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tv   Headliners  GB News  March 25, 2023 11:00pm-12:00am GMT

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good evening. i'm ray anderson is up next. but first, here's latest news offenders who commit anti—social behaviour could be forced to clean up their communities as part of the prime minister's new immediate justice scheme. under the plan set to be announced on monday those who spray graffiti , commit vandalism spray graffiti, commit vandalism would be forced to make good the damage within 48 hours. other punishments could include picking up litter, washing police cars or doing unpaid work shops all while wearing jumpsuits or high vis jackets. rishi sunak says he hopes to crack down on offences which erode a community's sense safety . matt hancock and kwasi have been caught up in a sting
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operation quoting thousands of pounds to consult a non—existent company. the two former cabinet ministers were approached by a fake south korean firm set up by campaign group led by donkeys dunng campaign group led by donkeys during online interviews. mr. hancock his daily rate would be £10,000, whilst mr. kwarteng said would be paid said he would expect to be paid similar amount each month. mps are to seek outside of are allowed to seek outside of parliament and there is no accusation of wrongdoing. in total, five mps took part in. the interviews . the prime the interviews. the prime minister has been accused of using incorrect figures when discussing the asylum claims backlog. the uk statistics has written to the government saying numbers used by rishi sunak not reflect official stats . it's reflect official stats. it's wrong, they say, to claim the conservatives have halved number of people waiting for their asylum applications to be processed when the backlog has increased by 150,000 people since they took post office,
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workers have been offered a 9% pay workers have been offered a 9% pay rise following series of strikes. members the communication workers union who work crown post offices have also been offered substantial lump sum payments of between and £3,000. they'll also see increase in paternity pay. will now be balloted on the deal with the union saying it's the that can be achieved and russia to station nuclear weapons in belarus according to the country's media. president putin says he's struck deal to post tactical nuclear weapons within the country, which borders ukraine. he claims it's not a violation of nuclear non agreements comparing it with the united states stationing nuclear weapons on the territory its european allies . we were on tv european allies. we were on tv onune european allies. we were on tv online dab+ and of course on tuned in. this is gb news time. the headliners .
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the headliners. hello, i'm stephen allen and welcome to headliners. joining tonight to take you through the best of sunday's new stories the best headuneis sunday's new stories the best headline is duo leo kearse and louis schaefer and doing well both a scorer of five. what would you rate yourself far. oh fave that's an interesting one don't normally rate like how you're doing it five it's normally a ten i think it makes it quicker make it five like a hygiene rating three but i mean it could be a high three. louis i'm like a negative one . that's i'm like a negative one. that's a right if . it i'm like a negative one. that's a right if. it wasn't going to be a negative number somehow. it would have a complex number with you. there's no way it was going to be straight of them. you know what.7 it's these what.7 because it's these questions, how am i doing? you should never ask anybody how they just just they do it. you just i just just think you don't you don't realise everyone how realise everyone, everyone how they're is to
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they're doing. and the key is to not about the answer. not care about the answer. it's just polite thing. how are you just a polite thing. how are you today? one's asked you today? no one's ever asked you that and really meant it. louis yeah, but i know that. but i know i respect the. and i know that i respect the. and i respect the questioner. i'm sure that continue. move respect the questioner. i'm sure théto continue. move respect the questioner. i'm sure théto today'sinue. move respect the questioner. i'm sure théto today's front move respect the questioner. i'm sure théto today's front pages. iove on to today's front pages. tomorrow's front. sunday tomorrow's front. the sunday mail says. ricci, i will let the victim yobs . victim how to punish yobs. sunday says european sunday telegraph says european judges may be overruled on rwanda's . observer top tory mps rwanda's. observer top tory mps ask for £10,000 a day to work for a fake company. sunday express . rishi crime blitz to . express. rishi crime blitz to. woo! red wall . sunday express. rishi crime blitz to. woo! red wall. sunday times. strip searches of children as young as eight. and finally, the star sun. there's a guy works down the chip shops where he's 80. and that is where you from? pages. 80. and that is where you from? pages . kick off with pages. kick off with the got your moment of the day . the your moment of the day. the observer, leo. yes, the observer saying they've got this. gotcha.
