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tv   Laurence Fox  GB News  March 17, 2023 7:00pm-8:00pm GMT

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by zzing to by going to evening girls and boys, it's 7:00. and i'm laurence fox . now tonight we are to delve into the murky world of the patriarchy . is it all the storm patriarchy. is it all the storm in a teacup or have women and all women been excluded from society based solely on their sex? society based solely on their sex.7 i society based solely on their sex? i be joined by a woman and a man to discuss this. sex? i be joined by a woman and a man to discuss this . then a man to discuss this. then i welcome you to the fox and the hounds panel. welcome you to the fox and the hounds panel . oh, cas, really? hounds panel. oh, cas, really? i am the fox and i have two news hounds with me. digest some of the biggest news of the week.
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and finally, i'm being challenged in my view that being bisexual being then bisexual is being greedy. then you get to put me on the spot. fox on the spot and ask me anything. and don't forget, most i hear from you. so send i want to hear from you. so send me your views at gb views at gbnews.uk or fox on twitter. gbnews.uk or the fox on twitter. that's coming up off the that's all coming up off the headunes that's all coming up off the headlines tatiana sanchez . headlines with tatiana sanchez. and thank you and good evening. this is the latest from the gb newsroom, the international criminal court has issued an arrest warrant against the russian president . it's accusing russian president. it's accusing vladimir putin of war crimes against ukraine, including the unlawful deportation of children from ukraine to russia. the kremlin has described the claims as outrageous and says it doesn't recognise the jurist fiction of the icc . deputy prime fiction of the icc. deputy prime minister dominic raab says russia must be held accountable to the historic moment in the conflict in ukraine. the international criminal court, which operates independently ,
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which operates independently, has issued an indictment for president putin and the children's commission commissioner for appalling crimes against children. and whilst they operate independently, it's really important the international community support them and give them do the job, them the tools to do the job, which why i'll be hosting on which is why i'll be hosting on monday with my dutch opposition number 40 countries from around the them the the world to give them the support conduct the support to conduct the investigations look after investigations to look after witnesses, investigations to look after witness so that they can see victims so that they can see this through. and we hope have accountability for appalling crimes . security guards at crimes. security guards at heathrow airport are to strike for ten days over easter in a over pay unite union says over 1400 of its members at terminal five will walk out from the 31st of march after voting in favour of march after voting in favour of industrial action . the of industrial action. the airport says it has contingency plans in place to deal with the strike, but is urging the union to discuss its proposed 10% pay rise . more than 175,000 rise. more than 175,000 appointments had to be postponed
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dunng appointments had to be postponed during this week's junior doctors strike to protect emergency care . nhs boss emergency care. nhs boss professor sir stephen powis called the three day walkout unprecedented , saying it's had a unprecedented, saying it's had a greater impact than all other action we've seen. so far this winter combined . leaders of winter combined. leaders of striking doctors have called for a meeting with the health secretary to resolve the pay dispute . the british medical dispute. the british medical association is demanding a 35% pay association is demanding a 35% pay rise . police constable mary pay rise. police constable mary ellen batley smith will keep her job despite being found guilty for attacking a former aston villa football player with a taser and a baton . former taser and a baton. former striker dalian atkinson died after being kicked at least twice in the head by another officer, benjamin monk , who's officer, benjamin monk, who's been jailed for eight years for manslaughter. ms. batley smith was cleared of assaulting mr. atkinson after trial , but the atkinson after trial, but the independent office for police conduct found there was a gross misconduct disciplinary case to. answer for her use of force . and
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answer for her use of force. and the prince and princess of wales have been celebrating st patrick's day with the irish. kate and william have attended the st patrick's day parade and aldershot. it's kate's first time at the parade as the colonel of the regiment. the royal couple also met with past members of the irish guards to onune members of the irish guards to online and the abbey plus radio . this is gb news. now it's back to lord . to lord. if i somehow be chance your fortunate enough to while away some evening hours for the women of a certain age. and when i say certain age, i mean 35 and unden certain age, i mean 35 and under. there is a possibility that at some point during your whispering things of sweet nothings that will come forth from arm or quite suddenly from your arm or quite suddenly and out of the blue, stern eyed
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and out of the blue, stern eyed and serious utterance of the p word . what is the p word? i hear word. what is the p word? i hear you asking. the p word is patriarchy . and if by some patriarchy. and if by some miracle you don't hop out of your seat there and then flee the beacon restaurant for the hills, i suggest dropping for in the ride. as you are given the familiar lecture about all the wrongs of mankind and an agonising intersection of identity, politics, grievance, culture and unending insistent compression . son and i emphasise compression. son and i emphasise only some young women you see are taught from an early age that everything which goes wrong in life is somehow someone else's fault. and when i say someone else's fault, mean someone else's fault, i mean someone else's fault, i mean some man's . they have well some man's. they have been. well trained and thus from a young age, all through education, to keep a keen eye out for this cruel, crushing and invidious patriarchy created to deprive them from opportunity and fulfilment . not being a fulfilment. not being a sociologist myself, i will leave the scientific explanations to another of superior learning.
