tv Headliners GB News March 7, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am GMT
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populi, is in its people. vox populi, vox day . that's why i'm joining vox day. that's why i'm joining the people's channel. join me monday and thursday at 8 pm. on gb news. britain's news. channel it's 11:00. welcome to gb news. it's11:00. welcome to gb news. in a moment, we'll have headlines. first, let's bring you the latest news headlines . you the latest news headlines. and today, minister and today, the prime minister has addressed potential migrants to uk by saying if you come illegally, you can't claim or stay in. the uk, rishi sunak said the government should be the one who decide who should enter the country , not the enter the country, not the criminal gangs and the home secretary suella braverman earlier admitted it's likely the illegal migration bill may be incompatible with the european convention on human rights . so convention on human rights. so at a news conference earlier today , tom harwood the prime today, tom harwood the prime minister, if he's ready for any legal challenges already legions of lawyers are preparing to tackle you over this legislation
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. firstly, are you up for the fight.7 and secondly , what's plan fight.7 and secondly, what's plan b if they win .7 well, of course, b if they win.7 well, of course, up for the fight and we'll be standing here if we want. but actually we're confident that we will win. there's absolutely nothing improper or unprecedented about pursuing bills with the 19 one b statement. it absolutely does not mean that the bill is unlawful. we believe that is lawful, that we are acting compliance with our obligations and we are also meeting our obugafions and we are also meeting our obligations to the british fairly the rmt tonight called off planned train strikes receiving an improved pay offer from network rail union members were due to take action industrial action on the 16th and 17th of march. the organisation says further updates will be given on the national rail dispute in the coming days . national rail dispute in the coming days. hundreds of people have held vigil in cardiff with
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relatives setting off fireworks to celebrate the lives of three people killed in a car crash . people killed in a car crash. eve smith , darcy ross and rafal eve smith, darcy ross and rafal jean were found dead in the early hours of monday morning. two others were taken to hospital, but in a critical condition . questions have been condition. questions have been raised by friends and families as to why it took police two days to find the group . despite days to find the group. despite them being reported missing . the them being reported missing. the independent office for police conducts it's investigating the force's . the trial of man force's. the trial of man accused of murdering olivia pratt corbell has been told she shot after running downstairs to her mother because she was scared . nine year old olivia scared. nine year old olivia died . a gunman fired shots into died. a gunman fired shots into home in liverpool last august. manchester crown court heard the defendant, thomas cashman had been lying in wait for his intended target on the evening of the shooting. he denies . and of the shooting. he denies. and lastly parts of northern land and scotland were hit by a
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sudden cold snap today with temperatures to drop further to 15 in some regions. more than four inches of snow fell northern scotland and around eight inches are forecast for later this week. a yellow weather for snow and ice in place for most of the uk with tonight expected to be the coldest night of the year so far . that's all the latest news headunes . that's all the latest news headlines now. headliners . headlines now. headliners. hello, i'm simon evans to headliners. your first look at wednesday's most interesting newspaper today. joining me tonight are roger monkhouse and scott cooper , two final scott cooper, two final comedians. you will not meet. not in the next hour or so, anyway. very nice to see you again, gentlemen. how are you.7 it's again, gentlemen. how are you? it's been a while. it's a while.
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but we've just been but perhaps we've just been sort of ships crossing of. so when the ships crossing in the night, i think. i think you've been busy they you've been very busy and they don't on your nights. no, don't invite on your nights. no, but i get monday and tuesday were you're probably were i guess you're probably recovering weekend recovering from the weekend generally healthy and generally fairly healthy and i never catch up. you never really catch up. do you know what? i don't want to disparage your weekend prospects as well. i expect you're doing some reviving well. well, some some reviving. well. well, i've never done it with you i've i've never done it with you for whatever reasons . i fear for whatever reasons. i fear the chemistry . it's the first of our chemistry. it's the first of our major innuendos for the next hour or so . let's take a look at hour or so. let's take a look at wednesday's front pages. the daily they make our faces bbq rebuke for likening like an animal. there is gary in a small boats. he likens to a plan the would come up with will be investigating that story shortly the telegraph staff also have bbc urged to sack lloyd maker after migrant jibe and there is in a photograph they're looking as if he's about to be sacked . as if he's about to be sacked. the omens are all the has sunak
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ready to battle judges over migration and. us intelligence believes pro ukrainians blew up pipelines pro ukraine sounds a bit like , doesn't it. there's a bit like, doesn't it. there's a couple of dogs on the front cover there. i don't think there are illustrating either of those stories. daily express lays down the we decide okay. yeah the guardian tories exist anguishing the right to seek refuge protection in the uk says united nafions protection in the uk says united nations and photographic evidence that britain is heading into yet another chill. also you. and so if china tells us to hit break or risk conflict we'll be having a look at that story the daily finally in synergy and beyond universe is number one paperis beyond universe is number one paper is in voted to meet we're not going to see the picture for this for some reason university is number one paper is invite you to meet space team for it
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you to meet space team for it you left to take my word for it or go out and buy a copy in the morning . so us begin with morning. so us begin with wednesdays daily express and the story that is dominating front pages. roger this is rishi laying down the law, doing little porcelain figurine impression of judge . more teen impression of judge. more teen titan is knight . it's very hard titan is knight. it's very hard to take him seriously. it didn't do anger well one way or another, does he? he doesn't amount of emotional range generally i don't think it generally i don't think does it exactly . and the more and more i exactly. and the more and more i listen to it, the more he sounds like some sort of a talented six former tony. tony former impersonating tony. tony blair. exactly. he's even got the thumb. but some people quite pleased about i think some pleased about that. i think some people and people find reassuring and calming after the turbulence we've had. i see clips of him and thinking, why is he and i'm thinking, why is he bubbly bouncing the bubbly and bouncing much? the world in turmoil. why is he
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world is in turmoil. why is he seems out a great. he's twisted a couple. he's tweaked a couple of things . all right. okay. of things. all right. okay. there's number two. know he's there's number two. i know he's very athletic and he's very athletic and maybe he's drinking lot caffeine in drinking a lot of caffeine in the it makes him really the morning. it makes him really hyped married the morning. it makes him really hy|has married the morning. it makes him really hy|has been married the morning. it makes him really hy|has been discussed. married the morning. it makes him really hy|has been discussed. mawasi as has been discussed. he was accused online today on accused on the online today on twitter somebody i follow of having in cell energy as in involuntary celibate you know all right and i'm being a guy who's reading book that talking tough about refugees is the sort of thing women bully is married one most one of the world's most beautiful and women yes you know that's intimacy energy is it he's clearly got something going right. think that's the thing right. i think that's the thing about him, though, he foxes about him, though, he he foxes a technocrat. i think he thinks he's well. i think people he's doing well. i think people are back are patting on the back and saying, how you've saying, look how long you've lasted, like 180 days. yeah. you're it. he's there's you're killing it. he's there's half a dozen lettuces wilting in his trailer that failed keep up he's onto some of the really more longevity and they're keeping him in a bubble don't tell you what's really going on around because this stuff he's trying to pass will never work well well many ways.
