tv Headliners Replay GB News March 21, 2023 1:00am-2:01am GMT
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government in. this week's first parliamentary vote on the new brexit deal . the prime minister brexit deal. the prime minister rishi sunak agreed the new windsor framework with the last month and it aimed resolve some of the concerns unionists had about the northern ireland protocol. also in the news , the protocol. also in the news, the home secretary has told mps she's satisfied the provisions of the government's illegal migration bill capable of being appued migration bill capable of being applied compared with the human rights convention . it comes rights convention. it comes after suella braverman migrants could be sent to rwanda by the summer. the agreement between the two countries has been expanded to include all illegal , including not just asylum seekers. speaking in the house of commons, braverman told the mps that the uk would work more with france to secure cross—channel cooperation . she cross—channel cooperation. she criticised labour for announcing its immigration policy on social media. shadow home secretary said on twitter she's, very good on twitter. she tweeted . in the on twitter. she tweeted. in the
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last ten days labour's paltry excuse for a plan. half of it stuff we're already doing the other half . is that plan for other half. is that plan for open borders and unlimited migration . what i suggest they migration. what i suggest they do is get off twitter, get to rwanda and i'll show them to. how stop the boats . members of how stop the boats. members of network rmt union voted to accept an offer covering jobs and conditions. accept an offer covering jobs and conditions . staff are accept an offer covering jobs and conditions. staff are going to receive a pay rise of between 9.2 and 14.4, as well as increase back pay. the union says its 20,000 strong membership, voted 76% in favour of the new deal and also nhs in scotland have been averted after the royal college of nursing . the royal college of nursing. the gmb union there representing . midwives and nurses also voted to accept a pay offer. this time by the scottish government. their is equivalent to an average 6.5% increase over the next two years. turning our attention to the united states,
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where local state and federal security agencies are preparing for the possible of the former president donald trump . security president donald trump. security fences have been erected around manhattan criminal court , a manhattan criminal court, a precautionary measure, according to police and the district attorney presented evidence to a new york grand jury related to allegations that a trump associate is to have paid $130,000 in hush money to a dunng $130,000 in hush money to a during the final days of 2016. presidential . just lastly, sir presidential. just lastly, sir david attenborough has planted a tree to honour the late elizabeth while officially opening a new platinum jubilee woodland in richmond park , woodland in richmond park, london, today. mr. attenborough selected a young oak tree for the occasion, describing elizabeth a second as a great lover of trees and very fond of the royal parks, where he was planting it . the plant a tree planting it. the plant a tree jubilee project seen more than a million new trees planted in the queens name on tv online dab+
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radio and on chain. and this is gb news, where it's time for headliners . headliners. hello. good evening. i'm evans. welcome to headline news . joining me tonight to take news. joining me tonight to take you through tuesday is top news stories. we have frances foster and dickson. how the devil are you both loving life loving, much rich challenges . have you much rich challenges. have you been poorly, nick? i have come back. everyone's been tweeting, asking will the show survive without me is a big question. big dogs bowl has been empty. he's been out and depressed . he's been out and depressed. yes. yeah. we'll feel a lot more . francis, i'm excited to be here. simon and excited too. we've got some good shows there, some great stories. there's also there's a couple stinkers as well, but that's just how it goes. yeah we don't know how they're going dealt so they're going to be dealt so take a quick look at the front
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pages we kick pages for tuesday. we kick off with mail. have the with daily mail. they have the unambiguous free result of the met survey and rotten, devasted ageing review says met is institutionally racist corrupt, misogynistic , homophobic. the misogynistic, homophobic. the full royal flush of unacceptable qualities. the telegraph met police is racist, sexist and broken. the guardian racist misogynist . perhaps telling the misogynist. perhaps telling the order in which these come in various papers. the on the metropolitan also scientists issue final warning. absolutely a warning now on crime it. the times has rotten met which has lost public faith and un sounds alarm net zero targets the daily express condemned public loss of faith in police. the daily star have a different collection of ne'er do wells in their target feathered scumbags . it again feathered scumbags. it again thatis feathered scumbags. it again that is a story the nation's seagulls are running all sorts
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of nefarious on the sea side. those of from pages. we'll take a look inside now now . or rather a look inside now now. or rather not inside, but in detail i should say on the front pages will begin with this report into the met, which is everywhere. let's take a look at the mail. so the mail starts off with the big of the day. is the so the mail starts off with the big of the day . is the review big of the day. is the review into the met and it is absolutely devastating it comes off the awful murder of everard by a former metropolitan officer wayne cousins , and has done wayne cousins, and has done a deep dive. and what it is found is in credibly and it is a essentially saying at the moment the is not fit for purpose and it needs a root, some root and branch. simon has been featuring in a lot of stories covered over the last 18 months or so. as you've been we've obviously that say a review one is the principal the most striking one
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because the opportunities were there to intervene beforehand but it's not it's not yeah and the mail's got this this shocking subheading , the shocking subheading, the institutionally racist, corrupt misogynist and homophobic. but there are also things apparently and. well, i'm so i felt on the stand is we're doing a story later i think about how woke the police we all know how woke it is how it's been infested by wokeness which is true and it's got these absurd non crime hate incidents time incidents at the same time somehow racist. so it's somehow kind of the worse things kind of all the worse things seem wonder whether met is seem i wonder whether the met is different of different from some of the police and that police forces and that is certainly case and the college of policing which become this new influence on the way in which police understand which the police understand their with rallies their relationship with rallies and protests and so and with marginalised groups and freedom of speech that's coming later it is hard to square that . it is is hard to square that. it is very hard to square, but i think one of the things worth bearing in mind simon is this is an absolute blow for the reputation. the metropolitan, which has not come out looking
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in any way, shape or form competent , particularly after competent, particularly after the awful murder of sarah everard. and you have to say the who is going to trust this now. so its interest to use the word competent because obviously it's a moral failure as much as anything , a moral failure as much as anything, isn't a moral failure as much as anything , isn't it? there's a moral failure as much as anything, isn't it? there's a there's a sense that female are exposed to rather than female civilians. i mean, i'm sure that, you know, i'm not i'm not saying is worse than the other, but it's a sense that within the institution is it is it been damaged? it is. it is in inhibiting their ability to solve crime or is it simply that it's an unacceptable facet of any ? well, number one, it's an any? well, number one, it's an unacceptable facet of any. but if you take the case of cousins , his nickname was the rapist . , his nickname was the rapist. yeah. and nobody did about it. he actually was exposed himself. i think it was a week or ten days before in a mcdonald's and still nothing was done you shouldn't be bad and have to