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so the container led by donkeys, this pressure group, tory mps and asked them to work for fake korean company that they'd up and filmed . the interviews are and filmed. the interviews are done over over zoom however they ask kwasi kwarteng matt hancock, ask kwasi kwarteng matt hancock, a couple of other people and they offered them like ten grand a day to work for this company. and they yes. and they're, and they said yes. and they're, oh, got you. like, no , you oh, got you. he's like, no, you offered and going offered them ten and he's going to turn down ten grand the day. obviously, people are going to see, take the ten see, yeah, i'll take the ten grand. anything. the grand. anybody anything. the guardian this guardian journalist writing this would ten grand a day. would turn down ten grand a day. that's a guardian that's more than a guardian journalist earns in a year, doing better than the doing hope for better than the people to be busy people who are meant to be busy . country. this is not . the country. this is not just like, oh letter in the like, oh is a letter in the rules. maybe the rules should be changed you can't go and changed that you can't go and earn other you should earn loads other oh, you should be kind of successful politicians are wanted by the private mutually private sector mutually exclusive can be paid loads exclusive who can be paid loads of money. obviously if they're getting of money then then getting loads of money then then you know they're worth the worth
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money. i think i'm going to offer somebody ten grand. they're ten grand. they're going to take ten grand. nobody's of nobody's nobody's that much of idiot. and also these have idiot. and also these did have to south korea. this for to go to south korea. this for this money. i mean, some some of the showed the are to the showed the are easier to trick was the hancock affair where isabel oakeshott said i'll write i'll write your biography for you and he was shown his views on the woods ups and then she was well i'm just going to send these off to everybody. yeah. let me see your take on this. on is it's like this. my take on it is it's like i wish i was first of all, i wasn't shocked because in this country totally and paid for country is totally and paid for the they allow the guy the fact that they allow the guy that this is this totally legal right number one number two was this kwarteng. he was he this quasi kwarteng. he was he was asked how much would you charge this fake company to do the bidding in parliament. and he said £10,000 a month. and the fake companies , oh we were fake companies, oh we were planning on pay you 8 to £12000 a day. a day . so this kwasi a day. a day. so this kwasi kwarteng is worst negotiator in
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the history the world was never in of money or i would really make things go bad . yeah, make things go bad. yeah, somebody didn't really smell the scam coming. surely if. if you see, i'll do it for this amount of money and they're like, no, no, we want to give you like 12 grand a day. that's less a sign. it's not, you know, it's not real. that could be an real. but that could be an argument system. it's argument about the system. it's not having people not about not having people being but while being politicians. but while you're politician for that you're a politician for that little bit of time, maybe pay politicians more, but say, could you on the of being a you focus on the of being a politician a bit. exactly yeah. but the other hand, we don't but on the other hand, we don't want sort want everybody to be some sort of career politician , just this of career politician, just this government apparatus who's never experienced anything . the world experienced anything. the world of politics, i think it's that people from from business and from want to go into politics and actually, you know, do some you know, do some good for the country as well . try not to country as well. try not to laugh there, but it's going so well, i stopped believing in that but of like let's move to on the mail on sunday leo. well
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well this is this is richard ricci. i will not i will let victor say how to publish jobs . victor say how to publish jobs. and i mean, this is an old concept. the idea that you can ask person who's been who's been wrong, what the punishment should be, but you can't . you should be, but you can't. you first of all, you can't you can't let normal decide what the punishment is . it's like asking punishment is. it's like asking your child what should be. it's always the death penalty. you never like, oh, well, maybe it should be in jail for a month. not a straightforward death ehhen not a straightforward death either. this is to be like drowned in sludge. so what did to me is a horrible horrible human being. it says this is what ricci this is how because ricci's thinking, i want to win people over. he has no understanding of human nature . understanding of human nature. really, what keir starmer is also doing the same thing. they're both because there's an election up. we're both trying to look tough on crime before one of them gets it and then inevitably does nothing crime. keir starmer said would
