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tv   Nana Akua  GB News  February 25, 2023 4:00pm-6:00pm GMT

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right now . this show headlines right now. this show is all about opinion. headlines right now. this show is all about opinion . it's what is all about opinion. it's what it says. and of course, it's yours we'll be debating, discussing at times. we will disagree, but no one will be cancelled . so joining me today cancelled. so joining me today is broadcaster and columnist lizzie cundy , also former labour lizzie cundy, also former labour mp steven pound . before we get mp steven pound. before we get started let's get your latest news headlines . good afternoon. news headlines. good afternoon. it's woman it past four. here's the latest from the gb newsroom islands. taoiseach leo varadkar says a deal on the ireland protocol could be made the next few days, but there's still a gap to be closed in negotiations . it comes as the prime minister criticism after proposed paying a meeting between king charles and the president of the european commission, ursula von der leyen , was due to continue der leyen, was due to continue talks with rishi sunak in person before meeting the king, but her trip was cancelled . labour says trip was cancelled. labour says it would have had implications .
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it would have had implications. speaking exclusively to gavin , speaking exclusively to gavin, the foreign secretary, james cleverly said the government was looking for cross—community support for the any protocol deal support for the any protocol deal. we remain on the outcome rather than the method and the outcome is to protect northern ireland's place in the united kingdom to make sure that people and businesses and the political representatives of those people in northern ireland are comfortable with the resolution, whilst also making sure that we protect the uk internal market. those are very much motivations. that's will drive actions . that's what will drive actions. most members of the g 20 have condemned the war in ukraine with a joint except for china russia, who both refused to . russia, who both refused to. finance chiefs in the world's two largest economies have been meeting in india and issued a closing statement at the end of the summit . it comes as the summit. it comes as ukraine's president says plans to meet china's zijin ping after beijing set out peace plan for the war between and russia. for
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a lot of , me, zelenskyy told a lot of, me, zelenskyy told a news conference in it would be beneficial both countries and for security around the world. ludo motty show new shoot on. it's correct to think that there are already thoughts that somehow correspond to respect for international law, territorial integrity and some security issues . i believe we security issues. i believe we should use this and work with china on this matter. why not.7 i want to believe that china will be on the side of a fair peace, which means on our side. this is very important to me. i really want to believe that china will not supply weapons to russia . not supply weapons to russia. the number of people who've been killed in, the earthquakes that have hit turkey, syria have now surpassed 50,000. the united nafions surpassed 50,000. the united nations estimates that the destruction has left 1.5 million people homeless with 500,000 new homes needed. president has pledged to rebuild homes within the year, but experts warning authorities to put safety before speed to ensure new buildings
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can withstand tremors . while can withstand tremors. while a 3.7 magnitude earthquake was in south wales last night. the british geological survey says it hit britain more near crickhowell just before midnight with the tremor felt as far away cardiff. residents on social have described being woken up to their whole house shaking . their whole house shaking. hundreds have gathered and county tyrone to demand an end to violence in northern ireland after the attempted murder of an duty policeman. detective inspector john caldwell was shot outside a sports centre wednesday. he remains in critical condition. the local club where mr. caldwell is a volunteer, have also gathered in solidarity. five suspects have been arrested and detectives say the incident is being treated as terror related . with the new terror related. with the new ira, the main line of inquiry , ira, the main line of inquiry, the defence says he's confident
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that. the defence says he's confident that . th e £5.5 the defence says he's confident that. th e £5.5 billion programme that. the £5.5 billion programme to build new army has turned a corner . the project to build corner. the project to build near nearly 600 ajax fighting has faced criticism over severe delays and technical issues . delays and technical issues. after nearly 13 years, it's yet to deploy a single tank. and wallace soldiers are now being trained in to use them and hopes they'll active in the military within next two years. when i took over as secretary of defence three and a half years ago this was a troubled programme. it started its life in march 2010 and i was determined that we were either going to fix this or have to find alternatives. and so we put a lot of effort into it, worked with general dynamics, the prime contractor and the army and contractor and with the army and i think i think after its use of trials that it completed at christmas it started christmas time, it started to turn corner and thousands of turn a corner and thousands of displaced ukrainians are being given the chance to go to . the given the chance to go to. the eurovision song contest may. around 3000 tickets will be made
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available to those who are currently living in the uk. liverpool has been chosen to host behalf of ukraine who won last.7 the government has announced last.7 the government has announce d £10 million in funding announced £10 million in funding to make sure that. the event showcases ukrainian culture. this is gb news. we'll bring you more as happens. and let's get back to nana . back to nana. good afternoon. it is fast approaching minutes after 4:00. this is gb news on tv online and on digital radio. i'm a square. if they thought the regulated british press were bad, the duke and duchess have gone to sea to say nothing because the american press and media are a whole lot worse . they don't have ofcom , worse. they don't have ofcom, who would have no doubt questioned that netflix trailer. that's great. when the us press
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are on your side, but unfortunately for the pair, spare or should i say where was on.7 i'm afraid the straw that broke the camel's back. south park did not hold . we are a park did not hold. we are a proud to have as a basic human right . how many more princess right. how many more princess and wife have to live at his nightmare .7 that was like the nightmare? that was like the bulls hitting me. was it? harry and meghan have been mocked all around the world, courtesy of south park's world while privacy, to which two characters with a striking to the couple. i'm afraid it would be hard for any business person to look the two of them in the eye without the south park parody in the and laugh in their faces. i mean, it is frankly hilarious . meghan, it is frankly hilarious. meghan, it was reported, was upset, although representative for them denied they were considering a lawsuit against south park creators trey parker and matt stone calling the speculation
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nonsense . and in the latest poll nonsense. and in the latest poll conducted for newsweek in the states, it showed that since then south park take down meghan and harry's popularity has sunk even lower than that of prince andrew. he's right, trying to make ourselves into a brand, just trying to send product. we don't need to be brand doing if it's truly what we want , then we it's truly what we want, then we really can get away from it all. no more magazines and netflix shows. we really can live a normal life life . yes, i'm sure normal life life. yes, i'm sure you agree, darling we can be the people we talked about . you agree, darling we can be the people we talked about. being with normal worries about we look or the image we project to people. what matters is we have on the inside. people. what matters is we have on the inside . hello . on the inside. hello. get away with that . you see. by all means with that. you see. by all means walk away from a life of privilege and untold comfort riches. privilege and untold comfort fiches.to privilege and untold comfort riches. to carve up your own niche. the principle itself is
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admirable , but if carving your admirable, but if carving your own nation , both destroying the own nation, both destroying the thing that gave you life , made thing that gave you life, made you credible, your family be prepared to lose everything . prepared to lose everything. it's simple, really. in my view, the vast majority of people are intrinsically good. regardless of who or what they stand for , of who or what they stand for, irrespective of whether they believe in a monarchy or not. must people don't like to see cashing in on treachery , cashing in on treachery, treachery laced with arrogance , treachery laced with arrogance, victimhood. as far as i can see, they sold everything now, including their integrity. i mean, what's. harry is now resorting whingeing via livestream , which you can pay livestream, which you can pay for the privilege to hear and submit to question because , even submit to question because, even chucking in a copy of talk about scraping the barrel . it's all scraping the barrel. it's all over for the duke and duchess of montecito. once you destroyed your intrinsic value, what remains is worthless. there's simply nothing left . so before
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simply nothing left. so before we get stuck into the debate, here's else is coming up today for the british debate this houn for the british debate this hour. i'm asking is net zero to blame for food shortages now supermarket shelves are empty as shortages of fruit veg have been affecting major shopping chains . and this comes as the government continue push that the net zero agenda further now farmers are now only able to access government funding if they reach high end rental standards. most of the detriment of food producers . others have of food producers. others have been the shortages , the lack of been the shortages, the lack of food security on brexit will go with the green or the greens . with the green or the greens. the net for 50 april round up time. royal biographer levin will be in the studio to give us.the will be in the studio to give us. the latest from behind palace walls. a new poll which i mentioned earlier has that prince harry and meghan's popularity promising popularity has tanked, promising lower andrew's. this lower prince andrew's. now this comes . you saw the release of comes. you saw the release of the pilot episode that mocks the couple over the need for privacy and. stay tuned. but finally, it's this week's difficult.
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social media influencer only london will be in studio live to tell me all about his journey about struggles with self identity that eventually led him to detransition back to a man . to detransition back to a man. after spending six months as a transgender female , you'll be transgender female, you'll be live in the studio to challenge the very core of the work gender ideology, ideology, movement . ideology, ideology, movement. all that's on the way in the next hour. tell me what you think when everything think is when everything we're discussing. email gbviews@gbnews.uk tweet at gbviews@gbnews.uk or tweet me at gbviews@gbnews.uk or tweet me at gb news news . gbviews@gbnews.uk or tweet me at gb news news. right. let's started. let's welcome again to my panel and columnist lizzie cundy. my panel and columnist lizzie cundy . i'd my panel and columnist lizzie cundy. i'd also mp, former labour mp stephen pound. welcome, stephen. behave yourself . stephen rose between yourself. stephen rose between two thoughts. most come to in the monologue. just so you absolutely exactly what. what did you have for breakfast? did have the collins dictionary because you haven't stopped talking since say oh no no, no.
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but what my dad always used to have a bit of whisky on his porridge. used to say say the breakfast. oh no i just haven't got it as it's. let me pass, so. no, no, i just i can't believe l, no, no, i just i can't believe i, where i am today? i mean, who would have thought that one day that you guys achieved the heights here? dreams do come heights of here? dreams do come the other day, weren't you? yeah i know, but i'm a champion and thinker. what do you think? then let's start with lizzie. because lizzie is actually make the mark before. i mean, would i. i laughed out loud before that because america have lost interest well, i said interest as. well. well, i said this last week. did. they this last week. did. and they have lost not just here, but over the pond as well. they total li underestimated how we failed, how low we are to the royal family just not in this country, but over where they have to. my kids. and slowly they are popularity is going down the toilet and don't sweat to andrew do you know what the mood is like then you would have
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thought it was a fairly low bar . well, it is, but it really is. and i'm sorry , all the whingeing and i'm sorry, all the whingeing and moaning and trashing the royal family has now come to bite them in. the bottom of this, i think, don't sweat it, andrew is one of the great lines. well done. but i think you would like to get actually, i think is that. yes she what she did. yes. yeah you know, you can monetise misery only satisfy you can monetise grievance only so but i think you actually so far but i think you actually put your finger on the difference between the rapacious american press and rather more innate going to oprah winfrey. no, no , she didn't. she's not no, no, she didn't. she's not going to let them back on, especially because she's almost embarrassed oprah by going, well, welcome, harry. but what what nouveau will protect what racism nouveau will protect me, harry. protect but i mean, fair play to south park i'm i thought they're pretty good but they got isaac hayes to sing to do the voice. it was do the voice. well it was hilarious. i mean , that's we hilarious. i mean, that's how we all feel . it was like looked all feel. it was like looked inside it there was nothing there because. this is what they
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want. they said they wanted privacy, every privacy, yet they do every interview possible going she's on every front cover. the bleating and moaning and moaning when we really you know look at what's on in this country at the minute people fleeing from minute people are fleeing from the ukraine you know, really we supposed feel sorry them. supposed to feel sorry them. i think there's don't know anyone that actually does anymore and i think that time has come they really do you think they're going do because i mean going to do because i mean harry's got and i've just seen it on tv news literally just came about half hour ago came in about a half an hour ago that is going to doing that harry is going to be doing sort another witness on sort of another witness on livestream couple days livestream in a couple of days time. well, talk a little bit about book and talk about his loss that and then loss and this and that and then he's going mean, look, he's going to i mean, look, whether if a kind of whether if there's a kind of a precedent here, i mean, you know, the duke of windsor and wallis simpson, i there's wallis simpson, i mean, there's a think a number, you know, think obviously you remember obviously none of you remember the way the 1930s. the going way back to the 1930s. and of windsor and when duke of windsor abdicated the throne. we're not. and they found him a nice little niche, i think, as governor of bermuda lovely bermuda yeah we just lovely we're wouldn't want to be we're not we wouldn't want to be
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governor his case it governor bermuda in his case it could south georgia . i don't could be south georgia. i don't even think that i the governor of the falkland islands . well, of the falkland islands. well, maybe because i don't that the americans i'm to tolerate any more. it was it was the gaslighting. yeah with the racist the racism card they did gaslight because if somebody is judging based on the colour of your skin or decision is made because somebody's skin out on how dark someone's skin is , that how dark someone's skin is, that is the very description of a level of racism . so to then say level of racism. so to then say nobody said racism, their lifestyle was incredibly expensive . they don't have the expensive. they don't have the level security . they're over level of security. they're over there. and this is the case of having, you know, wanting to have sponge and have your victoria sponge and eating what they're eating it. that's what they're saying they want saying is they do not want to be part of the family in this country. want country. they don't want to contribute, don't do all the work that princess prince work that princess diana, prince eric but you know, eric presented. but you know, the kent and everybody the duke of kent and everybody does. hand, you does. but on the other hand, you know, want all the know, they want all the benefits. that hypocrisy benefits. yeah, that hypocrisy is so sad is brief. but what's so sad about they could have been about this? they could have been it could been so much different. brilliant idea. well, yes. and
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when meghan first came on the scene, know, i thought she scene, you know, i thought she was the new princess was going to be the new princess diana. mean, she was welcome press she had well, press loved her. she had well, she had more positive than kate in the beginning and look how it's ended and is her own doing i mean it's they they just couldn't find out identity they just had keep moaning and groaning selling the royal family down the stairs if they dare to bring out the race card. yes. some people are racist. yes. some people are racist. yes. but that's has hindered her because she's married to a prince. it lost the second in line to the throne. and then obviously william had all the children. so he's now what, or seven or whatever it is. but she married somebody who is at the top of his society in this country , there can be literally country, there can be literally no one higher apart because she goes to the king. awesome. so to even that, my race has been even that, oh, my race has been terrible for me. like, no, terrible for me. it's like, no, no, is racism. give it to no, that is racism. give it to me. oh i think that i don't think i was i don't mind that. and i think oprah will be cross with because she was with her because she was
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thinking getting thinking she's getting the scoop and actually, you know, who is this racist that was not this racist that there was not there wasn't i think it's there wasn't not. i think it's not fair. and i have to say what harry's done these actually like petula link child but he's actually put his family in danger talking about the five danger by talking about the five taliban. if he comes to the taliban. and if he comes to the coronation. they will be coronation. they will be coronation of king charles i he hasn't made his mind up whether he's coming yet or no leaving them hanging. but seriously, he's whole royal he's putting the whole royal family jeopardy . probably family in jeopardy. probably she's a pawn shop his she's like a pawn shop with his pal chido. i mean, i'm expecting to sent to get the have the sent a candles. so, you know, that's how know . put on that note to how i know. put on that note to her sorry you're with me. i'm not her equivalent. this gb news on tv and on digital radio. you probably what scented candle he's talking about. probably what scented candle he's talking about . we move on he's talking about. we move on how the scent came from you started it i told you be british to debate this i'm asking you is net zero to blame for food shortages now supermarket shelves and in many cases are emptying of the contents fruit and vegetable and. this comes as
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there's been poor production which being caused by the government's limiting financial support. they to farmers. if they fail to reach radical mostly high environmental targets all of this in its pursuit net zero. so stay tuned for that and up 50 it's all round up time royal biographer and 11 was was all things and harry send me your thoughts as even harry send me your thoughts as ever. email gbviews@gbnews.uk or tell me what you think. you should also tweet at gb news. i've got a pull right now. asking is net zero to blame the supermarket shortages? cast your vote now . do not go anywhere. vote now. do not go anywhere. you probably seen politicians interviewed a thousand times. but we do differently. we find out who they really . we don't out who they really. we don't shout. we chaps . and hopefully shout. we chaps. and hopefully we bring a bit of light, not just heat. did you think it was apparently . do you have a just heat. did you think it was apparently. do you have a pair ofjeans apparently. do you have a pair of jeans or. did what would i do with them? friends what? oh, my god. what's she doing now ? join god. what's she doing now? join me every sunday at. six for gloria meets only on gb news. the people's channel. britain's
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news .
