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

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channel good evening. i'm tatiana sanchez in the gb newsroom bbc boss tim davie has apologised for disruption to the broadcaster's sports shows, but says he will not resign over the handung says he will not resign over the handling of the gary lineker row. it comes after mr. lineker was forced to step back from match of the day over a tweet criticising the government migration policy. tonight's match of the day only lasted 20 minutes and featured no commentary analysis. football
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focus and final score were also cancelled with several sports presenters walking out in solidarity with lineker while the prime minister's he hopes the prime minister's he hopes the bbc can resolve the issue in a timely manner but has defended the government's policy. in a statement this evening. in other news, jeremy hunt has told gb news he wants britain to have the most competitive tax rates. that's amid calls to scrap a planned hike in corporation ahead of the budget on. the chancellor spoke to estimate fe and philip davis on his plans to deliver growth and tackle inflation. he said the corporation tax increase from 19 to 25% would still leave the uk with a lower rate than nearly all major. but he said he was committed previous promises of bringing corporation tax down. what we now have is a responsible outlook for public finances. the markets recognised that by bringing down mortgage rates, interest and we're on
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track to bring inflation down. but if you're saying me as a conservative, do i want to bring taxes? conservative, do i want to bring taxes.7 well, i want to bring personal taxes because . that is personal taxes because. that is at the heart of what being a conservative is. but i to bring down business taxes, even more . down business taxes, even more. outgoing deputy first minister john swinney has backed yousaf as scotland's next leader. mr. swinney , the current scottish swinney, the current scottish health secretary was the candidate who could strengthen the snp as a force for progressive change. he becomes the most politician to publicly endorse one of the candidates running to be the next snp leader and take over from nicola sturgeon . a 29 year old man has sturgeon. a 29 year old man has been arrested on suspicion of terrorism offences after woman was stabbed outside a leisure centre in cheltenham. the was attacked around 915 on thursday evening on tommy lane. she sustained several injuries but
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remains a stable condition in hospital . the man remains a stable condition in hospital. the man is remains a stable condition in hospital . the man is currently hospital. the man is currently being questioned . being questioned. counter—terrorism officers and gloucestershire police says believes it was an isolated incident . west midlands police incident. west midlands police have said a man has been stabbed to death at a nightclub in walsall. officers were called felicia's nightclub in the town just after 5:00 this morning after receiving that, someone had been stabbed . the man died had been stabbed. the man died while on the way to hospital just an hour later. officers say no arrests have yet been made, but urging anyone was in the nightclub at the time to come . nightclub at the time to come. tv online and dab+ radio this gb news. that was, i bet, the headliners . headliners. hello, i'm leo kearse and welcome to headliners. your first look at
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saturday's most important and fascinating stories . and joining fascinating stories. and joining me tonight are bruce devlin and louis schaefer . how are you both louis schaefer. how are you both due .7 fine, thank you. yeah, not due.7 fine, thank you. yeah, not bad. you came down from gold .7 bad. you came down from gold? no. edinburgh. everyone thinks from glasgow. i keep making. i'm originally from dundee by life. a native of the majority of the time but yeah i don't fit a bit as yesterday. and you're originally new york are you are you a small boat migrant or a large boat i'm a big large boat migrant? i'm a big plain . let me just say plain migrant. let me just say this . i've spent plain migrant. let me just say this. i've spent a year of my life in edinburgh right here, a year and total in my i've spent at least 12 edinburgh festivals there. wow. more than that. and you claim benefits there. no, i mean, how does that. well who what the rules are with those people like crazy . anyway, let's people like crazy. anyway, let's take a look at. tomorrow's front pages and we start the daily mail . it has pages and we start the daily mail. it has prime minister heads back. lineker storm . the heads back. lineker storm. the sunday telegraph says i won't quit, says bbc boss, as he hints
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at claim tone. the observer has row threatens to topple bbc and hit the asylum plane . the sunday hit the asylum plane. the sunday express has bbc sport black new match of the day today . you can match of the day today. you can watch it on gb news. the sunday mirror has lineker. i'll never silenced. and the daily star has bbc and crisis. off, off, off . bbc and crisis. off, off, off. and those were your front pages . kicking off is the telegraph bruce . i mean, it's the only bruce. i mean, it's the only story and tone is every front page. yeah, it's this says tim davie saying that he he emphatically he will not standing down. what going to do is he's going to look over impartiality guidelines, right? so he's going to have a wee wage with some people. i don't think he wants to stand down because i think he'd get quite well paid. if you're in a top job at the bbc and a lot of power and
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influence if you go to. but people always say they're not going to stand down right before they stand down. that's what i've yeah. no i don't i've noticed. yeah. no i don't think there's any intention of doing. got where he doing. think he has got where he is i think he's quite happy is and i think he's quite happy to do that. i think i would as well. but i mean, 37 tory mps and peers have signed a letter demanding lineker is . but demanding gary lineker is. but on the other hand, you a lot of pubuc on the other hand, you a lot of public opinion or certainly sort of vocal leftie opinion is demanding that gary lineker be anointed as a saint and golden statues. in every town, even though those people might not want , you know, the cross want, you know, the cross channel actually living near them, they're happy for them to come into the country as long as they're putting deprived working class communities. i mean, lewis, what you of this? lewis, what do you make of this? well, because gary lineker a well, because gary lineker has a huge and he's taking huge house and he's taking taking these people in for once. i think once it's still living, it was like it was like the school hamster home. he had this going weeks. and, going for like two weeks. and, you then if you take the you know, then if you take the boxing, you touch me. no part of
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migrant and my and, migrant and refugee and my and, you know, the guy who's probably had security staff and all the had a security staff and all the rest not not quite rest, i mean, it's not not quite the same. i think in fact, we could solve a lot of this by mean guardian readers and all the other wing people twitter the other wing people on twitter who demand that we have open borders and anybody who to borders and anybody who wants to can into country . can just come into the country. we technology to we can use technology to identify where those people are and them next to them and just hold them next to them instead of to next deprive working class communities that necessarily for them . that necessarily asked for them. that wouldn't good . no, i'd like wouldn't be good. no, i'd like i'd like to watch that happen, though. of course we you know, basically this is this is the left feeding on itself, i think. but it's also it's what happened was is that andrew bridgen guy used a holocaust comparison or germany comparison and so he was totally brutalised and now guy gary lineker is using holocaust comparison and he's he needs to be brutalised. yeah another people's gina carano , the star people's gina carano, the star of disney's mandalorian series.