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but as far as i can gather, almost everything that some young women nowadays can always be found in time to be the fault of some young man whose patriarch scheming and his unending desire to stump glass ceiling after glass ceiling upon her troubled head . the better her troubled head. the better schooled raised some interesting facts about the deleterious effect on societal cohesion as all caused by the historical exclusion of women in all areas of life from town planning, crash tests , dummies to modern crash tests, dummies to modern health care, all designed by men for men . these are entirely for men. these are entirely valid points. i would learn strongly , i imagine, if they strongly, i imagine, if they weren't separated out from the intersected identitarian works of non blaming which constitute modern feminism . faced with this modern feminism. faced with this laser like patriarchal glare, the average incel is left with few options either to just carry on being and gently shrugging off the jibes of misogynist and toxic masculinity or to ally himself more closely with a future mate by stepping ever nearer the precipice of becoming
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a male feminist, which got the whole hog chop off his crown jewels. symbols of male oppression . love on a mini dress oppression. love on a mini dress and give up on manhood altogether . which and give up on manhood altogether. which is and give up on manhood altogether . which is strange and give up on manhood altogether. which is strange , altogether. which is strange, especially given that this latest iteration of feminism in many cases seems to struggle with than the previous ones to define what a woman actually is, as was witnessed this week in hollywood in a television studio for all to see the deeply regressive display of years long past . a woman sinking tiny is past. a woman sinking tiny is before a man in a desperate attempt to appease the ever powerful patriarchy. it's interesting because i look at someone like you and i can't imagine anybody dislike . you. imagine anybody dislike. you. oh, please. do know. do you want to know who dislikes me the most? sometimes myself. oh me too. oh and. but. i guess we've
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asking now, like you've asked me . like what i would do to combat the hate. right yeah, but what do you do ? wow. one thing is for do you do? wow. one thing is for sure. the patriarchy is an upside down topsy turvy thing . upside down topsy turvy thing. which brings me totally on to comrade hunt and his budget . new comrade hunt and his budget. new chief commissar to the treasury for the people's republic of great britain, installed by chairman sunak at a hastily called people's assembly . called people's assembly. following chairman truss and comrade kwarteng a hasty replacement in the recent coup . replacement in the recent coup. comrade his face, locked comrade hunt. his face, locked in ruptured joy, revealed budget of maximum well—being for the people's republic of great britain this week, as he announced following a 26 minute summoning evasion . mothers and summoning evasion. mothers and fathers were no longer required raise their own children. the state would provide free. comrade sitting was money. duty. go back to the important business of getting back to
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work. the state media were enraptured by comrade hunt's great parental leap forward. however, not all were not met in people's assembly. as a tiny of comrades, harkening back to bygone days when parents raised children instead of the party. what quickly removed the camps by representatives from the department for education and indoctrination , but on indoctrination, but on a slightly more serious note, it wouldn't have mattered . who gave wouldn't have mattered. who gave the budget last week? it certainly didn't feel like a conservative one or labour one were lib dem one one anything one. it didn't sound like it was conceived by a at all. it was the sound of , the establishment the sound of, the establishment talking to itself , juggernaut, talking to itself, juggernaut, trying to convince the they were getting something for nothing by some witchcraft or sleight of hand parents were getting comrade care for free. despite the pr uk having the highest tax burden since the last great war , it is something very unnatural about this position as motherhood , fatherhood and motherhood, fatherhood and parenthood more broadly denigrated and benefit belittled like never before. the clock
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begins to take for some women of a certain age, scowling at the patriarchal unfairness of it all as birthrates and the population cannot or will not replace itself . and yet, by every metric itself. and yet, by every metric , children thrive with two present parents in their lives . present parents in their lives. but our collective narcissism and the defiance of patriarchal oppression leaves us subdued and unsure as to the benefits of our only purpose in existence. all the while, the regime takes us towards work rather than incentivising us towards building and raising a family. organic societal progress a wonderful thing, but forced progressive is not the idea that masculinity is in some way toxic and in need of being constantly called out makes the weakest deviant, the most toxic of men turn our backs on a unique identity. only to exchange it for some oestrogen injections , a for some oestrogen injections, a boob job and a mini skirt. whilst the standard dads of yesteryear are mocked and dended yesteryear are mocked and derided by women who know better. these dinosaur wars
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products of this patriarchy, these simple men with simple desires to love and provide for their children, their families have been replaced with male feminists who will sidle swoon smooch their ways into a ladies undergarments whilst whispering the sweet of equality equity and inclusion . are we to continue inclusion. are we to continue down this path of patriarchal obsession ? or is it time to make obsession? or is it time to make mums and dads great again? tonight on this, the patriarchy patriarchal special, we're going to find out. so tonight i am asking you , should we make asking you, should we make parents great again ? email me at parents great again? email me at gbviews@gbnews.uk . tweet me at . gbviews@gbnews.uk. tweet me at. gb news. right. well up tonight, i am very pleased to be able to introduce journalist and author maya chisholm. barry done all the research for you? i and i
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don't have to and don't immediately turn your nose up and think it's our endorsement. and this is serious. it impacts your mother's your wives and your mother's your wives and your sisters and daughters lives . good evening . when asari women . good evening. when asari women 50% more likely to be misdiagnosed following a heart attack but only make up 25% of participant across 31 land trials for congestive heart failure between 1987 and 2012. so joining me all the way from portland is journalist and author maya gerson. very good evening , maya. hi, how are you? evening, maya. hi, how are you? i'm very good. so we at least we've got as far as the shaming that men and women are two totally separate creatures. and i was looking through your notes today and can you talk me through what particularly affects women ahead of men in society ? well, my research has society? well, my research has focussed on how gender bias