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well he is doing well many ways. but of course the polls aren't shifting and interestingly, in terms of politics this is one of his five pledges, isn't it? yeah of course. it's the least likely that he's capable of actually doing it as you know, as people even further to the right of the have pointed out this has been pledge of every tory government has come since about nothing nothing has happened and if anything is now surging with what and this feels a lot what is and this feels a lot like a bill is designed really to be to punish people treat them like yeah, yeah, yeah for them like yeah, yeah, yeah for the base yeah yeah . also to the base yeah yeah. also to flush the uncertainty , the flush out the uncertainty, the opposition. yes. fantasy has done. yes. and at the same time unlikely to get anywhere because of course will just become embroiled in all the inevitable legal wrangling , all the sort of legal wrangling, all the sort of it's always all the left wing lawyers who put up a crowdfunder on twitter and. people go, yes, tie loads of rope around the government's ankles. the real test whether they when it's test whether they will when it's by the european court of justice, whether they will make any move to remove of us from
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the seat we will come to say will they then to gunboats because that's going to be the fun . i'm not going to say final fun. i'm not going to say final solution. we've got gary lineker but let's have a look at the what have we got the daily mail now scott talking on that. well, first, that photo of helen mirren got one of the bows on the front page . she's got one of the front page. she's got one of the front page. she's got one of the bows. what's with the bow on the bows. what's with the bow on the neck thing now? because that is or musician. the neck thing now? because that is or musician . you must is it. or the musician. you must hear don't or that hear that dress. don't or that cape or whatever . i feel like cape or whatever. i feel like one of us should be wearing a large you're thinking, i large belt. you're thinking, i feel me. it is feel like i should be me. it is jonathan cohen's today. jonathan cohen's birthday today. one our writer producer one of our writer and producer spouse, him spouse, she's dressed up for him because wrapped . you get because she is wrapped. you get much of cake . but anyway, much of a cake. but anyway, you can. like a carry light can. we do like a carry light enough again. gary lineker made a comment about suella braverman plan as home secretary to stop the boats. he quote, good heavens, this is beyond awful. and then he said on twitter, there is there is no huge we take far fewer refugee than any
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other major european country . he other major european country. he went on to say , the language went on to say, the language you're using was used by in the thirties and i mean, that's just inaccurate because the one thing i do know about germany in the thirties was they were using german they were they were famous names we hadn't one that we'd speaking . yeah. well we'd be speaking. yeah. well i think they're very significant. yes would be appropriate our yes it would be appropriate our policy of course vis a v was fighting them on the beaches into. yes, yeah, yeah. that's true. it would a problem for true. it would be a problem for comedy though. one of the things i that which i noticed in that tweet, which is which not saying is the one which i'm not saying hopefully but hopefully cost in his job, but he no huge he did say has been no huge influx response to a who influx response to a man who said there's been an influx. yeah, not a influx . but yeah, not a huge influx. but she's been an. she's claiming there's been an. but she's claiming that we're under or we're being attacked or all use the words she's used to. please the that's yeah please the base. that's yeah they're they're not words that are diplomatic and don't really have a problem or even answer question. they just work people up that's saying. up. and that's what he's saying. he refugees famously. he's he takes refugees famously. he's taken think , or four. and taken in, i think, or four. and he about yeah, yeah,
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he writes about yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. how what 20, 20. he's got them living in his home. he has all these sort of passing through a bit like the cutting plants and making protein shakes for him. no, no, they're not working for him. you see. no, he's really been it's quite emotional for him. he's written a lot about it actually, you and he's quite you know, and he's quite supportive think supportive of that. he's i think a he's as furious as some a bit he's as furious as some people are, but suella braverman claim a larger claim that there's a larger problem than there might be actually . well, i think actually. well, i think it's a large problem, but. well it's whether use language whether or not you use language that hypes that . yeah. that hypes it up, that. yeah. and then it's so it's ironic the right to claim that he's should be fired for using such language . they use the same. yeah but she a polish, you know, he's, she is a polish, you know, he's, he's football commentator and, he's a football commentator and, and for it. so he and he's paid for it. so he has more she if he more power than she does if he was go on and doing was to go on tv and start doing this, i think will feel this, then i think will feel that's can off. that's fine. we can switch off. but it's part of but there's the it's all part of the fee debate. well at the licence fee debate. well at this point he's earning the single bbc single highest paid bbc commentator. we're paying her off. is an awful lot. off. 5 million is an awful lot. yeah can her out.