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she she used a similar and she was she was completely castigated and thrown out of the acting community and i can speak for the jewish community and for all jews in general . for the jewish community and for all jews in general. i can speak for us for them and say, you know , can use any comparison you know, can use any comparison you want to long as it makes our holocaust seem much bigger than any problem you have . but it any problem you have. but it does seem ridiculous . i mean, to does seem ridiculous. i mean, to compare the tories to germany , i compare the tories to germany, i mean, apart from the being able to get trains to run on time and there's, there's so many i mean , people were trained to risk their lives to get of germany rather than trying get into germany . and germany wasn't germany. and germany wasn't expanding its borders around . expanding its borders around. people who didn't want to be in it rather than trying to secure its borders. so people who wanted to be in it couldn't get . i'm going to stay away from that. and i'm to say, the one thing that i want to constance early on is the fact that match
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of the day apparently some of the sporting programmes have been bargain hunt been replaced. bargain hunt often people suffered enough serious . you know what? serious. you know what? tonight's putin doctor is on at that time of night, which really upset mum because of women's upset my mum because of women's right continent . right to marry a continent. right? well, i to put right? right. well, i to put doctors, the doctors would probably anyway . probably be on strike anyway. i've daily mail next, i've got the daily mail next, lewis and rishi is getting involved in the whole farrago. well he is getting involved by saying, don't want to be saying, i don't want to be involved. think what involved. i think that's what the story. yes, he said he said he it's up to the bbc. he he said it's up to the bbc. he gave praising gary lineker was a great player and a down great football player and a down townsend presenter and dude, great football player and a down twasn't d presenter and dude, great football player and a down twasn't here�*senter and dude, great football player and a down twasn't here at1ter and dude, great football player and a down twasn't here at the and dude, great football player and a down twasn't here at the time dude, great football player and a down twasn't here at the time andiude, i wasn't here at the time and he's playing football. but i think and football is the best thing in england. british engush thing in england. british english football. i got that that and men . anyway and i'm that and men. anyway and i'm glad you're laughing. well somebody's got a lot. well, i hope they are at home. we don't, we don't have to. you don't know. you know, you have got to
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tell what the story is anyway. so the story he said, i hope that the current situation gary lineker and the bbc can be resolved in a timely manner but is rightly matter for them not is rightly a matter for them not to which to government, which is completely because bbc , this completely because the bbc, this state broadcaster . it is it is state broadcaster. it is it is the pr propaganda wing of the state. yeah. well i'd a lot of people have said that, including ken loach know famous left wing filmmaker. he you know, we've basically got a state mouthpiece and the bbc i mean do you think it could bring down the bbc given that i mean, there's such a in the media, a pluralism in the media, there's so you spend there's so many you can spend your money. we don't it's your money. yeah. we don't it's not the 1940s anymore. don't not the 1940s anymore. we don't need state provided need have a of a state provided broadcaster we just pay broadcaster we can just pay we've services we can pick we've got services we can pick choose rather than having having a spoon and then having only one kick down our doors if we don't pay a kick down our doors if we don't pay a tv licence there was only one channel at one time and now there's a channels. so i think , there's a channels. so i think, i think this thing and i have no
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idea. i've only lived in this country for 23 years and i barely watched the bbc during that time, i over time the bbc has become and i think because it's become irrelevant that something like this move is making people think about irrelevant. it is that yeah gary lineker is there but we can see the same thing on sports talk exactly it's no it's no loss i mean we're seeing over of strikes at the moment you know the fringe go on strike. you know a lot of people have got alternative modes of transport so it's not the cataclysm that it might been in the it might have been in the seventies. yeah anyway, moving on story on the sunday times, a story about space. so this been revealed the elite british former are hired to spy the super rich am this apparently dates back to 2010 when a i can't remember the name of the group begins with a d i'm y spying on fifa during the initial world cup bids. right. so s or military people from this country here are privy to
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intelligence and know. well, as they say it's a shady private deck operations. right. which is things you can name names especially. so what do you mean by that okay that's so ex army officers are spy on behalf of but that's that is always happened what was over in iraq where they were asked to do dirty deeds. there's always been mercenaries they've always hired people do they've always hired there's always been corporate spying. this one nothing personal. but this is one of those non stories this this shows the rise lawfare in the uk they the uk is becoming the centre of the global for lawfare where people weaponize legal action to either either punish their enemies or exert some sort of commercial influence and commercial leverage . and it's commercial leverage. and it's worth apparently £50 billion a yean worth apparently £50 billion a year, which are uk in the uk, which is which is incredible . which is which is incredible. your bailiwick isn't that your
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background . well, historically, background. well, historically, no, not i was i was an intelligence analyst then and i worked in national security and stuff, but never anything that would make money trying stop would make money trying to stop people getting blown up, you know. yeah, but is it this country? country a lot country? this country has a lot of strengths. and one of the strengths is it is incredibly fair to people outside the country , to people inside the country, to people inside the country. i think it's a bit dubious that this country is too hard . brits and i wouldn't trust hard. brits and i wouldn't trust this country if to go to court with . a british judge , nothing with. a british judge, nothing personal. i don't know what exactly that is in trouble, but i would if i was living outside the country bringing another person outside the country person from outside the country to for that, for a judge in to act for that, for a judge in this country to act as a disinterested party. yeah, to be fair. well, if i didn't know that saying sue you, i'll that saying i'll sue you, i'll see in london or i'll see see you in london or i'll see you in britain because the laws here of enable enable here sort of enable to enable suing people and people bringing cases more frivolously . oh,