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affects medicine generally. so i think that women have been under researched and medical research, as you mentioned , it comes to as you mentioned, it comes to heart attacks. that's one great example. but across a range of conditions and treatments for a long time , we mostly studied men long time, we mostly studied men , extrapolated those results to women . and so one big problem is women. and so one big problem is that often women symptoms are not recognised and there have more side effects from treatments . and so there's kind treatments. and so there's kind of this knowledge gap where we just know more about women as men's bodies and symptoms and conditions and less about women's and do you think there is something to be said i was looking through the medical data that women are getting discharged hospital for having panic attacks when they're having heart attacks or being told they've got the told that they've got the intermediate crisis is getting misdiagnosed as other things on men capable of reading what's going on in a woman's medical situation . well i think you
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situation. well i think you bnng situation. well i think you bring up another good point is that i think it's partly that there's this for not of knowledge. so even the very best doctors maybe just aren't trained to recognise that a woman is having symptoms, say, of heart . because we do know of a heart. because we do know that women average a sort that women average have a sort of different symptom profile. they're more likely to have drop and nausea rather than the kind of classic hollywood heart attack. but i think another big problem is that there's the stereotype that women are hysterical and kind of overly emotional. and so i think it's very common for women to have their symptoms dismissed as anxiety, panic, attack or depression or some kind of stress. you know, that's a that's a big thing i heard in my research that there's this tendency to kind of say it's all in your head. and i think that that impacts all patients but especially women because of the stereotype we have stereotype types that we have around call it around gender. yes, you call it an insanity . around gender. yes, you call it an insanity. it's an around gender. yes, you call it an insanity . it's an entrenched an insanity. it's an entrenched bias laying out. it's sometimes
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catastrophic consequences . and catastrophic consequences. and do you think that there is an insidious and entrenched bias towards men as well? certainly in regards to suicide rates and, you know, death in war? or do you know, death in war? or do you think this is something more nuanced that we can pick up as society ahead of that? well, i think that it's certainly true that it's the case that men and women have different risks on average for different conditions, conditions . so average for different conditions, conditions. so as you note, women are more likely to have depression or anxiety, but men are more likely to suicide . how does that work when suicide. how does that work when it comes to sorry to say , men it comes to sorry to say, men are more likely to have women are more likely to have women are more likely to have anxiety and depression, but men are more likely to commit suicide. surely would a false positive that would be a false positive that you would expect that men are more suicide, that more likely commit suicide, that men likely to be men are more likely to be depressed and suicidal. well, i think that the explanation for that my understanding is that , that my understanding is that, you know, men might be less likely to get the help they need
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of our gender stereotypes that discourage men from asking for help, from talking about their feelings. so they may be, you know, under—diagnosed if . know, under—diagnosed if. they're struggling . and so more they're struggling. and so more likely to get to that point of committing suicide. so to find that to follow on from that point where you're saying that sometimes the man is less likely to discuss his personal issues and, you know, would rather not say anything and end up taking his own life. tragically, that woman is possibly more likely to the inner workings of her mental health and personal . would that health and personal. would that be one of the findings of your reports and writings ? yeah, i reports and writings? yeah, i think that that's a myriad of that particular disparity . it that particular disparity. it comes to suicide . and i think we comes to suicide. and i think we also see it with other conditions. you know , men are conditions. you know, men are less to have certain autoimmune
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diseases. women are more likely . but that means that potentially men might be under—diagnosed , because we just under—diagnosed, because we just know that for both genders , if know that for both genders, if a condition is sort of stereotype as this is a male condition , a as this is a male condition, a female condition, the other gender to get kind of overlooked . so i think that that's the for case certainly can go both ways . but i think the bigger problem is just that a lot of conditions that mostly women have been really under research entirely . really under research entirely. and so that's one reason that there's this knowledge gap that i think impacts women disproportionately compared to men . and in terms of language , men. and in terms of language, how would you feel about so, you know, a traditionally language like referred to as the like women referred to as the fairer sex or the weaker sex and how would that resonate now in 2023 ? i personally wouldn't 2023? i personally wouldn't resonate with me . that would resonate with me. that would seem like pretty outdated language to me . i don't think
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language to me. i don't think there's any evidence that women are the weaker sex bearer, but they might be fairer though certainly than men. because i know i mean, you said it not, but . well, anyway, thank so much but. well, anyway, thank so much for joining . and that's was for joining. and that's was lovely to speak to you . coming lovely to speak to you. coming up next is . thank you very much. up next is. thank you very much. may come out next is a new feature with a new nothing thanks to cast who is now in doing this thing with the portuguese. i can't read it is new feature with enough time i'm talking dominic cummings paul can you on my fox and hounds panel back in three really .