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yeah but you can vote her out. that's thing. you can't that's the thing. you can't vote. can't vote, but vote. well, you can't vote, but you individually. yeah you might individually. yeah anyway, let's have look at the anyway, let's have a look at the times we do just want to times we have. i do just want to address there, which address photograph there, which does looks as if it is does it almost looks as if it is illustrating the immigration and sort relationship that is sort of relationship that is actually just preparation for crufts it. that what it crufts. it. oh is that what it is. yes the great look on my shoulder snap. yeah but the us intelligence police pro ukrainians blew up possible this is this this smells a bit funny doesn't it it's an idea of course it's an anonymous source in the us intelligence who is now put out the story . yeah. for now put out the story. yeah. for their own purposes one imagines that the pipeline was blown up by an independent pro—eu crony and group. yeah, this appeared in the new york times, which is not, generally speaking , what not, generally speaking, what would is not anti government, not anti biden is not anti the general narrative . it is quite general narrative. it is quite pro—ukrainian pro the war on russia continuing to fund it and
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so on so is not coming out of fox out of tactical and or whatever sort of saying oh , you whatever sort of saying oh, you know, the russians have been painted the bad guys. but once again you know the facts. so it's interesting i mean, i don't know coming from know who where it's coming from , but it does seem to me to be illustrative of general trend illustrative of a general trend is lot of people is that an awful lot of people knew certain exactly knew certain what exactly what had happened a few ago. had happened a few months ago. and turns out that maybe it's and it turns out that maybe it's not so well i think the not quite so well i think the people surprised is people are surprised it is ukrainian and russian nationals perhaps this . i perhaps working together this. i think that's what shocked people and think, the germans and i think, i think the germans were i think left kind of in the end trying to struggle struggling an explanation of what occurred because they felt as though they should have been on watch on and they weren't. so i a lot people got in i think a lot people got in trouble america's trouble in the end. america's trying wash their trying to kind of wash their hands responsibility for hands of responsibility for it. it question how it begs the question how difficult a difficult it to blow up a pipeline. honestly , i have pipeline. and honestly, i have no practical understanding. it may do it. may be that difficult to do it. it's difficult do it unobserved. that's point. if they were that's the point. if they were patrolling and looked patrolling the air and it looked there people saying, there were some people saying,
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well, come well, it's clearly come the inside, have inside, which would have suggested they have suggested it was they would have sent inside and. sent something down inside and. then it got there, exploded then once it got there, exploded it. saying it. but this is now saying that's and of course that's not true. and of course it the fog war thing it just proves the fog war thing disney mean there's just so , disney i mean there's just so, so information but . the so little information but. the russians didn't to destroy russians didn't have to destroy it. stopped it. they could just stopped the flow that's they had flow of oil. that's all they had to they have done that to do. yeah, they have done that anyway. say the anyway. and then they say the argument was which i didn't buy but was that but the argument was that if they pipeline then they destroyed the pipeline then it liability basically it would the liability basically they would be able to trade me on the issue of price. right. but i didn't think was but i didn't think it was plausible that blow plausible that they would blow up. always up. ukraine was obviously always against it. and then there was also the biden and i can't also fact the biden and i can't remember a name, but one of the one of his senior sort of secretary on camera secretary of state on camera saying if they try and build this pipeline , it won't happen, this pipeline, it won't happen, will destroy it if necessary well so i mean that was a lot of motivation for america to destroy what america's made a lot of shipping over that they were of course is like vast amounts of buy by cutting that link then obviously supplying
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the gap with their own source and also just shoring up resolve in germany in because if you can't get the gas anyway but they just want to finish the war they just want to finish the war the ukraine is never wanted that pipeline built. they didn't want an either one of them because they they take they don't they don't take it out they want to out of that. they didn't want to was people say the was a lot of people say the syrian a lot to do syrian civil war had a lot to do with but anyway, with pipelines. but anyway, about the government in china us conflict in the guardian scope what's this? why is china so angry the time they're telling us to back off of what? it's because the chinese economy is flailing a bit. so they're pointing fingers dropped into single digit growth. yeah. can you imagine she's this mistaken 7 you imagine she's this mistaken ? the chinese says that there's a mistaken policy being forced ahead. a mistaken policy being forced ahead . the us government and ahead. the us government and their foreign policy is over some of us over taiwan and china saying this is all wrong, what you're doing we're going to we're going to jump, we're going to attack, we're going to do it. the has said the chinese government has said many times we don't care how
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many times we don't care how many lose. we don't care how many we lose. we don't care how much get much money costs, we will get taiwan get them to taiwan back. we will get them to it . admit that they are part of it. admit that they are part of china us is finally china and the us is finally kind of forward a bit and of stepping forward a bit and perhaps agreeing that taiwan is legitimate a government. and that's what china's about. that was that was donald trump down the first time phone taiwan before the biden being before the biden is being actually quite hawkish and belligerent all over he is and particularly of course ukraine and russia which is surprising him because it's a reversal of policy perhaps the isolationist tendency of american administrations , just trump's, administrations, just trump's, but perhaps the last couple of decades, but not taiwan who produce is that 80% of the world's microchip a lot in there. so import of that. so of course america and the west cannot afford to lose . yeah, cannot afford to lose. yeah, realistically, i mean, i think by the was willing to be, you know a bit separatist over the war but it's been going on for too long now and he's worried that the americans will lose faith and we'll start to think is too much money being well
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thatis is too much money being well that is the front pages don't join us in a few minutes for a dime we're full gender pay dime we're full the gender pay gap and you think that giant brothel close that pay brothel might close that pay gap. a thought crime gap. well that's a thought crime in the united kingdom. i'm well, we'll you in a couple we'll see you in a couple of minutes .