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cases more frivolously. oh, maybe it's just fair that . the maybe it's just fair that. the fair for foreigners is that they because there's english people as so excuse me british people are so snob arty that they're sort of above the dirty foreigners outside the country coming in and they could be perceived as being good. yeah well i mean don't think a british person could get away with not bad things losing. finally, we've got the daily star on sunday with a story about gary lineker this is gary good lewis well i'm not familiar with this story except to say that except to say that my friend bruce here is quite, quite up on it, which is a lie. it's one of lewis's stories. but anyway this is about a goat. that's going around. i'm headbutting everyone in sight. yeah, i'm bursting children's footballs with his horns . can footballs with his horns. can we. can we split him free on some premier league pitches? this would make it much more entertaining . well, indeed, as entertaining. well, indeed, as discussed, we're not fans. he up
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with brian potts on his hands and we find in the barn he gets off washing line so i don't know where this is i don't know who's they they say i am, but it seems to be going it just it seems very odd. go is single mindedly targeted in underwear. yeah in my opinion, there's so many different flights . who targeted different flights. who targeted arnold seem or something that they targeted. yeah. women's stole it but yeah i'm suggesting the go is taken his from pink floyd arnold lane arnold layne that's it yeah yeah that's was that's it yeah yeah that's was that was the pink floyd's first hit maybe one of the first hits. yes, i like time as a child because of the video of only one hole in the wall or something like that wrecking the world. and there was like a kind of johnny dodger that was trying to hang remember that . i hang itself to remember that. i don't tune. it was don't remember the tune. it was , you they go for a go at , you know, they go for a go at that steal in pants. but you don't remember that. no, that's not anyway. front
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not anyway. that's the front page done up after the break page is done up after the break we've got why trump is looking weak why prince andrew wins another tell interview . see another tell all interview. see you a couple of minutes. you in a couple of minutes. don't go away . 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.
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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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welcome back to headline news with me leo kearse am joined by the beauty full scottish bruce devlin and amazing american lewis schaefer. what about beautiful i'm beautiful too? well, yeah, you've a certain, certain charisma. anyway, ladies , with the actual stories with the observer now and rishi is criticised for his plans to , put criticised for his plans to, put the children of illegal immigrants in cages. listen, putin in cages is a fantastic idea. don't just do it to refugee children across the channel. do it to all, everywhere, every pub in the uk should have a cage open by. you can just fling these little branson , get them in there, have branson, get them in there, have a pain in peace. nobody's going
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to knock over the jenga anyway. bruce, more this bruce, tell us more about this wonderful not the wonderful idea. is that not the soft play area and family restaurants? maybe talking about it? maybe. want see it it? maybe. i just want see it like soft and more cagey . like less soft and more cagey. oh, and you know, oh, wow. okay. and you know, that's what i like about your nuke radius. you're just in there. it's good. so i take it this to do with senior tories condemning plans their words which would allow unaccompanied to be held and is in a u—turn on past legislation . so rishi sunak past legislation. so rishi sunak plans to reduce boat crossings and this will effectively reverse a ban on child detention implemented under cameron and open the door to the expansion of the practise yeah, that's, that's absolutely right mean it does sound it does sound appalling but we're we're facing an absolute cataclysm with i mean there's a projected 80,000 people to come across the channel this year on small and the countries already struggling to deal with the with the issue and so i'm i think the plans you
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know the plans to scrap the detention of children were made in times when this wasn't an issue. and now we've got to deal i mean more than anything we've got to dissuade people from bringing children across the channel because it's dangerous we've seen deaths in the channel these boats aren't safe. i think that's the thing but every time for people to take risk because . i remember in footage where had contact details on the back children you know written on the back of them and you kind of think, okay , how bad is your think, okay, how bad is your life? whatever country of origin or where you happen to be living is that prepared to take is that you're prepared to take that coming from that whether they're coming from france so mean, you know, france? so i mean, you know, i not vote cheese aim has not been over there and paid them something like half a billion poundsin something like half a billion pounds in which to help police beaches. yeah i got that . yes. beaches. yeah i got that. yes. so half a billion pounds in france to help with policing the issue and the political will you know we've yet to see if it
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really depends on the political will in france but we've also invested in albania in stimulating the economy so that people in albania have jobs, you know, can can get jobs there. and they don't need to try and make it to the uk to, to make some money. i've, i've ran into a guy some money. i've, i've ran into a guy a few years ago and he explained how immigration into the united states from a country like is similarly country or el salvador basically destroys life in guatemala that all the are gone and all the have no can no no income and the whole communities are basically destroyed by this . so there's destroyed by this. so there's something bad, something you have to feel for people who are going to come with their children to this country. yeah. but on the other hand in this entire article in the in the guardian , it not one said how guardian, it not one said how old the children in war. what makes a child a child. there's a big difference between a ten year old and an 18 year old.