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think will in an organised nafion think will in an organised nation like the police where surely they should be holding their officers to the highest possible standard that is a failing that's talk about the other big story today putin and xi and china. xi may be the one tuesday's guardian have it on their front page nick. yes she may be the face she can't forget . this is china and russia. the guard order, which doesn't sound great. then my first choice and all of them on the front guarding. and i say that, by the way, is it just the telegraph, the murder of the guardian? we yeah, we've got the guardian and it it's quite a worrying story because they've, they've had this of friendly this sort of friendly meeting and want to and the fact that they want to put and publicise it is put this out and publicise it is worrying enough itself . and worrying enough in itself. and they say that it uses cold feet and is dear friend. and last year signed this so—called no limits which sounds limits partnership, which sounds like dangerous like the world's most dangerous polyamorous and no polyamorous couple. yeah, and no limits . partnership. no limits limits. partnership. no limits was song about. yes. was a techno song about. yes. no, no limit. exactly i know it sounds quite disturbing for the
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rest of the world and it's a bit i mean, we don't have time for an in—depth analysis . i mean, we don't have time for an in—depth analysis. i i mean, we don't have time for an in—depth analysis . i would an in—depth analysis. i would just happen with just say, would this happen with trump? do ask the now trump? and you do ask the now they they see the us they see that they see the us weak. mean says or weak. i mean she even says or the chinese foreign has issued a report sorry saying that american democracy was in chaos and that they'd left a trail of havoc disasters the havoc and disasters across the world. it's not totally world. i mean, it's not totally false, is it? not, in the. it is. some truth to that, is. there's some truth to that, although you would also to say probably from a purely purely internal patriotic selfish point of view, america played the blind in the last couple of years. they've they've essentially, you know engaged russia in a war without having to actually put any american lives at risk . they're weakening lives at risk. they're weakening them. they're they've increased their export of liquefied petroleum. gas is linked to europe and so on. i mean, they've they've actually achieved a great deal of their objective. so obviously it feels like a very turbulent world. but in many regards america has come out in it know the thing
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out on top in it know the thing i very interesting well is i find very interesting well is china taking the moral ground when you look at their behaviour over let's fair it's over covid and let's fair it's been less than transparent it the way they the origin of the virus they didn't allow people to come in didn't allow inspectors to actually try and ascertain where the virus originated from whether it was in fact in a lab so forji to take the moral high ground i find slightly dubious. no but i mean yes i would probably still place biden above the other two in terms of playing by the rules. is there a danger? i mean, obviously intelligence is saying think that she saying that they think that she may be planning to russia, which would escalate things quite significantly is this they use that's not the nature of this deal right yeah this stage is it is sort of you fill out they're not it out for the future could that mean it would be quite go through back channels if they wanted but that would probably not be to either of their benefit. i suppose they as benefit. i suppose they might as well front probably well be brazen as front probably from channels where there's talk
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about potholes . i feel like i've about potholes. i feel like i've moved the conversation on. this is the sun's front page . it is is the sun's front page. it is indeed. so the sun has a front page talking about potholes . page talking about potholes. this country which obviously they found , which is almost they found, which is almost identically resembles the british is. yes, it is just one giant pothole. now that's nice accurate representation . but you accurate representation. but you know you always guaranteed quality journalism with the sun and but it actually reflects a deeper problem within . our deeper problem within. our society, which is our infrastructure , is crumbling. infrastructure, is crumbling. yes. quite literally . i have yes. quite literally. i have noficed yes. quite literally. i have noticed a lot of potholes . i noticed a lot of potholes. i think it's something to do. particular kind of weather events. i know it's obviously, you know, the mitigate if we had untold funds and efficiency to deal with them but it to me that if you get a sudden freeze i think it it seems to i don't know whether we've been using wrong recipe. i remember when pj o'rourke the soviet in o'rourke went to the soviet in the eighties and he wrote brilliant about how the soviets just hadn't the right recipe for
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concrete . they putting too concrete. they were putting too many oats the in the mix for their cement something feel their cement something i feel like doing that with our like we're doing that with our with roads the maybe with our roads of the maybe i could get in touch with the council or something so i mean although pretty although it was pretty widespread so he might need to excuse me whole country does excuse me the whole country does it like metaphor it does seem like a metaphor doesn't for the total doesn't it, for the total collapse of country, collapse of the country, a metaphor think says that's metaphor i think says that's a for as let's have weather. is for as as let's have weather. is it is it well do you like the whole don't whole ometer. yeah. you don't feel whole country feel the whole country collapsing on many fronts. i've been feeling since roughly been feeling that since roughly 1997 and that's when excited about tony blair. but i say it was all going to unravel very quickly finish off this section with the daily star makes some serious stuff i assume here. yeah is a good on feathered scumbag a rabbit again then of course talking about seagulls and the 48% of brits are now victims of seagulls they kind of just remain as their target. so when for them scumbags, i mean, i understand that it's kind of tongue in cheek but it doesn't mean i think of them as villains
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or. no, no, no, simon, they're a psycho scumbag seagulls. i attack nearly half the population as they go mad. literally mad for chips, ice creams , battered sausage. there creams, battered sausage. there was a documentary that's been ten years ago now, but it was brilliant they actually trying to load seagulls? i think it to load the seagulls? i think it was or something was newquay or something like that. in the west that. so we've done in the west country and they watched it very to see which ones were actually and all sort of 30 or 40 and of all the sort of 30 or 40 seagulls that were clustered around one abc villain around there was one abc villain who was responsible for late 90% of the crime were occurring . of the crime were occurring. yeah, yeah. one girl, the seagull principle. yes, exactly . yeah. and a bit like the tigers, the ones have become a manhunter and they get the ties for blood. you have to kill them because otherwise they come back anyway. that's the pages scumbag tigers . coming up after the tigers. coming up after the break, we'll go behind and discuss the snp's growing pains the geopolitical significance of putin and china getting into bed with each other and why someone would decapitate a shark . see in
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hello and welcome back to headliners. i'm still evans. they're still france's foster and dixon. nick is kicking off this section climb out news in the guardian. you'll be relieved . know it isn't quite too late after. all you must be very disappointed . well, yeah. i disappointed. well, yeah. i mean, it's great to put that to you i mean it says will can still avoid worse climate collapse genuine change collapse with genuine change ipcc and also we ipcc says and the also said we need to forward zero we're need to bring forward zero we're not doing it soon but as not doing it soon enough but as you it is a bit of a problem you say it is a bit of a problem because greta had that tweet from 2018 saying if we don't ditch fossil fuels, it'll all be over and it's over in five years. and it's like she's got until they've been they've been sounding this alarm my adult life alarm for most of my adult life i'm knew a girl at university i'm i knew a girl at university between age three and was between age three and 86 who was studying environmental. was, studying environmental. it was, you , and was understood.