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keir starmer said labour would also prioritise fighting the virus anti—social and virus that is anti—social and fly—tipping offroad baking in rural areas and drugs though fly—tipping and drugs. yeah. all right. they're not serious. problem offroad baking in rural areas. this is very specific . areas. this is very specific. somebody's been off road biking in keir starmer's garden. it's definitely. he's he's got a problem with it and it's the list up there with drugs right? yeah unless they're doing drugs in rural areas. right right. where he's trying to go off road, it's like when he was when they, when they came up with like countries like evil countries in world and it's always the worst ones. and always like the worst ones. and then include some other one then they include some other one to seem like they to make it seem like they weren't you know, weren't being racist. you know, just just it was like all just it was just it was like all them, whatever it is. but i mean, so is this just an appeal to i don't know how to say there's not the kind of there's not to the kind of people love the idea the people who love the idea the phrase saying is too phrase what i'm saying is too for him. well, like me. for him. well, people like me. yeah. had to you but yeah. if you had to you but yeah. because you can't really just most at your worst just let the most at your worst moment in life when you are the most because you've
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most emotional because you've just wronged. yeah. it's just been wronged. yeah. it's not for to be not the time for you to be picking punishments it. yeah. picking punishments is it. yeah. i obviously the punishments i mean obviously the punishments are but it does, it are capped but it does, it provides some sort of power and accountability satisfaction to, to person , the, to the to the person, the, to the victim and sort of provides you bit of a i think it links of just saying to somebody with a borstal or a jail whatever making them , you know, tidy up making them, you know, tidy up the local area , it makes it the local area, it makes it visible and people drive in person a little clear, to be honest , person a little clear, to be honest, susan's kid, you know, it's it provides that sort of that shame that i think is actually much more powerful than we think. but i think that that already they might die of a friend of mine who who was on community service or whatever it was . they made community service or whatever it was. they made him wear a yellow thing around town . so they are thing around town. so they are doing this. but the thing that shocked me was also that within two days they're going to have clean mess up, which means clean the mess up, which means the person has been put on trial and it listed two days only, you know , this is my kind of country
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know, this is my kind of country is this that like doesn't even give a chance for the guy to like bake a case of what you know getting sends a gulag for 20 years so just kind of to pick up some letter yeah but at organise that to make the guy pick up litter also this is pick up the litter also this is a politician's pledge it's not actually going to happen. there's no head it's going to happen. is one of them on the list? it was about making clean police cars. they they come out of it's to of scratch. he's it's going to cost more in paid legal next up is the sunday telegraph leo what they going with so european may be overruled rwanda deportations so in an attempt to quell could be the biggest rebellion of rishi sunak premiership ministers may to block the use of a controversial mechanism used by the european court of human to stop the flights to rwanda taking off last june. so a member the rwanda flags were announced you know the first one was was commissioned and it was going to take off and take people and start providing some sort deterrent to people
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sort of deterrent to people across the channel and the last moment the european court of human stepped and said, human rights stepped and said, no, you can't do this. but no, no, you can't do this. but that was quite a controversial thing for for the echr to do thing for the for the echr to do . so now, you know, people are saying this is controversial for us to step in and provide limitations, but sounds like a you know, it sounds something that actually has to happen . that actually has to happen. other countries in the eu have stricter rules on asylum and immigration than the uk does . immigration than the uk does. that's why people want to come to the uk. you you come to the uk, a four star hotel, you know, it's nice and other other countries. it's not as it's not as nice. so we need to sort of make a bit a bit tougher but hey , migration is going to happen. the government's got got a qatar of a net migration figure of 245,000 by 2027, which a lot of voters than half of voters think is too high. but is going to happen. politic is love, migration is this basically
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stimulates the economy and they don't care about anything else. yeah it's not that politicians like migration , the richest like migration, the richest people in the country benefit from migration better than the average the average person that always kills . when i hear like always kills. when i hear like working class people are pro—immigration or the labour party which should care about people but they don't care about people. migration hurts the countries that they come from because it is a drain on those countries and it hurts the countries and it hurts the countries they move to. not everybody, the country. you get your your house painted £50. yeah, but the poorest people, if you if you're a painter, if you're a painter and suddenly you've got to compete against, you've got to compete against, you know, unlimited supply of labour coming across across across the channel. this is impossible. you're going impossible. you're not going if you've a wave , two you've got a house wave, two cars, kids and all the rest of it to pay for. you're not going to to put your as low as to be able to put your as low as three guys living living in a room. i'm going to say this to leo, because you to be right. but i'm going to say wrong because will to that and