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this sounds like a case waiting to happen. louis i mean, i don't want to i don't know. big scandal about you is a valid because quite often people lose their id coming across the channel and then claim to be to be 14 years old when they're actually, you know, 20 or whatever. and my friend, he he fosters he's fostered some refugee children and orphans and things like that . and he was things like that. and he was doing it successfully. and then he was he had a kid placed with them, claimed to be a 14 year old boy, but was clearly an adult. you know, you don't feel good to take taken back to the place because he's got, you know, his own kids. he couldn't have this, you know, full grown man shaves and everything in the same house is his daughter. so how do they trace that, though ? how do they trace that, though? because over because if someone comes over and you know , and they don't any, you know, papers that i.d. and they don't any, you know, papers that id. or whatever and say, i'm 14, but it could be 21, i would have a clarify that you
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can they can do is look at the bone structure and look at the think the teeth will actually reveal. you know, it's a pretty pretty exact extent how that person is. but it says that dilemma for charity. no obviously, all these rules can be exploited in a game by anybody who wants to come across the channel. and that's why we're in such a such a bind with us.the we're in such a such a bind with us. the problem with this whole channel thing and the immigration is immigration thing is i personally support open . around personally support open. around the world, but i do not support that at cost of the local people and with the hotels that are being occupied it basically is destroying towns , i assume, destroying towns, i assume, because now there's no hotel rooms for tourists to come and visit or business people to come because all the hotels are being used by by this. you got . and of used by by this. you got. and of course, rich people and governments love immigration because it provides unlimited laboun because it provides unlimited labour. the for the businesses also provides customers their businesses and is much cheaper
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than growing the people from scratch. you know, raising a paying scratch. you know, raising a paying for schooling a child and all the rest of it. but does mean, you know, a lot of cases we're the best people we're cherry the best people from picking from other countries picking doctors around the world doctors from around the world even it's unfair in this countries they've trained up countries if they've trained up trained both it trained doctors it hurts both it huns trained doctors it hurts both it hurts both . but anyway, hurts both. but yeah. anyway, the sun telegraph. no. and an inflow angel republican says trump is weak. this this is going to be good news for ron desantis list . well not desantis list. well not necessarily i think it's not bad news. it's it says trump is the weakest candidate according to an influential republican who is david mcintosh who's the head of the anti—tax superpac club for growth. pac means political committee. and that's a that's a group because individuals can only give so much to money a presidential candidate. yeah, but can give us an unlimited amount to organised organisations for them to distribute the money. and because this, this pac does not like . donald and they support
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like. donald and they support ron desantis and the maga line can conservative political action con friends which is cpac which has just had its campaign at its conference they support donald trump . there's a lot of donald trump. there's a lot of debate whether donald trump is good for the country , good for good for the country, good for the republicans, are bad for republicans. these people that that donald trump lost . republicans. these people that that donald trump lost. in republicans. these people that that donald trump lost . in 2018, that donald trump lost. in 2018, 2020, 2022. yeah in the local elections. yeah and he shouldn't be trusted to run in 2024 because he's loser. yeah. well he seems to be the bane of republicans are in trump really to the you know the fervent ideological base but not the way they're voting public. and you really need to. if you want to get somebody to win the president, you've got to appeal to the way they're voting public. you've got to go both, yeah, you've got to go. both if you're opinion in this. you're going to opinion in this. bruce , no, really don't . i
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bruce no, no, i really don't. i am. is he going to stand again ? am. is he going to stand again? trump yes, he is. he's standing already. he has decided to stand , yeah. and he's promising some crazy stuff he's promising. like pubuc crazy stuff he's promising. like public guillotines, i believe . public guillotines, i believe. it's one of the things i mean, it's sort like he's he's made a tombola of my head and the stuff in and is pulling policy out in it and is pulling policy out of that actually i do have an opinion but it's maybe not relevant but it kind of the people in scotland who bemoan about trump but will go to turnberry on a groupon voucher and enjoy the hospitality there and enjoy the hospitality there and i'm like pick a side and stick to it and that's the vilification. sheena easton's had over the years with the mid—atlantic spades, and that now i don't think he'd be bossing . that's not necessarily bossing. that's not necessarily true . trump not represents so true. trump not represents so much of the values of middle america. he did find them to the aspirational, i think don't care for those people. but remember , for those people. but remember, like said is that he like what leo said is that he bnngs like what leo said is that he brings out base . there are a brings out his base. there are a lot of people who love donald trump , but there are some people trump, but there are some people
