don't i wouldn't say that we the way we've been flirting with idea of ukraine joining nato's flirting with the idea of joining the european union flirting with the idea of hosting missiles in poland . i didn't do it. i just poland. i didn't do it. ijust think we need be very worried about the lack of debate. we will have the debate on this show. the debate is being had in the us where republican politicians enough to politicians are brave enough to about some of the downside of their concerns depleting own weapons stocks. well low both in america and here germany is sceptical this as is so much of germany and other european nafions germany and other european nations have always been sceptical about ukraine. and let's be clear, we're not saying let's be clear, we're not saying let's run over and hand out planes, let's get to things that
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need to happen we need to need to happen first we need to look at the military use of that, also the diplomatic that, but also the diplomatic use that will change the use of that will change the conversation we're having with russia . if you look at your poll russia. if you look at your poll i know if you should poll, i don't know if you should poll, but tobias, he's saying that we need go in all blazing. we need to go in all blazing. we can't just leave it to ukraine. he's one of the people saying. mr. i want to just mr. 774 great. i want to just think, just in case with with us at the top of the show a minute, carl made a completely untrue about me and i wanted amy to go away and get evidence of her claim. so amy, you said we were talking billy at one story and you said very coming from you, someone who taking the mic out of angela rayner's accent . now, of angela rayner's accent. now, do you have any evidence that i've ever taking the mic out of hands to write his accent? do you know? i would like to apologise that. that detail apologise for that. that detail , i added. i think momentarily. got you confused with your fan side . good but you really know.
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side. good but you really know. well, it was a slightly exaggeration. it was fake. it was a mistake but it is a truth that have been very critical of. angela rayner and you like call her randi . well well you may not her randi. well well you may not have criticised her accent. you have criticised her accent. you have criticised her life so her relationship ups and you know her hair colour and you want to know why do you want to know? didn't you grow? it was because you don't agree with her it was because of this you cannot get any worse than the position homophobic racist socialistic . homophobic racist socialistic. 5001 out of five you so you go back. 5001 out of five you so you go back . that's it was about but back. that's it was about but look i accept your apology now it's not just off scotland trans right it's causing controversy with america's former university
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of kentucky summer riley games speaking out against the baffling in my opinion disgusting decision to put a biological male athlete. lee thomas in a female changing room with no full warning to other athletes . watch this. tara room athletes. watch this. tara room with leah thomas. yes the ncaa, of course, we competed thomas, but we were not forewarned beforehand that we would be sharing a locker room with leah . we did not give our consent. they did not ask for our consent. but in locker room we turned around . there was a64 turned around. there was a64 biological man dropping his pants and watching us undress. and we're exposed to male genhaua and we're exposed to male genitalia and honestly , where genitalia and honestly, where will this madness and, perhaps even sturgeon, may actually be happier stateside? amy shawn bailey, dominique savage step don't so shocking is that we're going to look more at this story next week, actually coming up , next week, actually coming up, is american civil rights activist reverend al sharpton right claim that meghan was a victim of racism within the royal family because she was the first black c—suite executive in
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the firm . we're first black c—suite executive in the firm .we're going to get first black c—suite executive in the firm . we're going to get the the firm. we're going to get the thoughts of my superstar panel on this at 1030. but next, very excited, we're going to have a world exclusive interview with the comedy legend and tv news star john cleese. this is about the relaunch of fawlty towers and his new job right here. so it's the first time john cleese is going to be on tv news with by for him straight after the .