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hello. welcome back to headline is with me, simon evans monkhouse in scarborough kick off wednesdays male male and woe halfway there we go we're living on a press well these babies aren't scott that weeks out from you were told me those are my golden is the mail a catholic woman was arrested a second time for silently praying outside an abortion clinic. for silently praying outside an abortion clinic . they cried well abortion clinic. they cried well she'd been fill armed doing it
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before and the film went viral . before and the film went viral. she was there with a priest. this is back about three weeks ago and she was given a sentence or she was sent to and the or she was sent to court and the judge dismissed it for charges. so wrote back, obviously, so she wrote back, obviously, because thought , i can do because she thought, i can do this, is fine . yeah. and this, this is fine. yeah. and she's standing by the side of the being filmed the building again being filmed and up and the police walked up and said, doing is this said, what you're doing is this is you're doing at is illegal. what you're doing at the she's doing is she's creating a sort of bad for people. she is. it's the roberts clinic in kings norton birmingham. and you're not allowed to be with 150 metres of that clinic . that's a safe. that clinic. that's a safe. you're not done. sorry for of many protesters as well she basically she is protesting because she keeps going back and it is considered harassment for people that are tried to go to that clinic. so at the 150 metres clinic, you're mentioned not that's not behave in any that's negative and made this is a scheme to go that harassment yes yes most people would question whether she is harassing people by quietly praying and well as
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court has suggested to her formally she is and she's deaung formally she is and she's dealing with the testing by law she's about . yes, but surely she she's about. yes, but surely she is on the right side of it, as has been proof. all previous apparently. yes. well, that i think they dismissed the four charges because the judge didn't really know where to go with it and didn't really want to cause really know where to go with it a|problem really want to cause really know where to go with it a|problem .aally want to cause really know where to go with it a|problem . didn't'ant to cause really know where to go with it a|problem . didn't see to cause really know where to go with it a|problem . didn't see that use a problem. didn't see that putting in or finding her, putting her in or finding her, would you? but there fines , would you? but there are fines, this behaviour, sort of this sort of behaviour, sort of re—education . where she re—education camps. where she was torturing. well, i, i think what she is, she is protesting and i think that has the church behind because a priest keeps defending her and other priests have. yeah. so i think the problem really is the question is why must you pray here you can pray anywhere else in the country why must you come here and make people feel uncomfortable. who going to uncomfortable. who is going to use and so use this clinic. and so presumably it okay with being an exclusion zone at all for peaceful protest. well, they're introducing apparently all over the country and some people are
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very uncomfortable with them. and employees are to debate and employees are set to debate this idea when they roll them out of the country . why would out of the country. why would i think they should put one round schools particular that school in wakefield where where a child scuffed , a koran. i remember scuffed, a koran. i remember there being quite aggressive, religiously based protest outside that that would probably have intimidated about not talking about bringing in an exclusion zone into the westminster square. you know to be the noisy protests that was on television park there for about year, ten years or so, making a frightful racket. we must move on the independent next. there is rising support for euthanasia and divorce in the . we sound like a bunch of the uk. we sound like a bunch of quitters . yes, currently is quitters. yes, currently this is cited as a britain more groovy, more liberal than other countries . it's a i use the term countries. it's a i use the term trolley. ironically, this is a survey of attitude suits in britain that that we are
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apparently more okay with divorce and all sorts of things and they do as you say absolutely say this this is a liberal attitude. yes which is. yeah that endorsement is entirely positive. we are more liberal, other european countries or as we used to say, of course, decadent . yes, of course, decadent. yes, absolutely weak , but apparently absolutely weak, but apparently not on the death penalty . not on the death penalty. millions of conservatives voters support this idea of euthanasia and of divorcing and maybe of just, you know, killing your ex basically doing both things to the same person about euthanasia , just slightly. i mean it's still a day when you can choose yourself to get assisted suicide then there's also the very much more dubious often using the same term. yeah which when the state decides you are life is going up by 100% or something like rishi sunak to support it though. rishi sunak there's support. just saying it's
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problematic in all sorts of ways as is being proved to the as is being proved to be the case canada belgium. as case in canada and belgium. as i it mean recently in it well, i mean recently in belgium someone was convicted of a heinous crime has essentially chosen euthanasia . he's unable chosen euthanasia. he's unable to address pain that her guilt has brought about that essentially out of hand bringing back the death . yeah, yeah . back the death. yeah, yeah. there was the mother in canada, wasn't there. who took it as an option. i don't know whether it's follow through. was it's follow through. he was it was down and out basically and they rules his they changed the rules his access to a hostel was withdrawn and okay then , i choose and he said okay then, i choose death having said that, death but having said that, those the stories that grab the headlines, i tend to thousands of people are relieved from a lifetime of chronic pain and despair , you know, it's not despair, you know, so it's not always a future that some people do choose it, especially they go to switzerland and they've been diagnosed. yeah they don't want to deal with that of option to deal with that sort of option is extremely expensive. it does to deal with that sort of option is be remely expensive. it does to deal with that sort of option is be remextraordinary. it does to deal with that sort of option is be remextraordinary waste es to deal with that sort of option is be remextraordinary waste of to be an extraordinary waste of money if you if the one of the reasons somebody reasons but if somebody really wants end up
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wants you dead they'll end up they'll take you to the telegraph and a giant brothel is to be built near an eu drug regulator . brothel 50 letter regulator. brothel 50 letter party starts. i it's about time the eu apparently this this medicine regulator was in london and they had to move to amsterdam after brexit. and now the dutch are saying well , going the dutch are saying well, going to put you next to a huge brothel and erotic centre i've been reading about for quite while. of prostitutes sex while. a lot of prostitutes sex care don't want built. care workers don't want built. but can i just have you just said you see the drug regulator being moved be near the being moved to be near the brothel , the way brothel, not the other way round? well they have a drug for of no, no, the brothel has been planned for quite a number of years. and i've been reading it for quite a long time because i have some friends in the biz and. they don't want to work in and. they don't want to work in a like that. they to a place like that. they want to stay the light. they stay in the red light. they don't in brussels. don't want to work in brussels. no, don't want to. working no, they don't want to. working in mall, especially in a brothel mall, especially the think the brothel because they think it and the