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a lot of democrats, they'll get they'll get out of bed three or four a day to vote against four times a day to vote against trump. and what that and trump. and that's what that and so to keep those to so they need to keep those to these people getting out of bed three or four times a day. is this a positive problem ? anyway, this a positive problem? anyway, moving on and talking of former leaders who are trying to make comeback, we've got the sun express now. and remember prince andrew's interview with i think it was emily maitlis? well, he it was emily maitlis? well, he it went well instead of being another tragic royal car crash and.he another tragic royal car crash and. he wants to do a new one because he thinks we'll feel sorry his job. i mean sorry losing his job. i mean that wasn't a job. you're literally a prince. you just open supermarkets loads open supermarkets and get loads of money. what do you make of this? i they say this is this? i mean they say this is quite something that prince andrew tell all andrew tapped for a new tell all as discussed in sources to as we discussed in sources to the play. who these sources? the play. who are these sources? it's sources, isn't it? it's always sources, isn't it? sources day it was sources are in my day it was called crisis . they told on you called crisis. they told on you wasn't as close to the prince, close to the prince of nothing is off the table. but what was like ? there's certainly no
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like? there's certainly no credible it's i think on the table i'm and prince case won't come back say someone called lisa bloom and so what case was the case? this has to do with the case? this has to do with the financier jeffrey . how are the financier jeffrey. how are you going as so he's obviously denies any legal action then was paid off with i think it's £12 million of the case. apparently that that expires year. it was only for year. well that's that's an expensive subscription service. well the 12 million bought him a year of house i think so. don't at me on social media i because i remember watching a morning show and they said yeah but this could actually away from the coronation . yeah. because she coronation. yeah. because she could do whatever and on that aim they duchess of york fergie come in and said this is all very sad to watch she's just signed a 22 book deal in australia . 22 books. yes, i'm
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australia. 22 books. yes, i'm she's still banging on about the royals, whereas even kylie has decided not to at the coronation because australia wants to be a republic. and kylie's move back to australia really whole. that's right. 22 to because i'm thinking many million so all the royals she's got sarah ferguson apparently a 20 to big deal in australia with an australian so every royal former royal hanger on is now receiving the money that harry and meghan have made from these tell all biography is in the rushing to do their own right. well i mean that money is floating around and this is fact.i floating around and this is fact. i was asked this week to be in a major your television show as prince andrew amazing . i show as prince andrew amazing. i hopei show as prince andrew amazing. i hope i hope you get the part you may need to work on i can't do it i'm booked up already but that's but i always thought of myself as more of the half as either harvey weinstein's . well either harvey weinstein's. well i mean what was the show was it
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crimewatch. i'm not allowed to say what it is. i mean, we've the independent now and there's controversy over electric shock treatment for women . why does it treatment for women. why does it make them drop the sandwiches ? make them drop the sandwiches? did we just skip that? i know it's just a sequence to. oh, i don't panic . don't panic. it's don't panic. don't panic. it's my story. i'll take off . oh yes. my story. i'll take off. oh yes. mvp's are calling bonds for. i'm on electric and. both of them had a play for women in. mental healthcare, which i agree with . healthcare, which i agree with. don't think anyone should be being late targeted in the same way . i'm not, alone i don't way. i'm not, let alone i don't think you should electric shock call to us your dog. i think that's all right. but i mean, some some physicians that it does and when people does provide and when people have depression and have have extreme depression and mental health issues electric shock therapy can be something that shocks the shocks the body shocks the brain is not fully understood but it does work in some cases it can get people back path to recovery, back on the path to recovery, even there side even though there are side effects. quite effects. well, i'm quite familiar it because know familiar with it because i know because my mother had it done
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and really sixties and she wanted done and then it wanted to have done and then it was relatively treatment and was the relatively treatment and i think it's i when you when you do not know why something works it should not be that right it didn't work for your mum. well |, didn't work for your mum. well i, i don't know. i wasn't there beforehand. she, she was a believer and i think it does is, it creates, it panic in the body which kind of like releases endorphins and the same way coffee creates a situation panic. right. audio and you and after and after it's gone you feel relieved you feel like okay the panic is over. well some people really some people feel confused and lose memories to according this. yeah so it's not always great anyway that's part in the bag but coming up, got how museums distort history why berlin is allowing women to swim topless in public and, why life coaches are being used to get people back to work less than a
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couple minutes. don't go away .