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you know, and it was understood. i'm saying all hoax, but i'm not saying all a hoax, but the has been so relentlessly catastrophic for so long that understandably we've all just a bit kind of numb to it. there was a documentary , leonard nimoy was a documentary, leonard nimoy in the seventies saying there's an ice coming. then they switched warming. so i'm switched it to warming. so i'm sceptical. not, sceptical. you know, i'm not, i'm not, a scientist, i'm not, i'm not a scientist, i'm not, i'm not a scientist, i'm not, i'm not a scientist, i'm not an expert. i'm just it's just a humble. i did notice one figure they came out with which was think global was to say, i think the global reduced something like 6% reduced by something like 6% over the course of the covid pandemic because everyone was just need that just at home, we need to do that year for ten years or year for the next ten years or something. 6% down year on year. and that kind of and i think that kind of tells its own story, it? its own story, doesn't it? i mean, that's just not we've we've already reaping the disaster, know, of having disaster, you know, of having been economically been so economically inactive that this is a problem is they want us to do things that we simply cannot do. you cannot reduce emissions 6% because it will send the economy into freefall and that means is that people will die as a result of that and as i mean, there's, you
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know, jordan peterson, who may be a controversial figure in some regards he seems to be taking on this challenge. he's used to taking this on, which i've quite interested to i've been quite interested to see, that it is see, pointing that it is absolutely world's are absolutely the world's who are going you know and going to suffer. you know and not the the global not just the poor in the global , but the poor and in in , but also the poor and in in america, the poor in in central america, the poor in in central america there are millions, if not billions of people already feeling the pain of reducing. i mean , you know, if the world is mean, you know, if the world is on the point of ecological collapse , then yes, obviously collapse, then yes, obviously it's a priority. but shouldn't be thinking this is all this is doing is stopping some german millionaires driving up and down the altar islands speed. and the altar islands of speed. and the altar islands of speed. and the problem is, is that the other problem is, is that frequently come frequently the people who come out lecture us then go and out and lecture us then go and go. see later. i'm off go. i'm see you later. i'm off on the private jet. you peasants, you on walking about everywhere taking the car where i suspicious when they say not only it shows that we have the capacity to build a much more prosperous inclusive and equitable society in the process so they sneak in the communism bugsit so they sneak in the communism bugs it would be much better if
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they would occasionally say sadly might mean there will sadly might mean that there will be inequality in society if be more inequality in society if they but if felt that they weren't there anyway. mirror weren't there anyway. the mirror now eco news now starting with eco news francis on slightly smaller francis on a slightly smaller scale from the death of the planet to the mysterious disappearance, shark's disappearance, a rare shark's head, the producers, head, you know, the producers, always me the best stories. always give me the best stories. you that knows . you know that nick knows. anyway, is. tv star anyway, here it is. tv star darren snow is playing to find graham. missing shark head stolen by hunters. really? is this best that we could do? this is number seven. so you can imagine how small the stories are get by the end of are going to get by the end of the evening. i'm lonely. so anyway, this is very shark anyway, this is very rare. shark washed on a beach i think, or washed up on a beach i think, or literally beach whatever it's literally beach or whatever it's called people very called and people are very excited it's rare shark excited. it's a very rare shark and then they wanted and and then they wanted to go and then it and anyway someone came in nick the shark said and then they examined it they're in a fluster dan knows how to melt down because obviously that's what you have a meltdown over on twitter and this is the number seven how much he loved ashley
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he did actually he was he was freezing it quite generous. he was you keep the show was saying you can keep the show safe but just bring it back because i think they're down to the something of this the last 25 or something of this species. well interesting species. yeah well interesting i happen dan happen to know this about dan snow because did a gig down on snow because i did a gig down on the coastline a few years ago. we used do literary we used to do a literary festival drama. know, he's festival drama. you know, he's married sister of the married to the sister of the duke westminster. yeah, he's duke of westminster. yeah, he's not. just like not. he's not just like a houday not. he's not just like a holiday down there. he's holiday cottage down there. he's he the country's he like one of the country's wealthiest men by marriage. i thought he was jon snow's. he is peter snow's son, the old spring ometer guy that and he was an oxford rowing blue i believe there's something wonderfully engush there's something wonderfully english about the fact they the sharks had. yeah if anyone could anything he's sort of like that . don't like is it sharks . what i don't like is it sharks are getting cocky they're are getting too cocky they're getting urban foxes getting like these urban foxes afraid anymore. are we afraid of us anymore. why are we getting england? that getting sharks, england? that you put them to you could possibly put them to use the small crisis use in the small boats crisis controversy. that might be that might what been might be exactly what he's been nicked . stay with the nicked for now. stay with the mirror. now, an interesting use of word growing pains. of the word growing pains. describe most
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describe some of the most powerful in recent powerful contracts in recent political yes the snp political history. yes the snp really should be shrinking pains. yeah. so, yes, sturgeon insists not in a mess. it's not a guys, it's just something some growing pains. by growing pen, she it's lost % of the she means it's lost% of the members. i mean there was 72,000, which down from 125,000 in 2019 because of it . so in 2019 because of it. so they're falling apart completely, which is kind of great. i mean, it's grown since , great. i mean, it's grown since i , great. i mean, it's grown since , i guess the referendum time or , i guess the referendum time or , something around that, but it's quite difficult know exactly i wouldn't want to immediately like say oh it's just falling apart. it could be various reasons why its membership might be oh it's totally falling apart. i mean when this huge when you've lost this huge amount of members too, she's obviously her husband's obviously on her husband's now had and it's in freefall had to go and it's in freefall and is not an attack and to me this is not an attack on scottish independence. and to me this is not an attack on scosayi independence. and to me this is not an attack on sco say ifndependence. and to me this is not an attack on sco say if scotland nce. and to me this is not an attack on sco say if scotland wants to would say if scotland wants to be which so far be independent, which so far they don't, but if they do, that's up them. but what do that's up to them. but what do think interesting is that it think is interesting is that it shows you have these shows how if you have these absurd ideology, gender, shows how if you have these abslknow, ideology, gender, shows how if you have these abslknow, it's ideology, gender, shows how if you have these abslknow, it's madness. gender, shows how if you have these abslknow, it's madness. genisle you know, it's madness. the isle