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break john cleese while to gb news it feels great saying that i'm very excited . well i think excited excited. well i think excited because i'm doing this show with you i've been working with a couple of guys on it. and the whole idea of being to create a show from scratch without anyone looking over our shoulders i mean, you know , i wouldn't get mean, you know, i wouldn't get an offer like this anywhere else on the planet . it an offer like this anywhere else on the planet. it is extraordinary and really looking forward to it because i think there are so many cliches , there are so many cliches, ordinary television. it would be nice to try and avoid those just start. well, look, i have to say , we've been going eight months now. i've been since day one. and i have no editorial interfere from management in my show. they let me do what i want to do. and you wouldn't get that
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in any other broadcaster in the uk? no, no, it's a sort of trust that we had when we when we started monty python went in to see mike mills , who was the head see mike mills, who was the head of light entertainment . and he of light entertainment. and he said . well, what sort of a show said. well, what sort of a show you guys are planning to do? what would you like to do ? and what would you like to do? and we hadn't discussed it. i look at what it became when we looked in each other and sort of said, well , you know, we're going to well, you know, we're going to do a humorous show with comedy intended to make people laugh. and then you said , well, you and then you said, well, you really have guests stars. and we said , are we are we going to said, are we are we going to have? and it was absolute crash of an interview and after about a minute looked at us and shrugged and said well go away and make 30 programmes like one in the history of television has trusted a group like that. and
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of course a lot people at the bbc hated it i mean the guy in charge of the in charge of michael thomas flow absolutely hated you bumped into the director and the elevator and he said what is this awful show? is it supposed be funny? i can't stand it. this is the guy in charge , the department. but you charge, the department. but you know, if you actually let people create an avenue the idea is instead of sort of what do they call a that kind of parent, what is it, a hover hovercraft thing? no. yes. helicopter a helicopter team. that's how you get into because nobody trusts anyone . because nobody trusts anyone. got to be in charge and in control and that's exactly what's wrong about television. but of course, gb news not your tv project. john i don't know if you're aware because you're not in the uk at the moment, but you have been on the front pages of all of the newspapers week because of your decisions. a slower, slow week . i it slower, slow news week. i it
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must been. but no, this is must have been. but no, this is huge news, though, john fawlty towers. true ? is it towers. is it really true? is it coming back with you as basil? yes, it is. but a very, very different sort . i mean, people different sort. i mean, people ask me for years are , you going ask me for years are, you going to do some more? and i said both connie booth and i, you know, we wrote the yes, we 12 we were at the 12 episodes together and we both felt done it and. connie retired from showbusiness and i moved on and people often said, well, why don't another fawlty towers? and i said, because people will say, that was quite good. but it wasn't as good as the you see what i mean? and then my daughter and no new i met guy and they chatted briefly and we were all in las vegas together because i was doing a show with and we had dinner and we suddenly realised what if we do a sequel for it ? first of
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do a sequel for it? first of all, it's interesting . secondly all, it's interesting. secondly does not rely upon of course man well dear and it's actually not with us anymore. and and prue's skills is, is generally known as difficulty remembering now and such to me. almost everyone else is dead because when i look at old now, all these wonderful engush old now, all these wonderful english character actors who are with us and suddenly we thought, well, if, if the only continuing character is basil, my daughter i because we've been writing together for 16 years, which people don't know we thought we could come up with something quite. and then we thought where and we thought . no, not in, not and we thought. no, not in, not in a small town, much more and much more different if it's say a caribbean or something like with a small hotel, but with few very rich coming to stay moment,
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it's going to be brilliant and it's going to be brilliant and it's going to be brilliant and it's going to be so it's the white lotus vibe . well, we say white lotus vibe. well, we say good bit of a white lotus vibe . good bit of a white lotus vibe. well, you know , that's what my well, you know, that's what my wife was saying me yesterday, because you put it in the caribbean, it becomes very, very multiracial . you know, people in multiracial. you know, people in the hotel business that just from every today i've had chatting people from austria kenya and nepal. chatting people from austria kenya and nepal . and so you can kenya and nepal. and so you can bnng kenya and nepal. and so you can bring lots of different people together and also you see the characteristic of fawlty towers was the sort of pressure cooker atmosphere that you created in the hotel although i have to tell you the guy in commission of the show after the very first show he said john, you're going to have to get them out of the hotel more completely wrong . oh
