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tv   Headliners  GB News  February 28, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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good evening. you're with gb news. in a moment, headlines. but first, let's you up to date with the latest news headlines. and the prime minister has addressed tory backbenchers at the 1922 committee. this evening after returning from his visit to northern ireland yesterday in an attempt to gather support his new brexit trade deal with the eu. rishi sunak says the windsor framework addresses around the northern ireland protocol and he urged the dup return to power sharing . the deal removes sharing. the deal removes barriers on trade the irish sea, but it still includes a role for the european court of justice. well tory backbenchers and are still reviewing the detail. there is a significant eu law that comes along that will have lasting and significant on the everyday lives of people here in northern ireland. that the
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assembly will be allowed to pull the emergency brake simply crystal clear the uk government then does have an unequipped a co veto. and what i've said is that the uk government wants to sit down with the parties in northern ireland assembly to codhy northern ireland assembly to codify how the uk government would use that veto .7 well, the would use that veto? well, the other main story today on gb news, a couple that went missing their newborn baby in january have been rearrested on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter. constance marten and her mark gordon were found in brighton yesterday and were initially arrested on suspicion of child neglect. more than 200 police officers are searching and 91 square mile area to find the two month old baby . more the two month old baby. more than 100,000 civil servants are planning strike action on the day of the chancellor's members of the public and commercial services union, which represents government departments border force and the dvla will all walk out on the 15th of march. london
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underground staff along the unions from aslef and the rmt will also strike in disputes over pensions and job losses . over pensions and job losses. more than 40,000 marks and spencer staff, though are going to get a pay rise from april while the hourly pay of customers and staff will rise from . pounds 20 to £10.90, from. pounds 20 to £10.90, taking their rate pay above the national living wage . the move national living wage. the move will cost the supermarket national living wage. the move will cost the supermarke t £57 will cost the supermarket £57 million, but they're calling it their biggest ever investment in staff salaries . and finally, the staff salaries. and finally, the last set , new stamps to feature last set, new stamps to feature queen elizabeth. the second silhouette have been unveiled by the royal mail. the 12 stamps marked the 100th anniversary. all of the steam locomotive art of the flying scotsman. the late queen's image has appeared on stamps since 1968, but a silhouette king charles will now be phased in over the coming months to date . on tv, online
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months to date. on tv, online and app plus radio with gb news. the people's channel. well, now it's the people's channel. well, now wsfime the people's channel. well, now it's time for, headliners . it's time for, headliners. hello and welcome to headliners . i'm and welcome to headliners. i'm your host, josh howie with me to take you through wednesday's newspapers are two understudies for the west end production magic mike leo kearse and roger monkhouse. hello hello . do you monkhouse. hello hello. do you know you're not impressed with that intro? i thought that was a big thing. you up? of a little idea. what? magic mike. i believe it's something to do with strippers, isn't it? isn't that's exactly what it is. i wanted something. it's just strippers. is that what it is? you can see now by you you can see right now by you pretending you know pretending you don't know what magic how good an actor magic mike is, how good an actor you are? well, we've both you really are? well, we've both done stripping, paint done stripping, but paint stripper. really? didn't. stripper. oh, really? i didn't. i you to i wouldn't take you to be a handyman type person, but i'm.
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if i get straight to, like , if i get straight to, like, vegas. let's take a look at tomorrow's pages. and we are going start with daily mail going to start with daily mail police. we fear that their baby has come to harm . the paper has come to harm. the paper tonight gambles his political career on defying deal critics mirror exclusive medical arms of love express wishes brexit boost for the uk . the times deal is for the uk. the times deal is negotiable, sunak tells dupe. and finally, the star market traders to forces to what quadruple veg prices oily mush want to buy a tonne it and those front pages okay . front pages okay. the okay let's kick off with the times leo and let's get into the cross let's get the death rates in early so a karen damaged at a school in yorkshire has been recorded as heat incident by the police and
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it's a west yorkshire police became involved careful high school wakefield after an autistic boy was told to bring in a copy of the islamic holy book the koran not the koran, not crying is a music magazine. it was a dare by his friends after a video game and it was damaged after being dropped in a busy corridor and four pupils were suspended for a week and the police, after rumours spread that it was set alight were which were totally false and just, you know, it fell from a bag as far as the evidence shows and, you know, was mildly scuffed . but still, you know, scuffed. but still, you know, this is was incendiary news for the for the and so the police acted it as a non crime he and the boys were four pupils were suspended so that shows that we now have de facto blessing new laws in the uk where, you know if this had been a copy of the yellow pages or or a harry potter, nobody would have or the biped or the bible, nobody would have it on. blasphemy have passed it on. blasphemy laws were specifically taken from statute book in 2008 from the statute book in 2008 because were deemed be
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because they were deemed to be in contravention people's in contravention of people's right free speech. of course right free speech. so of course the reintroduction by stealth of any level of the policing blasphemy for in connection with any religion is completely unacceptable for those very yep. and this this happened i think only about ten miles away from the batley grammar school, where a teacher was is what i believe is still in hiding after he was he was teaching . and as part of he was teaching. and as part of the part of , the lesson he the part of, the lesson he showed an image of the prophet muhammad which obviously for some reason is offensive or deemed offensive. and then he's to go. and it's not like people are a bit he's got to go into hiding . finally, fear for their hiding. finally, fear for their safety. well, this is thing that's most amazing to me. and roger what seems incredible is that police recorded that the police have recorded this as non crime. hey this incident as non crime. hey instead of whatever yet they haven't investigated death threats like actual death threats. yeah or grooming gangs. i mean if the if the police approach to this. well i mean