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on mark dolan tonight in my big opinion following wednesday's budget , things are tough, but as budget, things are tough, but as we avoid recession the prophets
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of doom were wrong to write off brexit. britain it might take it ten the charity oxfam has banned the word mother. my reaction. my ma meets guest is military hero and former blackrod of parliament david leakey, who called out ex speaker john bercow's bullying class one of the founding fathers of brexit. how does he think it's going? douglas carswell well, well—connected journalist petronella wyatt on channel 4 star kim woodburn. see . star kim woodburn. see. what eight i now kind of escaped you that jeremy hunt , the chancellor of jeremy hunt, the chancellor of the exchequer this week a budget the exchequer this week a budget the biggest point childcare now fits neatly in with my previous discussion as many parents have to make the decision to who stays and who goes to work the cost of living compared to 40 years ago means it's often unsustainable to live in one on
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one income alone. so the first topic, my panel of news is, is the childcare budget promised and is a vote. is it vote winner or a promise they won't ever have to deliver on? dominic, what do you think i love it's funny one actually, because i initially heard about this policy , i thought it was policy, i thought it was a positive thing because what we usually hear is that childcare costs in this country are so expensive to that of other european countries . expensive to that of other european countries. but expensive to that of other european countries . but then european countries. but then i listened to miriam kate and pay and she made quite a convincing argument about mothers who actually want to stay home. they should have the opportunity to be supported as well because i think what we actually encourage is a society where complete strangers are actually raising our children and whilst that's
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going on, our institutions also of indoctrinating our children , of indoctrinating our children, all of these wacky ideas and the place for parents is becoming increasing , really obsolete. so increasing, really obsolete. so yeah , whilst i think in terms of yeah, whilst i think in terms of immediate solution to a problem and the promise of it is to encourage more people to get back into work, to grow the economy. you know. okay. but in terms of morality of it, i would like to live in a country where mothers that want to stay at home are to do so . well, i'm on home are to do so. well, i'm on the opposite of four. a full grown up daughters who would actually appreciate it. it's just as interesting policy. i think it's a good policy theory in practise will it work and if nothing else? i think i think labour when if as likely they win the next election they're
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going to be picking up of the cost of this because it's going to take some time to roll out. it's not all at the point the fact that so i'll just about this today i was having a chat with a friend and we were like, well if we take off work, i sorry, we go back to work and we have someone to cover our own kids that we can go and do our own things. what about the person who is going to be the other things with us? so, you know, stop? who know, where does it stop? who stops getting the childcare? does everyone get the childcare? you don't seem does everyone get the childcare? you in don't seem does everyone get the childcare? you in ladies don't seem does everyone get the childcare? you in ladies workingam space in the ladies working sainsbury's also got everyone's getting the childcare who's looking kids . well but looking after her kids. well but we have to get more women back into the workplace . why because into the workplace. why because well for a number of reasons, not least the fact that many women want to go to work. but can't go because the cost, the cost of child care often makes it impossible for them do it. you know, it has to stop. and it was saying, we the highest
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childcare costs of any major european economy and that is shameful in our part. dominique tilly should be cut the cost of childcare or should be sent parents back to work. i think we should incentivise parents towards family. yes we should incentivise parents towards funding. how would you do that? give a policy. whoa oh, okay. well, in terms of a policy , well, in terms of a policy, maybe something like so viktor orban love it very well. your family tax credits something like that to actually give families a financial incentive to reproduce because we know that birthrates are plummeting all across the western world and that's because we've built our wealth really i quite artificially this sort neo liberal economic where everything's about the free market, everything's about gdp without actually focusing on family and culture those things have been degraded and what
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we're finding is as our culture is being degraded and as family is being degraded and as family is mattering less and less , our is mattering less and less, our economy just gets worse anyway. so what is it actually achieved ? yeah, i'm not sure that's fighting the putin sympathy orban regime in hungary actually is a i don't know, viktor orban . putin, if you you know it just trust is owned by well can you not identify a policy that you think is helpful with your vote or you know i have one daughter who is. no, but i have one who actually prioritises in her mind being a stay at home mother. she has five young children . and has five young children. and that's what she wants to do. and she has every right to do that should be venerate them . should should be venerate them. should we venerate women who have put aside that this sort of, you know, material whims, habits? we should we should venerate them not just on mother's day day this weekend, where we have
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international two days 65, still pretty long we do that stay at home. honestly, when you stay at home. honestly, when you stay at home mothers are whether they're mothers day, we go down day . but mothers day, we go down day. but there's definitely a culture nowadays . people actually do nowadays. people actually do look down upon women that do just want to stay home or perhaps see their job as being a perhaps see theirjob as being a homemaker and a mother is not a cultural problem. so yeah. should we you'd have to you'd have to sort of reorder artificially in a way to go something that we had in the past where we looked to women who raised with such respect, you when you used to walk down the street in those you know, you work pretty well we'd have to reorder culture. how would you do it? well, we all did culture to demonise women and convince them that if did stay at home and looked after the children, they were internalised misogynists. so i suppose you'd have to sort of reprogramme people to actually see the benefits of that . i mean, look
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benefits of that. i mean, look at it quite cynically . i think at it quite cynically. i think this whole men and women both entering the tax system was really just a way for governments extract more money from double the tax rather than promoting . so you decide their promoting. so you decide their freedom . you seem sceptical freedom. you seem sceptical about the idea . women want to about the idea. women want to work, want to know their careers . yeah, i do know. i i'm obviously a woman so i say, well, i also one plus one equals three. so of course i respect that. and of course i respect that. and of course i respect that. and of course i respect that. a lot of women want to work, but i think we've sort of encouraged this culture where women ashamed and often feel guilty about wanting to at home. i mean, personally , you know, i mean, personally, you know, hopefully one day when i'm married , i before i was quite married, i before i was quite sceptical of this. but i think i've decided that would like to stay at home and look after my baby. so hopefully i can afford to do that for a long time there was a reverse if like a reverse
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view point where in fact women who stay, who went to work almost looked at, oh, they're not looking after their children. so they were, in a sense, maybe, maybe maybe we need many years ago with the second world war, began to change that. but it took a long time afterwards to, really change. well, maybe we need to go back. i have to say, in the interests of impartiality, i'm team this one. team dominique on this one. right . the half time horn, right until. the half time horn, dominique samuels paul, can you say that we are back .