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well, it is faster. well, it is faster . 21 minutes well, it is faster. 21 minutes after 4:00 if you just join me. where you been? no monologue emails for harry and meghan. thatis emails for harry and meghan. that is the shape of things. come well done, people. right on a live on tv, online a quick where live on tv, online and on digital. right it's now time for the great british debate this hour asking is net zero to blame for supermarket shortages . now supermarkets like shortages. now supermarkets like asda morrisons they've been rationing fruit and veg are placing limits on the number of cucumbers, lettuce and tomatoes that people can buy. now, the reason for this, while poor harvests in spain and north africa, due to cold weather and also a farming crisis in this country which is caused by high energy which led to lack energy, which have led to lack of fresh produce plus , since the of fresh produce plus, since the uk left the eu, the department
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for environment, uk left the eu, the department for environment , food uk left the eu, the department for environment, food and rural affairs , otherwise known as affairs, otherwise known as defra, has the eu's common agricultural policy with the environment, land management scheme, and the new scheme gives some financial incentives on conditions that they adopt. higher environmental sustainability standards in line with the net zero green agenda . with the net zero green agenda. so the high standards include things like the preservation of trees, shrubs and wildlife, which is all very laudable but to the detriment of encouraging the production of food. however blamed brexit by and this is despite the significant proportion of the uk's fresh produce coming from morocco and non eu member. so what do you think of the great debate this hour? i'm asking is net zero to blame the supermarket shortages? well joining me now is senior meteorologist at british services, jim dale . lois parry, services, jim dale. lois parry, director of call 26, landowner and columnist jamie blackett and and columnist jamie blackett and a former labour minister for europe, macshane. i'll start with you, jamie, because jamie,
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it was your article in the telegraph that sort of prompted me to ask this question, because you . that actually net zero you sent. that actually net zero had lot to blame for this. why had a lot to blame for this. why did you think that ? yeah. well did you think that? yeah. well think it's a combination of things. i mean , the first thing things. i mean, the first thing obviously is the cold in a not not hot weather. you'll note down in southern spain and north africa , we get a lot of our africa, we get a lot of our vegetables. but you know, we should be growing a lot more of our own fruit and veg in this country. it is quite possible actually with the new technology hydroponics and that kind of thing to grow tomatoes and things. it'sjust thing to grow tomatoes and things. it's just british farmers haven't really had the confidence to invest in glasshouse and that kind of thing. we've we've outsourced that sort of production really to the dutch of start of the march on us on the spanish because defra the green blob in defra they really believe in
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food production you know that we are wedded this model of relying being able to buy food from anywhere else in the world and surprise you know this we've been out is partly our imperial cost we need to if you like decolonise food strategy and concentrate more growing it at home rather than being able to buy it in anywhere else. and yes, you're right, buy it in anywhere else. and yes, you're right , the civil yes, you're right, the civil servants really give the impression, anyway, that they would like farmers to do almost anything other than grow food on their land. so are a lot of, you know, mixed messages. and if you're sitting here as farmer wondering whether you're going to go and borrow hundreds of thousands of pounds to invest in upscaling your production or diversifying into growing new things , you're not really things, you're not really getting the right from
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government and is partly to do with with net zero and this this obsession with trying to save the world in one country and planting trees on on land that otherwise be growing food or putting solar panels prime arable land that could be growing food . well, let's. i do growing food. well, let's. i do want . to bring tim in. tim. tim want. to bring tim in. tim. tim says , let me just bring tim in. says, let me just bring tim in. you're just he's saying that they're using a lot that arable land to put solar on there. you've got to get wind farms there. in fact, these things could actually be used for. growing instead just growing food instead of just importing from places. net importing from other places. net zero is not reason for deficiencies . the uk market at . deficiencies. the uk market at. all. net zero is an evolution not a revolution. it's slow slow fuse if you like . so this has fuse if you like. so this has happenedin fuse if you like. so this has happened in in quick quick time . what has happened in morocco and spain. yeah there's been some bad weather around but
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you've got to think to yourself can you come the tomatoes raspberries that of these these crops are grown under cover and not exposed to. the weather per say there has been bad weather, but it's tended to be away from the these big agricultural areas. so if there is a deficiency , what it's showing up deficiency, what it's showing up is the logistics in terms of those things. if a if wagon driver wants to take their produce from, say, southern spain to wherever it's going to 90, spain to wherever it's going to go, they're going to choose countries are a lot closer rather than having to go through the red tape that has now arrived with brexit and other elements of this rather than go the uk. so in way it's an amalgamation things and it only starts with with the weather per se but only in a very small way . but if these incentives weren't there and they sort of building solar panels and like that, we could go stuff on our own land. lowest yeah. i mean, it's just highlights the fact that we need to be energy independent and food
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independent. know, it's independent. you know, it's completely disingenuous saying this about tape. may this about red tape. it may because so much in fuel because it costs so much in fuel , stuff be transported . , this stuff to be transported. but, you know, if we were actually producing our own energy producing our own energy and producing our own food, this wouldn't be happening until net zero is an ideal. it isn't a creeping slow thing. like you just said it's actually a in rate thing that a revolution in rate thing that wants to completely annihilate what most of us take for granted as a way of life. but you're right, be growing food right, we could be growing food in country if the energy in this country if the energy pnces in this country if the energy prices weren't so high. just wanted to make one quick point that i think one of the reasons that i think one of the reasons that were not allowed to that we were not allowed to frack cuadrilla over frack is because cuadrilla over 0.5 richter scale this 0.5 on the richter scale this morning wales was an morning in wales there was an earthquake , a 3.7 didn't cause earthquake, a 3.7 didn't cause that much damage. that's 3000 times stronger in terms of energy impact than what the fracking was allowed or not allowed to do it. that was the reason they used was not having our own energy is absolutely ridiculous what could have done is mcshane or sykes. i didn't bnngin
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is mcshane or sykes. i didn't bring in with me were lovely to i wanted to show the studio which showed all the country keys of europe where you can buy cucumbers raspberries without any problem at all. those in one southern was net zero ones left wing ones right wing ones and the one country where we're imposing second world war type food rationing is our beloved . i food rationing is our beloved. i like turnips . i was with theresa like turnips. i was with theresa coffee when said let them eat turnips. that's why we voted brexit. what do you need ? it was brexit. what do you need? it was to have more turnips than the british diet. but seriously , the british diet. but seriously, the problem is if you're a dutch lorry driver, which brings a lot and other stuff to here, it cheaper and quicker to drive all the way to portugal to navigate the way to portugal to navigate the brexit it delays this can i say you just highlighted the fact that we've been reliant too heavily on our european partners and because we've been doing that within the eu and transporting things. well some of things we can grow in of these things we can grow in this country the problem when
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this country the problem is when no one asks where sacrifice a lot for and lot of land for the and incentives what they really think where are think it's think about where are we're in the middle of winter it's not been yeah we are december we're the 12th and the trondheim come down that was a difficulty but producers in this country are not turning their energy on the cost reasons. energy on for the cost reasons. do because of renewables. do it because of renewables. because renewables much because renewables so much thing to it, it's completely to do with it, it's completely of renewables because we're making grid intermittent by making our grid intermittent by having to these having to rely on these renewable energies by law. and so therefore we're pushing the price of all of all of our fuel, whether it's gas , everything is whether it's gas, everything is going up because this renewable sky, it really to do with net zero. the telegraph journalist is absolutely right across . the is absolutely right across. the board it really is. well, other countries have net zero much tougher stricter this they still got tomatoes in their well they might be hot in estonia. got tomatoes in their well they might be hot in estonia . yeah might be hot in estonia. yeah but that's i think partly the reason why we have lack of that is we have been relying on these countries to so much. i want to
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come back to jim. yeah jim, look, i mean , you know, you're look, i mean, you know, you're talking about the weather. it would be better if it was warmer . we would . i'll say we haven't . we would. i'll say we haven't had any warming for ten years. i'm just going forward and it's a bit of a weather forecast, if you like. we've been looking at this cold weather coming in. it's going actually into it's going to actually into europe ourselves. so europe rather than ourselves. so that's where the cold weather is going the next going to go in the next fortnight, we're on the fortnight, too. so we're on the fringes of it, never going to be paradise. look let's make it clear where at this clear where we are at this moment time. the major the moment in time. the major the major problem we've got going forward droughts of forward is actually droughts of the areas, the south eastern areas, particularly no particularly eastern east, no rain. so that's to to rain. so that's going to be to say, know why that is say, you know why that is because these because we've invested in these water companies are water companies that are actually elsewhere. we've built more could have more reservoirs. we could have caught loads that rain that's going i want to have a chat going to i want to have a chat with blackett. i mean, with jamie blackett. i mean, look, you've the look, you this you've heard the argument actually it's argument say that actually it's more do with brexit. is there more to do with brexit. is there any level of that that might be true? because in view, true? because in my view, i think actually the fact we were in the eu made us lazy. i'm
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well, i don't think you can really blame brexit too much for this. i mean, i've actually been following this a bit on social media. there are shortages in some other countries as well , some other countries as well, and i think where brexit i think has been a bit of an issue for us farmers is labour and obviously the fruit and veg is very very labour dependent . and very very labour dependent. and i think that has been a problem. i think that has been a problem. i don't think it's necessary. brexit say it's just the that the politicians have not the opportunities of brexit the rather held back the sector by not doing the necessary things to provide with the labour either either you know of getting people off benefits into work or or allowing us to use unskilled foreign labour. i mean, you know what, whatever way you go about it, we are short of labour. i'm a i'm a dairy farmer. it's getting increasingly difficult to find
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people to , the milk cows. so people to, the milk cows. so we're not in that sense i think brexit or at least the interpretation of the way the way the way that it's all been handled has not been helpful. well, i'm going to give dennis miller in 20 seconds on this, because he didn't do. okay. for full form books . look, look, full form books. look, look, you're not going get the average engush you're not going get the average english working out at 4:00 in the morning in a lincolnshire field, pulling out leaks in february. has it happened for 100, 200 years? we had access to that giant european market pool of people, but not all that. so is it a phobia ? what if you get is it a phobia? what if you get aged? the wages they would require so people up are too good to do it. and the other people. i'm slightly european, they ask me if it's true . not so they ask me if it's true. not so thought. you know what? also the fact that we have relied on this european cheap labour and been drunk the labour so
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drunk on the cheap labour so which undercutting british which is undercutting british workforce the british workforce has meant the british people do it people aren't going to do it because not going to be because it's not going to be worth while soon because they can't afford to live on the wages, the eu wages, because were in the eu and the could use double wages. double currently an old double wages currently an old british workforce and they're young they're all under 25 they're all very committed people and so , i mean, there are people and so, i mean, there are young people out who work for labour culture would be a very future, but maybe the education system isn't selling it in the way that they should? well, there go. thank you very much. thank you so that's with us, meteorologist and british weather services jim dale. lois parry, director of 26th london, and columnist jamie blackett, and columnist jamie blackett, and also dennis mcshane , former and also dennis mcshane, former labour minister for europe. well, you're with me. i'm not a quitter. this is gb news went live on tv online and on digital radio. after the break. will continue with that great british debate. so asking is net debate. and so i'm asking is net zero blame for supermarket zero to blame for supermarket shortages? hear the
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shortages? we'll hear the thoughts panel thoughts of my panel of broadcast economist lizzie cundy, mp cundy, also former labour mp steven then at 5:00 it is steven pound, then at 5:00 it is this week's difficult conversation and social media influencers are all in london will be joining me live in studio to tell me about his struggles with self identity after the transit. think back to after the transit. think back to a after a six as a man after a six months as a transgender female he will be life first. so let's get your latest news headlines. 4:33 on radisson islands. tea shock. leo varadkar says a deal the northern ireland protocol could be made in the next few days. but there's a gap in negotiations . it comes as the negotiations. it comes as the prime minister faces after proposing a meeting between king charles and the president of the european commission ursula von der leyen was due to talks of rishi sunak before meeting the king. but her trip has been cancelled. labour says would have had constitutional implications as most members of
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the 620 implications as most members of the g20 have . the war in the g20 have. the war in ukraine, except for china and russia, who both refused to sign a joint declaration. it comes as ukraine's president says he plans to meet china's tsar jinping after beijing set out a peace plan for the two countries. for a lot of it, zelenskyy says it would be beneficial for security around the world. the death from the earthquakes that hit turkey and syria has now surpassed 50,000. the united nations estimates that 1.5 million people have been made homeless. that 1.5 million people have been made homeless . 500,000 new been made homeless. 500,000 new homes needed . president erdogan homes needed. president erdogan is pledging rebuild within the yean is pledging rebuild within the year, but are warning not to put safety before speed . and safety before speed. and hundreds have gathered in county tyrone to demand an end to violence in northern ireland after the attempted murder of an off policeman. detective chief inspector john caldwell was shot outside a sports centre on wednesday . he outside a sports centre on wednesday. he remains in critical condition . five critical condition. five suspects have been arrested .