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it's really i mean the police is grooming gangs happen for and still this particular story still this particular story still there have i think is i think it's kind of kind of really i mean it's just really when you think of a community it's about the prioritisation crime and clearly all the values that condition that and take what the police are are skewed horrendously for whatever reasons are the reasons. well suella braverman has come in here seemingly saying she's is she going to intervene what is she going to intervene what is she going to do? i mean, she's talking, i guess, how rima is the police. but for me these children have also been suspend it. i understand. yeah. and certainly from the certainly someone from the department needs to department of education needs to get they've been get involved. they've been suspended a suspended for a they've lost a week education. yeah because suspended for a they've lost a wethis. education. yeah because suspended for a they've lost a wethis. yeah.ation. yeah because suspended for a they've lost a wethis. yeah. and. yeah because suspended for a they've lost a wethis. yeah. and if’eah because suspended for a they've lost a wethis. yeah. and if we're ecause of this. yeah. and if we're talking about hurt feelings, i mean the who's the subject mean the boy who's the subject of these, all these rumours of all these, all these rumours and threats, he's, and death threats, he's, he's autistic. young kid . he's autistic. he's young kid. he's absolutely terrified, hasn't eaten and. he's you know, is eaten and. he's is, you know, is anxiety levels through the roof according so yeah
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according to his mother so yeah what has feelings do they do they don't matter we just to worry about the feelings of you know certain communities just trying to just sort of just underline what you said. they sounded my make want. i like deliberately i only subtly undermine you this of course. absolutely not. the province of the police and it's all about the police and it's all about the department education and it's about the school actually not fulfil their duties towards kids and in local of the children four of them and they're all children of vulnerable but an autistic ten child more so than anyone. yeah and to use these nine crime heath instance still which have been you know they've been castigated is ridiculous because this is a crime that doesn't actually reach the threshold of criminality. so it's a known crime. it's nip say by the police we call it the recording as some of a sort of near crime , a hate incidents. that's an absolutely nonsense . it's
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absolutely nonsense. it's a stalinist policing of people's people's opinion and minor actions . it is crazy . also we actions. it is crazy. also we have a little photo here of princess of wales or wales as every newspaper seems to have gone with that particular pun looking fragrant and not at all. that's not how i look in the gym . and you don't wear a long dress over your knee . i want to dress over your knee. i want to cover my modesty . dress over your knee. i want to cover my modesty. i'm going to love a carry on type incident where that gets caught in the flywheel and gets gets ripped off she's wearing union jack off and she's wearing union jack underpants on. she seems to be wearing a sort of palestinian scarf skirt. well scarf as her skirt. right. well but supposedly she won, as is her constitutional . i know. i'm her constitutional. i know. i'm not offended. it's and then the other what's the other story that roger on the page of the times. it's pretty vague still is . yes, absolutely. this is is. yes, absolutely. this is mean genuinely impressive . if he mean genuinely impressive. if he pulls it off, then it's genuinely a coup. this is rishi sunak's renegotiation of the
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northern ireland protocol, which has defied all expectations and apparently received the approval of the majority of tory backbenchers who you might have assumed would be critical and might be problematic. steve baken might be problematic. steve baker. david davis it's, it's amazing actually, frankly , he's amazing actually, frankly, he's apparently got concession from the eu that no one assumed were possible . well, leo, i mean, is possible. well, leo, i mean, is this actually kind of standing and being standing up to his party really because there were all these rumours that that was going to be these on the backbenches and whatnot. it seems like he's kind of stared them down. are you standing up to tiers in his own to the brexit tiers in his own party? he's also standing up to the know, said, no, the dup, you know, he said, no, no, but i mean of the comments, he's , quite funny. he's made a quite, quite funny. he said northern ireland is uniquely positioned to provide access to markets in the uk and europe it's like what the uk, the whole of the. but not only
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has he faced down his critics he's actually steve baker who was formerly not chairman of the lg, actually touring the studios support in support of the deal. it's amazing. but do pay off in a position well of course where they're very aware of which the wind is blowing and they're very that a change of administration would leave them high and dry. so now is the perhaps the time to tuck in. oh so it's like all divorce isn't a few years divorce isn't it. a few years down line, dust settles down the line, dust settles and you to pay a little you can start to pay a little bit more reasonable about things. the eu seeing things. maybe the eu seeing someone else. that's what someone else. maybe that's what it wish. maybe that's the it is. i wish. maybe that's the key. would leave. key. wish my dad would leave. yes mum and dad were yes wish my mum and dad were like dup. that's what a lot like the dup. that's what a lot of when parents get back of when my parents get back together it's so roger, let's together. it's so roger, let's have look here at the daily express. where are they going with continuing really a theme ? with continuing really a theme? well, it's exactly the same thing, which of course because it's the big news of the day and so it should be wishes the pedal power you christmas of power for you christmas of wheels. more