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it takes away the charm and the kind and their kind of influence and with their customers, trying customers, they're trying to kind strength and kind of diminish strength and the power crazy of the red the power crazy to me of the red light amsterdam . one light district in amsterdam. one of the city of the greatest draws the city has they're also has. yeah. and they're also going be talking to sort of going to be talking to a sort of statist, of in topic. statist, kind of in topic. people weed around. people were smoking weed around. there to say there was the red light to say was is referred to as the red light district is exactly where the marijuana culture is how poor all the fun is . and now poor all the fun is. and now they want they want to quell the fun and, move this regulatory commission these in this medicine regulated regulator next to the brothel mall. do you think there'll be an eu smoking cafes ? well, are they the cafe, cafes? well, are they the cafe, the coffee shops, as they call them. well they're being increasingly regulated and i think to clean as think you have to clean up as well. but why the city has chosen not be the magnet for chosen not to be the magnet for disaffected youth throughout europe. understand they've europe. i can understand they've got haven't they? got a rijksmuseum, haven't they? they've about just all they've a concert about just all that. enough. quite classy is it not. yeah. we all know because people saying the american problem is the exhibition of the century because it's a fabulous city. so it's a waste, but it's
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also at its heart over last 40 years they legalised this years since they legalised this essentially or decriminalised it it's become rather seedy. yeah, i'm rather unpleasant. i don't think i really hold amsterdam view everybody smokes weed and i think it's sweet that they have little stores and shops to go to. yeah, it's a for some to. and yeah, it's a for some people an disneyland. people it's an adult disneyland. i it's it should i think it's just it should remain i do remain cottage industry. i do too. is legalise too. and it is legalise it or turn the other cheek but don't turn the other cheek but don't turn it into some miserable four floors killing by floors of britain killing by putting it in a state. it's how they ruin the holocaust museum. let all garden let me get them to all garden now finally good news . the now finally good news. the gender has grown stake gender pay gap has grown stake that up your international prize case. yes, it turns out it seems according to research by dr. amanda gosling, a senior lecturer in economics at the university of close , she has university of close, she has discovered or argues that the closing of the pay gap between men and women since the 1970s has largely been driven by economic factors such as the minimum wage and falling wages for less educated men rather than societal progress and the wage gap, particularly mothers
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and fathers , is now greater. it and fathers, is now greater. it was in words, the penalty for motherhood, the motherhood penalty is now greater. it was 40 years ago amongst educated and professional couples. i think it's finally we have proof that men are smarter is that's what this is telling basically that more degrees that the women get more degrees now women stay longer in now more women stay longer in university and education they have and then then the have they go and then then the men a little later men come in a little bit later in life fix everything they in life and fix everything they claim up all the men claim. they mop up all the men kind feel like this is kind of feel like this is working. this is a symbiosis. we do i we do the heavy lifting. i think we make look easy because make it look easy because they're good why do they're so good at it. why do they're so good at it. why do they they struggle with they when they struggle with this sorts this right. there's all sorts of things of things going on here. and of course, above all else, i suspect the cost of suspect that the cost of childcare has got a lot to do with it, hasn't it? increasingly, people can't afford to pay childcare so that they can go out . well, we have they can go out. well, we have to. it is strange where we are. we're well below replacement level fertility now, aren't we, right now , because we're not right now, because we're not having children . and so having enough children. and so we jury with not enough
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we have a jury with not enough money. what are doing money. what are they doing exactly? not exactly? thank god. hogging, not getting more expensive. is that is it good law so that will is it good law so well that will be back shortly with ancient mysteries being unearthed the end student teacher relations end of student teacher relations bu and the penis in the us a tale of growth don't miss. yay . there's help for households. are you over state pension age? if your weekly income is below £182.60, or £278.70 if you live with a partner, you could be eligible for pension credit, even if you own your home or have savings. it's worth, on average, £3,500 a year and you could get help with heating bills and more, plus up to £900 in cost of living payments.
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and welcome back to the headuner and welcome back to the headliner so we kick our third section with the times it turns out it actually is adam and steve, at least in terms of parenting, as it turns out, it's to be gay. yeah. all right . to be gay. yeah. all right. yeah. same sex parents affair as well as heterosexual . says the well as heterosexual. says the times they did a study that analysed 16 out of 34 studies on the subject right . and the subject right. and researchers decided that from what they could see, same sex
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couples actually fared better. in some cases because of a worse well they that there is potential stigma towards kids whose parents are same sex that that society not the parent. it is but the kids. but it affects the kids when they go to so for their friendships but less gender stereotyping gay gender stereotyping and gay couples okay so as couples for the kids. okay so as the kids grow up they don't have to the gender and to worry about the gender and the worst kind of gender stereotyping at the moment and in the current conversation is, well, arguably the trans thing, of that like of course, is that if you like dolls, must be dolls, that means you must be a girl than a do girl rather than a boy. i do know some lesbian and gay couples in brighton who i have noticed. that is the that they are quite cross about the trans thing and they are much open about doing. i mean that's that's kind of whatever you want whatever you do you like this matter you should be with the kids right but this joining the study author for this article that appeared in the global health journal said that growing
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up with sexual minority parents making for some advantages to children. interesting you would kind of assume that to be the case anyway. wouldn't you agree that couples of that? same sex couples have, of course, chosen to be parents in a that heterosexual couples a way that heterosexual couples haven't always chosen to be. no, it's interesting that my stepfather turned out to be gay and. right. yeah, yeah , yeah, and. right. yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.the and. right. yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. the only of the other thing would say, though, perhaps more i read more broadly, i mean, read a book years blueprint book a few years ago, blueprint by middleton, loads by robert polly middleton, loads of basically the of twin and basically the they're too long didn't read for is nothing matters your parents don't matter almost nothing that you do as parent matches your child is going to like get the same have the same they will there'll be some but obviously it's horrible if you're nasty to them because they're experiencing misery in real time obviously bad . there will obviously that's bad. there will be emotionally . yeah. be feedback emotionally. yeah. if not academically and in terms their but range of their lives, but within range of being decent people. and so on almost nothing matches as much with or whether your with your or whether your race doesn't black , doesn't matter if you're black, white race, it doesn't
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white or mixed race, it doesn't matter vegan, a matter whether you're vegan, a home kind of home or whether you kind of shove they're 20, shove by the time they're 20, 22, you know, they they find own. i have often observed that given messed up most children's backgrounds typically are it's amazing that most adults actually turn out to be well—adjusted human beings. we are basically like little solid lumps of balls a little coke we book the surface as soon as we're released so anyway, the express now it seems the woke banning student professor relationships now this is lunacy inever relationships now this is lunacy i never go free but the apparent relationships between professors , teachers and students . oxford , teachers and students. oxford were formerly allowed. but finally oxford has got round to banning them because all young people are so awful nowadays , people are so awful nowadays, presumably to protect their stuff . this presumably to protect their stuff. this is presumably to protect their stuff . this is from presumably to protect their stuff. this is from this presumably to protect their stuff . this is from this is presumably to protect their stuff. this is from this is that strongly discouraging any close personal relationships of students between 30 you're saying i live i live with my lecturer during university i'm so lucky to live with and her