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suspects have been arrested. detectives say the incident is being treated as terror related . on tv , online and on disney . on tv, online and on disney plus radio , this is gb news. plus radio, this is gb news. back to nana in just a moment.
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so welcome back if you just tuned in. where have you been? it's fine, because we've got loads on the way. it's coming up to 38 minutes after 4:00. this is a gb views tv online and on digital radio. i'm nana akua. now it is time for our great british debate this hour. i'm asking, is net zero to blame for food shortages now? poor harvests spain and north harvests in spain and north africa due to the cold weather means that there's been a bit of a we haven't a farming because we haven't been to get produce that we been able to get produce that we would normally from them. would normally get from them. plus, there's been a crisis in this country in terms of farming which caused by high which has been caused by high energy which led the energy costs, which led to the lack fresh produce and since
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lack of fresh produce and since the uk left the eu, the department for environment food and rural affairs, which is otherwise known as defra, has replaced the eu common agricultural policy with the environment land management scheme and the new scheme gives farmers financial incentives on condition that they higher environmental and sustainability in line with the net zero green agenda.so in line with the net zero green agenda. so the high standards include things like preservation of trees, shrubs and wildlife, which is all very laudable but often to the detriment , often to the detriment, encouraging production of food itself. so if the great british debate this i'm asking is net zero to blame for food shortages . well, let's see what my panel make of that. joined by broadcaster and columnist lizzie cundy and also former mp steven pound. cundy and also former mp steven pound . and let's start with you, pound. and let's start with you, stephen. look, you've obviously said they've created these things. you know, a lot of the land is now being solar panels and farms, stuff like that, and wind farms, stuff like that, which be more which could well be more profitable that than actually profitable do that than actually grow total, 100% grow absolute total, 100% nonsense. it now. absolutely
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nonsense. is it now. absolutely look. well, what like the article in the telegraph didn't seem to think so. well, no, i'm sorry, i've read the article in the telegraph and there's a smidgen of reality in there, but there's no nobody saying in this country, got to stop country, you've got to stop growing. you're growing. but a farmer. so you're saying that a farmer, he is actually he actually a dairy farmer, he pointed employs pointed out, who employs people , on. well, dairy farmers , so on. well, dairy farmers have that. dairy farmers , so on. well, dairy farmers hainot that. dairy farmers , so on. well, dairy farmers hainot know that. dairy farmers , so on. well, dairy farmers hainot know obvious�*airy farmers , so on. well, dairy farmers hainot know obvious about.'mers , so on. well, dairy farmers hainot know obvious about. well, do not know obvious about. well, what farmer and say what kind of farmer and say because you know how much how. no i've got an allotment . all no i've got an allotment. all right. so you . all the dairy right. so you. all the dairy farmers that's just going from terrible this has got a couple of things on sustainable farming does not the reduction in product you can actually still produce great quantities of food with a sustainable way of growing and you can be more animal fed. the real problem we have here in this country is twofold. is expect to eat twofold. one is we expect to eat tomatoes at christmas, which is not natural. it's not right. and we them in we shouldn't be flying them in from south america we from south america or kenya. we shouldn't the shouldn't be doing that the second only to be personal, but
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the other thing is the supermarkets , this country are supermarkets, this country are acting like they are holding up the producers where i have entire with all farmers agricultural, you entire with all farmers agricultural , you know, entire with all farmers agricultural, you know, dairy farmers, all of them is the way that the supermarkets are actually going to. i think they've got the buy them and it's totally wrong. so what we need to do in this to say do we really want to fly roses from ecuador? do we really want to in, you know. lamb new zealand, we should actually have proper, sustainable farming system should security in this should food security in this country. if that means country. and if that means farming in a sustainable way all well but nobody is well and good but nobody is saying we carpet saying that we should carpet over great green deserts over these great green deserts or great of barley that or great acres of barley that we're growing in east anglia with solar panels, don't think you solar panels and you can have solar panels and you can have solar panels and you can have solar panels and you can grow food. okay, lizzie you can have solar panels and you cyou row food. okay, lizzie you can have solar panels and you cyou row tomato kay, lizzie you can have solar panels and you cyou row tomato ?y, lizzie you can have solar panels and you cyou row tomato ? i lizzie you can have solar panels and you cyou row tomato ? i sayzie , can you say tomato? i say turnip. well no, i have to say turnip. well no, i have to say turn it up, tony. so i mean, who eats turnips? should we turn it off? yes, i know . she's telling
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off? yes, i know. she's telling us to make some noise. turnips though, on a serious note, net zero net zero is to blame. and it's a net is hurting our economy as well, which you know, steve and i know you know this, all the trees are favoured in place of crops and animals and i'm lucky i live a rural area and i'm next to a farm shop and we have plenty of produce very luckily , but thanks to net zero luckily, but thanks to net zero target sadly because of productive land continue to be given over to solar farms correct you that's true it is true . that's too steep. and so true. that's too steep. and so you can't deny it. you have got to say, we still have the capacity to be self—sustaining, self—sufficient in in this country. well, evidently not, in terms of tomatoes and things where we have to import, where. no, no, no, we could actually them, as i want to say, we can grow tomatoes year round. i mean, i'm not exactly. well forcing my rhubarb at the moment. and this all things you can need to can do. but you need energy to think about. exactly. we've got aquaponics and polytunnel and all we could all those things. we could grow fruit vegetable but
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fruit and vegetable the era, but the energy are very, very high. and you know energy and you know why the energy costs high. that, of costs are very high. that, of course, the government's total income. exactly. and we're heading net we're heading towards net zero. we're losing we have losing energy. we have underneath our feet and within an let's stop an area like let's stop hydraulic now. hydraulic fracturing now. i mean, america could be so is currently self—sufficient in energy because of hydraulic fracturing. are we fracturing. why on earth are we just walking past bags gold just walking past bags of gold by side of the road and say by the side of the road and say we don't to touch them in we don't want to touch them in sight? actually have sight? we should actually have hydraulic fracturing. we should actually very actually because just very explain what hydraulic explain to people what hydraulic fracturing you fracturing is. it's where you actually below the actually gases from below the soil . so it's fracking. yeah, soil. so it's fracking. yeah, that's you want to use fracking in fracking. well, what do you do fracking. last time we were on it. believe in fracking. i do passionately. absolutely. i'd be out there a pickaxe myself out there with a pickaxe myself , given half jobs. that , given half the jobs. that would interesting. that would would be interesting. that would be very. can just raise be very. can i just raise another point that stephen follows of no follows david allotment of no with these turnip another with these large turnip another point can i just tell you something that none of the panellists have mentioned food
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issue 9.5 million tonnes of food wasted in a single year in the uk and how so how's throw away 6.6 million so how it when people are struggling to buy food and apparently there's a lack food on the shelves this can happen partly because of the best buy nonsense. what is it? a lot of the most sophisticated supermarkets are no longer that you they don't chucking the you know they don't chucking the food at 10:00. i mean you food away at 10:00. i mean you know my kids to work in the local waitrose when they were in sixth and about 5 to 10 sixth form and about 5 to 10 they bear massive crowd of they bear great massive crowd of people there. know, like people out there. you know, like the beginning, the marathon and the beginning, the marathon and the zoom that the minute, 10:00, zoom in that go food and it's go to get the food and it's ridiculous. perfectly good ridiculous. it's perfectly good food. forget, we got food. but don't forget, we got the got the felix project. we got a whole ludicrous group who whole ludicrous group groups who were actually taking food, which the very briefly, the thing would be very briefly, just people what that is just tell people what that is because felix paul is a charitable organisation that takes supermarkets takes food from supermarkets by, agreement actually agreement with them and actually distributes through food. yeah but that's one the but that's not one of the shelves, i mean, shelves, right? yeah. i mean, i hear that's interesting hear you that's interesting they're that they're not want to take that we're talking one because you
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said trying to said we're trying to incorporate. i that's why i incorporate. well i that's why i wanted know what it is that wanted to know what it is that some shows empty of some of the shows are empty of some of the shows are empty of some of the fruit and veg not all it know we know that we know that. so know if go down that. so you know if you go down the all vegetable market, the south, all vegetable market, you all the tomatoes you can buy all the tomatoes that where they that you want. but where they come canary islands, come from, the canary islands, what we're saying is the reason that we experiencing these that we are experiencing these kind shortages are simply kind of shortages are simply because, energy because, of course, energy prices, are ridiculous. prices, which are ridiculous. and the that we are and also the fact that we are driving from driving our farmers away from producing don't producing actual feed. i don't and at this on a and if you look at this on a bigger scale and lots of farms go along with net stuff, go along with net zero stuff, then find we will have then we will find we will have to import things, which doesn't make because there's more, make sense because there's more, there's more everything. carbon dioxide going to the air, you bnng dioxide going to the air, you bring you are bring them the food, you are really going work well. we're really going to work well. we're going possibly hungry. going to possibly go hungry. let's absolutely let's get one thing absolutely straight. to straight. nobody is going to hold against farmer hold a shotgun against farmer george stop george his head and say stop growing and veg because we're going put the going to have to put the government environment management it management scheme. is it working? it's cutting productivity. there's no disease. sorry lizzy. sorry, i was saying the government was just saying the government environment management environment land management scheme is actually bias. it's cutting
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scheme is actually bias. it's cutheg scheme is actually bias. it's cuthe fact that we win, it's is the fact that we win, it's about productivity it, not about reducing productivity, but it's not working is it. reducing productivity, but it's not working is it . the net zero not working is it. the net zero is hurting. working it's not working. it'sjust is hurting. working it's not working. it's just when we move on area, it's going to work. we'll go hungry. thanks very much. well, that's not till 20,000 net zero equals what's on the shelves at the end. well, this show is nothing without views. that's welcome. our great british opportunity to be british voices opportunity to be on the show. tell us what they think about topics we're think about the topics we're discussing over. i love discussing. hour to over. i love having a with lesley harrison bristol he's a regular great british voice he's always got something sensible something to say. it's sensible to say, leigh, come on, just give us something sensible because we've listening. because we've been listening. stephen i think you i think you've been saying essential things. not now. i agree with what would just say. you what you would just say. but you know it seems to me the supermarket shortages being caused number things. caused by a number of things. without crazy and without a doubt these crazy and expensive net zero policies certainly not helping . and just certainly not helping. and just to add, by way despite the to add, by the way despite the repetitive boring remainers, if you listen to the experts it has
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very little if anything to do with brexit this immediate food shortage i have just to be clear about this i no problem in principle with net zero but the timeframe and the way that it's being done is a joke. it's completely unnecessary . not only completely unnecessary. not only is it impoverishing farmers and the nation as a whole is playing a significant role in food shortages. as you nana acres of land is being used more and more solar farms. i'm not in the slightest and i'm sure you probably remember saying about the civil service. i'm not surprised in the slightest read that our woke infested civil service, who are completely obsessed with net zero, are focusing on sustainability rather food production. so trees are favoured in place of crops and animals is just clearly idiotic . we seriously need idiotic. we seriously need a change in strategy and the government got to just boost this net zero into the long grass . people are struggling and grass. people are struggling and it would be an vote winner. wallace thank you so much. really good to talk to you.