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wheels. yeah this is more interesting than interesting because rather than just the princess just the picture of the princess the words they got the prince and ifs the words they got the prince and it's like and princess of like it's like it's some sort of video game and they look so in love. they look so happy . she outperformed him, so happy. she outperformed him, apparently. really good for her. but getting back to this , this but getting back to this, this seems to be more about the positive response that's been received in the business community. do you think will actually make much of a difference? roger well, it's specifically about northern ireland. it so , yes, undoubtedly ireland. it so, yes, undoubtedly will make a lot of difference because it's going to take away a lot of the bureaucracy see which was hampering businesses in northern. so undoubtedly if it goes through if it doesn't apart suddenly in the next 24 hours or 12 hours or four days or however long it takes . and or however long it takes. and we're waiting to see what we're all waiting to see what bofis we're all waiting to see what boris say about it. boris johnson to say about it. and all waiting to see and we're all waiting to see what dup to say about it what the dup has to say about it eventually. but the fact that they haven't yet come out against there's got to be against it, there's got to be very sign. is this, do very good sign. leo, is this, do you a turning for
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you think, a turning point for rishi sunak his premiership? well, good well, yes, he's done a few good things. he's got rid of nicolas sturgeon to continue with boris. well he pretty much well he had pretty much challenged agenda reform, which well he had pretty much chala nged agenda reform, which well he had pretty much chala clever genda reform, which well he had pretty much chala clever move, reform, which well he had pretty much chala clever move, and'm, which well he had pretty much chala clever move, and he which was a clever move, and he received a lot of criticism for it. and a lot of question marks were raised. and yet he did it. and it was a good call the end, because it turns that two because it turns out that two thirds the scottish thirds of the scottish electorate of it. yeah. electorate approved of it. yeah. and actually this guy and it actually means this guy is likely to want to stay is more likely to want to stay in the uk because he's going to stop scotland passing stop scotland from passing ridiculous . and yet the ridiculous bills. and yet the polls aren't moving for him . polls aren't moving for him. yeah, polls haven't moved yeah, the polls haven't moved all. he's had no bounce and no credit for what seems to be so far quite good and some might be saying this is them the tories fixing their own mistakes in a way. yeah it's set in stone isn't it mean. it would be frankly it would take war to shift the polls now wouldn't it. yeah. so yeah that's go on to a slightly happier story the arms of love in the mirror. yeah. so this single dad jamie lost all
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his limbs in a terrible accident seven years ago. i'm not sure what the accident is legal. it was a pylon like his. like pylon a like an electricity pylon . a like an electricity pylon. yes. like it fell on him when he working sheets of metal and then essentially, oh, no luck at all the school corridors. yeah. yeah jeez. yeah that's horrendous. yeah. so maybe shouldn't have said that. well, oh, my . so yeah said that. well, oh, my. so yeah it knocked his tore his arms and his legs . oh, oh. all his limbs his legs. oh, oh. all his limbs and there's four of them and now is it a hand transplant. a hundred double and splint, so he can hold his children again? and we see there's, there's a lot of advancements with transplant technology facial technology we've seen facial transplants. mean problem transplants. i mean the problem is complicated join is the is very complicated join in all the tendons nerves and all the rest of it . then as well all the rest of it. then as well as that, you've got the body is trying to within advancements they can match with a donor who is going to be less likely to be rejected. you've still got to take immunosuppressant drugs to stop the transplant being, of
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course , if i had a hair course, if i had a hair transplant, if those from my own head so that also from roger head so that was also from roger engineer you all roger's here you're going to be pointing the finger at barnet i don't know what this is. oh, my god. that's why i'm growing my beard . yeah. why i'm growing my beard. yeah. so somebody's been killing my delivery to get it flipped on to the top. yeah. you just turn your head down. let's see your head upside down. let's see if works. the camera here. if that works. the camera here. i know. okay, fine . but that is i know. okay, fine. but that is a very positive story. do you know if your hands came from the same person that would same person because that would be weird. i don't. that be kind of weird. i don't. that would be kind of good to know. and also there's sort of horror movies on that. mean, they movies on that. i mean, they look same colours. well, if look the same colours. well, if he's his limbs, he's lost his limbs, you do wonder sound. the wonder what they sound. the hands as well. well hands on, too, as well. well think have like is he think they have bits like is he actually got arm trunks. well it's got tattoos and stuff. he's his it's a great his arms. yeah. it's a great story. it's it's he story. it's just, it's not, he can hold his daughters and yeah. it's a little also you wouldn't have thing where have to do that thing where you lie on your hand to make it feel like it's somebody else. i
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wouldn't what you're about. wouldn't know what you're about. i someone else , so i usually get someone else, so i can tell you is a private school. josh is the one give away. oh roger, let's finish off with the star, which we also . with the star, which we also. that's what helped . is the daily that's what helped. is the daily stuff front page, which that market traders are forced to quadruple their veg prices with wonderful headline as you've already read or want to buy a tonne market traders are being charged £2 for a single lettuce and £24 for a crate to 20 tomatoes. why? as britain's crisis worsens , i do struggle to crisis worsens, i do struggle to believe , you know, i in my local believe, you know, i in my local supermarket, i've got some tomatoes the other day, supermarket, i've got some tomatoes the other day , £4, tomatoes the other day, £4, really, for a bunch of tomorrow. why did you pay them? because i wanted make tomato wanted to make a tomato mozzarella need mozzarella salad. just need some. well, i did a loss making a bolognaise and i went, there's a bolognaise and i went, there's a bag of frozen peas that are being frozen peas all week. i
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was going to say this story should said. this is this is should be said. this is this is not affecting scotland all. not affecting scotland at all. this whole scotland literally now know. are scot like now know. but you are scot like as a cultural thing the whole. yeah. because we don't eat vegetables. that was the vegetables. yes that was the joke. tomatoes joke. oh right. chip tomatoes even available in february. even be available in february. you do question these things don't there are don't you. yeah. also there are fruit . oh really. our vitamin fruit. oh really. our vitamin tins as well. we're going to get pedantic, but that's the front pages. then join us after the for . break a pages. then join us after the for. break a nameplate, micro—aggressions . good news for micro—aggressions. good news for drug smugglers and the snp say space as well if anybody needs them . see you in a minute.
