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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  February 12, 2023 2:00am-3:01am GMT

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may patrick christys monday to three till six we tackle the day's news agenda you've never seen before. it's high tempo, high octane, the most controversial topics and the best guess you will not be able to set your eyes and ears off. i'm not afraid to ask the questions that you really want answered. three p.m. answered. three till 6 pm. monday's gb the monday's friday on gb news the people's channel. britain's news . channel good evening. this is the latest from the gb news. the home secretary has condemned what she described as the appalling disorder during protests outside a hotel housing migrants in knowsley on suella braverman tweeted that the alleged behaviour of some asylum seekers is never an excuse for violence and intimidation. it comes shortly after merseyside police 15 people aged between 13 and 54 following the violent protests. security has increased following the incident with
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reinforced fencing and a presence . the number of dead presence. the number of dead following monday's earthquakes in southern turkey and northern syria now passed 28,000. rescuers continued to find some in the rubble, but they say the window for finding them is closing . the un chief, martin, closing. the un chief, martin, has warned the death toll double. mr. griffiths says the un will carry out separate appeals for turkey and syria the coming days , the disasters coming days, the disasters committee has raised more than £50 million of aid and support for in just two days for being aside from frontline medical aid, charity uk med says more and more are joining in the humanitarian efforts around are going to be providing a full one hospital facility so that is providing primary health care to those who need it so that's deaung those who need it so that's dealing initial kind of trauma incidents but then secondary illnesses and diseases people that might have left their homes
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without medicine and families and children. so providing that primary medical support. and children. so providing that primary medical support . a man primary medical support. a man has died and. the second remains in hospital , has died and. the second remains in hospital, a double stabbing in hospital, a double stabbing in london. officers were called hackney wick at 430 this morning when the victim's in their twenties arrived at hospital with knife wounds. a 26 year old later died . his injuries. later died. his injuries. forensic teams are searching the white post lane where the incident took place . so far, no incident took place. so far, no arrests have been made made . tv arrests have been made made. tv onune arrests have been made made. tv online and pass radio this is gb news. now as i have a deadline . news. now as i have a deadline. hello leo carlson, welcome to headune hello leo carlson, welcome to headline the most dangerous show on television . this most on television. this most dangerous channel, according to the eye newspaper . joining me the eye newspaper. joining me tonight are the two most danger
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comedians on the. we've got scott sting caputo and chris crusher waitin . but before we crusher waitin. but before we talk to let's have a quick look at sunday's front pages and we start with the sunday times , start with the sunday times, which says the chairman has undermined the trust in the bbc . so it's not just gb news, it's grief. the sunday telegraph has british weapons could made in ukraine make sense to meet them where they're going to be used. the sunday mirror says . i did the sunday mirror says. i did cheat on vanessa a and a i've of idea . vanessa feltz i couldn't idea. vanessa feltz i couldn't care less. the sunday express has james bulger killer must die in prison , brother. the daily in prison, brother. the daily has has sunday the full monty . has has sunday the full monty. you can leave your socks on. it's going to be too to cold dance nude. and those are your front pages . and look . let's
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front pages. and look. let's start with the sunday times . all start with the sunday times. all right. in the sunday times. well, there's couple of things on the front page. this thing you mentioned about the bbc chairman. i think he's about to be replaced. right. our chairman. i think he's about to be replaced. right. ou r £800,000 be replaced. right. our £800,000 loan. wish , i would talk to loan. so i wish, i would talk to him about getting a loan first before this happened. but anyway tavistock with tavistock scandal is par with east doping of east germany's doping of athletes. says in the sunday athletes. it says in the sunday times the child gender times this is the child gender clinic it is a book has been written by a woman who's a newsnight journalist and they spoke to dozens of journalists who worked at the gender identity development service gids, which is part of the tavistock appointment nhs trust , and at that clinic that service they helped young people deal with their trans feelings . deal with their trans feelings. but some of the ways they did it now seen as circumspect, one was a thousand children were referred for puberty blockers. the experiment in a clinic and they were routinely referred
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under six teens for these blockers, which probably a great idea. and a lot of these people had children as young as three. yeah yeah. i appreciate that. you know, perhaps some people have gender dysphoria and, you know, identify as another genden know, identify as another gender. and sometimes hormones and surgery and the rest of it can be the best path for later. very out of the real, really small number of appointments as well. sometimes you reading that people have just been once yeah yeah. and made this decision and they've given the binder another thing in book former thing right in the book former clinicians service for clinicians at gids service for the time in detail of the first time in detail of their regret out the their regret out about the practise of routinely referring under teens. as you said for under six teens. as you said for puberty blocking cross puberty blocking and cross hormone treatment with no concrete and long term concrete data and long term effects. they were guinea pigs . effects. they were guinea pigs. yes, experimental. yes, they were experimental. they're recorded the data they're not recorded in the data to out how many of them detransition how many of them regret it. and there are are thousands. there's a class action. yeah. a of kids who action. yeah. a lot of kids who were against the were brought against the tavistock. yeah. it's tavistock. yeah, yeah. it's been, been closed and. been, it's been closed down and. no thankfully. yeah. no thankfully. yeah, yeah. there's be treated