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in three post—war bull sua earlier on i you should we make parents great again and you've also been getting in touch about panel discussions ahead of some of your reactions so far. jackie says the roxanne in the nineties when the workplace both
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commercial and public decided to have a no blame , which means have a no blame, which means nobody responsibility for nobody takes responsibility for what they do or don't do. it's very interesting. blame also means they're responsible , he means they're responsible, he says. thank you dylan for sharing this. you are one brave quy- sharing this. you are one brave guy. you be all pilot your elbow, says kate , and keep it elbow, says kate, and keep it up. please i'm winning tonight. usually have two shouts me and tells me i'm a bit jill says completely with you lost following of young children to strangers hours, we can cause extreme to top finishes touch trauma from being separated from main and it could manifest then later winning . i won later life on winning. i won tonight. no one was angry with me. that's brilliant. well, that's enough for you. thank you back.i that's enough for you. thank you back. i am now go back to studio. i'm going to relax studio. well, i'm going to relax and of say how and be and sort of say how wonderful am and dominique can tell oxfam what do they tell me about oxfam what do they do so i didn't know we're do oxfam so i didn't know we're actually about this actually talking about this first. okay they released 92 page guidance that include did completely insane things . like completely insane things. like we're not allowed to say mother or we instead have to say
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parents. and also say something about english being a common coloniser. well, yeah . had coloniser. well, yeah. had dreadful colonies that pretty rich come after the haiti experience , but apparently at experience, but apparently at least they got their pronouns right when they were doing it. it's just absolutely ridiculous . it i mean, can anyone really take this seriously? i think there's something a bit more pernicious about it, though, because what is this that's reaching far and wide that seeks to basically remove women specifically from along with for the benefit of who who is really going to be a benefit offended? what are your personal what pronouns would you prefer me to 7 pronouns would you prefer me to ? and secondly, who's benefiting from this weird oxfam? well, this i mean, oxfam does some great work, although they have had some shameful scandals. they hate the haiti abuse. you know , hate the haiti abuse. you know, women and children being a case in point. but this was absolutely absurd i thought it when first read this this
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morning. and i thought actually that it was satirical at first glance. i mean, it i mean, it is ridiculous now i suspect salafist . i suspect that a lot salafist. i suspect that a lot of an oxfam i and a lot of complaints from oxfam oxfam who are going to say come off yeah because it's not inclusive and i don't think i think staff at oxfam volunteers are not going to get to ignore this anyway they're going to they're going to use mum and dad he whatever i mean. yeah well fortunately i don't have to squint. okay. said something mother or as a parent or , can you make it bigger? or, can you make it bigger? guys, i'm not like. it's like reading a microscope. i don't examine read that to me. i was is about what they put it up on the screen so i can read and commentate on it. but i can't commentate on it. but i can't commentate on it because it's like we're looking at the microscope. i think the issue is, though, is this whole idea that it's somehow inclusive when on take no
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on the whole most people take no issue with the terms mother or father . so who are you trying to father. so who are you trying to include for people, i reckon, in are actually being asked elusive because you're actually excluding the vast majority of people take no issue with this and i think there is this culture that seeks to detach us from one another it seeks to detach children from their parents and it seeks to detach the meaning of words from their actual reality . if you are actual reality. if you are a mother you likely have a vagina . okay i'm not like it's almost guarantee he's all he's going to but johnny was involved some way or another. exactly so to sort of suggest transgender parent might be offended by this, i think it's absolutely ridiculous because if offended, i would say kindly, that's your issue. but by all the g says otherwise, this is insane. i wouldn't i know. i was christian. can i ask
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question tony? he's talking about inclusive . she's also about inclusive. she's also talking about the fact that something we would probably all agree on, which is that this is maybe not overwhelming maybe not the overwhelming portion of people who are running here, is running here, who is infiltrating organisations with their funny work madness. i think , i think that on the think, i think that on the wokeist you i think the obama charity of the of the public are fine the woke thing very very confusing and they aren't as preoccupied by it as of us on on the media. well yes, exactly. and i just i just think the nhs up here. okay bye bye. i felt every sympathy for those who are, you know, who are transgender or have issues, but they are a small minority , we they are a small minority, we should be sympathetic to that. they you know, and support them. but this is taking it to absurd to absurd degrees . but it's to absurd degrees. but it's become almost a fashion or an obsession. obsession is the right. so we should be getting politics out of it. should we have an should we get politics