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because people will to that and say you really don't care about just we just check when so saying when you left america it was a drain from america was it. oh you bet it was died in america it was been no good comedy in mean correlation correlation doesn't imply causation and tremendous growth in comedy in this country. he's been an incredible drain on the pubuc been an incredible drain on the public resources here and with his with his health that wasn't able to resolve until went on an all meat diet. yeah and finally lewis we've . yeah this one this lewis we've. yeah this one this is going to have a go at this. well, i just i just saw the headune well, i just i just saw the headline so i know nothing about this story. there's a guy that works down in the chip shops where's he's eating, based where's he's eating, it's based on headline comes from that on the headline comes from that fantastic is a is fantastic which is a curse is a casting call yeah kirsten mccall fantastic so on and he's the punch line is he's a liar and i'm not about you. and so guy thinks he's he's it. i mean, why it's in the front of the daily star where they're under more,
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if it's true. yeah this is a bigger story than the rest that we've talked about. yeah, we've just been talking, you know, various policies, aliens and living here based on the dna auens living here based on the dna aliens have collected so they can grow aliens to look like humans. yeah, it be the biggest story. no, it wouldn't be, because this guy would be a complete idiot working at complete idiot for working at a chip shop. if you would come all that way and created this thing, why would work? mean, you why would you work? i mean, you don't if he's working don't understand if he's working on tock, that would on tick tock, that would be it. so same as well. chip so it's the same as well. chip shop. shop. maybe scotland. shop. chip shop. maybe scotland. they'll a social media up they'll bring a social media up called shop. all the all called chip shop. all the all pictures of deep fried sorry . pictures of deep fried sorry. just just realise you're then you're effectively that these auens you're effectively that these aliens leaving their home planet to travel all the way here are a drain on that planet. they probably some of the brightest and best that those planets have to offer. yeah. and they're turning the southern states. turning up the southern states. i don't know whether this true what said i guy told it what i said i know a guy told it to like maybe 15 years ago to me like maybe 15 years ago and it made tremendous sense.
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yeah, tremendous sense. and you go to those places in mexico which has been completely drained of all the men of these towns and they're just women and children and barely anybody there and these whole communities, huge areas , mexico communities, huge areas, mexico are completely zones. it's like not even like cry and they're just dead. and the women are lonely and the children have no fathers. is that what you went there ? coming up, police evading there? coming up, police evading scrutiny. liz truss scrutiny and the gender wars come to an end .
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welcome back to headline with me steven allen. i'm still with leo kearse and lewis schafer the mail on sunday lewis and liz truss the george lazenby of pm is the woman of honour. that is an obscure and i even understand
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it says says the former prime minister liz truss . she minister liz truss. she nominates for close supporters for peerages as part of resignation. resignation honours, sparking outrage upon opposition mp i didn't know you could do this. she was in office for like 49 days or something. seems like no time and she she thinks she's to nominate people who her in her career. she's like a nobody. it's like somebody staying in hotel and thinking they can steal the towels well. she didn't just she wasn't just prime minister. she did some other as well. she was defence minister in like that probably . that's probably what probably. that's probably what other jobs all the trade negotiations the post. yes, that's right. yes she did all that's right. yes she did all that but she's not paid a salary for that. it's like the nhs were applauding the nhs like they're not paid , she was paid. what not paid, she was paid. what does she get . but they're i does she get. but they're i don't , i think the people she's don't, i think the people she's chosen are actually good because she's somebody in tory party who actually things like genuine tory, government low tax
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tory, a small government low tax tory, a small government low tax tory which is what the tories used to be. a no, no they're not, they're just the labour party. but they've got a slightly different name. so it isn't nonsense. the overage people are so religious that she gets to nominate people for peerages, whatever. and despite only being in power for 49 days, the outrage is that she was only in power for 49 days, she was elected by tory party members and she was deposed by the blob, the blob that controls the anti—democratic blob . so that's anti—democratic blob. so that's the real outrage . if you're in the real outrage. if you're in favour of small government, why people to the house of lords effectively still ruling is she's making the group of people rule over is even bigger don't try and catch me magic and nice andifs try and catch me magic and nice and it's and you're right about that because the house of lords i think i think like there are hundreds extra their number of seats in the entire room for the house, the house of lords and that's a shame because a lot of them need to sit down. yeah, they do need sit there. they're