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hotel more completely wrong. oh well, i'm glad you didn't listen to him now. i was he was in charge. i don't tend to listen to people in shock. i've got that over the years yeah. i've got that voice now , now look got that voice now, now look john you are annoying all the right people with this announcement. i annoyed. well, what can i tell you? what the guardian said about the return of your show. think by the way of your show. i think by the way the greatest tv show ever made they said an anti—woke nightmare why the fawlty towers remake is a truly nauseating . yeah that's a truly nauseating. yeah that's what they obviously know better . i do what's going to be in it . so maybe maybe they write an episode for me that they would find acceptable might not be very funny but i'm sure it would really some of their take a dig now john no broadcaster announced obviously have had a words to say about the bbc over
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recent years yes would you consider doing version of fawlty towers the sequel with the bbc . towers the sequel with the bbc. oh because you will get the freedom you see i was terrible very lucky . i was working for very lucky. i was working for the bbc in the late sixties seventies, beginning the eighties. that was the best because the bbc was run by people with real personality who love the medium and they were operating out of confidence, which was okay because there wasn't so much competition in those. but then john birt came in and if we go match the release viewing figures , the release viewing figures, the commercial channels getting, we'll get our licence revoked . we'll get our licence revoked. so then they started for biggest audiences and they tended to go for the lowest common denominator. while always always denying that they were doing . denying that they were doing. but if you took a paper now from
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1985 and looked at the television shows that are available and compare what they are now it means and i believe this basically britain we've gone from what was a middle class culture with all its failings to a tabloid culture . failings to a tabloid culture. and that is why the much of this screaming at people you see i want to deal with a lot of the subjects and get people upset, but i want to get a sense of what with a sense of humour will to each other, who will trade arguments instead of simply making speeches . indeed. and making speeches. indeed. and that's what we try and do on. gb news always have both of the argument to have a respectful debate. but don't shout people down simply because . they don't down simply because. they don't agree with the orthodoxy. okay, so fawlty will have a new home it will not be on the bbc. that's big news. of course the bbc in recent years has even started to censor off a trig of warnings on old episodes of
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fawlty towers. so i think what you're saying is correct. your argument about work or and some of it springs a very good idea, which is let's try to be kind people, but i believe it's become far too dominated by people who frightened of offending people . and i don't i offending people. and i don't i think you have to allow offence as you where you do you do you like want people to be shouting racial epithets to people. the answer's no, but i don't . prison answer's no, but i don't. prison is a correct sanction . you see is a correct sanction. you see what i mean? indeed, it's the tyranny. woke is the tyranny of woke. well, it's a yes . there's woke. well, it's a yes. there's lots of good angles to . but then lots of good angles to. but then it goes to the crazy, you know, like the statesman. i did see one thing last night and new statesman said, it's going to be about my show i've got to say. well do you really know what it's going to be like? and the idea that it's all going to be
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about locally and particularly occurred to me , i mean, the show occurred to me, i mean, the show i'm doing, you know, the dinosaur the show i'm doing for abc news that will deal with those kind of things. but i see that that would be relevant . a that that would be relevant. a small bijou hotel, that that would be relevant. a small bijou hotel , those run in small bijou hotel, those run in the caribbean. so they are swimming with evidence at all. they know the show's going to be like and condemning it for that . and that is neither criticism nor journalism. . and that is neither criticism norjournalism. no and it sums up all media cultures will look, john, we are so excited about the return of fawlty towers, but ihave the return of fawlty towers, but i have to say from the gb news family, we're most excited about having this year , having here later this year, very stressful, you know , having very stressful, you know, having me on your channel is , me on your channel is, enormously special for you . enormously special for you. well, we cannot wait . thank you well, we cannot wait. thank you so much, john and we'll speak so things are going what the media so she's the hospital you say go. yes of them. i can't i've got much to do. listen, don't
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mention the war. mentioned it once, but i think i got with it. all right. so pick up now, and let's hear more about it. so that's two egg mayonnaise, a prawn, a hermann goering , all prawn, a hermann goering, all coded sentence . oh, i couldn't coded sentence. oh, i couldn't resist . now, coming up, aidan resist. now, coming up, aidan cancelled with the new chair of the tory party , louie anderson, the tory party, louie anderson, throwing his support. capital punishment should bring back the death penalty to fix the lawless britain. fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie joins me live on this at 1045. but next in the media buzz with us, civil rights activist al sharpton claiming that meghan was treated differently due to being the first black person in the royal to take on executive duties. does he have a point or is this nothing more than race by superstar panel going to weigh in on this controversial straight after the .