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there's going to be treated a different but soon. awful. different way but soon. awful. they're making so much money. apparently% and 30% of the money for nhs trust from the for this nhs trust came from the tavistock clinic i believe one of the realisations you can make a lot of money on people's misery, you know, when people are vulnerable, young people almost always are. very almost always are. and very young they're young people are when they're they're when they're they're fragile. when they're wondering going happen wondering what's going to happen next, like they pounds next, it sounds like they pounds yeah i hate to speak negatively yeah. i hate to speak negatively about and it just they about that and it just they saved life 2013. but it saved my life in 2013. but it does in this case like does sound in this case like this outside this with almost by outside clinicians. yeah yeah , right. clinicians. yeah yeah, right. chris, are you surprised the giving drugs children and then mutilating their genitals turned out to not always be the best course of action. i'm not surprised. i think really sad. is that the so many of these people they're saying a lot a lot of the children have got autistic traits and if they'd just left alone, given some just been left alone, given some therapy, therapy, therapy, some talking therapy, but make as much but you don't make as much money. i guess i'm talking therapy . and i think the parents therapy. and i think the parents we've discovered some of the parents kids parents didn't want their kids to gay. so the interim, what
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to be gay. so the interim, what they decided to do was the genden they decided to do was the gender. when didn't this is what happensin gender. when didn't this is what happens in iran. iran has got one the highest rates , gender one of the highest rates, gender transitioning world. and transitioning the world. and it's because it's illegal to be well, they tell you we're going to or change your to kill you or change your genden to kill you or change your gender, choice you make. gender, which choice you make. yeah. and i think these kids felt as though obviously doctors are something are telling them something that parents they parents are telling us that they felt lot of pressure. felt under a lot of pressure. and, course, caved and and, of course, they caved and they did. they were told they took pills that were the binder. they they had they had surgery. they had breasts they breasts removed, they had mastectomies age so mastectomies the age of 12. so you the x—ray you you would with the x—ray you when very young and you when you're very young and you feel lost know some feel lost know you've some really so it's not really become goth. so it's not only option the terrible only other option the terrible story was you know story the nhs was you know surgically transitioning people to goths that would have to being goths that would have been you know that when been a whole you know that when i youngi been a whole you know that when i young i shot when was 14 i was young i shot when i was 14 you changed schools, we you know we changed schools, we moved the countryside. so moved to the countryside. so i guide home on my own at guide to get home on my own at night. and i was hitchhiking and i met a lot of people that and i was very vulnerable. i feel like i'm be alive, you know, i'm lucky to be alive, you know, and know what it's like to be
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and i know what it's like to be vulnerable knowing you're vulnerable knowing that you're what feeling, what you what you're feeling, what you what you're feeling, what is not. what you're thinking is not. maybe yeah good or maybe normal. yeah in a good or a bad way. you know, you different you it to different and you want it to change. you want to be like everybody else and certainly in the of this person and you, the care of this person and you, you told. yes you do what you're told. yes terrible. you'd hope least terrible. so you'd hope at least state institution would would treat you better . then somebody treat you better. then somebody picks up hitchhiking , which picks you up hitchhiking, which the seem to have the nhs doesn't seem to have done they didn't done in this case. they didn't buy anything meal like buy anything a free meal like some did with me. some of those guys did with me. i continue talk is through the sunday telegraph chris that it wasn't the front page there were british be in british weapons could be made in ukraine now talking ukraine so we're now talking about deals where i guess about doing deals where i guess british weaponry designs could actually made in the ukraine. actually be made in the ukraine. as you said, make . that's why as you said, make. that's why they're to used. so they're going to be used. so fewer no aggressor. fewer air miles. no aggressor. we delighted zero. yeah exactly. but downing street and the ministry of defence have declined to comment. so this isn't a done deal. what do you think? do think it's going to do. is to happen i think is a show of i mean apparently other european countries are are
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clamouring also do the same of weapons manufactured in ukraine and i mean it shows the confidence that europe has that russia is going to lose this ukraine. it's not going to be if we're if we're putting our weapons back, the french are getting in there, they just getting in there, too. they just to money, in way, is to make money, in a way, is cynical in way, because these cynical in a way, because these companies the of it companies seeing the value of it the way the us in the second world war. yeah before the world war. yeah but before the us obviously and even us joined obviously and even after. i if, if after. but but i guess if, if money, if there's money to be made in saves lives a good made in it saves lives a good thing. yeah. and also thing. yeah. yeah. and also i mean be thinking mean they may be thinking they're out the war so they're stringing out the war so long. i mean, the west could end very quickly giving very quickly by giving ukraine the but they're it so the it needs. but they're it so long assume there's always long they assume there's always going there to going to be a frontline there to test weapons. so you develop test the weapons. so you develop a you develop a new a new time, you develop a new missile, you've got some live russian troops, some wagner group tea in group concert drinking tea in the waiting be the crimea, waiting to be anyway. terrible thing. so anyway. yes, terrible thing. so yeah, we've also pictures from the brit awards oh, yeah, i believe so. harry harrison will host the brit awards and so he
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is dressed as a rosette and that's like the most confident politician , the world that big politician, the world that big dresses dresses are. clyde's the clydesdale horse. i he's got a hickey he's trying to cover. i have said that that's what that's about. it is his more conventional alpha. oh really. i'm not an expert. yeah. yeah normally comes on dressed as dame average. yeah it looks dame edna average. yeah it looks great if we've got more pictures . i want to show that some smitten. i don't know who that is. that looks good in that dress. ashley oh, wow . is that dress. ashley oh, wow. is that right? actually, it sounds like a fetish, but, yeah, it's. it's something that. yeah, it sounds like something you could actually do to her says, hey, chance you're that hygienic . are chance you're that hygienic. are there places it is lipo redistribution. yeah, you can see, the fur has been taken off of his belly and put in his knees. he's got a ryanair flight in smuggler's luggage. i think it's going to be very handy for skateboarding . yeah, i. for the skateboarding. yeah, i. for the real thing. yeah oh, good lord. i know i here it does. jessie j.