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so old and useless at the end of the day, at the end of the day i don't understand your i do. and i'm going to say it. i understand the british political system. it's the worst thing about country, one about this country, the one america muddled so did not america muddled it so did not matter. was the american matter. it was the american system is the anti system is the anti this system this house of lords and this whole patronage business and everything . but business and everything. but it's one of those things that like even though it sounds, it shouldn't work. it just does work somehow and sort works work somehow and sort of works better than elected. the house of lords works better having, you know , peerage or better it you know, peerage or better it better it doesn't work in does it. do you don't get something you don't you find coming in there all gender ideologies are something they all to something they all want to impose some thing is that impose some new thing is that there's and balance. there's a check and a balance. america all checks and all america is all checks and all balances. made for checks balances. it's made for checks working well, but the longevity is the problem here well is the problem here as well because would say because some people would say you gig for 49 days you get the gig for 49 days because other but that's because she did other but that's not reason gets to make not the reason she gets to make a resignation on the suggestion you the gig 49 days and
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you get the gig for 49 days and then put people in, the then you put people in, the house forever until house of lords forever until they yeah. so on average they die. yeah. so on average about six years. yeah which really isn't. how there are some she's she's nominating younger than the average though i would imagine that's an unrealistic daenerys level of power that you get from only having the gig for a short time. but i think the house of lords needs these people so little is the things head of the ieee, the i the does sort of small government, you know, low tax ideas . and that's know, low tax ideas. and that's what we need in government, not no forever because government just gradually gets bigger and more cumbersome and sucks in more. and that's what that's what you think they know it does . i you think it does. but . i know you think it does. but somebody who's from the left does not think that the literacy commun , you know, tory party commun, you know, the tory party are simply drifting into communism as you're saying, communists really of course communists are really of course the communists as opposed to the
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mail on sunday. leo what we do with this one, the test of a woman is to look down under moderate. yeah, well, i would be something that would solve a problems in this day and age. but the women's campaigner parker is, is in australia from the i she's in the eye of the storm trans culture war down under this law was put together the don't really form a sentence but but yeah she's she's basically she's she's down there she's raising awareness this agenda we will cut wants to transition children put meals biological in women's sport and put biological male rapists and prisons and she's a threat to her safety so she's got seven bodyguards and she's been called a because obviously the trouble is whenever you do something this you're to attract a few and on the left. you get, you know, the piers and whoever are coming along. and it on the right as well. so some people have come
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and done, you know, but, you know, you occasionally get that football matches. don't football matches. we don't say, oh, ban football, oh, we're going to ban football, you we just recognise you know, we just recognise sometimes turn up to events . so sometimes turn up to events. so she's been unfairly lumped in with these these and also it's got to go to the states that new zealand television actually though her hand she was playing with her zip while we were interviewing her and so her hand went like that and they said it was a far right white supremacist symbol because she was she was that which is like the all key symbol, but apparently is a it's apparently is a far right symbol. but i mean , it's not it's just mean, it's not it's just somebody playing with their zip zip. that's not the main part of the story, is it other that this so yeah there's been it's the violence of the protest against her as well. yeah it's happened lewis gets back the middle. how do we get two disparate groups who seem to think the worst of each other to actually come to some form of or are we never going to get that in this culture? i don't think we will,
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because we're this civil war and this war can't be this civil war can't be all touchy feely. that new touchy feely. i'm that new zealand australia actually zealand and australia actually had have had her come there. had the have had her come there. okay because i know she had a reputation being like in their a horrible person you say is like an oddball but he isn't an oddball he is corbyn piers corbyn, not piers corbyn. the other corbyn. which one? piers corbyn. oh sorry . i mean, the corbyn. oh sorry. i mean, the other one's not much better. yeah i'm. i mean, how can people get back together again? they, this is one of those issues that people see things totally different . and i think it's like different. and i think it's like where, where do you see a duck or do you see fish? is that one of those etch a drawings? oh, yeah. like a rabbit or a whatever. those drawings are. well, you can even see one of the other. yeah you can't the other. yeah but you can't see at the same time. yeah. see them at the same time. yeah. is there part of the effect is there a part of the effect like the echo chamber ness of it, that you end up thinking the worst, the group that you disagree of disagree with instead of thinking, oh, they some