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so from t chemicals . sorry. so from t chemicals. sorry. welcome back to headliners with me josh, howie and leo lefty curtis and roger. right monkhouse. that's not their
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politics just which way they lean . i'm more of a centrist. lean. i'm more of a centrist. let's kick off with wednesday's times . the woman with a cheap times. the woman with a cheap wig who brought down the snp and leo. i'm not talking about nicola sturgeon. do you really think nicola sturgeon wear wig? i mean, i want to look like my head's unravelling and transgender rip roger for laughing. transgender rapist that's those i'm when your head finally unravels but transgender rapist ala bryson sentenced eight years in prison so this is i bryson was a man graham who raped two women. and while he was the process was in the court process decided he was actually a transgender in scotland. if you see you're a woman , even if you see you're a woman, even if you're a man , you get sent to you're a man, you get sent to a women's prison like your heels three times. you don't even need to do that, it's literally just a magic spell. you just see, i am woman and you magically am a woman and you magically a woman in the eyes of the law. because scotland passed gender reform made it easier reform bill, they made it easier for transition to me, for people to transition to me, i transition i mean, people could transition
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at age and without at a younger age and without being verified by medical panel and living as a woman and and living as a as a woman and convincing doctor you have convincing a doctor you to have to live as, if for three months now out than two years in now is out than two years in your genden now is out than two years in your gender. yeah so very your chosen gender. yeah so very easy to just identify . and when easy to just identify. and when it's convenient, when convenient, such as when you're a double rapist, you want to go to a women's prison for obvious nefarious reasons . and when the nefarious reasons. and when the gender reform bill was was being debated, was raised , they debated, this was raised, they said, you know, this could cause these and were told these issues. and we were told you're being ridiculous transphobia , bigots, this would transphobia, bigots, this would never happen. obviously it immediately happened. this is the the only case of this the only the only case of this happening. and it brought their nicola because because happening. and it brought their nico bryson because because happening. and it brought their nicobryson was because because happening. and it brought their nicobryson was sent|use because happening. and it brought their nico bryson was sent toe because isla bryson was sent to originally sent to a female prison, then sent a male prison when there was an outcry. but nicola sturgeon under her ideology, under her own . if ideology, under her own. if somebody says there are women are definitely women. so it's like, why do you send women to a male prison then she couldn't ever point defined whether either bryson was a woman or a
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man and she was constantly pestered of course rightly by every journalist in every interview because she couldn't come up with a straight logical individual was the first line that they all refer. and then referred to the rapist. a rapist , right. which is a new gender. it's not it's not, jane, that if anything, it's a sexuality . anything, it's a sexuality. well, in scottish law, of course, have to be male technically to be a rapist. right but mean, it's right but i mean, it's interesting to how all interesting to see how all newspapers as newspapers are reporting as either bryson opposed to their real name , which is, you know, real name, which is, you know, adam saying people are going along with thing as to this identity or not including and of course in the court of law where one of the victims had to her penis . yeah but i think this penis. yeah but i think this will bring down gender ideology because it explores exposes the ridiculousness of . it i mean if ridiculousness of. it i mean if adam graham can say i'm a woman and then everybody's got to pretend that he's a video newspaper, including all the
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newspaper, including all the newspaper, i mean, that is that is a massive insult a genuine transgender women who the effort and women you know, don't go about committing crimes as i think this the fact the think this this the fact the british remain can nefariously identify as women that's going to bring this gender ideology andifs to bring this gender ideology and it's going to go back the way it was where it was know if you if you want to transition you if you want to transition you can if you want to be recognised as a woman you can but you've got put some but you've got to put some effort you've got to really effort and you've got to really mean it. and how will be housed by the scottish prison system now. well, i'm guessing within another people now. well, i'm guessing within anotidentify people now. well, i'm guessing within anotidentify as people now. well, i'm guessing within anotidentify as trans people now. well, i'm guessing within anotidentify as trans but people now. well, i'm guessing within anotidentify as trans but inzople now. well, i'm guessing within anotidentify as trans but in thee who identify as trans but in the male estate. yeah. and where where they're not biological women on around them and there are four or five apparently in the scottish prison system who are identifying as women. you know. there's one thing i want to say as we move on that site from the story is this person got 80 years for raping two women. that seems like an incredibly short sentence for
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such a heinous crime . and i such a heinous crime. and i don't think i think getting lost within this whole gender identity sting of whatever's on north of the border , that seems north of the border, that seems seems like a very short period of time for someone to serve a deep degree. do you think they should be longer sentences? i always hesitate to offer up anything on sentence saying when i am less qualified than the judge and indeed less so fight with the details of the case than the judge. so i trust system rather than my own tabloid instinct to say you should look although i don't doubt undoubtedly he is undoubtedly a threat still remains a threat and probably will be a threat when he's released. find onto i news nights and roger list of things that can entice children into life of crime is long more specifically a foot long. this is more the range of know pagans
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as someone somewhere. oh well you can laugh you can have this. oh he knew that you knew it. yeah then he laugh, identify with the people at home watching. they've got no idea what you're talking about. yeah. you also serious subject josh. not funny. oh i'm just this is good. jake trump, secretary this visit this is a little bit grim this this story is all about various charities providing evidence to a committee mps about ways which the cynical criminal gangs who and who are behind the county lines drugs operations in this country lure trap children into working for them and indeed running drugs housing drugs hiding drugs , etc. housing drugs hiding drugs, etc. and it's all there's a suggestion here that it's all about the cost of living in crisis. i think that's spurious , be honest with you, because of course, these cynical operations are always well , target are always well, target vulnerable children will always be vulnerable children , and they