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apparently i am being told. right. don't know who that ehhen right. don't know who that either. yeah, but there's her in her belly. oh that's adorable. no who that completely. you're younger than me. we are so out of touch with contemporary music. completely out of business, scott. i don't know . business, scott. i don't know. any of these people are as terrible as my husband. we know who that was, right? i don't know gender of that person, know the gender of that person, but glasses. know but i know glasses. i know they're going swimming. yes yeah. who blushes? supposedly to watch a public beheading. who blushes i suppose blushes anymore? god, i suppose all pictures . unless blushes anymore? god, i suppose all pictures. unless i was all the pictures. unless i was also brit awards, i don't also at the brit awards, i don't it scoffed while front it was scoffed while the front of express. oh well james of the express. oh well james bolger a killer must die in prison, says james burrows, his brother . prison, says james burrows, his brother. yeah. he has urged dominic raab rib. dominic raab to stay true to his plans . keep to stay true to his plans. keep the killerjohn to stay true to his plans. keep the killer john venables in to stay true to his plans. keep the killerjohn venables in jail life the 30th anniversary of the murder of the two year old james is today. yeah michael ferguson insists he will never forgive
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venables and accomplice robert thompson the attack on the thompson for the attack on the siblings so he wants do remember this you know when i was at school it was a big what year was it? 94. was summer. i just started. i just come over that that year. and i remember the i just played again and again on tv and it was so tear. as the story unravelled, you kept this can't get worse and. then it got again more terrifying. oh, yeah. like a like one of the most horrific and sounds completely senseless. yeah i know. it's just. yeah. anyway it just shows how human beings can be both, you know, horrible and know horrible. and in at the same time and that's harry styles or we pointing ukraine there was the ukraine herself and finally front page from our friends at the daily star created the film . you know, this is really sad guys naturists , they're worried guys naturists, they're worried about the cost of living crisis because obviously they like to go with their kids often, but
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they're going to be so hard up that they won't be able to pay their energy if they keep their kids. but they see the energy in their . i kids. but they see the energy in their. i mean, surely they go to other people's houses. if you order a stripper , you don't go order a stripper, you don't go round to their house. i'm done. i should just. so you're saying they congregate anyway. i you're mixing them up with swingers on it could you be a nudist in, your own home? oh, this is just. sorry, i didn't any attention. they told me this story about they told me naturist . yes i go they told me naturist. yes i go to a naturist camp in france right on the brittany coast. sometimes i go every year and all you have to bring is your own towel. it's great and don't even have wrap it. no, you you prefer that you don't you you have to sit on at least do tell people you discounts do they get when somebody isn't nude. no they sorry them this they feel sorry for them this seems yes seems unresolved. yes everybody's naked. everybody the person serving the food, the post person. person who changes magazines in the front office.
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everybody's in fact, people come there of are clothed and they wind up naked by the end of the day. right. they give in. it's fantastic. wow. yeah. you catch nudism. it's you. certainly. i have a friend whose . parents have a friend whose. parents were naturist nudist . the were naturist nudist. the difference is it the same when he was a teenager so that's how current to build the ruins of the house. well, i didn't meet this person till we were in our twenties, but his his teens sounded very . and there was this sounded very. and there was this difficult point where do we still go on those holidays or don't when they don't because when they were tiny, matter. yeah, tiny, it didn't matter. yeah, yeah, yeah . then you get to a yeah, yeah. then you get to a more years when parents are more years when your parents are embarrassing you anyway. yeah. and if the naked. yeah. oh my god.no and if the naked. yeah. oh my god. no if i thought about my mother anyway that's for the beaches coming. up after the break, be about break, we'll be talking about the goings , why the asylum centre goings, why museums aren't as tranquil days and why eden duncan—smith to imprison all of china oh so.
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welcome back to headline news. i'm luke pearson joining me tonight taking look through tomorrow's new are the comedians scott caputo and created a western let's start with a meal on sunday after a schoolgirl filmed apparently being propositioned a cross channel migrant or if you're guardian reader being cultural enriched by an asylum seeker liverpool millions have been rioting in sefton at a police van and they are so they didn't even nick the hubcap first. scott, you've got this one. yes, a violent riot outside a migrant hotel last night was sparked by fury over onune night was sparked by fury over online video of a schoolgirl said she was sexually harassed by 25 year old man allegedly saying at the local hostel she was by she was to a friend on her phone and the guy said something suggestive to her and
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she turned and she said, what did you say? and he repeated himself said, know, you himself and said, you know, you don't this in country. you'll don't do this in country. you'll go to jail for this. we've actually got the clip to run. and the video has been seen by 150,000 on twitter, 150,000 followers on twitter, 150,000 followers on twitter, 150,000 says witness. 150,000 times, says witness. wow, clip wow, are you gonna run that clip 7 wow, are you gonna run that clip ? how old are you ? 24. i'm 15. ? how old are you? 24. i'm 15. good that's. no, that's not good . i want to know. sorry. what you don't do this in this country. it's you go to jail . if country. it's you go to jail. if you do this a no , no. you know you do this a no, no. you know what i know . and yeah. so that's what i know. and yeah. so that's the clip . and some local the clip. and some local residents were up in arms about this and they showed up at this migrant centre and they started to make accusations and they started to pelt the police missiles and forced the police to wear protective clothing, including riot gear, shields and helmets . a total of 15 people
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helmets. a total of 15 people have so far been arrested by the merseyside police and there was a charity group . yeah, some a charity group. yeah, some members there were cornered in the, in the migrant salford kelly and they , they were kelly and they, they were cornered by right wing . thugs cornered by right wing. thugs which are thought, you know chris don't do anything like they always see you know this is race ism this is far right extremism and really just seems like there's motivate by concern for the child and concern was being done. i mean on the one hand saying they were up in arms is putting it mildly. i you say that was like police vans on fire it looks like the last days of the world. this is outrageous but having said that everybody is the is now hearing about the rotherham problem sorry rotherham problem sorry rotherham gangs. i shouldn't say problem. yeah and understand right. and understandably parents are terrified i guess. and i feel like it's sort of a straw that's going to break the camel's back, isn't it? people have already you said before that that the migrants should be housed near the guardian. journalists well, yeah, so i don't understand. like why the put the migrants and