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of case this absurdity, of rice, in case this absurdity, people are just not going to go that and it's wipe them that and it's just wipe them out. it's interesting they misjudge i mean, misjudge that was it. i mean, scotland, a conservative scotland, such a conservative culture it scotland, such a conservative cult|deliberately it scotland, such a conservative cult|deliberately excluded. was deliberately excluded. i mentioned weeks ago was mentioned a few weeks ago it was deliberately excluded the deliberately excluded from the social in 1967, the social offences act in 1967, the one legalised one which legalised homosexuality. knew they homosexuality. they knew if they included it, the champions would overturn wouldn't have it, overturn it, wouldn't have it, in quite rightly so. simon in and quite rightly so. simon however, think what really however, i think what really interesting about this case is shows that democracy is actually in crisis in scotland . well, you in crisis in scotland. well, you have the snp. no the party able to challenge them. so snp have essentially atrophied over the years and they've got more more demented until they brought in this gender ideology . but really this gender ideology. but really the snp is a party that is not fit for purpose because their only real policies to be screaming the words freedom and over again. yeah, it's true that overly fixated on that one issue there's all sorts of things that they've allowed to go by the by and right it has effectively become a one party state with all the usual dysfunctionality,
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the proceeds from is the proceeds from that is, is rare in world politics that one party has total dominance for very long before this of quackery starts emerging. yeah but i also said it was going to have its berlin wall moment with this thing and that's what's happened. i mean they've completely apart over the france is for free speech news in is now for free speech news in the times sounds like the the times and it sounds like the force is yet to be fully denounced. i add on this front too as we mentioned earlier. well this actually a very, well this is actually a very, very interesting investigation by toby young's free speech union looking at the thousands of hours that various police forces and down the country have been investing in equality, diversity and inclusion. and the thousands and thousands of pounds that were spent . but they pounds that were spent. but they compare to actually freedom of speech. how much time does each particular force look in to freedom speech upholding freedom of speech . trained on that and of speech. trained on that and actually it's practically
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nothing which explains why so many police arrest people for having gender critical views , having gender critical views, for instance, for preying outside abortion clinics . and outside abortion clinics. and you realise that all police forces have been by an ideology and they're investing all this money into the only training schemes when the reality is it should be going into keep off street safer. so i suppose question is we were saying earlier the message institutionally racist and all the rest of it does these two fit together what it seems me is that police has a culture of that the police has a culture of wanting understand you can wanting to understand you can arrest people for and then going for it you know and having some kind of enthusiasm for that . and kind of enthusiasm for that. and the problem with free speech versus the diversity, equity and inclusion and the you know, they do we're pronouns and stuff is one is a set of trends questions which the police entitled therefore to pursue and to process. and the other one is a set of mitigating circumstances
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, which will mean that their arrest will not lead to a court case in court. and what i mean . case in court. and what i mean. yeah, yeah. i mean, i know what you mean about looking arrest, but of course they are just following guys. i suppose comes from young police officers doing what but it's what they're told. but it's these incidents these non crime incidents and things the problem, things like this. the problem, there's of there's been hundreds of thousands since 2014 thousands of them since 2014 when they came in locally. there's been this new code of practise suella practise drafted which suella braverman the braverman has been currently the most on twitter, most popular person on twitter, which bit which is improved things a bit yeah, i mean, remember in 17, amber rudd was done for non amber rudd was done for a non crime, she was home secretary at the referred to migrant the time she referred to migrant workers. is how in this is workers. this is how in this is and this is the kind of stuff police being taught police are being taught and they're not being taught as. we discuss freedom of expression under which which under article ten which is which is all and the fcc is what this is all and the fcc you police forces if they you 32 police forces if they were doing on this only 2525 said they had no or no or inadequate on article ten. so i mean, my sense i don't want to be unnecessarily sort of caustic about the police, but my sense is that they're not particularly
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philosophers know they don't they to engage the they don't want to engage the issues. can't imagine. issues. i can't imagine. interesting roundtable discussions going on about this. they want to be told what the law what can arrest people on law what can i arrest people on this basis or not. do you want to mean. yeah and i think it is all about the messaging at this point it. quite with you point isn't it. i quite with you some you think it as some and you think about it as well. it's far easier to arrest for a tweet. yeah oh, you know, issue them with a non hate crime whatever incident that whatever the incident that that's the one then it is to actually going investigate somebody who is a serial for instance but also they've been told i this is something that came out of that school recently and they have been clearly they've been briefed that part of their job is to try and good community. and there are some communities which have very cleverly noticed this and understand how to weaponize that anxiety . the police office, the anxiety. the police office, the police , the police service and police, the police service and there are other communities who are , i suppose, media are less, i suppose, media literate are less up to speed with that. you know what the
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implications of that are? it's like somebody say, you know, wherever there's a subsidy, a scam, kind like there's scam, this is kind like there's a bad incentive at play , right? a bad incentive at play, right? yes, perverse yes, definitely perverse incentives and of just incentives and kind of just quickly, because free speech, you know, a big part of the story, think. well all story, i think. well all probably the advisory board. probably on the advisory board. full disclosure to ahead. full disclosure to get ahead. you know . well, we to take you know. well, we have to take a now. funnily enough, not a break now. funnily enough, not after nick, after which nick will giving us a riveting six will be giving us a riveting six education lesson. frances will explain great british gaffe. explain the great british gaffe. and i will be weighing whether to get a tattoo in. see you in a couple of minutes .