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be vulnerable children, and they will always target them with what they don't have, which might be subway sandwiches or it might be subway sandwiches or it might sweets , it might might be sweets, it might be stolen or might drugs stolen bikes, or it might drugs or might be as in this or indeed it might be as in this case, apparently a free coinage to use in video games. i was going to say that leo would tell us about this. the video games connection. they're connection. yeah they're not even coins. are the even real coins. those are the coins that use in whatever coins that you use in whatever video playing your video games you're playing your mobile more levels mobile phone to get more levels more know whatever, make a character transgender more know whatever, make a character is transgender more know whatever, make a character is .:ransgender more know whatever, make a character is . iansgender more know whatever, make a character is . i mean der not whatever is. i mean that's not if the authorities seem to be was minded you know the authority seemed to be using this as an excuse to this in that want to up the that they want to beef up the only bill to tackle . only safety bill to tackle. worries me this is a video authoritarian piece of legislation they'll be hugely onerous on on webcam isn't hugely onerous on people using using the web you're going to have to sign to in watch is going to be it's to be terrible and i think the fact the fact is i mean already these kind lines gangs losing children and children want to work they to be
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back up the chimneys so we need to just you know when can we get them back in the looms get british children not don't just leave it to bangladeshi children. get british children back in those back into the spinning journeys from drug deaung spinning journeys from drug dealing and back to the chimneys. okay this rather into a story which we're going to tackle later. absenteeism absenteeism has gone up and remained up since lockdown . and remained up since lockdown. and it's all about that. and of course , children who never went course, children who never went back to the system have been effectively by the system. they're the vulnerable ones. they're the vulnerable ones. they're the vulnerable ones. they're the ones, by the way, the figures that we're talking about at 27,000 children involved estimated . blimey, yes. involved estimated. blimey, yes. leo, it's your favourite, the guardian. and it seems like the best time to fly back from colombia is half term. yeah, but border officers been border force officers been ordered to deprioritized customs work at airports such as searching for guns and drugs in order to stop queues for street travellers. so the way queuing up may annoy people . just up may annoy people. just letting people go through with
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bncks letting people go through with bricks of , cocaine and ak 47. bricks of, cocaine and ak 47. and so mean you see what else they in allowing you cross the border in the street as a kid anything that can fall can basically come across into the country with no no problems. but yes is a good time to make a few quid if you want to. if want to smuggle some cocaine stuff inside of germany. this doesn't bother me as much as it should do, to be honest with you. we know there are busy know that when there are busy times at the airport, that's a good time to go through with stuff. it's stating the obvious . it really and it's only spot checks. . it really and it's only spot checks . it's not intelligence checks. it's not intelligence led searches that are being stopped by this. it's only spot checks. so we all know that you're likely to get you you're less likely to get you luggage rifled through by some board official . yeah when it's board official. yeah when it's busy holidays on that we can't the beaches there's no point fretting the airport queues is that when people have already shown their passport is this the tory government knowing which side their bread is because it seems like their big concern with those going skiing skiing .
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with those going skiing skiing. we get through the telegraph nice and roses are red. gb news is toilets a communal black lecturer who complained of failure to correct nameplate on a door loses racism tribunal rogen a door loses racism tribunal roger. this is a black lecturer at bristol university who has mischievously well , let us not mischievously well, let us not judge like he did complained various microaggressions perpetrated against her by the university authorities. like for instance putting her academic title on her nameplate on door. she's apparently a briton of origin, but she's lost all her claims of unemployment tribunal because it turns out that she's merely the victim of bureaucratic incompetence , just bureaucratic incompetence, just like anyone . be which is quite a like anyone. be which is quite a good thing it's quite nice to know that the tribunals work, to some extent she's she's a
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victim, the prevailing culture, isn't she? yeah when she believes herself to be the victim of when in actual she's just suffer like we all do from bureaucratic incompetence inefficiency. this is exactly i mean her name is dr. peters . so mean her name is dr. peters. so there's nothing to indicate anybody's and whatever. and then, of course someone else within her department, i believe , also has exactly the same problem , didn't have the right problem, didn't have the right name onto their thing. so that there's no indication if it's like a control all, isn't it? it's like a controlled experiment. i mean, the early indications are that she wasn't treated differently at all. there are some indications that, of course you're treated preferentially to some extent based upon your ethnicity in some fields of academe but why never say so . yeah so two things never say so. yeah so two things and two but i was going to ask is and roger kind of pointed to this it seems more more the court is where we have to turn
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to return some sanity . well, to return some sanity. well, that's right. and it seems to be the last bastion of objective truth wing, both sides of the argument, instead of just barrelling through with this ideology of critical race theory that says, you know , everything that says, you know, everything around us is racist and conspiring against anybody who's a minority. well can i go back to my point, which is she herself is a victim of that you know, it's not just the white authorities, this other victim of this is her. and a university lecturer. she used to stupid to realise it. yes. what a shame . realise it. yes. what a shame. okay. it seems like her next court case start now . that's it court case start now. that's it for part two. join us after the break for bad education meets sex labour goes straight to menopause and our obligatory rowling story you that .