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impoverished and vulnerable working class communities when guardian readers who massively keen massively in of cross channel migrants coming here so the everybody would be much happier if we passed a law that said if you read the guide if you to the guardian you've got to have seven albanian okay all nailed by yourself my grandfather he's said well years i think people are concerned about everyone's i think what concerns is the police then came out after this happened and said you know quote social media speculation , misinformation and speculation, misinformation and rumour can actually damage the outcome of the event . and it outcome of the event. and it seems as though the police are distancing themselves from it, saying you're to blame for being concerned, you are to blame for putting this on twitter. you were to blame for showing that actually really happened. yeah. and makes me angry because and that makes me angry because i for something i don't the victim for something occurred and is now causing a great amounts of because great amounts of anxiety because what done do is you take the what you done do is you take the power away from the investigation itself, because now believe
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now no one's going to believe the it. as you say, the outcome of it. as you say, guardian readers, going to guardian readers, are going to think police are too think that the police are too rightwing and people rightwing and the people that protest think the protest are going to think the other round. no, there's no other way round. no, there's no going to be any common ground there. conversation. and there. no conversation. and we've and again, we've seen this and again, over and to decades of grooming and over to decades of grooming gangs think gangs from rotherham to i think telford recent one telford was the most recent one where authorities and police where and authorities and police prevaricate say, no, prevaricate and they say, oh no, but you know, we've but it's not, you know, we've got we've got to tread so got to we've got to tread so carefully. anybody who carefully. and anybody who complains, social workers who raises issue gets, sent raises an issue gets, sent on diversity and diversity training and everybody's tip everybody's got to tip toe around and around around the issue. and when really it's a it's a serious issue and do ignore it. if they don't tip toe, though, look what happens. people then start the police and start pelting the police and start pelting the police and start and turn cars over start fires and turn cars over and corner this care group, a parking lot in liverpool. and suddenly threatening each other's lives . yeah, well, other's lives. yeah, well, almost. it's almost as if deaung almost. it's almost as if dealing with the issue , dealing dealing with the issue, dealing with the cross—channel would have been a good option instead of stopping . instead of stopping of stopping. instead of stopping that happening, stop . right. you that happening, stop. right. you would have. well i wonder how
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the balkans are dealing with because the balkan number of migrants in from the eastern part of you are much much, much farther greater than what's coming to the uk. yeah. and coming over to the uk. yeah. and those balkan countries tend to have quite conservative have some quite conservative political them. political parties them. so i wonder how dealing with wonder how they're dealing with this in several. in this issue in several. in sweden, for example the conservative party for conservative political party for first time in decades they've got party and got a right wing party and that's that's because of the migrant crisis sweden which had some real problems . five years, some real problems. five years, has terrible. yeah yeah, has been terrible. yeah yeah, but we are stripping from the front pages. the sunday now and we've got more allegations . far we've got more allegations. far right, extreme extremism as protesters try to stop drag queens reading stories to children. well, to be honest, the barrier to being considered a seems have come down quite a bit. i think hitler did a bit more than try and keep drag queens away from kids. there isn't. what was this one all about, tate britain carnage as protesters over drag protesters clash over drag queen storytelling . now, storytelling event. now, i didn't know i was doing this until late in the day and until quite late in the day and i there must have i thought, oh, there must have been a drop i wonder if leo
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been a drop out. i wonder if leo been a drop out. i wonder if leo been beaten, arrested in protest. it wasn't you. protest. does it wasn't you. you're here. lovely so, yeah. the museum's hired drag artist, eddie was adhd. the museum's hired drag artist, eddie was adhd . adhd? it's eddie was adhd. adhd? it's supposed to be like adhd . so he supposed to be like adhd. so he wears it in letters around her neck. right? got it . so, yeah, neck. right? got it. so, yeah, she's been to probably the first in europe to do this. she's been to probably the first in europe to do this . it's in europe to do this. it's a little travelling museums, schools educational facilities like this one and reading stories to kids. it's, it's quite funny, it's quite , i seen quite funny, it's quite, i seen it on tv, it's quite a fun act actually. is it. yeah. yeah. what to make of it. because as you say for right protesters that phrase coming up again that phrase is coming up again i was watching something this week on the buck david podcast there a guy from are you aware of this organisation called against organisation called gays against groomers ? yeah. and was groomers? yeah. and he was saying his argument was that any teacher with a rainbow flag in their classroom was a criminal because . he said it's because. he said it's introducing sex children. and i think . what this organisation think. what this organisation are arguing is sex just shouldn't sexualise shouldn't
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appearin shouldn't sexualise shouldn't appear in lives. yeah i sounds like a novel . not not like a novel. not not sexualising child. i mean, so would you. i think a rainbow is sexuality so it's a stretch . it sexuality so it's a stretch. it sounds like good old homophobia to me that drag i mean drag queens obviously fantastic . been queens obviously fantastic. been to see loads of drag queens you know late night bars in soho no children around all adults, all drinking having a great time. i mean it doesn't the right thing to have this well this person is just heavenly sexualised because this is a hypersexual rendition of women . is it because that's of women. is it because that's the bit. i'm not sure about but you just google image her she you just google image her she you know the act . okay there is you know the act. okay there is a range of the dress that's like a range of the dress that's like a rainbow. that doesn't mean that there's sorts of that she's there's all sorts of different of drag and different kinds of drag and we're in drag right now. we're all in drag right now. you're as the person you're drag as as the person you're trying to appear as and so are you and i am and person appears in drag. it's a rainbow pantsuit. reads children's pantsuit. she reads children's stories children. so stories to children. so i watched kids get up, watched as she gets kids get up, dance active because dance very active because like it laugh not there's it they laugh it's not there's nothing sexualised about it.