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thinking, oh, they have some issues clarify the issues that we could clarify the echo lets you believe echo chamber lets you believe they this side echo chamber lets you believe they both this side echo chamber lets you believe they both sides this side echo chamber lets you believe theyboth sides think this side echo chamber lets you believe they both sides think thats side echo chamber lets you believe they both sides think that soide and both sides think that so there's no way that they'll ever have any sort of useful discussion. that's why the protests are met other protests are met with other violent why violent protests. that's why things off, right? instead things kick off, right? instead of here's here's of actually. well, here's here's why kicked off in this why things kicked off in this situation, because it involves men trans women who originally started as men. they have high testosterone men. they're crazy so, of course. and this is why this is why it's been it's kind been called an anti woman . but been called an anti woman. but it isn't an anti women event. it's just men being men. it's like what's happened in france with the riots. france, it's mostly men who do these kind of men, manly well in scotland as well . seen, you know, trends is well. seen, you know, trends is the trouble is you know trans the trouble is you know trans the trans activist side i can understand from an ideological point of view i'd be if people who identify as a as a woman can
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you know have access to all these spaces but then you've people who are maliciously abusing the system to gain access to the to the and for bad reasons such as you know, i la grim the male rapist who was sent to a female prison in scotland so you can be you can have this ideologically pure solution. it's a nonsense. so you need to have a system then works out to stop the bad, which is why you need to talk rather than just hate the other side. no, just need to no, you just. you just need to go. got. i've it easy go. i've got. i've got it easy system hotness rule. if you're hot enough, if you're convincing enough, can go enough, then yeah, you can go into prisons . you'd would into female prisons. you'd would they just send you the photos or would you probably stand at the doon would you probably stand at the door. oh i assume the prison's got a door . i door. oh i assume the prison's got a door. i mean, it's good. everyone needs a hobby. i'm not. you'll get away with it. sunday's telegraph now. lewis and that this and they're saying that this gender war is actually pretty much i guess we did solve much over. i guess we did solve it. that's according to the it. yeah that's according to the telegraph. turned the
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telegraph. the tide turned the gender war. and they use, for example is that the trans transgender have been well, transgender have been well, transgender women men who were once men and now they're women have been banned from playing international sports and the olympics are banned competing in the female category in female category. right so because there's only two categories, they're basically left to do with the men , which is going to with the men, which is going to be quite interesting to see like really hot chicks with with those men making a good point they all yeah and then the other things that they use as a nicola sturgeon has had some problems with recognition act with her gender recognition act . the tavistock clinic has closed that isle of man situation which i think you've spoken about . and the drag queen spoken about. and the drag queen who was teaching pupils were like 11 years old, about 73 genders that they had to cancel the entire programme because of this. and the fact that keir starmer is hemming and hawing about what he's going to call men and women. yeah, he's still
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waiting to see. most people think a woman is. he says what he thinks of women is it's like manchester city have have an idea of what a woman is and stick to it nobody wants a leader who can make up his mind on women is that the telegraph is saying because he's hemming and hawing that's a sign that that side is losing . well the that side is losing. well the article makes the good point that for decades we had you know all this progress and lgbtq rights, civil rights, women's it was all you know it was mostly good progress could get behind but we've reached the point where a lot of the progress is like, whoa, wait a minute. you know what, i mean, it's actually right to push on it. so the right to push back on it. so the people pushing aren't people pushing back aren't intolerant fascist, right intolerant fascist, far right bigots. people with bigots. they're just people with common want common sense who don't want children sterilised. children to be sterilised. the demeaned you know, demeaned don't want, you know, rape been sent into women's spaces, you know things like that seem fairly obvious to that that seem fairly obvious to be, you know , ideas. well, be, you know, ideas. well, excellent for that section coming up the, downside to slimming jabs why hippies won't
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be happy anymore. and while the raf thought women were too hysterical .