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taught rough sex. it's taught about rough sex. it's more that kind of thing. so more of that kind of thing. so the education lesson plans the tsx education lesson plans include and polyamory. is include and polyamory. this is not all bad. i mean, they found that they were teaching pill that they were teaching the pill the concept of pill the the concept of pill kept the female body a permanently female body in a permanently unnatural so they got some unnatural state so they got some things but they've there things right but they've there were also problems and this is shocking because it comes to the times supplement. times educational supplement. now by news now as t is actually run by news and what are they doing ? and you go what are they doing? but this. but they weren't doing this. they allowing these things they were allowing these things that they weren't keeping a close it you see the close eye. it did you see the figure for the total number of documents or whatever resources it almost 9000. it was? absolutely. almost 9000. yes. a very big figure beginning with i let me just say that what was really shocking is some of the stuff, the one resource on polyamory , if polyamory and polyamory, if polyamory and homosexuality is natural, could you class paedophilia as a sexuality? what is that ? yeah, sexuality? what is that? yeah, the school absolutely . if you the school absolutely. if you answer that question with a firm , no way to say why you're asking the question. children discussing and then world discussing and then the world being is . tracy shaw, being what it is. tracy shaw, spokeswoman schools
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spokeswoman for the safe schools , they've got concerns , says they've got concerns about. it are particularly about. it we are particularly concerned is anti concerned that t is anti anti—abortion so that's more worrying than the paedophilia but it it's all disturbing because. well, it's interesting isn't it they've a huge cat flap with no of at all. with no sort of at all. everything is just rushed it and of course , people on both sides of course, people on both sides are unhappy . but there is are unhappy. but there is a sense they both control of the of the. yeah yeah. but it wasn't like say was 900,000 resources available for teachers. so how like say was 900,000 resources avaithey for teachers. so how like say was 900,000 resources avaithey they're chers. so how like say was 900,000 resources avaithey they're still. so how like say was 900,000 resources avaithey they're still going ow like say was 900,000 resources avaithey they're still going to can they they're still going to monitor what is waiting and why is happening. the problem is this happening. the problem is this happening. the problem is quality sex is that good quality sex education is actually needed in schools, but way is done is completely wrong. the whole purpose of sex education is to teach children about sex, reproduction, their own bodies and what happens when you have sex and the repercussions that can come from it and we need quality sex education part of it would also be as well teaching boys to check their testicles because from the age of 15 and above, when your body producing testosterone, that's when start
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to develop tumours your testicles and teaching . how do testicles and teaching. how do you feel? francis how do you feel about children being taught to or whether you know there's kind of safe sex play that they can use instead of having intercourse which would lead to pregnancy. you can see that there might be an argument for that if they if they're old enough to consider their bodies a sexual i do not that a sexual phase, i do not that thatis a sexual phase, i do not that that is the role of the school at that is not the role of education. and the problem is that when you start to put kind of lessons in place , it becomes of lessons in place, it becomes a very, very easy for teachers to get into real problems with with these types of resources . with these types of resources. it does seem to me fairly obvious 900,000 is absurd. there be. there should be. i mean, maybe a hundred, but do it with a bit of thought, say a few hundred would do it and actually as well these we need to a discussion about quality sex education in schools but this is no it more news now perhaps is
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an aftermath previously failures in sex the daily mail have distressing about women failing them and in bed well you've got an expert on to talk it simon so here i am so is about the great british gap and women in the uk climax four times less often than men so during the condom suppuer than men so during the condom supplier should we call them surveyed 2000 brits on their sexual experiences and found that men times as much as women average which just goes to show that men better at sex is that are they saying within like a single nice or over the course of a lifetime or regardless of whether there's a partner there not it's very hard to say exactly what's going on. yeah, it is very hard to say. but this city which has the largest gap in the uk is norwich. simon norwich. so yes. so bringing that because that's where my parents live. i says that's right. yes, because it's difficult to make your sister . difficult to make your sister. well, what's your take on thing? well, what's your take on thing?
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well, i like this place as a of sexually active ladies said they felt frustrated or disappointed but 11% said they've gotten used to it and a great attitude. yeah stiff upper lip. well yeah and then an interesting bit here says alex fox revealed the top tips to boost women's chances , tips to boost women's chances, including using chopsticks. now it not. yes, it's not clear if it's the song or if that's where the piano, if i may, that's what i've been going on. there's the other thing. is she seriously suggesting using it in the article i just read , they say, article i just read, they say, but also . but you know, it says but also. but you know, it says 5% of women say they always, but it's only 20% of men. so 80% of it's only 20% of men. so 80% of it is just a waste of time what are you talking about? waste time. a method of time. it's a method of connection . lo say two out of connection. lo say two out of five times people have sex. me either of them will guess. yeah. it's shocking stats. stinks. i don't know whether that's the way it says you count as sex. i think they're blaming the uk. is it just just in the uk. i want to see national figures. i want to see national figures. i want to asian other gap isn't to see the asian other gap isn't it. they say the pay gap
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it. they say with the pay gap and there it's just gaps all over telegraph one of the over tues telegraph one of the big specialist subjects over tues telegraph one of the big j. specialist subjects over tues telegraph one of the big j. trump.ist subjects over tues telegraph one of the big j. trump itt subjects over tues telegraph one of the big j. trump it actuallys over tues telegraph one of the big j. trump it actually and donald j. trump it actually and got a lot of information now this is an ongoing so it might be we're talking be that while we're talking about has been about this trump has been arrested about arrested but this is about arrested but this is about arrest and the telegraph's come with the angle. trump supporters vow around vow to surrender to sites around mar—a—lago and prevent him being arrested. gone the arrested. and they've gone the kind of fatty, sort of kind of a sort of fatty, sort of cooked angle, like, oh, cooked lefty angle, like, oh, what about my might to what about my might lead to violence trump supporters, violence from trump supporters, which of course it could. but they've gone website they've gone to one website called dot wynn, so called patriots dot wynn, so i don't people will don't think most people will anything and of anything violent. but no. and of course shouldn't but so course they shouldn't but so this very case they've this is a very case they've taken this old stormy daniels this is a very case they've takerwhereyld stormy daniels this is a very case they've takerwhereyld storgave aniels this is a very case they've takerwhereyld storgave paids this is a very case they've takerwhereyld storgave paid hush case where trump gave paid hush money to hush the whole thing up. but it was seven years ago. it was a misdemeanour. they want to raise a felony. and the to raise it to a felony. and the way want do that is say way they want to do that is say that was to do with campaign that he was to do with campaign finance. but a very finance. yeah, but a very tenuous claim. and at best he would be the one financing. so it even a it wouldn't it wouldn't even a it wouldn't make of a difference make much of a difference anyway. shocking fact anyway. and it is shocking fact that prosecutor to this that the lead prosecutor to this quy-