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out of every single institution completely understand no political organisational moves whatsoever. i said get all the stonewall everything out of all these institutions . that's where these institutions. that's where it's come in. someone's actually to for stonewall to write an email for stonewall gay by the way oxfam you know we need to sort your stuff out we need to sort your stuff out we need to sort your stuff out we need to have gender neutral oxfam for all its forms , does oxfam for all its forms, does some great, great some great work. but this just makes that makes them look ridiculous. i mean, this is this is like something that you would expect from governments promises from a satirical comedy show, the thick it or whatever. i mean i mean , it or whatever. i mean i mean, really is. but this is reality . really is. but this is reality. we literally live in a clown world. we you know, what would me be reacting as much if it wasn't around mother's . i me be reacting as much if it wasn't around mother's. i think i think this year it was god's gift to every headline writer this one bashing perfect been around in the nhs for ages this whole idea of indoctrinating our kids like this. what i'm finding really hard is being told the bookis
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really hard is being told the book is why and up is down. i find it really, really stressful so. people come up to you and they go the one that really, really bothers me is the there is 50 minute cities. it's is no 50 minute cities. it's a conspiracy theory. yeah, i'm like they've the like they've literally the cameras told you that you cameras and told you that you can't cameras and told you that you cant and cameras and told you that you can't and it's like can't travel here and it's like we language but we using inclusive language but also totally destroying the meaning of mothers. what do we do to fight back? like i view? what does an impartial person do to back? oh, look, i view this attack on language as i think a brainwashing exercise and. people are so brainwashed that they don't even know it's happening. i'm the only thing that you can do is to not submit to what they want you to submit to what they want you to submit to so you know, personally, i don't want to call sam smith example are they basically or of them because i'm just or a fish of them . yeah all of them of them. yeah all of them because when you actually succumb to you endorse a version
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of reality that's frankly non—existent . and i think the non—existent. and i think the issue with vogue , it seeks to issue with vogue, it seeks to sort of promote this false consciousness, this false idea that, you know, we have all of this compassion, we have all of this compassion, we have all of this empathy when all the woke is obsessed with is like wrapping themselves in circles. and then so they don't even know what reality is anymore. i think it's a symptom of real confusion when it comes to as something which which the vast majority of the public that the dog and echo or in the supermarket or whatever don't care sounds they don't care about you know. dawkins we are in the media obsessed about it but the public aren't the public on that. then they can call a man, he and a woman she and actually the pubuc woman she and actually the public would call if a bloke turned up in a wake and said, i want to be called her, you most of the public would go, yeah fine. well, but what sections
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the public are we talking about? we talking about the adults going on to shouting, give me my yes, we got to go. oh oh, let's make it go, go, go, go, go, go, mak 90, e it go , go, go , go make it go, go, g0, 90, 90, 90, go, go. make it go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go. these most of these people don't really engage with news they likely don't even news and they likely don't even know what's going on, which is why don't care. but when it why they don't care. but when it comes to actual children are comes to our actual children are absorbing this through absorbing all of this through p0p absorbing all of this through pop cartoon ins pop culture through cartoon ins where got non—binary where you've got non—binary bulls do believe crap . that bulls do believe this crap. that is what's dangerous but it doesn't change it doesn't change their lives. i think think they are they are not that that tolerant tolerant but they're not obsessed and we sometimes are obsessed about it. that's very good point, actually. and you know. exactly right. it's different in session. right? coming up, i have more my views and opinions challenged are challenged so far this about bisexuality and that is with activist sally. i will be back .
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in three though coming back now last wednesday i spoke to apprentice and celebs go dating star navid so being bisexual as he dated both men and women on the channel 4 programme it was an interesting conversation and i wanted to find what made him realise he was attracted to both men and women. so what i asked at the time , and you , are you at the time, and you, are you familiar with the american podcast? steven crowder i have no clue, to be honest, right? so he has this thing called change my he has this thing called change my mind. okay, but and you have said that you are bisexual. yes i am saying there's no such as bisexual or bisexual. changed my mind . bisexual or bisexual. changed my mind. bisexual bisexual or bisexual. changed my mind . bisexual changed your bisexual or bisexual. changed my mind. bisexual changed your mind . i mean, he doesn't support bisexuality. it doesn't change online. oh, but you know what?