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welcome back to , headliners welcome back to, headliners sunday's telegraph lewis and some people when they think of donald trump think of the word cult or thereabouts. yes i think i think there for something to pin on donald trump there was something to they they just hate donald trump and thing that you mentioned is that that donald trump was criticised for choosing waco, texas for his first 2024 campaign rally. according to the telegraph . and according to the telegraph. and for those who don't know where what waco is, it's the site where the federal government killed six people, breaking into an organisation that was living
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there, i think relatively peaceably. yeah, but refused to give up the religious a religious sect and i think it was, it was the federal it was, it's a i don't think it might not have been this i think it was actually a brilliant place to hold an event because equidistant from houston austin and dallas fort worth. yeah, right in. the middle of texas. yeah, it is. and it's a and it's a very touristic place. it's the home of the doctor pepper museum . that's another way they can't have the start line. what's the worst that happen in waco ? yeah worst that happen in waco? yeah visiting the dr. pepper. is that is that was that . yeah. i don't is that was that. yeah. i don't know . it also there was know. it also there was a mammoth museum there which is where they bones of dead elephants . elephants are elephants. elephants are republicans so. yeah. so i thought that was i actually. yeah. some that some of the criticism so they say the critics are saying oh trump's chosen this location because it
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appeals extremists who view the raid on week was a seminal of government overreach surely killing 86 innocent civilians is a government overreach. you don't you know, i think i think just you know getting fined for, you know, leaving a car in a jail. elaine is government overreach but killing entire families is sort of those those definitely government rule. do you think there's sense that maybe they thought donald trump or his people thought if you pick you'll definitely get pick there you'll definitely get in news? yeah i think donald in the news? yeah i think donald trump because i thought about this and i think donald trump is such a genius. he didn't even need to think it. it was like said, i've never even heard of waco, texas . it just it just waco, texas. it just it just comes out. he's he is the greatest pilot. he is johnny rotten of his . mm. yeah agree rotten of his. mm. yeah agree with that. yeah. i mean for johnny what johnny rotten was the punk music was the music
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basically putting a sledgehammer to, to the i don't know whether it's because he does he picks he pick strange plays he picked the carpet warehouse or something there was this sounded and the name to the hotel the name similar to the hotel the forces poison to him that was forces no poison to him that was judy at juilliard think as we went to sunday's observer leo and paying your pound of flesh could get a lot easier. so the rise of slimming jobs could lead to overseas trips to remove excess skin . surgeons have excess skin. surgeons have warned . so you've got these warned. so you've got these miracle jobs. the mean, you know, you can just inject them and then you just magically lose weight. they make you hungry. i don't know how they work. that's probably going lead you to develop earlobes in 20 years. but you're not going be but who? you're not going to be fat also when fat until then. it's also when you the flab, you're left you lose the flab, you're left with all the skin that previously flab in. and previously held the flab in. and apparently that can cause problems. infection problems. you get infection and all folds. got all your little folds. you got to yourself a rag and to wash yourself with a rag and a like you're still fat a stick like you're still fat and.the a stick like you're still fat and. the surgeons are saying people go to turkey to have these these the excess folds and
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remove . they say, oh, turkey remove. they say, oh, turkey doesn't have the safeguards and assurances of your own drugs being used in the same quality in provenance as the uk . that's in provenance as the uk. that's nonsense. i had my hair done in and it was great. i mean, there's a chicken roundabout in there's a chicken roundabout in the but the surgeon was the car but the surgeon was wearing crocs he was smoking a cigarette while he did it. but i look all right. think . look all right. i think. brilliant. yeah, he had his hair did cut . you don't mean cut did not cut. you don't mean cut out of me audiences not going to know i mean this this story is one of the funniest i've read because it's because it said the rise of the slimming jabs will lead to people going to oversee for surgery, but it could lead to a million other effects. it couldn't it could lead to women being so beautiful. they don't need travel overseas to find men that maybe the men this country will find. these attractive . will find. these attractive. you've basically sent an appeal to camera there. well, think just looking for a gentleman then to. yeah, i would say i