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listen, like. jemmy listen, kids kids like. jemmy savile he wore coloured savile as well he wore coloured clothes. that , turned out clothes. look that, turned out i know this thing you know people are be like looking back are going be like looking back in 20 years to how could it happen. what you happen. oh well what do you mean? it was really obvious. i'm not worried about this drag queen. other in queen. there's other people in this business i worry about, but not yeah no, i'm not her, so. okay. yeah no, i'm sure. she or he or sure. i'm sure she or he or whatever the right pronoun is, is anyway, the is fantastic. anyway, the observer ian observer now and ian duncan—smith once a visiting chinese arrested over chinese politician arrested over crimes including forced labour. yes, i know it seems bad, but these jeans were so cheap. i know i my on ercan nias know i want my i'm on ercan nias is head of the region you're welcome . we're human rights have welcome. we're human rights have been alleged to have taken place and abuses include arbitrary detention , forced labour, sexual detention, forced labour, sexual violence and leo's jeans in august 2022, the un high commissioner human rights said that these abuses in province may amount to crimes against humanity. so idsa are saying if this person comes this country,
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we should arrest him first, tell him not to come and then if we do tell him he can come. we should sneak him, put should sneak in, get him, put him right. but we him jail. right. but we know lots of politicians from lots of politicians come from other countries come to the other countries and come to the uk. do. if we uk. yes, they do. and if we start anyone, anyone start arresting anyone, anyone who's country involved who's come from country involved in human rights abuses, there's not be many perhaps not going to be many perhaps addressing the are addressing some of the who are already voted for already here that we voted for wrong maybe maybe tony wrong way. maybe maybe tony blair. i mean, what do you make of this? well do not reward bad behaviour. you observe. it certainly be welcomed certainly shouldn't be welcomed . yeah, i exactly. let's clean up our own act first. i don't. i mean, it's good that we're talking about it. good pub pubuc talking about it. good pub public discussion with shed some light the problem i mean this is i mean this is the thing everybody bangs on about sleeve theory that ended 400 years ago as if it's a current and ongoing evil in the greatest evil there ever existed. but there's actually sleeves, according actually more sleeves, according to office sleeves and to the home office sleeves and the world right now than there were at the height of the transatlantic . and transatlantic slave trade. and tv's are so inexpensive they
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right it does reveal all the convenience anyway there's telegraph. no and you're more likely have your stuff nicked and labour run . but on the plus and labour run. but on the plus side, if you in a labour run area, you're more to have nothing worth nicking . alison nothing worth nicking. alison yeah, pretty much people living areas overseen by labour police and crime commissioners pccs are almost twice as , almost twice as almost twice as, almost twice as likely to be victims of robbery as those conservative areas. i mean, that's that's a massive amount, isn't it? yes. sounds shocking at first. but then of it's chicken and egg, isn't it? is the case that people who vote labour live in inner cities and people who vote for the tories, maybe live in the countryside cottage and subject to much crime of course, is what labour is saying. so i mean, you think if there's more people in inner city, those you know, because they measure the crime per so you've got more people to dilute the crimes you know it might have we watch people shoot of
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heroin in the parking lot below us and call the police not yeah we know about it but you know we've got other stuff we're working on right. can't really help you with that one. you doughnut show. it's just opened. yeah yeah. we threw flavours yeah yeah. we threw all flavours so should be even so that it should be even higher, what you're saying. higher, is what you're saying. there's crime there's even more crime happening getting happening that's getting into the there's the stuff. yeah, there's prostitution right by my building tower is a big, a big labour enclave. so i. i know these people feel , you know, these people feel, you know, what are you going to do ? i wish what are you going to do? i wish i made more money. i wish i some part of me wishes i voted conservative. but i need to be able sleep night, i'm not able to sleep night, so i'm not going do it. why wouldn't you going to do it. why wouldn't you be able to sleep before worry about other people, not just myself trust? because myself and my trust? because i think johnson be arrested think boris johnson be arrested by smith. but i have by duncan smith. but i have a problem with with worrying. i mean, i do also wonder, like i know that that murder are crimes like murder. they mentioned robbery knife and then total . robbery knife and then total. right so yeah murder is not mentioned but i don't know. i i know nothing is what we talked
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about here. they're up in london and in manchester, but it's mostly a crime by young mostly a crime driven by young white youths. really. yes white male youths. really. yes because when i worked as a criminal intelligence , that criminal intelligence, that wasn't you just wasn't a thing. you just dropped. i didn't cover say you died as i said. oh, no, those police tried it. so that wasn't the demographic. that was it. now, though, it really is. i mean, i don't know. i you read that in the guardian, and i don't entirely trust you on that. anyway, i've got bad news. part two is over, so i'd face coming off idris elba is no longer black. white vikings are problematic i'm white britain's teen obsession is killing us. i'll see you .
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soon we welcome back to headliners the now we've had gary sin is black now we've got idris elba saying he's not christian. that's right idris elba says
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he's now he's no longer calling himself black a black actor because it puts him in a box. this is i really like this story, idris says. if we spent half the time not talking about the differences, but the similarities between us, the entire planet would have a shift in the way we deal with each other. so says, although other. so he says, although racism very real, his racism is very real, his perspective it's perspective is that it's as powerful you it to. powerful as you allow it to. bravo. a wonderful message bravo. what a wonderful message . easy for me to believe in here not being an ethnic minority, but i thought was really but i thought that was really interesting. just like interesting. he's just like guys, i've heard enough of this. it was hard when. i first it was really hard when. i first started over and because started coming over and because they me a time out they always call me a time out magazine, which a gay comedian gay give you and i and my gay could give you and i and my management just management call was like, just say comedian. that way he say a comedian. that way he can reveal it when he feels like i mean, the way he likes to, you know. yeah, i wanted to be, you know, i realised the know, and then i realised the audience minute audience knew from the minute i walked stage anyway, so it walked on stage anyway, so it didn't matter. but but it is a thing we feel like just talk about something else. yeah, it's become world's become become the world's become identitarian. got identitarian. everybody's got their who
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their identity and people who don't identities then have don't have identities then have to invent identities saying that they're or have they're genderqueer or or have adhd or any one of a number of completely up things. well, also, as soon as you start going to in and saying, i always i'm cressida, who happens to be a woman, not a woman who's called chris. know, like don't chris. you know, like i don't want get for things want to get booked for things just because i'm a yeah just because i'm a woman. yeah i know that wouldn't happen to gb news, but it just undermines the whole it? if you whole thing, doesn't it? if you start at in their start looking at people in their little what their little boxes rather what their act they they are. act is, what they who they are. yeah. so good for idris. i do wish actors would just take their paycheque and waddle home. i do wish they i do i do really wish they would. lucky to be so would. he felt lucky to be so famous and so successful. so yeah. yeah you did a pretty good hand. i mean, if we're going to talk about privilege, you know, having looks at your having those looks at your resume. yeah, yeah. he kidnapped me any you want me want. me any time you want me want. anyway, the sunday times. no the latest thing that's racist . a latest thing that's racist. a scottish nursery, right? yes i wonder if people are ever going to out of things to call racist. scott other than yourself a