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boyfriend and her brother and his it was a great house live in. and i learned i mean, i was really. that was your student accommodation with my little students the that's when you've grown up. so those were prodigious and rapidly . yes, prodigious and rapidly. yes, i know, but i live with students and that was horrible. the first couple of months they stole from me they were all out of to me and they were all out of to love was crying love live with. he was crying and she was lecturer in the department. was studying. it's department. i was studying. it's fantastic. the fantastic. i remember we had the mince cherry with mince pies and cherry with stephen, saxby . name stephen, saxby. his name was my law legal of i don't know, law law legal of i don't know, meant talk all right yeah yeah. and he used to host a socials. they little bit old they were a little bit old fashioned. it like an old fashioned. it was like an old kingsley well, you kingsley game. all well, you know, there would a know, there would not be a record. had chilli record. no we had vegan chilli and some lecturers have and some other lecturers have come on the come by to sleep on the sofa. francisco is francisco no, no. this is birmingham . oh, birmingham. birmingham. oh, birmingham. i mean, certainly a shame mean, it's certainly a shame that of intimacy that any kind of intimacy or relationship in relationship is now banned in that. relationship is now banned in that . i think relationship is now banned in that. i think probably the teaching staff are so paranoid now. yeah, they are. of course, the piano , rightfully so. the piano, rightfully so. i think the old saying and having relationship beyond the strict
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academic circumstances. yeah he seminars but on the tutorials and that's dreadful shame because there's a lot to learn. i it used to be the big thing about as as understood it the about as as i understood it the big oxford about as as i understood it the big cambridge oxford about as as i understood it the big cambridge yrestrd about as as i understood it the big cambridge yrest of and cambridge and the rest of the at oxford you the university was at oxford you do you did have an intimate relationship you went relationship you have you went there study that person and there to study that person and to to them. they to get to know them. and they groups of two or three students, the extraordinary the maximum extraordinary privilege be. yeah. privilege that would be. yeah. oh, well . to transit onto the oh, well. to transit onto the metro . what is the world's most metro. what is the world's most wealthy troll got to say scott. well was accused of kind of abusing a disabled ex twitter employee online and this this twitter employee had begged musk to tell him on twitter whether or not he would still he couldn't find out his computer had been locked for 20 days. he couldn't get any off of it. but he he still hour had got no information as to whether or not he worked there so he should try gb views he well he twitter musk and musk said i don't believe this i think this is happening. i think you're and he said you're lying. and then he said he me proof. said, you're lying. and then he said hcan me proof. said,
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you're lying. and then he said hcan send me proof. said, you're lying. and then he said hcan send you ne proof. said, you're lying. and then he said hcan send you proof. )f. said, you're lying. and then he said hcan send you proof. i. said, you're lying. and then he said hcan send you proof. i can'taid, i can send you proof. i can't get computer. looked get my computer. so musk looked into said actually into it, then said actually what's your job title ? they what's your job title? they said, supposed to tell said, i'm not supposed to tell you he you that it's private. but he did him musk you've did online tell him musk you've not doing enough working did online tell him musk you've not workinging enough working did online tell him musk you've not working hard.|ough working did online tell him musk you've not working hard.|ough vfired.g not working hard. you're fired. and musk said, quote , the and then musk said, quote, the reality is that this guy in parentheses, who is independently must complain about that, about somebody else , which is ridiculous, did no claimed as his views that he had a disability prevented him from typing. yeah with simultaneously tweeting up a storm the guy as it turns out , does have muscular it turns out, does have muscular dystrophy and as his body is failing . muscular dystrophy. yes failing. muscular dystrophy. yes unless his body fails, he's trying to shore up whatever financing he can have to look after his kids, his family was plenty interesting. he wasn't i'm not he was he was from iceland. yeah. sold his business to twitter and then got a job. part of the deal was twitter and he got it because he it wasn't enough obviously for him to live off of and his family forever , off of and his family forever, especially because he was losing his health. yeah. so this is a
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guy that must decide to take down. got a feeling if down. i've got a feeling that if i musk, i ever met elon musk, i necessarily approve of him. but would be very good company. well, why company? why do you think onto the telly graph now with an ancient mystery , you with an ancient mystery, you know, it's not joe biden's brain something more intact than that rogen something more intact than that roger. i keep digging on the leicester cathedral. yeah i just won't let it go . it was won't let it go. it was leicester car park. they found richard the third wasn't it. yeah. there's somebody they probably sucked in half the world's occupants. right. that desperate leigh. keen to keep the funding going find great new stuff . yeah. and as far as i say stuff. yeah. and as far as i say they found a plinth and nothing more but the idea is there's some sort of pagan site to worship 13 foot by 13 chamber. yeah. a roman some sort of roman worship chain but unremarkable really in the churches are built on sites where previous have been worshipped as true in rome as well. yeah yeah. before saw the light on and entered
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throughout throughout the contested world you see mosques which have been cathedral and now cathedrals and churches across . britain have been turned across. britain have been turned into work home centres and desolate. this is just my religion. so yeah, no, i mean, i'm all for this of thing. i think it attracts a little bit like a bit of heritage. i'm having a now. yeah the trouble is of course there's so much nonsense in this country isn't that you can can pull up a paving stone find some sort of road. well i had a friend i still have a friend who bought a house in, in just on the edge of brighton were just, brighton and they were just, they to an they wanted to build an extension down extension they dug down for foundation and found some coins. yeah. so you know , got to pay yeah. so you know, got to pay for all these. oh yeah . just to for all these. oh yeah. just to sit there carefully . is it not sit there carefully. is it not time we had a grown up conversation. paying some conversation. italy paying some sort of reparations for our colonies and soil. but you never thank you for the name of the city by the way. i'm italian and my people built this place. guys
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can off switzerland, london can piss off switzerland, london . yeah. it. is it . london? yeah. is it. is it london? roman it london? you a roman term? is it 7 london? you a roman term? is it ? it was it just applied to nothing the time. there wasn't even wasn't much here. but even there wasn't much here. but they called something which even there wasn't much here. but they creally something which even there wasn't much here. but they creally swasething which even there wasn't much here. but they creally was very] which is not really it was very generous, of the to call generous, i think of the to call it. mean, south london it. i mean, south london is still pretty swampy. yes, is. still pretty swampy. yes, it is. yeah you mean that yeah yeah. so you mean that figuratively you times now men are back to roman times. men are more endowed these days than they were in classical sculpture . well, if i want to find out more , check out my erotic more, check out my erotic portraits of dolan . on portraits of mark dolan. on papen portraits of mark dolan. on paper, it's been said, why do i get the gay son and the large and own the stories they're giving all to you? it seems a little unfair . i know. little unfair. i know. especially i think it large in germany university. so now just seems doubly unfair. michelangelo luis david has a small one, as we all know we've all seen it. and they started researching paintings and sculptures from period to sculptures from that period to current times and decided over the last 30,000 years having looked at primitive human figures that a pointing there is that they repair slaves unfed.