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break let's return to democracy now! in our mediabuzz. let's return to democracy now! in our mediabuzz . more pages in our mediabuzz. more pages have been delivered and the guardian reports on the historic vote by the church of england's body that see same sex civil marriages be placed by priests as early as the summer. individual churches will be encouraged to state clearly whether they offer the blessings to avoid disappointment . the to avoid disappointment. the daily mirror reports that finance guru martin warns finance guru martin lewis warns raising the cap on energy bills would be a national of harm. would be a national act of harm. and daily star with comedy and the daily star with comedy legend chuckle unveiling legend paul chuckle unveiling a manifesto to get people again by ending cancel culture, which has made too comedians dull. ending cancel culture, which has made too comedians dull . and he made too comedians dull. and he wants to have more tv shows like towers, what i hope he call the interview before the break with .john interview before the break with . john cleese i think it's going to be absolutely hilarious, actually, in the fact that god is in a against it makes me want it to succeed even more . how it to succeed even more. how about my superstar panel ? back about my superstar panel? back with me now, the political
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commentator dominique samuels, the former conservative london mayoral candidate shaun bailey, and writer and broadcaster and the writer and broadcaster amy , now the royal row amy nicole, now the royal row sparked by unproven smears from the sussexes back into life week. race baiting america civil rights activist reverend al sharpton and told the very woke good morning britain that meghan was treated because she was the first black person in the monarchy to be in the so—called c suite of , the firm, which c suite of, the firm, which effectively means she was carrying out duties on behalf of the royal family. look i think that if when they were married was a beautiful day, right and people were celebrating how you saw this woman of colour now in the royal family. gasp song sent the royal family. gasp song sent the song at the ceremony to queen sitting and then the reaction was so much acrimony and just looking to treat her
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differently and people were the eu and the uk all around world that was always treated differently understood what meghan was going through it somebody black working in the suhes somebody black working in the suites c suites for first time and they treat you differently but given prince harry himself has now backtracked on his of royal racism. is this just yet another example of a woke american trying to bring down a royal family with an irresponsible and unproven claim of racism. dominique we're talking about al sharpton . al talking about al sharpton. al sharpton is in america for this sort of racial catastrophes that people like him like to promote . he likes division and he's bringing it here. but i'll just say my , your american stick to say my, your american stick to creating racial division , creating racial division, america, instead of sticking your nose in, it's what's going on here because clearly from that spiel, he doesn't know what the hell he's talking about. it
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wasn't about racism. yes. some people did have an issue with meghan and her race , but the meghan and her race, but the vast majority didn't . and number vast majority didn't. and number two, the reason why it didn't work out is because i think meghan and harry wanted their way. they didn't get it that way. they didn't get it that way. so they left. so we please stop talking about it then. and can we please weeding out these people just for the endlessly hammering this narrative ? it's hammering this narrative? it's boring, but he's like dr. shola, isn't he? shaun bailey really? because i think what he's trying to do is create a narrative and rewrite history, because what he can't deny what sharpton can't denyis can't deny what sharpton can't deny is that the whole country came behind meghan and harry to celebrate the union. so it's this desperate grass spin at straws to say, oh , actually, straws to say, oh, actually, then you turn against meghan because she was a royal executive. i mean, what he mean there's no c—suite in the royal family anyway . and actually, why
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family anyway. and actually, why if the british public so racist . meghan, did we celebrate her wedding so overwhelm meanly. i mean he said in his comments that their wedding was a real celebration. it's a real sweet moment . and people in the black moment. and people in the black community were genuinely excited about having make it in the royal family. and every. but here's my point, dan. it felt like that beyond the black community as well having conversations with about conversations with people about the normally the rules that you normally wouldn't but i think wouldn't have. but i think he's also missed point in that also missed the point in that all a royal woman , very, all to be a royal woman, very, very to be any kind of be very hard to be any kind of be a woman in particular, and it seems to be very hard, dynamic challenges. fergie, camilla has had challenges as well. so i hate waiting. exactly so it's a tough role, i think sometimes because of what happened make and it looks unique but any of those women could argue that they had a unique experience and not always positive. so is about perspective and how you judge a thing. mean are you prepared thing. i mean are you prepared to condemn al sharpton to condemn reverend al sharpton here? because he is trying to paint a false picture of what