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that the lead prosecutor to this guy. mark, who worked guy. pomeranz mark, who worked with clinton with a sort of clinton affiliated legal i don't affiliated legal group, i don't know affiliated. know how efficiently affiliated. that's he that's what they're known as. he then them to prosecute then left them to prosecute trump. said he wanted trump. but he said he wanted to prosecute trump so much he he would do it he didn't even would to do it he didn't even have paid. he pay do have to be paid. he pay to do it. this is the guy who won in this case completely this case so completely politically motivated. terrible for know, no one is for america. you know, no one is saying, you know, destabilise and thing and you know, this thing a victory for democrats and anyone, the who thinks this victory for democrats and ara)ne, the who thinks this victory for democrats and ara good 1e who thinks this victory for democrats and ara good idea. who thinks this victory for democrats and ara good idea. bulio thinks this victory for democrats and ara good idea. but itthinks this victory for democrats and ara good idea. but it will. s this is a good idea. but it will. i mean there are two i can see two sides of this. on the one hand, you to admit trump did you have to admit trump did spend half his campaign in spend half of his campaign in 2016 people to shout 2016 encouraging people to shout lock up. you know, there was there was amount of enthusiasm there was a amount of enthusiasm for clinton behind bars, for getting clinton behind bars, but just an but it was actually just an empty slogan. empty it was an empty slogan. don't was ever really don't think he was ever really intending do it. truth is, if intending to do it. truth is, if the democrats were outside the democrats. the if the if democrats. but if the if the if those who are sentimentally inclined trump humiliated those who are sentimentally incline get trump humiliated those who are sentimentally incline get theirtrump humiliated those who are sentimentally incline get their way.) humiliated those who are sentimentally incline get their way. itiumiliated those who are sentimentally incline get their way. it sets iated in this get their way. it sets an extraordinary really bad precedent. also in an extremely bad precedent . i agree with you, bad precedent. i agree with you, number because if you look number one, because if you look at president george bush at president george w bush staged invade and she
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staged an illegal invade and she led to the deaths of a million people. and he is currently walking around free. you're trying to indict trump. and secondly . well i don't think secondly. well i don't think that's a good move on behalf of the democrats because he will do is let's then trump can't run right well then desantis will be in and if the sentence is a republican candidate, i think the scientists will win. can i just say, by the way, the idea of a paying pornstar hush money, that's an afternoon for hunter biden slow week. now biden that's a slow week. now well, i mean, bill clinton as well was hardly pure as the driven. well was hardly pure as the dnven.so well was hardly pure as the driven. so on that was driven. so on that front was that will it will not that anyway? it will it will not be administrations be for future administrations find investigators find other investigators that they people locked up for or find other investigators that th
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because they're a lot of ethnic minority people who say that the countryside is very wide it's not very welcoming so have teamed up i can see you're on board simon. they've teamed with this muslim hiking group, although any anywhere on there aren't a lot there is this one man run. i think his name is who is behind every every time this story appears in the papers is this exact same guy he's a fit guy - this exact same guy he's a fit guy . he's a marathon runner. guy. he's a marathon runner. he's got sisters, he takes them up the hill. but it's always and he's to make up is this he's trying to make up is this kind of mass movement. and it's just relentless. see the same guy, a dozen guy, there's been about a dozen stories featuring him muslim stories featuring him and muslim runners muslim hikers runners or muslim hikers organisation in the last three organisation in the last three or four years. the papers love it because he's a big, cheerful, you know, looking guy. and you know, happy looking guy. and but mean, it's just but i mean, it's just such a keen it ? yeah. but i mean, it's just such a keen it? yeah. i keen grift, isn't it? yeah. i mean, let me just quote story so i don't get involved. says i don't get involved. it says while minority while from ethnic minority backgrounds, value national natural environment of the countryside excluded in countryside felt excluded in what seen an exclusively what was seen an exclusively engush what was seen an exclusively english , it's kind english environment, it's kind of suggests that multiculturalism , the
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multiculturalism, the integration failed. if you're integration of failed. if you're seeing this separation, those people yeah. and then people english yeah. and then the second question i inevitably ask what's so wrong being ask is what's so wrong being engush ask is what's so wrong being english and things being english? was basically english? so there was basically people don't feel we people saying, we don't feel we haven't integrated and don't haven't integrated and we don't like certain things in like the certain things in english. a completely english. so it's a completely and ought them feel and it ought to make them feel at some of the things at home. some of the things done. mean, watched done. i mean, i've watched a little video. there's there was about of down on their about 30 of them down on their knees on specially knees praying on specially designed you designed prayer mats that you can afterwards. they've can roll afterwards. and they've got the got little pockets in the corners, in a way corners, but stones in a way them so like basically them down. so like basically hiking mats and about 30 of them in information and like praying, you know , on halfway up the, you you know, on halfway up the, you know , the district. i mean, know, the peak district. i mean, i don't know that that is necessarily going to come . the necessarily going to come. the potential frictions they're encountering from other traditional walkers, they've got the signs up all the time and it works a bit. don't you, mate, with the direct system? yeah yeah.i with the direct system? yeah yeah. i mean, it feels to me like he's deliberately
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provocative rather than anything else anyway. tell us about this one. from the time is now, this is tattoos , the catholic church, is tattoos, the catholic church, the beast. well, the mark of the beast. well, that's the question should that's the question is should have tattoo christian so have a tattoo as a christian so catholics sense of history tattoos, fateful . they tattoos, the fateful. they say it's because it's controversial because leviticus suggested was leviticus suggested it was somewhere prostituting your daughters shaving corners of daughters and shaving corners of your beard. and konstantin, you know, not your friend, but the roman said that it was a it was like disgracing the because women still in god's image so but this quote is this this cathedral these these austrian monastic orders are we're going to do tattoos for you because you know, why leave to what they call the body cult , the call the body cult, the mistakes. so there is an argument you the culture is so degenerate everyone's got these why not at least have christian tattoos where you can only get a choice of five sort of christian symbols you just anything and they're they won't do they're very clear they won't do them people's backsides they're very clear they won't do th good people's backsides they're very clear they won't do th good pknow. s backsides they're very clear they won't do th good pknow. ibacksides they're very clear they won't do th good pknow. i mean, ies they're very clear they won't do th good pknow. i mean, is they're very clear they won't do th good pknow. i mean, i can is good to know. i mean, i can that you're playing devil's advocate here but does that make any sense the culture any sense at all if the culture is degenerate, if you're
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is already degenerate, if you're going choose, at going to have to choose, at least christian, does least make them christian, does that does? yeah, because that mean it does? yeah, because matt a tattoo and matt walsh has got a tattoo and he's a big question. what i'm saying, like so many things like maybe shouldn't got maybe we shouldn't have got tattoos not tattoos of christians. i'm not sure. then again, you know sure. but then again, you know it the worst thing it wouldn't be the worst thing in know it wouldn't it is. in a you know it wouldn't it is. where on this process? where are you on this process? i think i think i'm made sense to me that the with christianity is that it doesn't really know it is anymore but basically the church of england is the religion has been watered down to such extent in order to make more appealing that it doesn't really seem to stand for anything. i remember in eighties it was christian rock bands that that didn't know what we've run out of time for this part the break we have the world's happiest. america thinks the happiest. why america thinks the british are smart and what of mixed favourite topics? it's beavis. we'll see a couple of minutes .