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welcome back to headline is going through tomorrow's top stories . who controls the past stories. who controls the past controls the future wrote george orwell in 1984 describing a totalitarian government the edhed totalitarian government the edited history to manipulate the thoughts of the people in a dystopian future. there's plenty evidence to suggest that we're no living in that future. according to the sunday telegraph, lewis. well this is one of those excuse me for saying it's another non—story. it's like that museums have a point of view and all institutions have a point of view. it's titled how the left wing elite use british to distort history , which says distort history, which says they're moving towards a more wing, more woke approach to things and, including saying how
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the elgin marbles should have been returned to egypt, how the benin bronzes should be returned to benin or nigeria , wherever to benin or nigeria, wherever that is. and another that they're complaining about is that a discussion, whether it's okay to use the term mummy to describe an embalmed corpse? it's not because it says no. a gender neutral term. i mean shouldn't you shouldn't museums be this should be neutral. museums shouldn't have politicised view on on the history the present but that's what that what saying here what i'm saying is it's impos civil for any institution be neutral . for any institution be neutral. it just is impossible. you either you revere the history that's not neutral. if you blame blame your history, that's not. but you can certainly harder. we know the moment at kew gardens is a wonderful it's wonderful place with so many , so many place with so many, so many plants that have been brought to
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the uk. but they see that some are racist or have racist , the uk. but they see that some are racist or have racist, and the other places of medical exhibits they describe as sexist. i mean , putting these sexist. i mean, putting these modern values on historical artefacts isn't true. i mean, what if whatever . am i? right what if whatever. am i? right wing party took over ? the tories wing party took over? the tories actually aren't right wing, so at this point , anybody, they're at this point, anybody, they're not that conservative party in name only. but you know, if a right wing party are for a far right wing party are for a far right party, go ahead and then wanted to do else in museum exhibits to see for example justify the you know or something was wrong far right parties have done in the past this this a precedent that we justify them doing it but there's no way around this if change if you don't . a museum change if you don't. a museum you're with a museum of a museum where where live in south east
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london. there's the whole ornament museum is the most amazing place because they still have the original and the original displays that the animals , including a seal that animals, including a seal that looks so unnatural. i don't see they never saw us see taxidermy. what do you what do you disappoint when you when you went into the horny mind not got an and it wasn't born a man what's its name . no that joke what's its name. no that joke has been made many times before live . but is it fantastic place. live. but is it fantastic place. yeah, but it is a relic . yeah. yeah, but it is a relic. yeah. and so there's no there's way around this. this is either you change it, it becomes or you don't change, it becomes . so don't change, it becomes. so whatever we've got is going to is going present the values of today anyway. the sunday times. no.and today anyway. the sunday times. no. and the government has found a new and inventive way to waste our taxes. £250 million a year on life coaches lazy people. bruce well we don't know if they are lazy in fairness, but i'm
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willing to say i will pay money down on that. it says people who left the work place, i workforce due to long term problems as mental health could be offered support millions of the long term sick will be offered life coaches to help with mental debt and other problems under plans being considered to get people back to work. no, i thinking about this is there then going to be enough coaches or are they going to do a recruit for life coaches ? because it seems if coaches? because it seems if this is a new thing this is we're going to and a lot of people might think you know what this could be the job for me. yeah, well, what if the life coaches decide to go and long term sex they don't like working i mean if they really this through. yeah well i think it's a good i think it's a brilliant idea because i mean, everybody likes to talk to. that's likes someone to talk to. that's role of counselling. i mean is talking to somebody people who are down in the dumps it's good it's to be done it wouldn't a better system to get these people back work but to cut
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their benefits which is not it's not only not only does it not cost us anything it saves us money as well . i think maybe. money as well. i think maybe. how about sending big, big men there , maybe roughing them up. there, maybe roughing them up. how about that ? that's. yeah, how about that? that's. yeah, that's good. if they're to do it for free, maybe they could do it for free, maybe they could do it for whatever jewellery they could get off their fingers. anyway, moving on. we've got the metro while west is now so metro while the west is now so liberal that queens teach liberal that drag queens teach children all hundreds 72 children about all hundreds 72 genders and school sex education includes advice on how to chalk your partner. i'm not making this up, by the way. developing countries to going in the countries seem to going in the opposite direction on gay rights. this is rights. lewis well, this is a very in a way, a sad story. it's like it's going far away from what we are doing when even if we don't think what we're doing very good, we're i think it's upsetting to read this. uganda considers criminalising lgbt q plus people for simply being who they are unquote . and the they are unquote. and the president in parliament uganda has introduced chilling new
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legislation not just to make sex acts illegal . they're already acts illegal. they're already homosexual . same sex illegal acts illegal. they're already homosexual. same sex illegal, which it already is punishable by life in prison, which is but well , you can by life in prison, which is but well, you can say that by life in prison, which is but well , you can say that they're well, you can say that they're advanced. it's not the penalty, although, i mean, if you have life prison, you're probably going to have more gay sex. that's an old joke. well yeah, you're probably there when it was written, louis. probably there. and it says it says such things touching. okay gay with the intention of committing an act of homosexuality or simply saying you're gay is enough to be. and ending in a decade in yeahi be. and ending in a decade in yeah i mean this is reminiscent of our hate crime laws where you know even the mere twist of anything that you've tweeted can can in a knock on the door from the policeman. this this really is this is quite chilling. and bruce, i mean, do think the bruce, i mean, do you think the ultra progressiveness of west turn liberalism, where we do have, you know , drag queens have, you know, drag queens