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actually is this great british speaking? so much sense what today i'm asking, isn't it fair blame for food shortages and lots of you getting in touch with your views lot? he says our food down and food sources are to down and constant over of constant concreting over of agricultural . more people agricultural land. more people means more flooding, more more waste less land , less water waste and less land, less water and less food . our food security and less food. our food security and less food. our food security and energy security should be a priority, not an afterthought, stephen says , surprised the stephen says, surprised the media and the left aren't , media and the left aren't, blaming food shortages on the mini budget . that's true. i like mini budget. that's true. i like it , dan says. there is plenty of it, dan says. there is plenty of fast fruit and veg here in france . yes, yes . well, thank france. yes, yes. well, thank you for watching. in france . you for watching. in france. anyway, we're very pleased to have you company. but there's a follow up on twitter throughout the show. and i'm asking, is it zero to blame for the food shortages? it's a bit brexit currently. it's 59% yes, but currently. it's 59% say yes, but 41% no . well, if you just 41% say no. well, if you just saw this , a gb went live on saw this, a gb news went live on tv online and digital radio tv online and on digital radio after . the break we'll be after. the break we'll be talking to ollie london . he's my talking to ollie london. he's my difficult conversation he's
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talking about his struggles with self after transitioning back from a man to a transgender female . you'll be live at five female. you'll be live at five and then coming up next it's world round up time royal biographer and he'll be giving us the latest on the and duchess of sussex. you won't want to miss that .
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good afternoon this these were live on tv online and a digital i'm none a queer now there's always something going on in the royal household and this week has been no different. prince harry and meghan's approval rating has dropped significantly in the states even plummeting past. that of prince andrew and queen consort has spoken out against the proposed changing of roald dahl's works. well, every saturday i'd to love you a rundown on who better to do that than biographer and 11. angela
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to the studio. hello it's good to the studio. hello it's good to see you and acosta so much to dig into what we stole harry and meghan of course. yes well, it seems that harry is sticking to the fact if he doesn't get a personal apology, he's not coming . but it's personal apology, he's not coming. but it's quite personal apology, he's not coming . but it's quite obvious coming. but it's quite obvious that the king and prince won't do that. william is still incredibly with him. and you can't have the king in to someone who's been very, very rude about him, very unkind and broken into his privacy. so i think they're in a dead end . but think they're in a dead end. but i think that the royal will win because can't otherwise. but going to look very silly nonetheless. he seems to be carrying on with selling himself. and i just have to check what he's doing. there's a there's a it's good to do a
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livestream event and it's going to talk about living with loss and personal healing . may and personal healing. may i everyone to take no notice because he must be the worst in the world to people like that. he's been depressed. his ex blamed everybody idiots and not himself even . it's something himself even. it's something that he couldn't have done anything about because unfortunately he couldn't control his mother and the accident. but he hasn't on. it's quite obvious that hasn't moved on about anything . so to have on about anything. so to have him advising people and apparently he's going to ask to answer questions they're to be obviously chosen but it it's almost . well i hear he's also almost. well i hear he's also giving a copy of his book where away. i said that was fair though. where you gave it away a copy of his book as well. i think it' s £17 and you can pay think it's £17 and you can pay an extra pounds for something else. and he's going to be
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talking about his and it's not. look, i don't think they've got else. have they got any other capital value than that because they're trying to trade on mobile? i'm sorry, but i think it's the end of the for it's the end of the road for them. yes, i think so too. and they're actually very pompous because behalf of because aide spoke on behalf of harry when was asked yet harry when he was asked yet again he was coming or not. and he said because they haven't had the invitation they don't know how to organise the itinerary on day. now have you ever heard any such nonsense? i to say i can tell him it's 11 am. on saturday, the 6th of may. if you come over, you will be let in. but i mean, the arrogance and that sort pomposity of actually it back and saying, you that sort pomposity of actually it back and saying , you know, we it back and saying, you know, we haven't had the invitation . haven't had the invitation. nobody's had the invitation . nobody's had the invitation. they haven't even had save date. so he's just he's stuck into pomposity. he can't say it because it has never. and then
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we move on. yes. he says, yes, it will be like, well, why? i don't think we want them. i don't think we want them. i don't i don't see them here. i think they've got the marvellous excuse of art. his fourth birthday. and so they can stay. they have a lovely for party him. but tell the four, of course, doesn't know and his birthday is you could put it off week or a month. there wouldn't be of that be a win aware of that necessarily. actually there necessarily. but actually there we could have a very nice we are could have a very nice time and that is it's not a good excuse, but was a positive , excuse, but it was a positive, positive excuse. do you think that's the king picked that date because he could have potentially picked another week? no, think was a you know, no, i think it was a you know, it's busy that it's it's it was so busy that it's a to get their engagements done. so far in advance , one or two so far in advance, one or two years advance . so they were years in advance. so they were obviously out what good obviously sorting out what good day be. and i think he day would be. and i think he wanted to do it as quickly he could. but they've got other things haven't on the birthdays and that's sort of given harry and that's sort of given harry and meghan a comfortable excuse to give to think he's on it, to give them excuse. if they don't them an excuse. if they don't come, say, well, come, they say, oh, well, actually celebrating son's actually celebrating our son's birthday. do you think? i don't
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think that sort of manner, think he's that sort of manner, though. the king though. i don't think the king is i mean, also father is i mean, he's also a father and he harry and he will and he loves harry and he will always speak to him and to always speak to him and try to sort heal . but always speak to him and try to sort heal. but he can't do sort of heal. but he can't do this because this isn't a family event. it's a state event. so he has to stick to what? proper is. but i think a good, gentle man who would actually not sort of try to be like that, do you think? i think that he's sort of being kind. so they said no, they would have a way. i thought that's what i was thinking. but maybe, maybe one of us is probably right. what was it like ? which one of us is. that's ? oh, which one of us is. that's no fun. if it did and what about camilla? queen consort you've written the book? yes, i read biography . yes. yeah. i think biography. yes. yeah. i think this is wonderful . i think biography. yes. yeah. i think this is wonderful. i think this is somebody who's using the position . she's now got a very position. she's now got a very important that can stop nonsense. i mean, the nonsense is was dahl's book where they're
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changing all sorts of words and putting in some that make any sort of sense but won't upset anybody and she said she has an annual gathering of authors to celebrate her book club which she started in the pandemic and her speech that you know you can't away the magic that you can't away the magic that you can read you can't take that away and just have it. well she didn't say clunky, but that's really my word for it. and it just shows you how she can have a potent effect. but the other thing that some people will say, look, she's she's getting to she's getting too involved . but she's getting too involved. but i think that's very important because the role magic charity one that she is president and they look after children who are fatally ill and she makes a christmas party for them so she's involved in it. it's not just her speaking because she
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likes reading. this is important to help a charity and make sure that it to help a charity and make sure thatitis to help a charity and make sure that it is respected . well that it is respected. well that's what we want the royals to do now. that is not necessarily political is something protecting the integrity of something that is written like almost a tradition which is what are ultimately the authenticity . yes, something authenticity. yes, something like that. i mean, what's your view on actually changing words books anyway? i think it's shocking. think that shocking. i mean, i think that somebody writes it once they're i think if there's something that the this illegal or i can't understand that coming . yeah but understand that coming. yeah but it's the fear that the author wants to get across and his work is so popular that now she's won it because the publishers are going to bring back natural . 17 going to bring back natural. 17 of his books that are in the original language but they're going to present these as well . going to present these as well. i think that's wrong i don't think they be allowed to stand
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that life is hard . and if you that life is hard. and if you don't quite like or you don't like the word fat . well, it's like the word fat. well, it's just to that enormous, which i don't think is most nice. and what about prince andrew and his 30 room home? he doesn't want to. yes, he said let be known that he is not going to leave. he that he is not going to leave. h e £250 a week for this home and he £250 a week for this home and the queen his mother left him. what gave him just under. £3,000. a £300,000? that's right . every year . £3,000. a £300,000? that's right . every year. and prince charles king tells us, stop that . so king tells us, stop that. so he's very, very angry, furious and sad is not leaving. well, i he should. because if those have gone , lots of people downsized. gone, lots of people downsized. so it doesn't shameful. but he wants people to he wants him to spend his own which i think is quite right. i think royals,
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assuming everything is paid for them . i think that's quite them. i think that's quite wrong. they've got to learn lesson that actually if they have money they have got to spend it for and i don't see any reason why he couldn't go and live in mayfair with his ex she's just bought a house worth 5 million. well i'd be happy that exactly he's including at 11. always a pleasure. thank you so much. can't do it without his royal biographer, levin. this is a gb newsroom on tv online , on a gb newsroom on tv online, on digital radio. more to come in next hour . next hour. well is 5:00. if you just joined the, welcome on board a queer. and for the next hour, me and my will be taking on some of the big topics, the headlines right now. on the way. i'll be speaking to influencer olly london, who is currently in the process of transitioning . yes. process of transitioning. yes. and for the great but just to make this hour is schwimmer back in uk his responsibility all
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in the uk his responsibility all of your latest news of that after your latest news headunes. of that after your latest news headlines . it's 5:00 on radisson headlines. it's 5:00 on radisson islands tea shop. leo varadkar says a deal the northern ireland protocol could be made the next few days, but there's still a gap in negotiations when it comes as the prime minister faces criticism after proposing a meeting between king charles and the president of the european commission ursula von der leyen was due continue talks with rishi sunak before meeting the king. but her trip has now been cancelled . labour says it been cancelled. labour says it would have constituted final implications. speaking exclusively to gb news, the secretary said the government was looking for cross—community support for any deal. we remain focussed on the outcome rather than the method and the outcome is to protect northern ireland's place in the united , to make place in the united, to make sure that people and businesses and the political representatives of those people in northern ireland are
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comfortable with the resolution, whilst also making sure that we protect the uk market. those are very much our motivations . very much our motivations. that's what will drive our actions . most members of the g20 actions. most members of the g20 have condemned war in ukraine except for china and russia, who refused to sign joint declaration. it comes . ukraine's declaration. it comes. ukraine's president says he plans meet china's zi jinping. president says he plans meet china's zi jinping . beijing sets china's zi jinping. beijing sets out a peace plan . the two out a peace plan. the two countries. for a lot me zelenskyy says it would be for security around the world. bravo ludo motty sure. shoot it's correct to think that if there are already thoughts that somehow correspond to respect for international law , for international law, territorial integrity and, some security issues, i believe we should use this and work with china this matter. why not? i to believe that china will be on side of a fair peace, which means on our side. this is very important to me. i really want to believe that china will not supply weapons to russia . the supply weapons to russia. the death toll from the earthquakes
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that hit turkey and. syria has now surpassed 15,000. united nafions now surpassed 15,000. united nations estimates that 1.5 million people have been made homeless with hundred thousand new homes needed. president erdogan is pledging to rebuild within the year , but experts are within the year, but experts are warning not to put safety before speed. warning not to put safety before speed . well, here, a 3.7 magnum speed. well, here, a 3.7 magnum shoot earthquake was felt in south wales last night . the south wales last night. the british geological survey says , british geological survey says, it hit bryn mawr near crickhowell just before midnight with the tremor as far away as cardiff . residents on social cardiff. residents on social media have described being woken up to their whole house, shaking hundreds gathered in county tyrone to an end to violence in northern ireland after the attempted of an off duty policeman . detective chief policeman. detective chief inspector caldwell was shot outside a sports centre on wednesday . he outside a sports centre on wednesday. he remains in critical condition . five critical condition. five suspects have been arrested and detectives say the incident being treated as terror related
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and could be connected to the new. the defence secretary says confident that the troubled project to build nearly 600 ajax fighting vehicles has now turned a corner. th e £5.5 billion a corner. the £5.5 billion programme has faced criticism , programme has faced criticism, severe delays and technical issues after nearly 30 years. it's yet to deploy a single tank . ben wallace says soldiers are now being trained in how to use them and hopes that they'll be active in the military within the next two years. when took over as secretary of defence three and a half years ago, this was troubled programme. it started life in march 2010 and i was determined that we were going to fix this or have to find alternatives. and so we put lot of effort into it, worked with general dynamics. the prime contractor and with the army and i think i think i'll use a trial that it completed at christmas time you it started to turn corner . thousands of displaced