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happened? well, i think actually in this instance, you are creating a false image . what creating a false image. what happened? no, i'm not. because know it is simply a fact that there were direct stories that were identical about both kate and meghan ultimately this again. well i could say the same to you. why we've been having this conversation again, but it is because reverend al sharpton, who is one of the most famous civil rights activists, america, who is a household name, has gone television to gone on british television to accuse british of being accuse the british of being racist. i'm sorry. meghan is excluded from her royal peers such as kate. so when kate has an avocado, it's very different. when meghan has an avocado when kate wears white, it's very different when meghan wears difficult. why is that? and think you can say, oh, it's just i dislike meghan which is the case. but you also can't that racism played a role when the mother was first in the papers who's a yoga people accused her of being a dealer. that was
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quite a low . but the important quite a low. but the important part was he said, okay, what about all of the positive? just while you're speaking sure, i want to show you all of the positive headlines. amy loves to raise three articles. you know, there were literally thousands and thousands of these were the positive . but i think this is positive. but i think this is the whole about subconscious bias, isn't you can sit there and be like i'm not aware talk about micro—aggressions that's why invalidate. why not? hold on. it's not an effective topical politician. and from our point of view, you remember he , point of view, you remember he, has spoken to the sussexes and that's what they told him and he's replayed i to a lot. but for him, they're correct. yeah, but i'm sorry, dominique . what but i'm sorry, dominique. what makes me so angry is amy. so to me. oh, no, dad . you and the me. oh, no, dad. you and the british people are racist . british people are racist. you're just subconsciously . no, you're just subconsciously. no, we are not. you would say if it
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was subconscious . yeah, i think, was subconscious. yeah, i think, to be honest . i think this whole to be honest. i think this whole idea , it all been subconscious idea, it all been subconscious actually has the opposite effect , allows people to escape accountability when exactly they feel racist. but actually, if you're not, be prepared to say that you're not. so. so you think that you as a middle class white woman, you're subconsciously racist? are you? i think subconscious. so exists in our society, our you subconscious, your viewers. you are trying to you subconsciously racist saying i this or you just i. i think everyone wants you . i. i think everyone wants you. so everyone in this room is like, i'm talking about you. i'm sorry . i'm like, i'm talking about you. i'm sorry. i'm going to have to like, i'm talking about you. i'm sorry . i'm going to have to say sorry. i'm going to have to say i'm not racist. i just i'm not. i'm not racist. ijust i'm not. i've really everyone in room, including, you know, shaun . including, you know, shaun. okay, so now we've got amy saying that. shaun and everyone else is, everyone has bias except the person saying that
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everyone has a subconscious . everyone has a subconscious. both. so you need to are you subconsciously racist? you wouldn't say are but you think the racism in me into saying i'm a racist can put it together could be like amy says this ridiculous thing and i'm not really going to have that all i'm saying i would agree that i do think i'm some i think that i think this is subconscious in the uk and i think sometimes it's something that permeates . it's something that permeates. do you think? yes, i do. then adam, do do you perpetuate. i think i saw he does so. but you don't . i'm think i saw he does so. but you don't. i'm part of this is a i'm i'm all about me i'm really what about me am i say look i mean, am i subconsciously racist? as i've said, i think everyone in british society , including sean british society, including sean and dominique , oh, this is you and dominique, oh, this is you reducing just like, oh, take what? doing reducing, using the ridiculous earnestness of your argument by using specific, i think less than i have. i think we shouldn't. dominique thank you so much. now coming up, we've shown their front page,
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but left wing rag, the guardian , our greatest person tonight or reunion jackass will see. this nomination involves the great meal, all of us. so by. but next in cancer should a person bringing back the death penalty suggested by tough talking tory deputy chair lee anderson . deputy chair lee anderson. kelvin mckenzie is going to be live on that in just 2 minutes time. so don't go anywhere .