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well it is absolutely vast to david. only when you see a human next to it. yeah yeah. you get a sense of that . it's not the sense of that. it's not the obviously i don't mean proportion, but that was a nod and i he was still popular at the time to the greek roman idea, which was that you had a small genitalia in. it implied that you were a grow up or that you're a grow or not a show or as they said, mediaeval times you're saying heroic you grow and yeah, yeah, you want to mind that you want elevate spirit. yes. they have other yes. they did have other sculptures with large genitalia and sort like they and they were sort of like they just gentility that just have large gentility that is just not attached to bodies at lasso at all. well about lasso and abbott's . yes, massive of abbott's giant. yes, massive of course. pedestrian greek i course. no pedestrian greek i think he's dead but i think the popular stories seem to be great. we're getting large . great. we're getting large. we're getting bigger in scale. expected asians are growing boys. i'm just telling so boys. i'm just telling you so what kind of art now has there? there male nudes there are many male nudes outside specialist outside of specialist public. not no there's a lot of not enough? no there's a lot of paintings various paintings that at various charity shops. i just talk charity shops. i can just talk them. yeah. now i follow a
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facebook group. okay yeah. and there are lot of explicit paintings and because have i will say i think in my, my experience narrow that it might be of kind of like feeling anxious . and bright and anxious. and bright and especially if you have a lot of airbnb flats and that sort of thing. well if have coffee table books, the, the roman books, right. but the, the roman the greco—roman idealised male beauty is of still quite beauty is kind of still quite popular. it's i of a large popular. right it's i of a large that's as important . having that's not as important. having the arms the yeah the well—developed arms the yeah just sure yeah i think it's all about girth to be i mean mental girth what. i mean . yeah, it's girth what. i mean. yeah, it's yeah. oh that's really quite of how flesh is anymore. brexit. roman spoke to and also architecture generally is quite politicised on twitter there's a number of accounts that sort of tweet under the smokescreen of just being kind of archaeological heritage . right archaeological heritage. right right, right. he's supposed to be it's kind of i think it was more of a handbook. this from
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kind palladian dimensions kind of the palladian dimensions to define modern world. but to define the modern world. but i mean, we haven't escaped, but always. one of the interesting things washington is that things about washington is that it's between being it's caught between being christian and the classical world real mix world as well. it's a real mix up now berlin the same up of and now berlin the same it's almost modelled after see right. the rebuild. yeah the berlin well they had other plans for didn't they did. for that didn't they. they did. wrong. hey. all wrong. yeah. yeah. hey. all right . poor speer. he right. poor old albert speer. he one of the good ones for enough to go up in the final four. we have terrifying clowns . have terrifying clowns. ejaculation was how to sober up in a hurry . ejaculation was how to sober up in a hurry. sounds ejaculation was how to sober up in a hurry . sounds like a bit in a hurry. sounds like a bit like search history. see in a couple of minutes .
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run the country but this is a study which has found that 5% are often respondents. i think have self diagnosed or claimed to be sufferers from . coover to be sufferers from. coover phobia , which i wasn't familiar phobia, which i wasn't familiar with , if i'm honest, but that is with, if i'm honest, but that is apparently the oh had a people who were afraid of clowns. you must know that i was vaguely aware of that. but i've always thought it. i didn't know had a word . i thought it was word. i thought it was a cartoon. this there's a famous where two cannibals are around big cooking partner eating a clown and one of them goes does this taste funny it's a very famous cartoon . i said that the famous cartoon. i said that the punchline should be no scary actually , because he'd say it's actually, because he'd say it's very well known. it's on the subject of children burst into tears when they're to have a sample isn't it? because that's all to do with the face paintings. these bizarre, grotesque face paint. yeah compounds, of course. and
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actually , it will benefit this actually, it will benefit this study. i suspect to look into anthropological development of the found face painting to understand why they like they do it. it might come back to your italian ancestors again because a lot of that stuff does make . a lot of that stuff does make. yeah. and they're less scary stage aren't they. in a proscenium stage feet from you than they are in person. close up when they which is why up when they rush. which is why the grotesque. the painting so grotesque. it has cross . they have the face has to cross. they have the face paint and. the other thing they do grotesquely clumsy do is they're grotesquely clumsy right. they do it right. they can and they do it in generate in order, generate pathos. but there something a little bit there is something a little bit alarming about somebody who bend over up over and pick something up without doing i mean, like without doing i mean, like without a without falling over, it's a little do seem little bit and some do seem angry . little bit and some do seem angry. there's angry to angry. there's an angry tone to their or their gestures. and then kill people and bury them out of home. somebody out of their home. somebody i mean, the poor are the greatest clowns b the brothers. clowns on b the marx brothers. right. like a clown right. and that was like a clown troupe david troupe within. and david thompson, wrote a lot of thompson, who wrote a lot of interesting stuff about about film said interesting thing film said the interesting thing with groucho would with the most groucho would break occasionally speak to break out occasionally speak to is margaret dumont the big