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corner. thousands of displaced ukraine ions are being given the chance to go the eurovision song contest in may. around 3000 tickets will be made available . tickets will be made available. those who are currently living in the uk liverpool has been chosen to host on behalf of ukraine who won last year. the government has announce d £10 government has announced £10 million in funding to make sure that the event showcases ukraine in culture . this is gb news will in culture. this is gb news will bnng in culture. this is gb news will bring you more . it happens and bring you more. it happens and get back to nana in just a moment . moment. good afternoon . this is gb news good afternoon. this is gb news on tv digital radio. it's most approaching minutes after 5:00. i'm not a quitter. approaching minutes after 5:00. i'm not a quitter . over the next i'm not a quitter. over the next houn i'm not a quitter. over the next hour, me and my panel will be taking on some of the big topics . the headlines right now ? this . the headlines right now? this show is all about opinion mine. it's yes. and of course it's yours . we'll be debating. yours. we'll be debating. discussing at times. we will
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disagree, but no one will be cancelled . so joining me today, cancelled. so joining me today, it's broadcom and columnist lizzie cundy and also former labour mp steven pound. still to come and finally it's my difficult conversation now social media, influencer olly london will be live in the studio , be talking about his studio, be talking about his struggles with self—identity that eventually led him to transition back to a man after spending six months as a transgender female, he'll be long live in the studio to challenge the very core of the woke agenda ideology movement. that's in just a few minutes for the great british debate this houn the great british debate this hour. asking samantha bacon, hour. i'm asking samantha bacon, the . a former isas to the uk's. a former isas to chairman bacon lost her legal challenge over the government's decision to revoke her british citizenship. so if she'd be allowed to try again, be joined by the man who spent over a year with her in a syrian camp . with her in a syrian camp. journalist andrew journalist and filmmaker andrew leigh as ever, you can email tweet me at . gb views. so it is
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tweet me at. gb views. so it is time for this week's difficult conversation. influencer only london is in the process of, transitioning back to a man not spending six months as a trans gender female . he underwent 11 gender female. he underwent 11 surgeries in one day to make his features more feminine, and he says that he was bullied growing up, which included decision to transition. now admitted that he regrets his choice and his claim that the woke culture negatively impacting upon those are deemed vulnerable in society causing them to make these kinds of . the them to make these kinds of. the actor and singer in the process of releasing a memoir detransition detailing plights upon marrying and divorce . a upon marrying and divorce. a cardboard cut out of a korean star to self—identifying as a korean woman with book he now hopes to warn others about the dangers of transitioning. i'm pleased to say that only joins me live in the studio ollie come on all i'll talk to you about marrying a cop out. what the hell you do? you know, people
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took that so seriously, it was just a bit of fun. it was a joke. that was a joke. it was a joke. that was a joke. it was a joke. people took it so seriously . i wasn't actually seriously. i wasn't actually married it was married to a couple. it was just, know, i was having just, you know, i was having fun. i was vegas, i was fun. i was in vegas, i was drunk, and i was like, why not? so you did. but it wasn't legally binding. it wasn't legally binding. it wasn't legally binding. it wasn't legally binding. you can't seriously up. seriously married couple up. but, time, you but, you know, at the time, you know, seem think it's know, people seem to think it's rare. just kind of went rare. and i just kind of went along it that's quite good fun. got to talk to me about your childhood because you say that what into what actually spanked you into this you were this was the fact that you were bullied as a child. yes. so there bullying aspect. there was the bullying aspect. so as a teen was used to get bullied about the way i looked and as a kid, did used to play and as a kid, i did used to play with dolls. know, with barbie dolls. you know, i do to do traditional boy do used to do traditional boy things. to play things. i didn't used to play football rugby, was more football or rugby, was more interested in barbie dolls and even girls even dressing up in girls costumes stuff. so i always questioned my identity people when say, you when i was at school to say, you know, was ugly or didn't know, i was ugly or i didn't look very good or i was more feminine. my feminine. so really affected my self—confidence led me self—confidence and that led me on this journey to kind try to
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change way i looked and changed my so parents, my identity. so your parents, this of when did this isn't only sort of when did you start deciding change you start deciding to change your was your parents and what was because there's a trigger because often there's a trigger point sort of point when somebody sort of goes, oh, really upset. somebody said happens said or something happens and then do something, right. so then you do something, right. so i basically of the i basically because of the bullying always bullying and stuff, i always wanted change my nose. i used wanted to change my nose. i used to know, had to get called, you know, had a big and stuff i went big nose and stuff and i went one such i was only planning to have surgery back in 2013 and the went wrong i had to the surgery went wrong i had to get another one that went wrong. so of became a snowball so it of became a snowball effect of became effect and then kind of became addict. was like, me, addict. and i was like, me, change and then change everything. and then i stuck with my identity. was stuck with my identity. i was questioning i was. was questioning who i was. i was living korea spent living in korea and i spent i want have a certain aspect ic want to have a certain aspect ic to fit into this particular i'm living in and so how old were you you did the nose job? you when you did the nose job? honestly, nose was actually honestly, the nose was actually at 23 and i've had surgeries at 23 and i've had 32 surgeries in gone under the in total. i've gone under the knife about under knife about 11 times under anaesthetic and i've anaesthetic stuff and now i've kind quit. you know, i've got kind of quit. you know, i've got to a point where last year was i've become transgender. i'd always gender, always struggle with my gender, had gender dysphoria, and i was
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questioning myself and i had facial gave facial feminisation and it gave me temporary happiness after me a temporary happiness after certain period of time i realised, you know, there's more certain period of time i retlife�*d, you know, there's more certain period of time i retlife thanu know, there's more certain period of time i retlife than just ow, there's more certain period of time i retlife than just havingre's more certain period of time i retlife than just having surgerya to life than just having surgery is more to life than trying to you know, change myself. i need to happiness from within. you know, change myself. i need to i happiness from within. you know, change myself. i need to i wasappiness from within. you know, change myself. i need to i was going ss from within. you know, change myself. i need to i was going therapy,nithin. you know, change myself. i need to i was going therapy, i thin. you know, change myself. i need to i was going therapy, i was so i was going therapy, i was going church really going to church and it really kind helped get kind of helped me get perspective life. what's perspective in life. what's important? it that made important? what was it that made think that you wanted be think that you wanted to be a woman because that's what, you know, say, oh, i like know, people say, oh, i like a woman. well, even i am. i'm a woman. well, even i am. i'm a woman. i don't know what that feels like me feels like. i just feel like me and don't buy in all the and i don't buy in to all the stereotypes of what a woman's supposed to be. what was it that made you feel that you wanted to change your well, was change your gender? well, it was you a point where you know, i got to a point where i surgery and still wasn't i had surgery and i still wasn't happy and used to look back at my childhood and think, okay as a i used to like playing a kid, i used to like playing dress with the girls clothes dress up with the girls clothes in that i had my in the costume that i had at my house stuff and always used house and stuff and always used to more thing to think i more feminine thing because mongolian people would always say i was more girly. that was really my that was really reflecting my mind. point mind. and i'd got to a point where done all these where i'd done all these surgeries, i wasn't and i
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surgeries, i wasn't happy and i was this is what i'm was thinking, this is what i'm missing. must be because, you missing. it must be because, you know, meant be know, i'm meant to be transgender. you know, everyone know, i'm meant to be transg would you know, everyone know, i'm meant to be transg would lookznow, everyone know, i'm meant to be transg would lookznow, eve|a)ne says i would look better as a woman i feel better as a and stuff. so i've got to a point where i was and maybe that's what i'm missing life. and it wasn't was it checks and wasn't it was it checks and balances when you went balances for you when you went to you, did have to you, did you have a psychiatrist there? what was psychiatrist there? and what was was there for you to support you in decision? i'm so, in your decision? i'm so, you know i obviously good know i obviously had a good i had good doctor i went to had a good doctor i went to turkey and stuff. so they did a lot and stuff so lot checks on me and stuff so that were very good. but that they were very good. but i've had doctors in the past that would literally just you know meet them you have a know you meet them you have a ten the next ten minute consultation the next day surgery every day having surgery so not every doctor and balances doctor has checks and balances what have what we're now the issue we have the that's the tavistock clinic that's finally there finally being shut down there are and balances are no checks and balances they're children they're fast tracking children onto hormones puberty blockers and surgeries that's the and surgeries and that's the real harm, you know they're often misdiagnosing kids you know have an eating know that might have an eating disorder, might have body dysmorphia misdiagnosing disorder, might have body dysmorphi'tracking|isdiagnosing disorder, might have body dysmorphi'tracking|isdiagont01g them, fast tracking them onto kind of process transition. kind of process of transition. and it's really harmful and there's see there's no long research to see there's no long research to see the this having on the effects this having on children's do children's bodies. so do you hear obviously nicholas that is
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gender reform, though, which is obviously it obviously the end, which it should have because it's should have been because it's the thing that the most ridiculous thing that i've . when hear i've ever heard. when you hear people this sort of language turning into this direction, i mean, you know, you got the likes of sam smith going there and say, and you've got people who say, oh, i identify as oh, i know i identify as a woman. and getting the path of surgery that. surgery and things like that. what you thought what what do you thought of what's well, firstly, what's going? well, firstly, it's very disrespectful to women, what's going on right now. at what nicola now. i mean, look at what nicola sturgeon she caused sturgeon was doing. she caused so much harm to women. women so much harm to women. no women . have in fear . shouldn't have to be in fear of toilet, you of going to the toilet, you know, changing know, or going to a changing room. they should feel comfortable. safe. comfortable. they should safe. so nicola was so the fact that nicola was pushing those rules and we pushing those rules and then we had transgender people in women's prisons and these were very violent criminals. women's prisons and these were very violent criminals . you very violent criminals. you know, committed some know, they committed some terrible so terrible crimes and stuff. so we shouldn't at shouldn't be putting women at risk we shouldn't be, you risk we also shouldn't be, you know, indoctrinating children we see some they're see in some schools, they're teaching education teaching gender or sex education to. you know, kids that are 6 to 10 years old and stuff and they've kind of targeting them. and i've just got back from america and the problem is a lot more they're kind like
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more severe they're kind of like in know. so in scotland, you know. so schools pushing kids schools are pushing this on kids and question it, and if you dare to question it, you're transphobic that you're labelled transphobic that nicola sturgeon was trying to use argument. are use the argument. people are transphobic criticising , but transphobic for criticising, but really of those people really most of those people concerned, worried about concerned, women worried about their , also worried their safety, also worried about children pressured guys to children being pressured guys to transition you know they transition when you know they maybe wouldn't have thought about that otherwise. well i mean some schools are mean some some schools are pushing of level of this pushing a sort of level of this ideology with ideology going along with it. now scotland . so now in parts of scotland. so i have read about the have actually read about the sort ideology that is sort sort idea ideology that is sort of asking children about what gender they are giving , them gender they are giving, them questionnaires as early as eight. and so saying their gender giving four gender and then giving four opfions gender and then giving four options hasn't agreed by options which hasn't agreed by the parents. i know some a lot of parents weren't happy that as a weren't happy with nicola a lot weren't happy with nicola sturgeon thoughts . sturgeon, with her thoughts. what do you think about this? i that you were interviewed by tucker carlson and you've also talking to the senate that . you talking to the senate that. you were talking to the americans because they planning to do something similar what nicola something similar to what nicola sturgeon which is sturgeon was doing, which is actually removing for actually removing the need for any diagnosis. right any medical diagnosis. right
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what doing was what they were doing was actually the actually worse. so it in the state washington. so spoke state of washington. so i spoke before the senate in a hearing were trying a bill that were trying to pass a bill that would parental for would remove parental for medically children medically transitioning children but not just that these were specific children that were runaways or in the foster care system , in the shelter system. system, in the shelter system. so extra really so they were extra really vulnerable kids they were vulnerable kids and they were trying to give these kids the power make decision to power to make the decision to change gender and medically transition and without the parents even knowing and. that's really, really bad know. and now we're starting to see thousands and thousands of teens have detransition know detransition regrets. you know they've put on hormones, they've been put on hormones, they've been put on hormones, they've surgeries . and it's they've had surgeries. and it's just heartbreaking. and, you know, all of this know, i wrote about all of this in new book discussing all in my new book discussing all these issues that were across these issues that were across the world. you know, the world. and you know, how wokeness become so wokeness has really become so toxic can't even toxic that we can't even question a child being medically transition or mutilated. that's how far off you go to duty transitioning . how far did you transitioning. how far did you go and how far you coming back? well, didn't take or well, luckily i didn't take or anything that, but i have anything like that, but i have facial feminisation and stuff .