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going into schools and, libraries and stuff like that is actually making it harder for lgbtq people in developing countries it gives their countries because it gives their anti homosexual politics ammunition. you know, i've seen this in russian propaganda. they say, look , dude, in the west , say, look, dude, in the west, well, the only out homosexual on the panel tonight , the night is the panel tonight, the night is still young . i'm i really don't still young. i'm i really don't know i read this and i do it's important because for if you have a gay saw in your house in this how are they going to find out and how can you be charged with that? and i know that that is so simplistic and maybe but that's kind of you know, it's something to humza yousaf would think up this sort of thought crime. i think is very busy at the moment . crime. i think is very busy at the moment. i'm thinking about his next, so we'll leave him alone just tonight. i am, but i don't know if it's anything to don't know if it's anything to do with drag queens going in to skills and reading books. do with drag queens going in to skills and reading books . well, skills and reading books. well, yeah. no, not directly . but i yeah. no, not directly. but i mean are ultra permissive in
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this and some of the co—opting of children into the into certainly gives people ammunition to you know countries but you know what really surprises me that everything comes down automatically to do with the sexualization of whatever yeah i'm in my element is experience of debates because i don't know any drag queens that have gone in. yeah, but i'm sure the drag that i know of they were called in to read a bookit they were called in to read a book it wouldn't be anything else and, but read a book. yeah. if you what i mean. so i if you see what i mean. so i suppose i do. tired of fact suppose i do. tired of the fact that people seem to always think it's do with some it's something to do with some kind sexualisation kind of sexualisation the children mean if children but there i mean if they're in i mean denial they're brought in i mean denial of mind there's a drag queen brought to teach sex brought in to teach sex education is specifically education which is specifically about didn't about sexual. i didn't know that. so yeah. mean there's, that. so yeah. i mean there's, you other instances you know, other instances obviously, drag itself obviously, you know, drag itself if you know, drag drag if you got, you know, drag drag queen show is for children it's an inherently sexualised performance i mean certainly i, i get aroused but i mean loos also do you think there's a
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there's an issue with you know gary lineker and all these last he's and you know also got he's one and you know also got jack they weren't jack borders i wish they weren't open borders immigration i mean some people in other countries mean in uganda they seem to have some some ideas about lgbtq rights here. and they don't quite match what we've got in the west . isn't there a worry the west. isn't there a worry that, you know, people would bnng that, you know, people would bring these? well, i just think there'd be a worry that that we're bringing people in without and any vetting all, and without any vetting at all, there's of self self—appointed self—identified as being an engush self—identified as being an english person and think maybe i mean it's not up to me to say but it seems like i say so what you're saying is don't bring people from uganda this. no, i'm not i'm not saying that. i'm just saying it's you know, it's something we should perhaps be of. we've certainly of. and we've certainly seen with, know, uganda but with, you know, not uganda but other and other other other cultures and other ideologies that have been being brought we've seen mean, brought here. we've seen i mean, there manchester arena there was the manchester arena terrorist was who was terrorist who was who was a libyan refugee saved from the
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mediterranean by the by the royal navy. so when people how is that related? because because it's somebody bringing an ideology. it's a, you know, attitudes from other countries, you know, from wherever it is, don't western, liberal, democratic values. right. but openness and has not passed yet. so we don't know. and you can't i don't know if you could put it in brush. all of uganda knows i'm obviously not doing that. but what saying is we should perhaps just you know, it should be somewhere where we're perhaps i mean, look at every with open arms we and cousins and seeing every you know the whole police is problem when the is this huge problem when the why why we see the other . well why why we see the other. well it does say here that parliament speaker anita i'm on radio the 2014 bill six takes to the house before sending it to the committee for scrutiny on public heanng committee for scrutiny on public hearing on thursday and, quote, let the public explain their views, including the that's not
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allow them to come among sides . allow them to come among sides. so there we go. i am . but to the so there we go. i am. but to the mp, she said , is the time you're mp, she said, is the time you're going to show us if you want a home or not. but thanks for mina always seem so base because it's you know, believe me, this is how we need to do parliamentary bills in this as well. how we need to do parliamentary bills in this as well . the bills in this as well. the sunday telegraph no. and a feminist is giving lessons in schools about andrew tate encouraging boys to hate girls while also seeing that gender isn't binary. so boys and girls don't exist. bruce can you make sense of this? well, i know who andrew tate was . his downfall andrew tate was. his downfall and obvious . he's not being and obvious. he's not being charged with anything . but is he charged with anything. but is he still being held on alleged rape and human trafficking charges? he is still in jail in romania. right. so forth. i understood from boys that he got into i'm going off topic slightly, but it's related. he got into a fight with gretta timberg. yeah and then did a video . he was and then did a video. he was having some pizzas delivered out
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to prove that his carbon footprint was huge and then tv was watching that saying where he was and then was able to go in a rest stop. yeah. from us. i'm not necessarily thinking he's the most intelligent. i'm person in the world, but there is an organisation bold voices who have created a toolkit for teachers how discuss the teachers on how to discuss the misogyny, misogynistic misogyny, the misogynistic influence facing rape and human charges . so yeah, i influence facing rape and human charges. so yeah, i think a of people who are aware of them are aware that he's not particularly well, shall we say, light and frothy , for want of a better frothy, for want of a better saying, unwanted , to act upon saying, unwanted, to act upon that , i'm saying, unwanted, to act upon that, i'm part minister. i mean, they also see that there's , you they also see that there's, you know, gender isn't binary which . i mean , it's kind of strange . i mean, it's kind of strange to be saying this is this is misogynistic and then saying women don't exist. well, this is this is one of those subjects people have decided that he's a misogynist. and i don't think he is, from what i can tell , number is, from what i can tell, number one. and number two, that even