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welcome back to headline and we're going to kick things off straight with the daily mail returning to the homeland. so yes the snp are having these lead ship hustings they're having . a we haven't heard having. a we haven't heard because they're going to have these hustings in secret behind closed doors. it's in so normally you know you public and political debates happen they're televised they have in an air so everybody can can them and challenge them and challenge and see what the politicians are thinking and seeing and because the politicians in question and particularly humza yousaf and kate forbes, have said some things that are quite controversial they've decided, no, we better have this in a cave nobody can see it. so cave where nobody can see it. so absolutely so controversies absolutely and so controversies keep forbes is member of the scottish free church or something like that. it was a sort of, you know, quite fundamentalist christian church. so she's got some some views on gay marriage and things like
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that. gay marriage and things like that . like gay marriage and things like that. like him, he gay marriage and things like that . like him, he doesn't that. like him, he doesn't really like, you know, no matter this stuff is was humza yousaf it says they say they like gay marriage but then it was revealed by alex neill . there's revealed by alex neill. there's claims by alex neill these same politician had the politician that humza had the vote marriage under vote on gay marriage under pressure from his mosque . so pressure from his mosque. so he's also got some sort of religious bias, according to alex. he's the only one that will pursue the gender business. interesting because the other two candidates have said that they would step from that. we had ash regan and actually resigned from the from the party in protest of the gender reform bill, which was the third the third candidate, but was wait about this. i thought the whole point televising leadership point of televising leadership debates could play debates was that you could play the membership throughout the entire membership throughout country. yeah, now they're only nine secret or safe nine of these secret or safe space events, so you're not going to get the entire membership in holes, are they, to see live debates. so how can the membership make an informed choice without the hosting going aheadin choice without the hosting going ahead in a public space as well?
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they're only going to have if they've only four members. that's just be the same nine people over and over again. wednesdays rodger and finally, it seems that labour knows what a well is you say it's a woman is. well is you say it's quite interesting, i think, because it's another initiative from labour which i think has something to in fairness and you kind of know which way the wind is blowing, don't you, when the opposition are coming out with the new ideas, which are quite plausible, be honest with you, this support . this about labour support. menopausal women who are one of the largest growing groups , the the largest growing groups, the gp workforce . understandably, gp workforce. understandably, because we're an ageing population and who are not and have not heretofore received support as they encounter and deal with perimenopause. what sort of policies are they talking? well, that's a bit more vague and that's perhaps where problem lies, because some of these ideas are they'll get paid time off. i mean that's to be expected. all labour always appeal to people but so you want them to do the work. you get to
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get money for free. yeah, that's the of socialism until the essence of socialism until the the the money runs out. but the thing that jumped me working environments temperature thing that jumped me working environn every temperature thing that jumped me working environnevery businessierature thing that jumped me working environnevery business is ature thing that jumped me working environnevery business is going areas so every business is going to burdened this need to to be burdened with this need to provide sort of you know provide this sort of you know look a cigar smoking area with the temperatures on and some angry women in the corner. the temperatures on and some angry women in the corner . yeah angry women in the corner. yeah it's don't have enough hassle and red tape with bringing temperature i'm with with red tape in what's how they're intended do it is that they're inviting all businesses to submit to a central authority a government authority the ways in which they will be supportive of and deal with the issue . and deal with the issue. perimenopause for women in the workplace , which is once again workplace, which is once again an invitation to just swell . the an invitation to just swell. the bureaucracy is not sexy , but it bureaucracy is not sexy, but it is a serious issue . are arguing is a serious issue. are arguing that one in ten women are leaving work because of going through the indefinite hardships because of the saying that is as an excuse really they enjoyed furlough they want to sit all and looking forward to a
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lifetime menopause then you will have we have a little bit more sympathy . we have a shrinking sympathy. we have a shrinking workforce and it's important to enable stay in the enable people stay in the workplace if possible during my lifetime . this is also quite lifetime. this is also quite interesting , as you say , we're interesting, as you say, we're kind of getting a drip, drip of policies now as we are getting a tiny bit closer to the election. also, it shows some confidence that they're willing to put these out there now because , who these out there now because, who knows what else is waiting for us? yeah. and they're starting to put out the proper, you know, before it's all going to be going to sort of immigration. going to do sort of immigration. we're to be looking we're going to be looking for business this nonetheless. oh, yeah, we're to yeah, actually, we're going to be businesses with ridiculous be in businesses with ridiculous legislation know, give legislation and, you know, give people and people money for nothing and help people . the daily now help people. the daily mail, now they are the isle of man really lives up to its name here. so school on the isle of man is to spin to this sex education curriculum after a drag queen guest reportedly told pupils there were 73 gender years and meet a child he said but i think
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a way to leave the classroom so i mean first i mean the child was obviously but first mean what are the other 71. yeah there's two genders two genders and 71 narcissistic attention seeker mentally ill and is 70 haircuts. yeah but why why is a drag queen teaching sex education? i want to i want to know that. i mean, why does a drag queen want to teach sex education? it's slightly worries me. why do we balloon sculptors teaching? it's nonsense. when do get clones teach ? well, those get clones to teach? well, those are actually quite good ideas balloons is in the labour manager . so balloons is in the labour manager. so you know balloons is in the labour manager . so you know the balloons is in the labour manager. so you know the online word that people seem to use is a about this stuff is grooming. oh you mean as well as grooming and ideology but this surely is not right. do parents really need to be looking into what their schools are teaching? i think that it's a good thing. schools teach sex education. i think most people would agree