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facial feminisation and stuff. the first step for me, i cut all my hair and stuff. i'd been going to the gym, working out and i think lot of it's and really i think a lot of it's in minds you know, if you in the minds you know, if you tried to a healthy mind and tried to have a healthy mind and stuff and think positive. so going been going to church, i've been writing , which is of a form writing, which is kind of a form of writing about my of therapy and writing about my life writing these life and writing about these issues because, you i want life and writing about these isshelp)ecause, you i want life and writing about these isshelp people. you i want life and writing about these isshelp people. you i've|nt to help people. you know, i've got this. you got an insight into this. you know, feels to go through know, how it feels to go through this. and i want to warn parents, you know, because parents, you know, just because a be a tomboy, it a girl might be a tomboy, it doesn't child doesn't mean that that child should harmful should be put on harmful testosterone oestrogen. testosterone or oestrogen. you know, doing that. know, we shouldn't doing that. so this this wokeness has so you this this wokeness has kind of caused the problem in the sense that we can't even these things out anymore . are these things out anymore. are you do any more studies you going to do any more studies into yourself more into feminise yourself any more the women as a feminist? yeah you know, i'm trying not to do surgery because it ends the day. it wasn't answering my problems. and, the surgery and, you know, the more surgery i unhappy am. so i do, the more unhappy i am. so i've got to a now. i've kind of got to a point now. i've kind of got to a point now. i look very feminine and i do look very feminine and stuff, have questioned it. i think that feminine. think you know that feminine. oh, did when oh, thank you. well, i did when i hair and stuff in the
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i had the hair and stuff in the makeup but you know i have questioned but just questioned that but i'm just thinking it's much better thinking that it's much better just self—acceptance just to find self—acceptance from within and that's more important and also the thing that looking feminine that you said looking feminine is objective thing. i might that you said looking feminine is objthate thing. i might that you said looking feminine is objthate thi look might that you said looking feminine is objthate thi look feminine think that you look feminine somebody might think you somebody might think that you don't a thing don't it is not a set thing looking feminine doesn't there is definitely is an effect is definitely feminine. and think the feminine. right and think the problem is that we these problem is that we have these narrative and these stereotypes if you don't conform enough towards then you might think you're else which is you're something else which is me. it's to you to find your place in it. do you that you found your place? yeah i mean, i'm the happiest ever and, you know, want use, know , know, i want to use, you know, been of identity been for a lot of identity struggles stuff i've kind of struggles and stuff i've kind of it's like self—harming, it's almost like self—harming, doing it, let's doing all surgery to it, let's say so, you know, say to oneself so, you know, i've come out of that now, i want to that experience, want to use that experience, help people because we really all crisis right now. i all in a crisis right now. i mean, at scotland they mean, look at scotland when they had women's prisons, had men in women's prisons, that is . then when women dare is insane. then when women dare to question it like jk rowling, they're immediately cancelled . they're immediately cancelled. so, know, i feel like we so, you know, i feel like we need out and you need voices speaking out and you know my books covering all of these issues what parents
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these issues and what parents can do , what's happening to can do, what's happening to children because children right now because seeing increase now, seeing a dramatic increase now, of course, we had trans people in the eighties. in the fifties, there are but now we're seeing this sharp in the last ten years, especially since covid and i think social media has big responsibility when you go and take talk, you see so many people , you know, these tik—tok people, you know, these tik—tok influencers, and they're influencers, the men and they're promoting and they're promoting tampons and they're mocking doing mocking women. they're doing stereotypes and you stereotypes of women and you know, it's offensive to women , know, it's offensive to women, but harmful to the but it's also harmful to the people consume videos every people that consume videos every single start single day because they start believe is believe that that behaviour is totally normal and they can be like as well. what like that person as well. what do you think the government should doing this? should be doing about this? because, are now because, you know, we are now you have be careful you have to be careful if you say anything, a sort of a backlash or, backlash towards you or, something. i'm not something. i mean, i'm not afraid of it. i don't care know, i think and i a man afraid of it. i don't care know, ithink and i a man a i think and i a man is a man. a woman is a woman. if you want to try change in terms try and change genders in terms of physical, actual of the physical, the actual anatomy, you change anatomy, that's you can change the you're going to the of it. you're not going to change so yeah, change the physiology. so yeah, i and i love i completely agree. and i love the fact you're outspoken. i've
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seen monologues seen your monologues online talking be a talking about what it is to be a woman and. we shouldn't even be questioning the definition. women. simple. women. it's plain and simple. your if want to your biological, if you want to change yourself, some change yourself, has some surgery as an surgery and stuff, do it as an adult. you. you know, adult. that's you. but you know, please rights of please don't take the rights of other know, the other people. you know, the rights women or know rights women or you know what we're children we're now is so many children being , like we're now is so many children being, like you said, being taught gender and sex education in school is just so wrong. well, i don't think it's the school's be doing that school's place to be doing that at i think to stick with at all. i think to stick with the facts, teach them english and the things meant and all the things they're meant to not to do them that well, not genden to do them that well, not gender, gender. they're gender, not gender. they're going out for and going to work it out for and time will only listen. the book is called talk to me very briefly about the book when briefly about the book and when people the people get older. and so the book is called detransition. i've back from america. book is called detransition. i'was back from america. book is called detransition. i'was doing back from america. book is called detransition. i'was doing ayack from america. book is called detransition. i'was doing a bookrom america. book is called detransition. i'was doing a bookrom a and ca. i was doing a book there and stuff it's on it's stuff and it's on it's detransition biology and it's on. simon schuster barnes and noble and the book it goes through my struggle, but it's more a broad what's going more of a broad on what's going on society now with woke on in society now with woke ideology, with being indoctrinated and, how we can find a solution to this problem and, you know, how we can love and, you know, how we can love
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and without and children while without having to kind of medically transition them. you know, a parent can love child even parent can love that child even if they're a tomboy. but, you know, don't to medically transitioning them. well listen to to out more to people want to find out more about they need to get hold of that so much. that book. i thank you so much. thanks appreciate thanks then i appreciate your and thank so and explaining it. thank you so much all it. london he's much that's all it. london he's a social media and has his book out this a statement on out. well this is a statement on trans equality from stonewall that the lgbt organisation has the right to be themselves without . it will take time to without. it will take time to secure a recognition for trans people . but by increasing people. but by increasing understanding in our informing and inspiring and raising the visibility trans people's stories, we can achieve vital gains and pave the way for trans equality . well up, it's time for equality. well up, it's time for our great british debate this houn our great british debate this hour. i'm asking, should some of my bacon , the uk's my bacon, the uk's responsibility , the former east responsibility, the former east pride its lost repeal challenge over the government decision to revoke the citizenship . so what revoke the citizenship. so what do you think? should the uk government responsibility for? obviously into filmmaker andrew drew. he spent a year to know
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her. you won't want to miss that one is on way next. hello, one is on the way next. hello, i'm . here is your i'm craig stone. here is your latest forecast from the met office go through the next office as we go through the next few days is set to remain largely dry and, settled across the that's all the country and that's all courtesy high courtesy of a huge area of high , going to go very , which is not going to go very far the next few days. it far over the next few days. it does bring in a fairly cool breeze the north. so if you breeze off the north. so if you live the coast of live along the east coast of england across the england or down across the engush england or down across the english channel, certainly wrap up we through next up warm as we through the next few days here for rest of few days here for the rest of saturday, see a lot of the saturday, we'll see a lot of the cloud melt away and that'll lead to cold frosty for a to a cold and frosty night for a lot but along north sea lot the uk. but along north sea coast we will maintain some rather cloudy skies. maybe the odd shower . so temperatures odd shower. so temperatures actually freezing actually stay in above freezing here but elsewhere could see lows falling down to minus four or in spots . so in or minus in a few spots. so in going into sunday, little changes actually we still maintain rather cloudy skies across northern parts of england, eastern too. that may well filter its way a little bit further southwards as the day goes on. but elsewhere of sunshine around after that and
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frosty start for the perhaps stay in the best of the sunshine across western scotland and maybe down towards devon and cornwall and then that sunshine temperatures will reach about eight nine degrees. under eight or nine degrees. but under the if you're the cloud and also if you're exposed to this fairly brisk wind, feeling a good wind, it will be feeling a good deal colder than that . sunday deal colder than that. sunday evening then sees a repeat performance. a lot of the cloud melting away once again, leading to fairly cold and frosty night along parts of the north sea coast, again the cloud continue to come in, keeping things above freezing here. so a cold and frosty start to the new working week on monday. best of the sunshine as we start the day across western scotland , an across western scotland, an island down towards the south western of the country too. but a nice day goes on this cloud . a nice day goes on this cloud. most central parts of the country will sink its way a bit further southwards. largely dry, though, but there will still be the odd shower around as we go into the middle part the into the middle part of the week. little changes week. very little changes largely dry , often but largely dry, often cloudy, but feeling cold in the wind .
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good afternoon . it's coming up good afternoon. it's coming up to 25 minutes after 5:00. this is gb views on tv online and on digital radio. i'm nana acquit. we the people's channel now . we the people's channel now. it's time for our great british debate. this hour. i'm asking, is cinema the uk's responsibility ? the former us responsibility? the former us brownite has lost a legal challenge over the government's decision to. revoke her british citizenship. now she previously appealed against the supreme court in 2019, but they ruled favour of the home secretary on all grounds. now she has now lost yet another appeal . the lost yet another appeal. the special immigration appeals commission , and she is still commission, and she is still looking to continue appeals potentially at the court of appeal. now, shamima fled east london back in 201515 appeal. now, shamima fled east london back in 2015 15 to join the terror organised britain as a teenager alongside , two others
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a teenager alongside, two others and she was stripped of a british citizenship in 2019 by the home secretary . at the time the home secretary. at the time that sajid javid was a general discourse around her in years has been over the potential reinstatement of her citizenship . supporters claim that she was groomed isis while others would up a traitor who knowingly and willingly joined the cult. so for the great british debate this hour i'm asking is the uk's responsibility. well, joining me now is journalist and filmmaker drury and reality tv star and commentator narinder kaur. let's start with you, andrew, because you've met her in. you spent time with her? yeah. what was your on the ruling this week ? i your on the ruling this week? i wasn't surprised. a lot of were surprised i think it's i mean i didn't wasn't to comfortable about the citizenship being away but now after past week or so kind of changing that opinion to really why i think she or what she represents i don't think she can come back because of what she's done and what she represents . andrew okay. she is
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represents. andrew okay. she is our responsibility. she was born in this country. whether like it or not, she was born in this country. she's a citizen of britain. she's our problem she's not a name. she is our top. but she's not a citizen anymore . she's not a citizen anymore. yes, but that should never have happened. yes, but that should never have happened . home secretary should happened. home secretary should ever this much power. well, that's what erdogan, you know, they shouldn't talk about, though, because actually, i know . because it creates a chill . . because it creates a chill. there's a two tier system also child. that means what? whatever crime i commit, i could be back to india and india. crime i commit, i could be back to india and india . well, look to india and india. well, look what. and then what if. what if i do something little and they say actually go back to india? what happened is because there's a court appeal properly to a court appeal is properly to set a dangerous precedent on what i actually what sets a dangerous precedent allowing somebody terrorist who somebody who's a terrorist who supposedly terrorist and she's supposedly a terrorist and she's just but but 15 i'm not sure exactly i'm just going to just finish is a terrorist who's gone off somewhere and involved in us in a heavy way. we don't in a very heavy way. we don't know recently , she sold suicide
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know recently, she sold suicide vests on and we don't know that she's had it. so we do know that. so it's an opinion. so it's not not an opinion because said, as you saw , they said said, as you saw, they said there was a slight chance that she was trafficked . and if they she was trafficked. and if they produced that evidence , then the produced that evidence, then the evidence that the home office produced must be quite severe . produced must be quite severe. those girls had their phones . those girls had their phones. all the people were taken in by the sdf over that at their phones and the images because they had cell phones pictures taken with the metropolitan police knew and they knew was full because why didn't they her. why was difficult to do that when she was there because they did not to be being andrew she wasn't. okay. let me bring something else else . let me go. something else else. let me go. you say about the grooming, the 15, some hbd . you know who he 15, some hbd. you know who he is, don't you? he did the manchester of 22, right. yes, right. he you could say he was groomed because he was he was
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the same sort of story as it was in england. 22 year old guy. but he she did. oh, no, no, no . not he she did. oh, no, no, no. not a groomed, not trafficked out . a groomed, not trafficked out. came back and she did something sold suicide vest. she she she didn't i don't care what she says. she says loads of lies. but the fact is if someone had their suicide vest and they detonate and killed lot of detonate and killed a lot of innocent would feel, innocent children would feel, you're saying wrong thing. you're saying the wrong thing. i'm to listen we all agree we all what were some all agree that what were some the joining and leaving the beating, joining and leaving wrong? the british government the british authorities had in response rooms to terrorists. we don't know that we need so this is easy for me to say something that i think immigration commission ruled on wednesday that although there was credible suspicion for the bacon being topic for sexual exploits and the decision was ultimately the home secretary's. why is the home secretary got this much power because the you ask question. sorry. last question .