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welcome back to headliners. so talk about this list of happy countries from tuesday's mirror. francis indeed so finland has been named the happiest country for a sixth year in a row. cosi by denmark, iceland, israel and sweden . and so it's a very happy sweden. and so it's a very happy country and what's interesting to me is , a lot of these places to me is, a lot of these places like denmark and iceland , like denmark and iceland, sweden, then they're said to be the happiest countries once all them have a phenomenally high suicide rate. i think that might be a myth. i seem to remember that the high suicide rate of the nordic countries that disappear into darkness for six months was debunked, was it? yeah. i'm pretty sure it yeah. yeah. i'm pretty sure it has finland have a good has a finland do have a good deal to be happy about they have an extraordinarily good record education. they have, you know, an extraordinarily good record educ healthy 1ey have, you know, an extraordinarily good record educ healthy people, ., you know, an extraordinarily good record educ healthy people, longevity/v, very healthy people, longevity in good quality. but i do in very good quality. but i do find strange that they can find it strange that they can be quite so happy they are quite so happy when they are literally , you know, plunged literally, you know, plunged
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into darkness for months at a time that it's all decent . and time that it's all decent. and apparently one of their philosophers the philosophers has said. the reason is that reason we're so happy is that not competitive. sound not competitive. so they sound like losers anyway, like bunch of losers anyway, even though they're of the even though they're top of the table. i impressed the israelis in that list because israel has a good deal more, tempestuous, kind of existence, isn't it? i suppose generally speaking it comes under a good deal more international scrutiny of one kind another. it's impressive kind or another. it's impressive that keep their that managed to keep their pecker up and willing. indeed they but , you know, they have. and but, you know, they have. and but, you know, they obviously with they are obviously charged with saying like trolling people, they they're they lying not them. they're surrounded people who they just really just enjoy getting under their skin. but the united kingdom is numberjust above lithuania. yeah, lithuania is coming up hard actually. that will be in the top ten next yeah he will be in the top ten next year. he was very close. finland, what did he say have been debunked a second ago the of scandi noir suicide rate . oh of scandi noir suicide rate. oh yeah because i was basing my philosophy on that my theory was that they were so happy they're basically getting rid of the
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happy people. yeah. yeah it's a very interesting if dark theory to be of dark things. book burning has hit the headlines while we've been on air. in fact, this story has come in. yes, it's a breaking story in the telegraph. i mean, because it's it's about a far it's so new, it's about a far right politician . he's barred right politician. he's barred from after threatening to from the uk after threatening to burn wakefield. and burn the koran in wakefield. and when a breaking story it when you get a breaking story it says you think does says far right you think does that just mean he thinks women says far right you think does that _ort mean he thinks women says far right you think does that _or somethingthinks women says far right you think does that _or something because)men says far right you think does that _or something because your exist or something because you don't but he may don't know any more. but he may actually if this is a rasmus paladin leader strand paladin leader of the strand workers party and found in 2017. so he may actually far right and this is i mean presumably of course in response to having this been happening in wakefield that horrible case with the 40 year katie was she terribly year old katie was she terribly for just scoffing a so that's forjust scoffing a so that's perhaps part of the might perhaps part of the what might call inevitable backlash call the inevitable backlash he's come in and try and he's going come in and try and frame this frame these i pretty sure this is i've seen him on is the guy i've seen him on youtube likes playing kickabout in with a koran and in the car park with a koran and so on, particularly enjoys . so on, particularly enjoys. yeah, i mean i watched a lot of his stuff i think that was yeah.