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it's time now for our cancer cancer. it's time now for our cancer cancer . and this is where cancer. and this is where britain's top speak out on controversial issues without the fear of the cancel culture . the fear of the cancel culture. the rest of the media, from migrants to food banks . newly elected to food banks. newly elected tory deputy chairman luyanda sen has rocked the geopolitical discourse in this country and he's to earn his moniker as
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westminster's talking mp. after calling for return of the death penalty . speaking to the penalty. speaking to the spectator this week, lee said nobody has committed a crime after being executed you know that. don't you want 100% success rate? and that's not new. by the way, his position is not new because on this show a couple of weeks ago he said that the afghan monster , low ranking the afghan monster, low ranking abdul rahim zia, triple murder, murdering asylum seeker , evaded murdering asylum seeker, evaded authorities as a 14 authorities by posing as a 14 year old schoolboy deserves the death penalty to . this is death penalty to. this is a creature is not a man is , a creature is not a man is, a creature. this is murdered abroad. it is. kumaris told lies is been it's been put in foster care is cost a british taxpayer thousands and thousands of pounds and now we're going to put him in prison for 2020 odd years when the cost of british taxpayer thousands and thousands of pounds again that's not the answer. and you know, i think answer. and i you know, i think answer. and i you know, i think answer is and i'll say this we will it is at the end will have it all is at the end of a rope. i believe in the death penalty for cases like this. now, calvin mackenzie
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predictably , there has been predictably, there has been utter complete in well, i'd call it confected outrage . confected it confected outrage. confected outrage stifle the political media establishment because they want to bring lee anderson down. but you actually agree with him? don't you, calvin. well, i've always believed in the death penalty and actually his. penalty and actually in his. it's a stunning interview, by the way, the like of i've very much doubt many other tory mps would like to go publicly on it, but probably believe it in their art is he talks about people say you can make mistakes and he's saying, well, not with video. you can't and the case that he of course is the dreadful case that dreadful murder of . lee that dreadful murder of. lee rigby , the soldier in woolwich rigby, the soldier in woolwich in which the murder was captured on cctv . and he says under those on cctv. and he says under those why should those guys, one in particular be given the rest of
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their lives in rather nice cell three meals a day having butchered in such a vile way and it based on based on kind of isis's kind of thought process so what would be wrong in that case? why would anybody want to keep that person alive? now, i often the case that actually it's a moral issue. we the those that kill should not be killed because it is fundamentally wrong . we don't have the right wrong. we don't have the right to take somebody's life. i i disagree with that . and not only disagree with that. and not only that, i see of examples there seems to more and more examples today of shocking, shocking murders when where actually when you say to somebody that's 30 years, what does that really to them? you know , what does that them? you know, what does that really mean to society as society got its revenge ? now, in society got its revenge? now, in the court case, you have statements now , why can't we statements now, why can't we have impact when two things
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happen? supposing in impact statement, they mother the father, the brother, the sister said actually , we would like to said actually, we would like to see that person die for this crime . see that person die for this crime. right. or see that person die for this crime . right. or say instead of crime. right. or say instead of 50% off, you're going to get 10% or 2% off. i think that the families who are most effective who have to live with this tragedy , their hearts and in tragedy, their hearts and in their minds for the rest of their minds for the rest of their life, should have a vote. but look lee anderson said a lot of things which are really quite watching, watching credible. i mean i mean, for instance he also makes the point about benefits said i get attacked morning noon and night these are these are really vile vile socialists right they should they should be dissociated by but i doubt whether they will and point he makes is that i have two children as a single i had to flog a car because i couldn't afford to run it i didn't i had my last five quid had to go into the gas metre. he said these these coming from the
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position you couldn't be more skint than me so don't try and tell me when i, when i turn around and say he works seven days a week so credits to sorry he said well i was just say he worked seven days a week during that tough period. not only did he sell his car to work, he was working seven days a week by car and just on death penalty, what has fascinated me is if you watch any of the same coverage, you think that he was you would think that he was spouting a view spouting a fringe view, a view maybe that 5% of brits might agree with . example, a yougov agree with. example, a yougov poll just last month commissioned , by the way, this commissioned, by the way, this is not an outlier. this is what all of the polling shows. but a yougov poll last month found 52% so the same percentage of brits who who voted for brexit think the death penalty should apply in cases multiple murder. so is speaking for the majority of the country . well of course we country. well of course we aren't allowed we aren't effectively allowed to have a