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nursery rhyme there are banning rhymes and reason because a nursery rhyme has been banned from a publicly funded reading scheme in scotland after fears that its historic be racist. five little monkeys has been banned by book books. a book bug sessions alongside a number of poems because the word monkey had been transferred from apparently the us in the late 19th century. the same rhyme had the n bomb in it, right? so they took the bomb out about hundred 50 years ago because that would have got banned a lot quicker. i think so. yeah, yeah. we will be talking about it here right now, but they remove little but also they remove little pebbles a counting pebbles, which is a counting rhyme because the word pebbles used to be a bee. apparently indians are referring to native americans . and i do remember we americans. and i do remember we said that in school as a kid but liked it because i thought the indians were the feathers of cute. yeah. you're not allowed to think anymore. so that's before we found it was the before we found it was bad. the always now this is all
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always bad. so now this is all in support black matter . and in support of black matter. and in support of black matter. and in november the scottish book trust asked authors who are paid to attend events to sign code of conduct which revised clauses insisting they must avoid bigotry and transphobia it said the code is 600 writers, and they protested the writers and really that this is. yes this is going to create a sort of a lack of thought and a lack of belief in free speech. and it does create a sort of censorship. chris, that would be good for them. well, presumably, if i wanted to write a poem about monkeys. tomorrow, i'd be allowed to. yeah, so it's the historic connotations , isn't it. historic connotations, isn't it. the links. i mean , i think kids the links. i mean, i think kids don't care and kids are no. yeah, i don't know. but maybe, i don't know if that's maybe being ignorant if the kids don't know. does matter. i think kids just like monkeys do cute. yeah like monkeys to do cute. yeah sure. your indian feathers sure. about your indian feathers approach . you don't like that approach. you don't like that one. do you have a go to like fancy dress? do you know if i look good with my shirt off? i certainly would if i thought i
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could get away some fringed trousers and a feather in my hair. no shirt on. i do this. i do right. and would you dress up as a fireman them? yeah why as a fireman with them? yeah why not to the sunday telegraph? no and northumbria police are being anti immigrant. but don't worry, it's against white people. so it's against white people. so it's okay. chris there you've got this one. i've got this one. viking could be connected to the far right, according to police backed order of monuments to oppressive behaviour. so northumbria police took part in a review of statues and landmarks to which sites might be associated with slavery and other forms of oppression . yeah, other forms of oppression. yeah, so i know how delighted you are about the police being funded to look into these types of issues rather than go to eliminate crime in. northumbria but like doing audit of statues to find out what viking wins a reason but to be fair even the police in this article that came out said we think this is probably waste of our resources to hold the police some former police not not the current well, not not the current ones. well, this statue. i can't take
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this is a statue. i can't take it because it's horrible. i mean, i know what that mean, i think i know what that is . vikings. that looks like two is. vikings. that looks like two vikings. you don't know vikings. if you don't know the of history vikings they of the history of vikings they came and the they did a lot came over and the they did a lot of you know pillaging and rape me stuff but we didn't have twitter so we couldn't stop it couldn't get a hashtag going and the way we had the irish more attractive though in the long run was leeds. yeah. yes. there's no lot of elderly it there's no a lot of elderly it seemed to dumfries they seemed to get dumfries but they get to the they did all that and no you know no seeing there's a link between the far right and vikings and this heritage which seems very it seems to be linking a very small proportion the population to this viking which a lot of people in the uk would have. well, this article also said apparently hitler adopted some warriors stuff from . the vikings from from from the nordic rune . so we know the used nordic rune. so we know the used the nordic cruiser willow which is the appearance of a bolt so
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hitler also used a lot of other zippers , his trousers. he wasn't zippers, his trousers. he wasn't born of zippers. and trousers. no. we walk around with a genital soles falling. i mean, this is not used in middle eastern symbol, too. that was a thousand old that he thousand years old that he purposely as. yeah, it's purposely chose as. yeah, it's a forest. they're looking blue plaques as well. it mentioned , i plaques as well. it mentioned, i always think if it's problematic it put a plaque on it meaning tell everybody what it is and what it did put plaque on it. don't go after the blue plaque. i mean that's just going after reality isn't it. yeah. or least, least give me least, at least give me reparations . yes. being a being reparations. yes. being a being a is probably my great a scot who is probably my great great great grandma was great great great grandma was probably by some of probably pillaged by some of these vikings. yeah. give me some. they afford it. these some. they can afford it. these norwegians anyway. the mail on now an nhs is suspended the nurse for speaking up in trade and seeing that being white doesn't make you racist. to be honest , doesn't make you racist. to be honest, seems doesn't make you racist. to be honest , seems the doesn't make you racist. to be honest, seems the nhs training makes you racist instead. scot, what do you of this. well, this is oddly it goes back to the tavistock trust that we talked
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about earlier with that child clinic, gallagher . she's clinic, the amy gallagher. she's a mental health nurse from orpington she's a forensic orpington. she's on a forensic psychology training to be a psychotherapist at that tavistock portman nhs trust. so when she started to question the process, she was told that she was racist, that she needed to be separated. everybody else, oh my god. there a lecture or my god. there was a lecture or dunng my god. there was a lecture or during the training quote , during the training quote, whites don't understand the world and christianity is responsible racism because it's european and a series of politically biased talks. she is that's what she's confronting . that's what she's confronting. and she was she held up her hand and she questioned this approach to training nurses. she was told that she was wrong and she was asked just kind of remove herself and they go on and this to talk about one of the patients at the clinic the tavistock mrs. bell who's injected with testosterone at 17 and had a mass check to me age 20 before detransition training and that up because amy challenged these controversial views. right and was said that she was bullied by the staff,
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suspended from the course pending an into whether she is safe to work with patients sushi questioned the ideology there operating under the critical race theory which which says that all white people racist and bad which you you don't get it if you're white you don't get the problem if you're white. and she also questioned the gender ideology that said you know we must these kids must get all these kids transition. yes so i mean, this this seems , you know, she's been this seems, you know, she's been punished asking punished for just asking questions questions. the us questions and questions. the us then. i mean, i completely support her i think we should when should we not be having debates about things? i mean, that's just ridiculous. the only thing like about is thing i don't like about this is that these phrases like that she you these phrases like it anxiety . and it caused crippling anxiety. and i don't want to hear about her. i don't want to hear about her. i want to hear that we should be debates about things. i'm not falling into that trap, as is she. she's oh, it really hurt my feelings. of mine feelings. i think some of mine that this is just you hallucinate it and heard voices and think actually and stuff but i think actually what was saying was you know what she was saying was you know i mean critical theory has been it's been a problem in well it's
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created a problem for itself in higher education institutions in the it's just a theory that the us it's just a theory that suggests that race is not biological, is not real. yeah. and it's a social construct, but race mean, it's not really a social construct. i think our interpretation of people's race is i, i think judging people because of their skin colour or how they, how they appear that is a social. it depends what you mean by social it depends what you mean by racist. but certainly seeing that whites don't understand the world would seem to contravene its own rules is of race being a sort of construction. it turns it back on them and that seems to be a deeply racist thing to do. and as as you start applying as soon as you start applying different saying, different standards and saying, oh, white people oh, but you know, white people are because know and are bad because know this and you know, you can treat white people differently because this then other people then enables other people empowers other people to be racist other direction. so racist the other direction. so it a terror, it seems like a terror, terrible, terrible idea . and, terrible, terrible idea. and, you know, blaming christianity as . well, also for the nhs as. well, and also for the nhs to be it. yeah. when