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well, you know , it's good to well, you know, it's good to have a 5050 and have a bit of physical. is it greedy? you know what? you to experiment in life, lawrence? i mean , we just never lawrence? i mean, we just never wanted we live once and it's like, you know, why not just try , you know, you know, yeah. we go exactly on when they say educate yourself having watched that but i do need educating so this prompted lewis hope he won a leading bisexual in the uk to get in touch. lewis is co—host of the bisexual brunch, a unique podcast for people who identify bi to come together and celebrate their sexuality as he believes, bisexual people aren't treated equally . so to talk more treated equally. so to talk more about this now he's , joining me about this now he's, joining me on show this lewis on the show this evening, lewis hello , bisexual. no such thing hello, bisexual. no such thing changed my mind . i'm here. pinch changed my mind. i'm here. pinch me. i'm honestly. i guess if you do think that bisexuality real, what do you think i am? so you
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say everyone's that they everything. it's like if you're trying to keep your place in the game, then i do believe that they're all gay and straight people west. they're all people in the west. they're all going but lot going straight people, but lot of know, we're of people are, you know, we're all a bit spectrum. all on a bit spectrum. we're always told this, you know, it's all a it's a spectrum in europe, sadly. i mean, there are not a lot of people that identify as bi. think people bi. i think more people would probably as straight probably identify as straight out know that they're not out but know that they're not 100% straight like we see that law know, one or the law are, you know, one or the other probably and i hate other i'm probably and i hate the term 5050. it's really i must be a lonely place to be nice . i've been i've been in a nice. i've been i've been in a relationship for seven years now. yeah, i know. but i'm looking at. i wish. what was i reading. it said i found reading. it said what i found out over years is many people are on board with equality. as long as it doesn't affect them personally, they're happily a gay couple doesn't gay couple because it doesn't affect suggest dating a affect them but suggest dating a queer all queer person. then all of a sudden the prejudice they pretend there bubbles to pretend isn't there bubbles to the well, you're the surface? well, when you're with your mrs. with when you're with your mrs. yep. and you're in a club talk me through it a lot of different things. definitely
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things. so we've definitely been in and been kissing in a gay club and been kissing people have been don't do people have been like don't do that that why are you that in here that why are you doing that in a gay in a gay bar. i think doing that in a gay in a gay bar. ithink had doing that in a gay in a gay bar. i think had a really rude bar. i think i had a really rude awakening when i stopped dating bar. i think i had a really rude aimaniing when i stopped dating bar. i think i had a really rude aiman so; when i stopped dating bar. i think i had a really rude aiman so iwhen i stopped dating bar. i think i had a really rude aiman so i datedi stopped dating bar. i think i had a really rude aiman so i dated a;topped dating bar. i think i had a really rude aiman so i dated a manad dating bar. i think i had a really rude aiman so i dated a man foriating bar. i think i had a really rude aiman so i dated a man for twog a man so i dated a man for two and a half years. i became single again and i said that whole time to all of friends, whole time to all of my friends, you buying to stay in you know, i'm buying to stay in him then i started him and then when i started dating again, there was dating women again, there was some gay friends that did not like it. you know, i remember was to lovely young was found to a lovely young woman a club that woman outside of a club that we were we've dancing. we have were we've been dancing. we have little outside. and the little kiss outside. and the next day on the group next day on the on the group chat some friends was like, chat with some friends was like, oh a picture of us oh my god. and a picture of us kissing gay guy being kissing was like a gay guy being seduced disgusting. so there seduced in disgusting. so there is of prejudice there. is that kind of prejudice there. and other half been told and my other half has been told everything like, oh he's going to you, you got to to cheat on you, you got to catch hiv the way. this one catch hiv all the way. this one was. let's if you men was. well, let's see if you men in the world were attracted in the world that were attracted to like could have any to men like could have any straight guy wife have got to take a load take it bisexual there's a load of weird stuff that tumbles out of weird stuff that tumbles out of people's i think you of people's mouths. i think you might but, i mean if
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might be, but, i mean if bisexual israel, which i now understand it, is gay educated myself, lgbtq+ plus myself, the b of lgbtq+ plus seems to be a lonely place to be though should remain so. yeah on the hand if you're if you're the one hand if you're if you're if you're and you found if you're happy and you found a great girl and you're happy with her, you're gay friends are going to be and if you going to be annoyed. and if you find nice guy, you're straight find a nice guy, you're straight friends go, come friends are going to go, come on, you're straight. on, you know you're straight. well, i think you get yourself into trouble. i get myself in still it. but then i don't get to tell us we want to know the thing here that i think that with within the lgbt and i understand why we are all coming together and why you know, it's a happy community. we have a strong but actually i think that this is a good thing though. it's the lgbtq community. yeah, it's it's there. but from it's real. it's there. but from what i can gather , they don't what i can gather, they don't like there. some like bisexuals in there. some are very, very into the basic rituals some some i think there's two main issues, right. so the statistics show the community is the most common that bisexuals will biphobia and
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the other one the one that i'm always dragging the banging the drum about is the funding. so bisexuals make up roughly just about half of all lgbt people , about half of all lgbt people, but we receive about 1% of funding. so are a lot of issues that are bisexuals specific, that are bisexuals specific, that are bisexuals specific, that are never addressed . so that are never addressed. so there's something quite interesting about the sort of the, you know, without wishing to of sound this is sort to of sound stupid, this is sort of unresolved nature to bisexuality . to me it sounds bisexuality. to me it sounds unresolved things like you'll go to your deathbed with a guy and, maybe with a girl that you don't know yet. whereas in the l community you're pretty going to go to bed with a lesbian in the g community, you're going to go to bed with a gay this is how you're going to spend your life. so what how do you how do you maintain a sense of identity within that sort of flux ? people within that sort of flux? people struggle. so i run an advice column i set up basically because my after i do things