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i got a youtube i mean he's got a youtube channel, know, but i see channel, you know, but i see you're you're the patron. you're you're on the patron. i see. i think the with this see. yeah. i think the with this stuff is i mean you know, i've already spoken with some scepticism communities scepticism about communities in the hopes of maintaining the in the hopes of maintaining peace. there's no need to peace. but there's no need to kind this far as no kind of go this far as you no mean this is deliberately inflammatory and this will look this will cause riots and people will be hurt . this will cause riots and people will be hurt. so he's been banned from the country and that's probably a good thing. another nick dixon's specialist subjects . now, this is beavers subjects. now, this is beavers i'll be is upon a male have gone with that plight of dams they build they're known as nature's simon happy to tell you but yes the beavers it just goes on and knows beavers knows everything. but beavers are london are being reintroduced. london inevitably , you inevitably it's in ealing, you know, going to some sort know, it's going to be some sort of posh generally as you go to river. ealing yeah yes. it has a huge dam now . yes. since about huge dam now. yes. since about 10 minutes ago. that's how fast . yeah. this is it's generally against rewilding because i'm from the country and it's so annoying have to deal with sheep
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on the road and always on the road and it's always like, why we intervene to like, why don't we intervene to use wolves let's bring that back the sabertooth tiger the great enabung the sabertooth tiger the great enabling would we don't we enabling the would we don't we don't want people from the country want rewilding but country don't want rewilding but this the beaver seems relatively benign southern predator is benign southern apex predator is it? the predators are the it? yeah the predators are the ones that junior figure and it says, we're so excited to ones that junior figure and it says, themre're so excited to ones that junior figure and it says, them and so excited to ones that junior figure and it says, them and how (cited to ones that junior figure and it says, them and how they'llo ones that junior figure and it says, them and how they'll with study them and how they'll with urban well hopefully urban communities well hopefully get the rest of us you a get stop the rest of us you a fan of the beaver? yeah am i do like a beaver . it'll be nice to like a beaver. it'll be nice to see them back and natural habitat i think you've got to give them plenty of room. from what i remember, their extraordinary destructive. you know, of their know, in the pursuit of their time the absolutely driven to time in the absolutely driven to build it's not like a build dams. it's not like a hobby doing the or even hobby doing the mean or even evoke an absolute mania with evoke is an absolute mania with only only only 5% of them actually complete the dam that was a sort of obscure call back to an earlier story but they weren't working as quickly to the dam gap so same with the daily mail frances it americans are even sicker than we thought . well americans believe that we
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are smarter than them because we use the word . yeah and they use use the word. yeah and they use the word. okay so when we use a word right they think that we're saying oh i know that. correct. but the reality is we're using it in a different context when . it in a different context when. yeah, right . absolutely. so was yeah, right. absolutely. so was born in and then it's also how we use a different internet nafions we use a different internet nations they we say writes in a far more we've with an output inflation which that we are no we're talking about and the reality is that we've done well that's how the empire was built exactly what we seem like we know we're talking about. there's this thing from the journal of pragmatic because they've gone through all these engush they've gone through all these english what english phrases and how what they it's so good. they actually mean it's so good. it's hear you say. it's like, i hear what you say. what the british mean i disagree and to discuss when and do not want to discuss when they think mean we accept your point are all point of view. well are all those there are sort of tea towns on there that have of
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towns on there that have less of the stuff interesting the stuff like very interesting that clearly nonsense. so that is clearly nonsense. so it's fault. it's your fault. yeah, they're not wrong. read yeah, they're not wrong. i read your email . great interest. i your email. great interest. i pray. yeah, but this is the thing. when people come over here i remember my venezuelan family being like, why does nobody's what do think my nobody's what do you think my favourite one is the word quite which can mean almost anything. so it's about the importance. if you say, i tried some of that, it was quite good. that means it really extraordinarily good. really was extraordinarily good. if i tried of that, if you say i tried some of that, it quite good that this is it was quite good that this is borderline they've it borderline in that they've it means a bit disappointing . but i means a bit disappointing. but i have said it's much more recent. it's about the emphasis anyway. we've coined fine yes, we've coined as well. fine yes, we go one more story and it's the daily style. finally, the big debate about what we used to call childhood games before, i suppose everything. yes, important i brits over correct name of game where kids on door and run off clearly called knock at door no no some ginger at door run no no some ginger southerners see it's called knockit southerners see it's called knock it over and it actually it turns out is a sudden thing calling knock down ginger
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calling it knock down ginger which sense. although which makes no sense. although sunland you knock at sunland have got you knock at door run. correct which a real name someone have with name and someone have gone with nine parts of the nine doors. so parts of the north have sort of gone off on their own. no, exactly. you their own. no no, exactly. you from cumbria cumbria. yeah, yeah . you have your own way of counting sheep as we and we counting sheep as we do. and we all decide, go look a bit key. tied to three or so, you know . i tied to three or so, you know. i mean, i don't even know what i talk about now, but viewers will know we're talking about because this is pre—internet when this was a fun game again tether, then yeah, teach right lol. and we have all of ways but we have all sorts of ways but knocking doors, running away knocking on doors, running away and the person might not even many were they're within many doors were they're within a two radius of your house two mile radius of your house like so say my own house we have a knocking on bothy doors scottish isn't it just pre—internet funny . the stuff we pre—internet funny. the stuff we used to do not going to do then might not even be in. yeah, i used to it. i had no name for it. it was the game with, no name. the show is nearly over. let's take another quick look at tuesday's before we go. tuesday's pages before we go. the mail broken and
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the daily mail broken and rotten. that's devastating reviews institute reviews as the met is institute usually racist, corrupt, misogynistic the misogynistic over with the telegraph story telegraph with the same story met racist, sexist and met police's racist, sexist and broken the guardian the broken the guardian agree the racist misogynist, homophobic, on the metropolitan police and also a new final warning on climate change. the times has rotten met has lost public faith un sounds alarm on zero tolerance. the daily condemned loss of faith in police, the daily star have feathered read it again that is not metropolitan police, that is the nafion metropolitan police, that is the nation seagulls . that's all we nation seagulls. that's all we have time for tonight . thank you have time for tonight. thank you to my guests, francis foster tonight. i will be back on headuneis tonight. i will be back on headline is tomorrow p.m. headline is tomorrow 11 pm. with and scott with leo kearse and scott coopen with leo kearse and scott cooper. you're watching the cooper. if you're watching the repeat the repeat stay tuned for the breakfast otherwise, good breakfast show. otherwise, good night night .
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hello. good evening. i'm jacob rees—mogg, state of the nation . rees—mogg, state of the nation. tonight, it's the 20th anniversary of the iraq war and. while boris johnson is on trial and faces an inquisition, i will be asking why we never saw an appetite for mutiny under tony blair. and there's lots of bureaucracy to get through this evening. everything from the reconsidering its ruling to the un calling for tighter climate controls. but perhaps most importantly vox populi vox day. we ask the people if they can about boris johnson's cake gate . and here's a taste pun intended of what they had to say . this is irrelevant. let's move a marvellous palate from the lady. the state of the nations starts now . starts now. i'm we'll also be heanng starts now. i'm we'll also be hearing from our panel, historian and broadcaster dr.
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