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to be money on it. yeah. when i believe there's some other issues that one of the seminars issues that one of the seminars is called whiteness a problem for our time . i know it's funny for our time. i know it's funny and that's a good name for a one person show though and including include a description on the trust website that quote the problem of racism is a problem of whiteness . now i must say , problem of racism is a problem of whiteness. now i must say , i of whiteness. now i must say, i mean, the thing is, when my father had this, you know, thing, that cotton swab up his nose and sent in the mail and we found out that we're sephardic jews from and now we're greek slash. no, we're italian no doubt greek. it says so doubt we're greek. so it says so right it really turns this right here. it really turns this world around . but the is world around. but the joke is that we're all part of everything else. yeah, yeah not the same revelation when i found out anyway, the sun . out it was. anyway, the sun. marano you drink more marano and if you drink more than cups tea a day, than 13 cups of tea a day, you're at higher risk of alzheimer's, which is doubly if you forget where the bathroom is drinking, this decreases. drinking, all this decreases. there drinking 12 there are maniacs drinking 12 pints day. i don't know. pints of day. i don't know. isn't funny that drinking a isn't it funny that drinking a lot and going alzheimer's lot of tea and going alzheimer's both happen to old people? i don't . if anyone's noticed,
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don't. if anyone's noticed, there's a link there. the chinese university hong kong chinese university of hong kong tea each extra cup tea said each extra cup significantly grade. so this actually shrinks your brain if you go over a dozen cups right which i don't think i'm planning to well it's interesting it's a bit lower down it. however, they also found 1 to 6 cups of tea a day may actually cut the risk of dementia . so that's that's dementia. so that's that's convenient. walking a tightrope trying to get the right amount of tea to not get dementia worries you. i don't require caffeine i have an inner fire but what i don't feel but i do understand that some people need it and you hear these things about coffee's good. you coffee's bad for your tea . a coffee's bad for your tea. a glass red wine every night glass of red wine every night before bed know that before you go to bed know that will kill you. i don't know. i don't know. i think. i think old people have the game already anyway. old. mean, anyway. they're old. i mean, what's next? they're what's to happen next? they're going to. yeah, yeah. i don't think journalists tend to just run releases run whatever press releases shoved of anyway. shoved in front of them anyway. is the show after
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is this part of the show after the loan? will be telling us the loan? boy will be telling us what fobbing probably what fobbing is probably going to well. so stay up to show us as well. so stay up for. we're going to find for. we're also going to find out why haner the beat probably teased a delicious an all the dangers of combining social media . i'll see media and polygamy. i'll see you in couple minutes. don't go in a couple of minutes. don't go away .
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we welcome back to your saturday headliners, the daily star . headliners, the daily star. sunday has a new word . i haven't sunday has a new word. i haven't memorised all the old ones yet. this is to do with dating scott . it's called flooding . farming . it's called flooding. farming is it's shifting a lot of people but it's pretty i mean when you are on a date somebody and it's going pretty well and your phone fings going pretty well and your phone rings and you look down, you get engagedin rings and you look down, you get engaged in the phone and give up on the date for a minute your phone snubbing or fading because you're more interested in interested in your friends
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gossip then this person you want to bang later that's going so instead of banging your subject maybe you looking at the next person you want to bang up, maybe that's what always maybe that's what we're always shopping. there's always going. so hotter so there's always a hotter kettle around corner. kettle around the corner. i mean, know i'm glad i didn't mean, you know i'm glad i didn't have a phone when i dating because i would have been much more frenetic i really was more frenetic than i really was . well, in fact, seems . yeah, well, in fact, it seems to change in dating with to led to change in dating with every so would they it non non something monogamous . oh they something monogamous. oh they call it ethical. ethical no no which i think is ethical nonsense. hi guys. i'm an ethical non monogamist. oh, that's convenient . ethical non monogamist. oh, that's convenient. is ethical non monogamist. oh, that's convenient . is that that's convenient. is that understanding between you. i think it means one person's very unhappy. think it means one person's very unhappy . oh, think it means one person's very unhappy. oh, i assume. i don't know . would, i wouldn't touch it know. would, i wouldn't touch it with a ten foot pole. right. i have definitely a furber. before i didn't know was a word for it. i didn't know was a word for it. iused i didn't know was a word for it. i used to go out with a something else. i'm sure i go to many things. a guy who's is an engineer and they machines to
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women at the best of times seven and he just laughed his work and he'd be out like let's go and a dnnk he'd be out like let's go and a drink and now he'd be in the phone somebody's engines failing i got to think about okay it really is failing his really wells is failing his engine this flashlight engine this was a flashlight with a come in on it you can on any with the sunday telegraph now with valentine's day coming up should all watch out for romance freud. chris this is so sad surge and romantic fraud sees 316 million taken from victims . so this is i mean, victims. so this is i mean, i watch a lot of dr. phil. are you a dr. phil fan? he's just left the screen today. he's just retired . hardly. i'm not that retired. hardly. i'm not that big a fan . so sad. i feel so big a fan. so sad. i feel so sorry. okay. well, he covers this a lot. so this is when people end up getting catfished the tune of sometimes like well clearly extortionate amounts . clearly extortionate amounts. money so romance fraud involves victims being deceived into relationships by online scammers and that's what's so sad about
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this this me watching dr. phil it's always the people who are desperately vulnerable because they're vulnerable they're the need for human connection means they can't judge the situation and you've got these situations where family are saying where all the family are saying grandma 24. you grandma he's saying he's 24. you know, don't send him $100,000. and she's like, he loves . and i and she's like, he loves. and i just breaks my heart sad. so just it breaks my heart sad. so bnng just it breaks my heart sad. so bring back real data bring back speed dating , even even though speed dating, even even though that's awful. but at least you get a sense of the person and you get along the speed with two. what i like about article is at the end the final paragraph home office spokesman says have also paragraph home office spokesman says we have als 0 £400 million says we have also £400 million over the next three years to bolster law enforcement's to fraud, economic crime . and fraud, economic crime. and i think just back the think why just pay back the people lost 360 million but people that lost 360 million but that's 1 million. you never know . they can fund it by doing their own romance fraud. star no . and an aussie has three wives. how does he deal with . three how does he deal with. three lots of nagging he's he's only he's going to be treated well tonight when you get home but he's he's only a 48 year old man
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and he's been married three times the first two did not end in divorce he just left those women right and he 2000 miles that you could do in australia the to work he met the commute to work and he met else perth married her and else in perth married her and then tell her about then forgot to tell her about then forgot to tell her about the other two and he and authorities in australia have told him that his current is not legal . he could face five years legal. he could face five years in prison for polygamy, so he's still married to those women, of course. yeah, he's lazy. it doesn't do out the course, but on the other hand, he sounds like quite a romantic man. yeah, i. it's too to play. he didn't want to pay, you know. he did want to pay, you know. he did want to pay them off, you know really, like, take and celebrations. yeah. i don't know. yeah think so on comic con , this makes me sound like a right but not that right loser, but it's not that uncommon to gentlemen who. right loser, but it's not that uncyi'mfon to gentlemen who. right loser, but it's not that uncyi'm separated gentlemen who. right loser, but it's not that uncyi'm separated okay. tlemen who. right loser, but it's not that uncyi'm separated okay. henen who. right loser, but it's not that uncyi'm separated okay. he keptvho. oh, i'm separated okay. he kept busy with that. yeah i can. i can totally see how this would happen do you think it's definitely cynical i mean, i think think he's kind of sweet.