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with that. but clearly, education is to some extent or other in the grip of trans ideology , which is problematic ideology, which is problematic enormously , especially as a enormously, especially as a parent. i mean, i think of the isle of man as a fairly traditional place. and i'm surprised that this sort of nonsense going on there. yeah. surprise because we've seen institutions throughout the country be taken over by places like stonewall and whatever . like stonewall and whatever. they do it because they feel like, oh, i need i'm being . yeah like, oh, i need i'm being. yeah and then they don't do actual detail. they think they're being and they realise that the and they don't realise that the spreading ideas of huge get, i mean the increase in transgender ism and children is sort of replaced anorexia as a way for teenage to exercise control sexualise their bodies. yes i mean yeah and it's understandable they would be afraid of puberty and all the processes that all children undergo. and this is of course to hang that over isn't it and also to hang there that troubled coat upon these have been traumatised. they're saying some
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of them in terms of not wanting to go back to school or and it wasn't just this gender there wasn't just this gender there was also teaching stuff about . was also teaching stuff about. i'm trying to think of the right onan ism yeah, i'm just always in is i'm send them a daughter to school in afghanistan that is seems to be the place in the world in the world that you can send your daughter to school. there is no school for women in afghanistan. the thing that through with book she's going to school with boko haram. okay the times next leo are ethnic minorities are overrepresented on television because the white host white panellist who's also a white guy i am full cherokee so nearly half of tv in the uk believe the ethnic minorities and the lgbt communities are over represented on television . over represented on television. i just want to know what the other 55% are watching. i mean just like every ad break is , you just like every ad break is, you know, some transgender person on roller skates selling some paint or , whatever is they're actually or, whatever is they're actually sailing doesn't to matter anymore as long as they're in
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mixed race relationship and. there are, you know, rainbow coloured . what's interesting coloured. what's interesting this article though and the time is roger is they don't actually seem provide any statistics for the number of characters from minority groups who are on tv andifs minority groups who are on tv and it's ridiculous because actually quotes in this article very specific statistics about the ethnic makeup of the population according to the census. but it doesn't tell you about that over represent station on the television which seems that i mean let's face it we've got enough media studies undergraduates to sit down making notes. that's baffling to me that can't compare the reality . yeah. to the reality. yeah. to the perception. yeah mean i don't know if the ads they would say that any such survey wouldn't be accurate because it's the perception so you might see somebody who's you might see gary lineker and be like well there is there's a there's a person of colour as gary lineker himself did. indeed long
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familiar with that particular story. but it is interesting that we are kind of talking this now. they were saying, though, they're using some figures from 217 in which show at the time five 500 big marketing companies were very about underrepresentation . and it underrepresentation. and it seems that at that point , which seems that at that point, which is six years ago now, that arguably was a need to cause. and the figures they do have, i think, from 2010 were only 5% of tv adverts did have people of colour in them and. about 10% of the country, only five companies. i did that. an interesting place this this this is a survey is a relative with other countries and evidently it's a it's a british problem and it doesn't happen in other countries and the whole thing and the tightening commissioned it's a yougov survey which was commissioned by a korean which makes follow up on gastric balloons to understand perceptions of representation for well basis is this saturday so well big time i wonder how they'll be celebrating i wonder
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they'll be celebrating i wonder they didn't actually want to make an advert for sticking to the times. roger and i like this term, but surely there's a pun here about serve and tough serve . yeah. gotcha. yes jk rowling , . yeah. gotcha. yes jk rowling, who is the queen with the claim ? perhaps this is all taken from her podcast , which i understand her podcast, which i understand is quite interesting. and it's about her observations regarding her her trolling. that's what's, isn't it? her demonisation by, her own fanbase, which is extraordinary it's an extraordinary it's an extraordinary business. and i can't understand the cognitive dissonance of people who who adore harry potter universe. and then and apparently hate her with equal passion. it seems extraordinary to me i don't understand when she simply has bluntly an opinion is utterly acceptable, which might not be there as well as that. but this is interesting because it's actually sort of it's almost a prelude to what happened because it's her 20 years ago going
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yeah. she online 20 yeah. so she went online 20 years ago when obviously the internet in a much, you internet was was in a much, you know, less sophisticated know, much less sophisticated state of social media and everything that chat rooms everything that these chat rooms . was hiding it out of a . she was hiding it out of a chat room for her opinion she was in when an anonymous. yeah. sort of stuff like oh i sort of said stuff like oh i think harry potter snape think harry potter it was snape i don't know i've never read books. snape may be a books. but so snape may be a good guy at the end or something like that. and when like that. and then when you were and what do you know, who'd expect harry fans the expect harry potter fans on the internet reasoned well? internet to be reasoned well? bones well, right. so, mean, bones well, right. so, i mean, obviously be obviously they're going to be nerds and just nerds and geeks and just unfortunately you know running everything the green party in scotland yeah in particular right that's it for this section but after the break we'll have russian stripper as bbc and do you have low self you better come back .