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is it margaret dumont the big sort of statuesque woman . but sort of statuesque woman. but generally speaking, when the four engaged four of them were engaged in action, oblivious to action, they were oblivious to the outside world. they were like a little isolated like a like a little isolated storm of chaos and very similar to a who's just unable to engage with the real world and lives in a slightly sort of childlike delusion about what's going on. i became an organic spectacle. that's what suggest , sealed that's what you suggest, sealed off. yeah. real and it is a bit. i marx brothers films i know this seems funny but there are scenes that you kind of go, oh god, get them away . the opera, god, get them away. the opera, you know, it's like although i would say marx films have aged better than most films of their era. they might yeah, yeah. and except to being fat is a hope which the movies in which early movies because the chaplin keaton but anyway we've moved to the daily mail can hormones make you sober up quick it doesn't affect me. of course i haven't been sober since 1977 or produce any hormones . scientists have any hormones. scientists have developed hormone injection that
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halves the time of sobering up. it's called a fibroblast growth factor 21 and it produces it's produced in the livers of people and animals. this thing that they've extracted and they shoot it into you and it stops your brain from drying up. wow good. yeah. sounds great. so now brain unked yeah. sounds great. so now brain linked a cure, or is it sort of be both because this article states that for a lot of people , alcohol abuse can be quite dangerous and to some really terrible side effects, you don't say, yeah, so they're shooting this into people. so the tells tonight that safety go as you say you can drink too much but this might be for those those police patterns to pick up people like in leicester square on the weekends right where people are so hammered. yeah that they're going to you know somebody's fly plane or somebody's got to fly plane or something that so yeah yeah something like that so yeah yeah or see pack and make a speech or go see pack and make a speech enough the deal drugs are has come up with an alternative chemical which gets you drunk
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but has antidote that acts but has an antidote that acts immediately government immediately. the government won't so says the won't licence it. so he says the guardian story about sushi guardian next story about sushi terrorism which is what i called it when my ex stopped using . i'm it when my ex stopped using. i'm not say that's not going to say that's disgusting . i'll disgrace. it disgusting. i'll disgrace. it this is story body spray. you can say body. yeah, i know , i can say body. yeah, i know, i got we were only there. yeah. yeah. those conveyor belts of apparent late pain practically rendered useless in japan , rendered useless in japan, specifically because of sushi terrorism as a few social . specifically because of sushi terrorism as a few social. media videos that have gone viral of people licking , oh, you look at people licking, oh, you look at them touching them. it's a more extreme of it, wasn't it? that fellow, they think was poison. the russian wasn't. he was with the collective poisoning. surely an option. it wasn't that when they put in all right but yeah i didn't that and i thought i might wrong but i it's might be wrong but i mean it's such a so doesn't it. those weird little conveyor belts i
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see them in like , it's like see them in like, it's like i never do them. i don't. but then i don't really taps either. i like a big play a steaming i like a big play a steaming i like buffets but that is for the same reason. if you were to squirm out of every kitchen and i know i go to gail's in maida vale after yoga food buffets oh there's but there's people pointing over the car too long. nails what's that. i don't saying is dipping celery in and eating it and then dipping oh double dipping is terrible. i believe we the guardian. you got 40 seconds. a story about premature ejaculation . oh, god. premature ejaculation. oh, god. oh, sure , i'm afraid. go for us. oh, sure, i'm afraid. go for us. this is this is a study that has just to the exercise could be a beneficial as drugs in treating premature ejaculation not at all well we're blessed intimacy. oh if we hurry it up frankly to yeah sure get on with it deep is the stuff you've tried that right right yeah. so yeah . this
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right right yeah. so yeah. this is there's no it's you just think of is margaret thatcher or your grandmother or the hippo , your grandmother or the hippo, your grandmother or the hippo, your mother naked on the beach doing cartwheels always works for yeah your mother, for me. yeah, yeah your mother, i mean , it doesn't mean she's i mean, it doesn't mean she's switched off, but we should be all right. that is all we have time for tonight. thank you very much for joining time for tonight. thank you very much forjoining us. those have another quick look at wednesday's front pages, especially who especially for those who switched on tomorrow morning. the mail lawmaker faces the daily mail lawmaker faces rebuke for likening small plans to propaganda. the telegraph bbc, bbc urged to sack linacre migrant jibe . times have shown migrant jibe. times have shown that ready to battle judges and over migration and us intelligence please pro ukrainians blew up pipelines that from the new york times the daily express has lays down the law. we decide who comes here the guardian tories right to seek refugee protection in new
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well, a day of very brief pronouncements from the home secretary and the prime minister and new legislation to stop the boats do they really believe in it or are they just playing a game of politics? the budget is coming up next week. is there any that we can stop the any hope that we can stop the chancellor up chancellor putting up corporation tax by a staggering 30? well ukraine bakhmut a salient all the ukraine is right to be defending that position . to be defending that position. and joining me on talking points , duncan larcombe, former royal
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editor of the sun newspaper and a man who befriended harry. i'm going to ask him. what on earth has gone wrong ? could it be the has gone wrong? could it be the drugs? i don't know . but before drugs? i don't know. but before all of that, let's get money. is with polly middlehurst . nigel. with polly middlehurst. nigel. thank you and good evening to you.the thank you and good evening to you. the top stories tonight on gb news. the prime minister has addressed potential migrants to the uk by saying you come here illegally, you can't claim asylum or stay in the uk . rishi asylum or stay in the uk. rishi sunak says the government should be the one who decides who should enter the country, not the criminal gangs. and the home secretary suella braverman earlier admitted it's likely the illegal migration bill may be incompatible with the european convention on human rights. well, at a news conference , gb well, at a news conference, gb news tom harwood asked the prime minister if he's ready for any legal challenges . already legal challenges. already legions of lawyers are preparing
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