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death penalty in an odd way because we can't even say back illegal migrants, illegal migrants to countries is where a penalty is carried out and by the way, can be not. it states unbelievably right, but certainly the whole of the whole of the middle east, certainly the whole of the whole of the middle east , etc. certainly the whole of the whole of the middle east, etc. right. so can't get so somebody comes and murders here if they come from iran and they got some children here , we can't send children here, we can't send them back . these are impossible them back. these are impossible things. and what lee anderson has and i do congratulate him from don't agree with everything you said, but i do agree is he brought this issue into spotlight. this won't go away now. not but he also most certainly meant that that they constituents of ashford will in fact actually probably more
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likely vote for him and other red wall seats. what do they that's why other mps are much more. yeah i couldn't agree more and that's why sunak needs to by him. kevin mackenzie, thank you so much and have a great week. and we will speak on monday. but it to reveal today's it is time now to reveal today's britain and the union. has britain and the union. jack has my superstar partner dominique samuels , who is your greatest samuels, who is your greatest britain nominee ? mine is gb news britain nominee? mine is gb news presenter neil oliver. he's under some extremely unwarranted fire and i think he's a champion for free speech and a credit to gb news. here, here, here, here shaun bailey, your my honorary greatest will today semansky . greatest will today semansky. i'm completely portuguese but he's impassioned speech to parliament is was such a demonstration of courage remember this is a man who is offered safe passage to the us and he's decided to stay and be with his nation and represent them as best he can. and i think
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that's great. is that so? yes, it is. and to call your nominee , admittedly, a bit of a gear change, but i've picked a popstar called because children's mental health week . children's mental health week. she has been schools to spread awareness of mental health and also do some performances she's supported little mix on the tour and she's awesome and i'd love it if everyone would check her out. but of course , it's no out. but of course, it's no question to me the greatest person is neil oliver. and you know , folk want to silence him know, folk want to silence him because . his voice is so because. his voice is so important and will be back here on monday night on this show , on monday night on this show, only this time because your union jack has following on from the theme my union jackass is the theme my union jackass is the guardian for the disgusting hit piece that they put out trying to paid neil oliver a sum of anti semite for talking about globalism and talking about fact that there are a number of people want to shred our democracy. it's not anti—semitic to talk about that and really
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dangerous really to throw out those sorts because this is absolutely despicable . the absolutely despicable. the guardian is fairly emboldened . guardian is fairly emboldened. they came for well, first they actually came for myself with nigel farage trying to claim that we were anti—semites for using the word globalist . then using the word globalist. then they came for the great mark steyn and had some success there. and so now they're moving on to neil oliver live without doubt, going to they're not going to win. but it's despicable. shaun bailey, your nominee , union on so nominee, my union jack on so many is a press politicians many is a press and politicians trying reignite the brexit. we don't have a time machine to go back. we need to focus on what we're going to do in the future and. any politician who talks about the effect brexit has without mentioning effect without mentioning the effect that lockdown has, you know, it's politically need move it's politically we need to move forward. to get the forward. we need to get the brexit and going to brexit bump and i'm going to call nominate is boris johnson in who made call nominate is boris johnson in who mad e £2.5 million from in who made £2.5 million from speaking another yet can't pay . speaking another yet can't pay. his 200,000 legal fees partygate
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so funny why are we paying that bail minister you didn't want him to as prime minister now that he's no longer minister you don't want him to be. oh, no, i want him to make money. but want him to pay for his own doings, for line. what doings? he's i want him to fund the bill for partygate. oh he doesn't want the some basic issues. none of us do. it's political up. i mean. oh, my , you can pay for mean. oh, my, you can pay for this, but i'm going with dominic on this and the guardian for the reasons that outline. they know what they're doing dominic samuel was shown bailing out my fabulous superstar panel this thursday thank you for your all week it's been a dramatic one but
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good evening. you with gb news it's 11:00. good evening. you with gb news it's11:00. in a moment, headunes it's11:00. in a moment, headlines but first, let's bring you the latest news headlines . you the latest news headlines. and more than 20,000 people are now known to have died after monday's earthquakes . southern monday's earthquakes. southern turkey and northern. around 70 members of the uk interned national search and rescue team have joined the effort to try to locate people in the rubble. the prime minister rishi sunak says
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the government is doing

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