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to yeah we'll just check out my only fans anyway welcome back to headliners and jumping straight wednesday's times and leo have the bbc made a show that actively they don't want people to see. it seems so the jemmy savile biopic the reckoning, which stars steve coogan as jemmy savile is being put hold by nervous bbc bosses until after coronation, denying it. but yeah, it's been delayed until late till after the coronation because of course saville was friends with prince charles. they exchanged letters were seen frequently together. so they're going to get to replace it with a with a drama about rolf harris instead. oh we can't do that either, but maybe prince andrew. yeah jeffrey epstein , there's a of celebrity epstein, there's a of celebrity so this i mean do you think that this is quite brave of the to even be commissioning this in the first place. i'm not sure. it depends on what it's like,
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doesn't really. we've not doesn't it really. we've not them saying oh he was brilliant, i they're going to doing i think they're going to doing it. unlikely. then it. that's unlikely. but then again, whether to again, i do wonder whether to some because they're some extent because they're on such ground , you do such dangerous ground, you do wonder there be wonder whether there might be some don't you? some level cover up, don't you? but haven't seen i don't but we haven't seen i don't know. i think to me, if you in a cover up, the best thing to do is just to commission a tv is just to not commission a tv series the do the bbc have series about the do the bbc have a track record of creating really good dramas such as three girls the drama, the grooming gang. sorry to elbow into every scene was it was scene but it was it was controversial you know a who's criticised say that it radicalised islamophobes and stuff like that but it was a i think it's a necessary at you know what happened and i think this is this is the same thing then obviously the bbc is also controlled. there's basically, you know, media all we you know, state media for all we talk countries talk about other countries having having state controlled media. bbc's not really much media. the bbc's not really much different the key thing different the key the key thing is bbc culpable in is that the bbc was culpable in g jemmy savile deeds acts . yeah g jemmy savile deeds acts. yeah therefore it's awkward for them andifs
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therefore it's awkward for them and it's awkward everyone, isn't it? you would prefer an independent programme producer to be making this. yeah, because they would be less to be swayed . an members of overcompensate the other way. but in the bbc's defence jemmy, savile made some of the best evening tv we have everin of the best evening tv we have ever in this country. that for you let's move on to wednesday, sun and roger perhaps the russian army preparing for their new jobs when they lose war. this is i knew nothing about this until . i this is i knew nothing about this until. i read this article. this is the naked general who was apparently a virus sensation for dancing naked. i'm quite sure in what context . apparently sure in what context. apparently it was very, very popular with the kids on tik tok and the isle of man. i no idea. clearly i'm out of my depth here, but he's been blind. this is the tenuous link to real news. he's been blamed apparently, for taking his off the ball and allowing
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the sabotage of russian spy plane very near the belarusian caphal plane very near the belarusian capital, which was apparently taken out by drones , operated by taken out by drones, operated by partisans in, belarus, who weren't , as far as i can see, weren't, as far as i can see, ukrainian but actually belarus in opposition partisans. yeah, that's an intriguing angle which i'm not. and the other intriguing angle to this is commercial drones. i understand this isn't the army. they this isn't from the army. they just them. apparently just bought them. apparently from you can so much just from shops. you can so much just so has been so much. the warfare has been done drones. done with commercial drones. they've drop they've rigged them to drop grenades they're in grenades and. they're taken in tanks. there i mean, this is incredible what they do with incredible what they can do with them. yeah, i mean, them. this is yeah, i mean, i think their protest 2020 in belarus is still ongoing belarus this is still ongoing there still a lot of people in belarus. right. well anti, lukashenko let's finish on the independent planet independent and leo the planet is ? oh, yes. so is saved right? oh, yes. so they're to giant they're going to have giant mirrors reflect suddenly back mirrors to reflect suddenly back into excuse my forehand into space. excuse my forehand to meet claimants like jamie is ready . i to meet claimants like jamie is ready. i think we can save
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to meet claimants like jamie is ready . i think we can save the ready. i think we can save the planet just roger and i standing next to each . this is this is next to each. this is this is the united nations. this is a serious thing. the united nafions serious thing. the united nations are genuinely looking at giant mirrors to reflect sunlight back into to space meet climate targets. but then what about the places that won't get the sunlight? you're to be davos. mr. burns did this in the simpsons. exactly. you are unleashing a geopolitical armageddon yet because there's going to be many competing going to be so many competing interests. people do well interests. some people do well at do at climate change. people do badly. someone's got to be in badly. so someone's got to be in charge. a world government be charge. a world government to be in any innovation . in charge of any innovation. this and some people like me like me i'll be in charge. the show over. so let's show is nearly over. so let's take at. take another quick look at. wednesday's the wednesday's front pages, the daily police. fear that daily mail police. we fear that baby has come to harm i paper sunak his political career on defying brexit critics mirror exclusive medical miracle arms of love express receives brexit boost for the uk. the times deal is not negotiable, sunak tells dupe. is not negotiable, sunak tells dupe . and finally, the daily dupe. and finally, the daily star markets it as forces quadrupled , blah, blah, blah,
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quadrupled, blah, blah, blah, blah blah and those high on pages. thank you forjoining us. pages. thank you for joining us. thank you to wonderful guest leo kearse. i'm roger monkhouse headune headline is back tomorrow 11 pm. evans again p.m. simon evans live again stephen all the adults and stephen alan all the adults and if you're watching at 5 am. repeat have any quotes you have a job essentially a proper job essentially good morning the morning stick around for the breakfast thank .
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nonh good evening . today, the show good evening. today, the show has moved on to balfour past. there are still some very big legal questions about rishi sunak's agreement. will the dupe agree to a deal. that's sunak's agreement. will the dupe agree to a deal . that's the sunak's agreement. will the dupe agree to a deal. that's the big debate we're going to have today . will also look at a court of .will also look at a court of appeal judgement today surrounding brexit. were russian men though very interesting .
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men though very interesting. we'd ask why is it so difficult to deport foreign criminals and those who their asylum those who filed their asylum claims ? and dell, former claims? and tiffany dell, former racing driver and of course , a racing driver and of course, a one time top gear presenter joins me on talking points. but before all of that, let's get the news with polly middlehurst . nigel, thank you. and good evening to you. our top story tonight, a couple that went missing with their newborn baby in january have been further arrested on suspicion of gross negligence . manslaughter. negligence. manslaughter. constance martin and her partner, mark gordon were found in brighton yesterday and were initially arrested on suspicion of child neglect. more than 200 police officers are searching a 91 square mile area to try to find the two month old baby. sussex police are assessing the baby's welfare on an hourly bafis. baby's welfare on an hourly basis . whilst we still have hope basis. whilst we still have hope that the baby can be found safe and well, we must retain that

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