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if is a misogynist, he has gotten the ear of many many, many young men and by sending in some feminist woke type person is probably not to have a positive change of changing and effect on these boys, so they're not going to listen to this. they're going to come, you know what it be like, leo? it would be like send in a white racist in this, a white so window to do that. listen to that. nelson mandela the fact is, whether you like andrew tate or not and personally i have my problems with him , but did he refund you with him, but did he refund you for that university ? hustlers for that university? hustlers university that is that he's university is that is that he's a bit of a scammer, but he is definitely not stupid . he's definitely not stupid. he's super bright guy , i would say super bright guy, i would say almost brilliant , super bright guy, i would say almost brilliant, but i will say this, that can you see it in 5 seconds? i think this is a joke. all right, cool that's it for this section. but coming up in final part of the show, we've
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got why we're in a kill is racist. if you're not scottish, why young people are addicted to dvds how we can stop wiping dvds and how we can stop wiping out race country in out the human race country in a couple minutes . 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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thank you. welcome back to headune thank you. welcome back to headline news. we've got the sunday telegraph, an escort, as we've always known , that the we've always known, that the only people who wear kilts are a people weddings. is it people at weddings. is it cultural appropriation? bruce well, it says here that there is an increase in trace in dna to, you know, ancestral heritage and all this kind of stuff. so a lot of non scots and a waning celts but people of what. this is cultural appropriation and what someone has said here and i'm not sure here is as long as people wear a kilt properly as in the coat over the top with no pants , you know, as long as pants, you know, as long as people with a kilt, probably cultural appropriation isn't an issue. well, how can you wear
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one inappropriately on your head . no, but i mean , tartans, you . no, but i mean, tartans, you know, people people carry on that the tartans go back . i that the tartans go back. i believe the terms were just invented the 19th century, the 18th century to sell shortbread. that's what happened. no, i think it before that that's probably that's a good point. but i broke that down here. now, the history that kills is not that ancient. all right. i mean, people did kilts, but they didn't have their own little tartans decision. this is tartans and decision. this is this is also this is not i thought when i heard this, i thought when i heard this, i thought oh, my god, thought to myself, oh, my god, this the scottish government this is the scottish government again horrible. you again being horrible. yeah. you know trying to trying the alienates scottish people. and first of all, you can't tell what scottish person is. there what a scottish person is. there is scottish i don't is no scottish blood. i don't think it's a oh, no, think i think it's a oh, no, this is my heritage. it isn't it a mixture of scottish blood, like a mixture of english. and then it's like we everybody has to go going back far enough there the picts , the picts. and there the picts, the picts. and then then there were the other kinds that were just the welsh
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whatever. anyway the point is the point is guess is that this that this is being printed to tell the americans who are into cultural appropriation and they don't want to be guilty of it. they're it's okay to do it because they can't a mexican sombrero anymore. yeah and the americans can't. they can't . so americans can't. they can't. so the kilts are the only thing they can do. so if the village people reformed, they could just wear maybe. and wear kilts. yeah, maybe. and wouldn't taught in wouldn't have to be taught in kilts so celts now kilts because so many celts now are know, playing are just, you know, playing colours for a century. anyway, the show is nearly so. let's take another quick look at sunday's front pages. the daily has prime minister hits back at lineker storm . the sunday lineker storm. the sunday telegraph says , i won't quit, telegraph says, i won't quit, says bbc boss. he hints at clean down . the observer has lineker down. the observer has lineker row threatens to topple bbc chiefs and hit as ireland plan . chiefs and hit as ireland plan. the sunday express has sport blackout . the sunday mirror says blackout. the sunday mirror says lineker . blackout. the sunday mirror says lineker. i'll never be silenced. the daily star on sunday says
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bbc in crisis, off, off, off . bbc in crisis, off, off, off. and those were your front pages. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, bruce devlin lewis schafer, and join me again tomorrow. we'll have josh, we listen .
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good evening. here we are, together again for nearly all of our lives on gb news tv and on radio. tonight on the show, i'll be discussing the concept of 15 minute cities, a good idea or unnecessary meddling in our lives. we'll try to answer that with a series of experts . we'll with a series of experts. we'll be asking why some media outlets are able to peddle what could be considered misinformation. and it's completely overlooked by ofcom. while others are scrutinised more closely, this week's great britain is a 74
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year old pensioner who's going to cycle from edinburgh to oxford to raise money for the charity, give a kidney , having charity, give a kidney, having already donated one of his own. all of that and more, plus plenty of conversation with my brilliant panel. emma webb and jacob reynolds. but first, an update on the latest news from tatiana sanchez . neal, thank you tatiana sanchez. neal, thank you very much. and good evening . very much. and good evening. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. the bbc has apologised , pleased and says it's working hard to resolve the situation after experiencing a mass boycott by its sports presenters. it comes after gary lineker was forced to step back from match of the day over a tweet criticising the government's migration policy . government's migration policy. the show will go ahead this evening, but alan shearer and ian wright of both backed down. that will focus and final score being cancelled as well . after being cancelled as well. after alex and jason mohammed alex scott and jason mohammed said they won't appear. bbc scotland's coverage this

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