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i think what's what's nice about him is that he had in own mind moved on. he wasn't contacting these women anymore. he was bothering he's going bothering them. he's not going back for sunday. oh, he got so to speak. he's i mean, maybe he is, but we don't know. but he's not, you know advantage not, you know taking advantage of at the same time of other women at the same time he's. yeah. which is what i assumed i read that. and 20 assumed when i read that. and 20 years would have probably years ago he would have probably away it. but social media away with it. but social media has other things. yeah. feckless man. but for any who man. yeah. but for any man who wants family wants to abandon his family for a of milk, come back. this a pint of milk, come back. this quy's a pint of milk, come back. this guy's three phones. guy's got three phones. probably. a nightmare for probably. it's a nightmare for any the to know and more any of the men to know and more protest time with protest this time kids with irritable irritable syndrome but it's just it's a school has faced backlash for installing barriers outside toilets meaning children can only use them at break and lunch times . the break and lunch times. the issues of periods conditions and the potential impact of unpredictable upset stomachs have all been raised. so it doesn't exactly say why they did this, but the assumption is kids will just go in and tossing about and having a. yeah. so it's stoke on trent. so there's
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a cross and they had put up a gate. not just. yeah they had to put up a gate and lock the doors. so the teen pregnancy is a nightmare though , so it's a a nightmare though, so it's a blue light. know the elbow blue light. so i know the elbow so and mother called and said, how dare you , i'm removing my how dare you, i'm removing my child school . and the child from school. and the school said, why it be? school said, why should it be? because so get her of because i said so get her out of there and you know, my child has this problem and this issue and that problem and now can take care of them. now they can take care of them. yeah, it's another one. it's getting bit mumsnet is, it's getting a bit mumsnet is, it's hard girl that hard enough being a girl that age mind bleeding through hard enough being a girl that age of mind bleeding through hard enough being a girl that age of your nd bleeding through hard enough being a girl that age of your whole eding through hard enough being a girl that age of your whole class. through hard enough being a girl that age of your whole class. i'm ugh front of your whole class. i'm not daughter . front of your whole class. i'm not daughter. i'm not having my daughter. i'm like, yeah. margaret, calm. not having my daughter. i'm liwould yeah. margaret, calm. not having my daughter. i'm liwould just h. margaret, calm. not having my daughter. i'm liwould just agree'garet, calm. not having my daughter. i'm liwould just agree people alm. not having my daughter. i'm liwould just agree people .lm. not having my daughter. i'm liwould just agree people . need i would just agree people. need toilets. yes, it's ridiculous. and only indoor plumbing and only had indoor plumbing is still like ten still going to try for like ten years well , that's all years right well, that's all for tonight's but let's take tonight's show. but let's take another look at sunday's another quick look at sunday's front the sunday times chairman front. the sunday times chairman has undermined trust in the bbc. the sunday telegraph has british weapons could be made in ukraine. the sunday mirror says, i did on vanessa again and again. essentially that
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australian guy, the sunday express james bulger killer must die in prison says brother the daily star on sunday says the funeral monty you can leave socks on. that's for all tonight's show. thanks to scott caputo and christopher werth and hard liners will be back tomorrow at 11 with stephen allen, lewis schaefer and, simon fanshawe. and remember that if you watch five m repeat stay tuned for the breakfast. see you later .
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join me camilla tominey at 930 on sunday morning when i'll be speaking. simon mayo, former deputy chief of defence staff, about president zelenskyy's demand for british fighter jets. i'll also be asking mp tobias ellwood, chair of the defence select committee , whether the uk select committee, whether the uk is spending enough on defence. all that and more at 930 tomorrow .
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all that and more at 930 tomorrow. i'm all that and more at 930 tomorrow . i'm michelle dewberry tomorrow. i'm michelle dewberry and you can join me every week. six till seven on dewbs& co you're an inspiration to us all. click that bell. you are . my click that bell. you are. my political ambitions are those daysi go political ambitions are those days i go on my shafee elsheikh only tees ankle is probably in a while. i'll lay down now. i'll get him. well well, respectfully disagree. that's we like i'm dewbs& co come and join us gb news the channel. michelle dewberry. weeks, evenings . 6:00 dewberry. weeks, evenings. 6:00 simon evans . join me on gb news simon evans. join me on gb news for headliners at 11 pm. what's the scoop? i'll be by two of the country's top comedians. the scoop? i'll be by two of the country's top comedians . yes, country's top comedians. yes, right. as we take a look at tomorrow's newspapers. tonight just into trouble if it's a big story, be covering it. spill some tea him. there will also some tea him. there will also some fun. i wouldn't stick up a bank. i like father didn't love me so anyway. headliners every night from 11 on gb news the
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