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question. sorry. last question. no, no, no. when you ask the question, i'll answer the reason why the home secretary has that thatis why the home secretary has that that is because that is the job of the home secretary. okay. and what to protect the what they do to protect the national. and it was ruled that to protect the national interest national. and it was ruled that to pwould the national interest national. and it was ruled that to pwould lose ational interest national. and it was ruled that to pwould lose her1al interest national. and it was ruled that to pwould lose her citizenship . she would lose her citizenship. she's get it she's obviously trying to get it back and we're not having it. and question when do set and the question when do you set about happens ? she's our about what happens? she's our responsibility . she has not responsibility. she has not really. if you go another really. if you go to another country and commit crime in country and commit a crime in the country, you're the other country, you're automatically, you're not automatically, you're not automatically come automatically, you're not autorto tically come automatically, you're not autorto the ly come automatically, you're not autorto the ly and come automatically, you're not autorto the ly and serve come automatically, you're not autorto the ly and serve your back to the uk and serve your time well this is time here. well this is happening these happening now. none these people that to places and we that have gone to places and we don't know her name, one she does say if stop the trial, does say if you stop the trial, you said other people, name one. she's a there's been she's had a few. there's been 101 bombs. which one? i think one because they give one of them is because they give you the names have you the names that have come back. if back. she's made an example. if seen one, she's been used to be used, andrew, by people like yourself on media to get yourself on the media to get their stories and know if she's made the case and you. whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. hold on. whoa, whoa whoa, whoa. hold on. andrew if i've used up used. i've not had a penny any. i'm
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not saying penny. i've just. i met her on a day off and the media stuff about. i think we've given her a platform a platform where she can actually give her opinion. it's not a point of view has been changed. so times it's not a trial. no she can't decide she's been on trial. she has she has what you're saying, the high court. i think they were given evidence. i think that's a political by the tory government because a tory know that if they allow her back they will be that may be to know who your support and. you don't know her you we both don't know . i do her you we both don't know. i do know better than you do. but he's not a judge and he's on a jury he's not a judge and he's on a jury but then the evidence. andrew so is this trial by the compassion? no no girl it's this shoot it down. we'll take a look at the evidence . they say at the evidence. they say there's a slight amount of chance she was trafficked or sex trafficking tried to credible. if you think even it was credible and she still had two
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citizens ship and it rejects the evidence against her must been so. i think they would have know they said it's up to the how. sorry. no, it wasn't. there was evidence by the home office. yeah, it wasn't just the reason . reasonable doubt. bring it back reason. it was pivotal, not reasonable people were profoundly disagree with the secretary of state. but that raises wider societal political questions, which is not role of this commission. it was just committee. so if i were to peel this little if i told there's a good possibility she was the hezbollah, which is the religious place, and she sewed suicide vests , would you be so suicide vests, would you be so sympathetic? no i've got to enjoy sitting, trying to stick a jubilee , because i believe jubilee, because i believe anybody born in this country, we are , a civil country, deserves are, a civil country, deserves a fair trial. try it in this and pay fair trial. try it in this and pay the price . yeah, well, pay the price. yeah, well, listen, listen. perhaps people in syria where she a lot of those crimes would love to see a tried perhaps they've taken a
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look at a but they've looked at our system and realise what soft touch we are and they and want touch we are and they and want to punish her properly and that is i'm afraid. when is that so. i'm afraid. and when you in another you commit crimes in another country we decide you're no country and we decide you're no longer going a citizen, longer going to be a citizen, and and leave and this one and leave a stateless you not think stateless do you not think sorry, sorry. sometimes you've got to look and you're going have to come rest of her have to come for the rest of her life. well she you didn't achieve anything . so sympathy achieve anything. so sympathy for man. we should have for this man. we should have sympathy . she would. well, well, sympathy. she would. well, well, well, do know what i can tell you? what will happen to it? because even if she gets a citizenship she could face citizenship back, she could face trial syria and get sentenced to 20 years. will you have a problem that? yes, because problem with that? yes, because should be a british citizen. she could course that she needs to be people . syria. don't know be people. syria. we don't know that that will do it will speculation . oh okay. i think speculation. oh okay. i think she does all this now to stop this now she's had a fair trial and made a decision on the information that i have, which you are not party to and you probably a little bit more than you but neither is he. and the
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point even you've committed point is even you've committed your whether serve your crime whether you serve time there is actually time here or there is actually not really the main thing. the main thing is that you serve the time the end i believe time and in the end i believe should place that should serve in the place that she committed a and i believe she committed a and i believe she is the problem i was born in this and she was not this country and she was not radicalised. i have to laugh because i get the because i for that i get the last on that right . well, last word on that right. well, it's just so i last word on that right. well, it'sjust so i mean, last word on that right. well, it's just so i mean, this is gb news. welcome on board, but. well, in the state been, well, in the state there's been, as case as lawyers argued, that her case concerns, a british child aged 15 who was persuaded influence and a her with by and effected with a her with by determined and effective. i says propaganda machine. i've seen argued that shamima was recruited transported, transferred and received in syria for the purposes of sexual exploitation and marriage to an aduu exploitation and marriage to an adult male . well, you're with me adult male. well, you're with me on that. okay this is true. that is on tv online and digital radio on the way. we'll continue that great but debate this hour i'm asking is shamima vegan uk responsibility . you'll hear the responsibility. you'll hear the thoughts broadcast thoughts of my panel broadcast columnist he will say labour columnist is he will say labour mp stephen powell. but first
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let's your latest news let's get your latest news headunes. let's get your latest news headlines . for 534 i'm radisson headlines. for 534 i'm radisson islands t shockley radhika says a deal on the northern protocol could be made in the next days, but there's still a gap in negotiations . it comes as the negotiations. it comes as the prime minister faced his after proposing a meeting between king charles and the president of the european commission ursula von der leyen was due to continue talks with rishi sunak before meeting the king, but a trip has now cancelled. labour says now been cancelled. labour says it would have had constitutional . most members of the have condemned the war ukraine except for china and russia, who both refused sign a joint declaration . it comes as ukraine's president says he plans to meet china's zi jinping after beijing set out a plan for the two countries. volodymyr zelenskyy it would be beneficial for security around the world the death toll from the earthquakes
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that hit turkey and syria has now surpassed 50,000. the united nafions now surpassed 50,000. the united nations that 1.5 million people have been made homeless with hundred thousand new homes needed. president erdogan is to rebuild within the next year but experts are warning not to put safety before speed . and have safety before speed. and have gathered in county tyrone to demand an end to violence . demand an end to violence. northern ireland after the attempted murder of an off duty policeman , detective chief policeman, detective chief inspector john was shot outside a sports centre on wednesday. he remains in a critical condition. five suspects have been arrested. detectives say that the incident being treated as terror . the incident being treated as terror. we're on tv , online and terror. we're on tv, online and on dab plus radio . this is gb on dab plus radio. this is gb news. back to nana in a moment.
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good afternoon. this is gb views coming up to 39 minutes after 5:00? i am nana akua where live on tv and on digital radio as well. you can see us live on youtube. now it's time for our great british debate this hour. i'm asking you to name a big in uk responsibility for uk as a responsibility for answers sprung a lost repeal challenge the decision to the driver of a british citizenship she fled east london in she fled fled east london in 2015 to join isis. then she fled fled east london in 2015 to join isis . then she she fled fled east london in 2015 to join isis. then she was stripped of her citizenship 2019 by the home secretary, sajid javid, who there at the time. so what do you think in this unmasking is the uk's let's see what my will make of that broadcaster and columnist lizzie cundy also a former mp steven pound. cundy also a former mp steven pound . hannah, start with you. pound. hannah, start with you. lizzie cundy yeah, no, i think i tend to get away with too much that, you know, but i thought let, let us say because it's important to have that reverse it is because people are it is because most people are quite she's not coming quite that she's not coming back. she's
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back. yeah i'm happy she's not coming i'm not boo hoo. coming back. i'm not boo hoo. bgm n0, coming back. i'm not boo hoo. bgm no, all. made bgm no, not all. she made a pledge to line that there are consequences to her actions she you know she wasn't caught smoking behind the, you know, bike sheds. she joined a death cult . it's absolutely awful . and cult. it's absolutely awful. and i mean i know people i've worked with, those that i've spoken with, those that i've spoken with has , you know, they all say with has, you know, they all say it was she's very manipulative , it was she's very manipulative, calculating woman . and i'm calculating woman. and i'm afraid the only people i feel sorry for are the victims. those you know, the poor victims like david haines. i've heard his daughter speak on this channel and my heart just went out to her to think that this woman could get back here and you know what? she's going to appeal again on whose money? our money. the taxpayers money. and it has to people see if i was shamed of because i've tried to donate to this and she's trying to herself just because she puts a baseball on and a pair of sunglasses is sorry it doesn't stop what she
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has previously done and i'm sorry there are there are consequences to actions. i have a slightly different perspective i like to think that anyone's of redemption i would to think that we all contain within ourselves the seeds of redemption. but there has to be remorse and there has to be remorse and there to be remorse before there has to be remorse before redemption. i can't help thinking, that was 15, thinking, though, that was 15, nearly 16 when she left the country. she was statutorily raped when arrived there raped when she arrived there because when you don't that because when you don't know that this is because she's a she had a but that there laws a choice but that there are laws different. isn't the law different. isn't the law different to us. i think if you go country those are go to another country those are the don't know what that the laws i don't know what that is a 15 year child i think. is a 15 year old child i think. but look look i not you but look look i it's not you don't that don't the don't know that don't know the detail know what detail but don't know but what i'm fact that she was i'm i know the fact that she was married a jihadi and married to a dutch jihadi and nine months she but she nine months later she but she would birth baby would have given birth to a baby stillborn. but if you look something like mary hindley should released should never, ever been released obviously crimes are obviously because the crimes are so thing we so horrendous. the thing we should be begum crimes should be in a begum her crimes particularly that of particularly in that sort of that people who that ghastly group of people who went fingering for went around fingering women for doing the not wearing the appropriate taking appropriate clothing and taking the but on the
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the way to get shot, but on the other hand, do we want to say that we are better than those people are better than the jihadis, than what? she's jihadis, better than what? she's a threat. the stakes high . the a threat. the stakes high. the eu if she plans statement just apologies apologies for that word it to be can't say that i'm going to say it again apologise second time sorry okay . second time sorry okay. statement you realise she is a threat and if she to change we would have to pay to monitor her. would you like her as your neighbour? would you like her to be next door to you? can i just say, do you remember bell? say, do you remember mary bell? mary most hated mary bell was the most hated woman country. she was woman in this country. she was the child murderer. she went to prison. she. expressed prison. she. she expressed great remorse. she was released, given a . she's a false identity. and she's not a false identity. and she's not a member us this on a productive member us this on this it's possible but maribel served her time right so what is happening? bring her back her never wonder why don't know what this obsession is with this woman to serve 20 years here or there why should it be any? i don't understand what you can't accept that you've done something another something wrong in another country. time that country. you serve time that country. you serve time that country. have to come country. why do you have to come back? because we have a
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responsibility. brought responsibility. she was brought in i think know that's in and it i think we know that's irrelevant. look, i'm brought irrelevant. i look, i'm brought up this country. if i go to up in this country. if i go to america steal the things, america and steal the things, you shoot up a load you know, maybe shoot up a load of would never of people, which i would never do. you to oh, do. you not what to say. oh, well, we'll it back. she's well, we'll take it back. she's responsibility here. no, no, no. you. you serve your you. you you could serve your time could not time in this country. could not necessarily. choose necessarily. they may not choose that. there a that. i'm sure there might be a reason don't. the reason they don't. she's the reason they don't. she's the reason i'm done. it was to they because it's because it's in the national mean national interest to i mean in any prisoners get any number of prisoners get repatriated to their home countries a british countries not a british citizen anymore listened to countries not a british citizen any have listened to countries not a british citizen any have listened stened to countries not a british citizen any have listened steiher?o her have you listened to her? she was unfazed. i sing she said she was unfazed. i sing about people being beheaded seeing heads a box. about people being beheaded seeing heads a box . she seeing the heads in a box. she was on face also showed no remorse . so statement. let's remorse. so statement. let's think of the victims of manchester. let's think the family of lee rigby. let's think of the poor daughter. they hate. that's why she she wasn't involved in joining the group, but supported them. i know, but. but she wasn't specifically involved with those cases . but involved with those cases. but she joined that group. she a cult and she supported it and she she literally she was she she literally said she was unfazed that seeing people be