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like this is always full of bisexual people have questions. and one of them is always, you know, how how do i like come across bisexual? how do i, you know how can i be bisexual if i'm in a straight relationship because i'm whole if i hold hands of my opposite sex partner , i walked down the street the world sees as a and then if i'm always the same people i'm by i'm by by people like, oh, my god. well sex i feel god. well sex partner, i feel about saying i'm by and by about you saying i'm by and by and mean, she's fine with and by. i mean, she's fine with it. yes, she she she well, she knew about it before i met her. but lot of people a lot but a lot of people are a lot women. you know, i that's another you no one another problem. you no one wants to hear but you know we need to have a conversation with some the some straight women. the statistic show it's 63% of straight women were straight with either sex or the bi guy. yeah, exactly. so if i go, i that's 63% wouldn't have sex with a guy wouldn't have sex of a by guy and then it's19% wouldn't have sex with someone that had sex a guy had sex with
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a man it's so there is that to kind of deal with but you don't want to be that person that's saying , well, you must find by saying, well, you must find by men, do you have the same reverse stigma like if someone's just being solely gay, do you find them less attractive than someone been like had someone who's been like had a few gays and straights they or are they the very good oh okay. so for you to say to all the people there to all the bisexuals out there in the audience tonight , what's your audience tonight, what's your best piece of advice top with their best life? my best piece of advice. listen to, the podcast bisexual brunch is really good and we come up with leads. can we find bisexual brunch every what you get your podcast it. i'm tuning in. podcast love it. i'm tuning in. yeah there you go. that's my advice. oh so let's get on onto the bisexual and it in the bisexual brunch and it in order to make yourself feel good , is to live your best life living alone. it's hard, i think a lot of bisexual people don't know any of a bisexuals. that's where we're distinctly different from gay and lesbian. there are a lot more bisexuals than you
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think. well i know, but they're not out, so you never you sort of always at the mercy of gay institutions. all right. sorry about the bisexuality . thank you about the bisexuality. thank you for joining me at in the studio forjoining me at in the studio and in your hearts . coming up and in your hearts. coming up next lengthy mark dolan. next is the lengthy mark dolan. have a wonderful weekend i. hello there. i'm give your latest weather updates from the met office. many of us will have to hold out until for sunday the best of the weather throughout this weekend because through friday evening and into saturday it's low pressure that is very much in charge, bringing a front's across much of the and a generally unsettled setup. so as we move throughout the friday evening, there will be and longer spells of rain across pretty much all areas of the country have nuclear spells here there and where that comes with of winds we could see the odd mist fog patch forming perhaps some sea fog forming around some coast as well. but underneath that cloud , temperatures won't that cloud, temperatures won't be dropping too far at all, around 7 to 9 degrees celsius. that bit chillier up in the far
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north shetland, down to around 40 degrees celsius throughout saturday. a continued risk saturday. then a continued risk of showers throughout the day more persistent across areas of scotland and northern ireland, turning damp here at a time turning damp for here at a time . some of the showers across england and wales could certainly heavy and there's certainly be heavy and there's a risk some full of storms risk of some hail full of storms in mixture there as well but in the mixture there as well but while you're in the sunny intervals in between it will feel relatively pleasant highs around 15 degrees quite around 15 degrees celsius quite up above for the time of up above par for the time of year for saturday evening band in the north continues to push its way. we could see some stronger winds for a time across the highlands and into orkney with gales. but the with some coastal gales. but the showers to ease way showers will tend to ease way off as we move into the night. so a slightly chillier to so a slightly chillier night to come here underneath those clearer but means clearer intervals, but it means that off sunday with that we start off sunday with much weather around much more drier weather around and actually like and actually sunday like a pretty fine day for many of us. some cloud just lingering across the 40 east coast of england. and the cloud will begin to build throughout northern ireland as well later on in the
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day. these frontal day. and it's these frontal systems start systems that will then start pushing of the pushing across the rest of the uk as we move into the start of the new working low the new working week. low pressure returns as we move pressure then returns as we move into the new week and it will turn unsettled again with turn unsettled once again with further spells of cloud and rain. generally rain. but temperatures generally staying mild side, but by staying on the mild side, but by westminster is going around an ever decreasing circles followed by the media. britain is broken out of. did we get into this mess? but more importantly, how do we get out of it . join me at do we get out of it. join me at 7 pm. monday through thursday on farage here on gb news news. we will have open, rational . we will have open, rational. we've got to work out how britain moves forward from this. join us here on gb news, the people's channel. britain is watching . only camilla tominey watching. only camilla tominey on sunday mornings from 930, taking the politician to task and breaking out of sw. one to see how their decisions are affecting you across the uk. first thing, the westminster
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bubble every sunday morning on gb news the people's channel britons .
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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,
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plus up to £900 in cost of living payments. welcome to mark dolan tonight and a busy 3 hours ahead at 9:00 following wednesday's budget . following wednesday's budget. things are tough, but as we avoid recession. the profits of doom were wrong to write brexit britain. my first on air reaction to the financial events of the year, the budget that set nine and it might take its head. you won't believe this story. the charity oxfam has banned the use of the word mother. if we don't push back on this madness, it will only get worse . but up it will only get worse. but up next, with a range of pay deals in the offing , the unions now in the offing, the unions now running britain. have the
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government

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