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beheaded . so the question is , beheaded. so the question is, what nationality is she? i mean, is she any nationality all at is she any nationality at all at the moment ? because what the moment? because from what you're known . she you're saying, she is known. she is stateless. okay if is stateless. stateless. okay if she's stateless, then what's going happen to her for the rest of life? don't care. i see of her life? i don't care. i see you don't get to. she you really don't get to. she should of thought about her actions you really care actions have go you really care what to her. i care what happens to her. i care about every cent human being this woman who wants to apparently watch people being beheaded and suicide vest. i tell what i and pray is that tell you what i and pray is that she somehow actually redeem she can somehow actually redeem herself the remorse herself by showing the remorse that should you. she hasn't shown much okay. she hasn't yet so she's not ready to stay from. would say that if was your would you say that if was your son of lee rigby families son think of lee rigby families and she's involved she she left to what they to join and this what they are a death come on i'm going to say when was northern ireland when i was in northern ireland i met lot of parents. children met a lot of parents. children had been killed, murdered had been killed, be murdered and the people who the number of people who actually malice actually said have no malice against my child against the killer of my child because want see that because i want to see that person well, no, but person redeemed. well, no, but they that for their they would see that for their own mind and own peace of mind and
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forgiveness. i mean, look you know, say that no. no, know, you might say that no. no, no. yeah, of course. because it's healing. it's your own personal healing. i hate and we all i mean, if you hate and we all know hate makes you say know hate makes you will say you've got somehow release you've got to somehow release that hey can toxic that hey, hey hey can be toxic in exactly, you know, in terms of exactly, you know, phrases they about phrases that they think about i can can't any redeeming can i can't any redeeming qualities in this young woman she's quite clearly very economic with the i mean economic with the truth i mean she quite puts act she quite clearly puts on an act she quite clearly puts on an act she quite clearly wants to reinvent in all sorts reinvent herself in all sorts of what manipulative reinvent herself in all sorts of what ilanipulative reinvent herself in all sorts of what i thinkilative reinvent herself in all sorts of what i think in:ive reinvent herself in all sorts of what i think in some that essentially i think in some that just shows the absolute utter naivete this and naivete of this person and i that we in this country could be more proud if we could actually bnng more proud if we could actually bring it back and say, look, we're not like those scumbags oven we're not like those scumbags over. we going know why over. we are going to know why all is we're going to have all she is we're going to have to pay to monitor her as it's all i'm not saying for. right. there's nothing more that says she's then if you're not she's doomed then if you're not going i'm going going to pay for her, i'm going to something your to do something without your views. great views. let's welcome our great british opportunity british voices now. opportunity to about to be the show and talk about the topics discussing i've the topics we're discussing i've got with got four let's start with miranda richardson from northampton evening is not northampton this evening is not the one she's a member of. i'm just miranda. do this every just miranda. we do this every time. what think? come
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time. what do you think? come on. i've done a routine . on. i see. i've done a routine. oh, well, this discussion . i oh, well, this discussion. i don't know why. in fairness, this. we're still having she this. we're still having it. she shouldn't brought back here. shouldn't be brought back here. she shouldn't allowed to come she shouldn't be allowed to come back this country. she was back into this country. she was massive for all we know she massive risk for all we know she remains a risk there . are so remains a risk there. are so many things and so many stories that aren't adding are we that aren't adding up are we actually prepared to do that? we've had so many instances where we've monitored people that have gone on to commit horrendous . we know that she's horrendous. we know that she's thought like this. did you know what, let's just not have it back. let's just leave it where it is and let them deal with it. i mean, i do understand what this people this obsession with people wanting that. well, this obsession with people want go that. well, this obsession with people want go to that. well, this obsession with people want go to johnson that. well, this obsession with people want go to johnson jones. well, this obsession with people want go to johnson jones .well, this obsession with people want go to johnson jones . he.l, this obsession with people want go to johnson jones. he in let's go to johnson jones. he in enniskillen. lovely johnson told me they sent mapping trees here. so i know the beautiful place up here and i was talking to some locals about this case and they just say it's a bit of irrelevance and maybe someone a bit attention grabbing and on other hand, i think a bit of
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sympathy and giving her an opportunity to really prove how british she is that maybe up here and spend some time in northern ireland with some proper brits drinking tea and show us that she's got over show to us that she's got over her ways in a generous of her part ways in a generous of what i think people around the world think the same thing that jonathan the invitation is noted , right? going hear , right? we're going to hear from , who's calling from alan mcneely, who's calling in . alan offered in from grimsby. alan offered another . absolutely not. there's another. absolutely not. there's no way that she should come back to this country. no way that she should come back to this country . she there is no to this country. she there is no evidence show we're being forced out of the country . the three of out of the country. the three of them parted, left the company of their own accord . they have said their own accord. they have said in northern syria they want to prosecute her, so she should be prosecuted where she committed crimes. and then she goes 20 years and she will there i really couldn't care less if you don't end up calling organisation and she needs to pay organisation and she needs to pay for that and that's the end of absolutely. alan thank you very much. thank you so much to
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all great footage voices miranda in northamptonshire. jonathan in enniskillen , alan in grimsby. enniskillen, alan in grimsby. also john in kidderminster. oh, alan, john, i haven't asked. i don't . it happens to you don't think. it happens to you for a minute now. you just sat there in the corner. i suddenly thought, i saying thought, why am i saying thank you? kidderminster. talk you? john in kidderminster. talk to think. my to me. what do you think. my opinion is much same as the rest of your guess. i cannot imagine why we would ever let you back in the country ? why do live in the country? why do i live here? is this she was 15 coming on 16 when she left this country . and my children would at that would struggle to get to london then syria. the could then syria. how the hell could do it? she she must have had that were working with us. she took two other young girls with us, went syria as people have us, went to syria as people have already said, viewed some already said, she viewed some really horrendous things, said she really didn't give a step one way or another. whether she saw a few head to the basket or not to my way of thinking, there's no whatsoever for bringing it back. and i would lock well, listen lock up in syria. well, listen thank you so much. my great british voice it's not the day i've been asking is to minimum
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begging the uk's responsibility and of been and lots of you have been getting viewers. getting in with your viewers. nancy , no, she can't come nancy says, no, she can't come back. believe she has no moral back. i believe she has no moral compass. crazy. ross says compass. how crazy. ross says she born in the united kingdom. we need take responsibility. no she should take responsibility as this case, the courts made the right decision on evidence, not opinion. she is dangerous and should be allowed back. born here or okay. so it's to talk to you. all great thoughts, right? it's for our quickfire quiz this week is the part of the show where test my panel, some of the other stories hitting the headunes other stories hitting the headlines now. i'm joined headlines right now. i'm joined by broadcaster columnist by broadcaster and columnist lizzie . lizzie, you're lizzie cundy. lizzie, you're basically as a former labour mp stephen pound, your father . stephen pound, your father. right. and please play along at home. right. let's do. got five questions. question one. a woman has walked in to length of a tube line this week. but which line was it was a piccadilly. was it b hammersmith and city? no, can't buzz until after no, you can't buzz until after these days. i'll give you a tea or the jubilee line. now it's
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all suppressed now she's become to go for piccadilly . to go for piccadilly. piccadilly? you can see that everyone jubilee, jubilee , the everyone jubilee, jubilee, the arms be them. oh with only about half off about nil point. yes, a member of the public decided to walk 15.8 miles passing 29 stops on the hammersmith city line. it took around 6 hours to complete because it was the strike zone i probably would have . would you probably would have. would you do that ? i've i've tried to walk do that? i've i've tried to walk the central line, but i got stuck at watch city. right. well, that's true. those of you don't live in london, it's you wouldn't to question to wouldn't want to do question to one of a trying to buy one kings of a trying to buy a large number of cucumbers, fruit and vegetables rationing has gnpped and vegetables rationing has gripped but how gripped the nation. but how cucumbers to cucumbers ditch attempt to purchase with . purchase clothes also with. physical hundred 100 5050 oh yes oh stop. fine. i was barred from purchasing 100 cucumbers to make detox drinks for our health business at local open fair play. lisa fan said the manager
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came chasing her to say they were simply too many cucumbers in a trolley , which is a little in a trolley, which is a little bit too many cucumbers. but she should have come to my farm shop. they got loads of cucumbers. see, they made my local shop tea that me. have local shop tea that to me. have you cucumbers ? you you got any cucumbers? you certainly got turnips. i've got. you got any cucumbers? you chaveily got turnips. i've got. you got any cucumbers? you chave a got turnips. i've got. you got any cucumbers? you chave a couple 'nips. i've got. you got any cucumbers? you chave a couple of)s. i've got. you got any cucumbers? you chave a couple of cucumbers in i have a couple of cucumbers in the from last year the greenhouse from last year but this this season's but not not this this season's i've just planted them. you're going two time and going to get two at a time and me you mean with they. okay. well no, no, i do like to pinch out courgettes. all so out of courgettes. all so grandmother and arizona was buned grandmother and arizona was buried in eminem shaped coffin thought to be true she was obsessed with multicoloured shaped chocolate you've got to be true in it to lose it. you the have it for that right? is this true as a teacher is initials is eminem was released received the memorabilia from friends right question for we've got two more questions which cuisine has been ranked the most popular in the because the popular in the world because the italian style is still ms. ms.
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italian style is still ms. ms. italian is it the basic in the indian what is interesting indian what is interesting indian especially now you pay for the bread. that's right. yes. adventure travel company . yes. adventure travel company. come on. you isolated the data? well, it's kimchi i've got to see the evidence. so the social across a variety of platforms. right and final question newcastle united will face manchester united in the league cup final for the first domestic cup final for the first domestic cup final for the first domestic cup final since the what year is the pot? so what do you think's 1899? b two thousand and seven or c, 1973? steve season 27 two thousand and seven i'm saying it's not 1973, it's wag . i would it's not 1973, it's wag. i would say it's a long time ago. let's see, it is a newcastle first domestic cup. oh in 99 tied for i don't know you one right. actually got in. i thought it was the first time a cup final
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been played. not the first time. manchester and newcastle went oh what have you sold steven. you gave me the wrong see overall. good. didn't points. good. you didn't get any points. i'm sorry yes. anyway think good. you didn't get any points. i'm only yes. anyway think good. you didn't get any points. i'm only got. anyway think good. you didn't get any points. i'm only got oneyway think good. you didn't get any points. i'm only got one point think good. you didn't get any points. i'm only got one point right( good. you didn't get any points. i'm only got one point right. you only got one point right. i'm really so i've been asking net zero to blame for food shortages and according to our twitter poll, 56% of you say yes, 44% of you say no. golf geeks. excuse my fabulous panel. broadcaster columnist lucy cundy now say former labour mp stephen powis eden, thank very much. and for the first time on the panel, i think you did quite well . i think you did quite well. right. well, and thank you for your will back your company. i will be back tomorrow discuss the top tomorrow to. discuss the top stories. me be stories. joining me will be author broadcaster christine author and broadcaster christine hamilton broadcast hamilton and broadcast journalist kelly. enjoy journalist danny kelly. enjoy the of your day. i'll see the rest of your day. i'll see you tomorrow at four. don't forget to stream the show on youtube. forget to stream the show on youtube . hello, i'm craig simon. youtube. hello, i'm craig simon. is your latest forecast from the met office as we go through the next few days is set remain next few days is set to remain largely dry and settled across the country that's all the country and that's all courtesy a area of high courtesy of a huge area of high pressure not going go very pressure is not going to go very far the next few days. it
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far over the next few days. it does bring in a cool breeze off the north sea. so if you live along east coast england along the east coast of england or across the channel, or down across the channel, certainly up warm as we go certainly wrap up warm as we go through the next few days here for rest of saturday. for the rest of saturday. we've seen the cloud melt away for the rest of saturday. we've seerthat the cloud melt away for the rest of saturday. we've seerthat to he cloud melt away for the rest of saturday. we've seerthat to lead oud melt away for the rest of saturday. we've seerthat to lead ouya�*nelt away for the rest of saturday. we've seerthat to lead ou
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sunday evening then sees a repeat performance. a lot of the cloud melting away once again, leading a fairly cold and frosty night along parts of the north sea coast. again, the cloud will to come in, keeping things above freezing here. so a cold and frosty start to the new week on monday morning . best of the monday morning. best of the sunshine as we start day across western scotland over ireland, down towards the south, western of the country too. but then as the day goes on, this cloud across most central parts of the country will sink its way a bit further southwards, largely dry, though, but there still be the odd around . and as we go odd shower around. and as we go into the middle parts of the week, very changes, largely dry , that feeling , often cloudy, that feeling cold in the wind. , often cloudy, that feeling cold in the wind . join me, cold in the wind. join me, camilla tominey at 930 on sunday morning when i'll be asking lord frost, boris johnson's brexit negotiator. whether rishi sunak land a deal on northern ireland that keeps the brexiteers happy,
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i'll be speaking to the dup's sammy wilson about the unionists demands . john bolton, the former demands. john bolton, the former us national security adviser under donald trump joins me to discuss the first anniversary of the war in ukraine along with a lexicon shrinker , the mayor of lexicon shrinker, the mayor of odesa all that and more at 930 on .
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good evening, good evening , fellow travellers. good evening, fellow travellers. welcome along to neil. all of life on gb news tv and on radio . tonight on the show i'll be talking to actress and biohacker davinia taylor about the
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importance of food , how it's the

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