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think i think first of all leo is totally right because these this thing nobody how this thing works. actually i've read i've watched tonnes of videos . this watched tonnes of videos. this it says it's called the zen picture go venus love. oh they go weird mean we live right now i got you yeah . well that's the i got you yeah. well that's the that's the of harvest fest yeah and it affects the glucagon it has to do with the liver producing more insulin it works for a time and then it stops working and then a turns your sperm crazy and it's going to be bad. it's going to be really bad. it's going to be really bad. eat meat. well, you want to lose few weeks to start again. we will move on to if you want to see me just look at his twitter. yeah the mail on sunday lewis and happy crack which sounds like the two edges of your glutes but it's not tell us more about that. well this is nitrous oxide and they call it they it hippy crack. they call it hippy crack. i mean, around for mean, it's been around for i guess was around when were
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guess it was around when were hippies. mean we did i like hippies. i mean we did i like now admitting to doing a drug but did not and they do but people did not and they do it now go the park the it now you go the park and the whole place filled with these whole place is filled with these carnies. and it's a carnies. yeah. and it's a complete waste of metal. these tiny canisters they tiny little canisters they would, for adding would, they were for adding chocolate and whipped cream . we chocolate and whipped cream. we go in car tires. chocolate and whipped cream. we go in car tires . yeah. so it was go in car tires. yeah. so it was littered all over the roads. i think that's the reason to mean at least when people smoke, crack, don't leave bits of metal lying around they little bits of people onto actual crack for the environment less . yeah at the environment less. yeah at the end of the day oxide is actually needed the body it affects our vaso dilation. it's a very important element. vaso dilation. it's a very important element . but the body important element. but the body can also make any nitrous oxide that it needs because it can't be gaining it from the atmosphere. it can if it eats protein which has nitrogen in and a lot of people eventually don't need to breathe in. nitrous if do too nitrous oxide. if you do too much nitrous oxide , it much nitrous oxide, then it affects nervous system the affects your nervous system the same as people who do much same as people who do too much deep we like commercial deep diving. we like commercial divers . it your bones and divers. it kills your bones and kills you . it kills, you know,
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kills you. it kills, you know, the benzos. you come up to the benzos. when you come up to fast, it your bones fast, but it kills your bones and your nervous system. and kills your nervous system. yeah a in the yeah it's not a step in the right direction. and so then, is it? so we're we going to be going every sun telegraph. going out every sun telegraph. leo should people be subtitled for single dutch, for speaking only single dutch, so this is the dutch farmers party . basically, they just had party. basically, they just had an election in the netherlands and it was amazing this this party came from because they've been so tough on on farmers there, they've said they've got to reduce their nitrogen . it's to reduce their nitrogen. it's not nitrous oxide, but nitrogen emissions going to be cut by 50% by 2030, according to the eu. so they said to the farmers, we're going to we're going to just show you what you don't. we're going to you've got this compulsory purchase, these farms have there for like have been there for like hundreds and so the hundreds of years. and so the farmers understandably farmers were understandably like, well, this is terrible. you're these, you you're getting rid of these, you know, farms that produce know, great farms that produce meat that louis likes to eat. like a terrible idea. so like it's a terrible idea. so people really revolt against this and elected the beeb, which is the farmers party. but
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they've got some some strange they're going to ask for conversations television to not be subtitled at the moment apparently if you're from the sort of countryside , get sort of countryside, get subtitled because people in the cities have got no what these farmers are saying. it's like, you know, hearing somebody from cornwall or scotland so, they're going to subtitle them , but we going to subtitle them, but we do that over here that only if an accent is thick from some part of the uk. yeah. i didn't realise could be seen realise it could be seen offensive. yeah. i realise they had countryside the had a countryside ad in the netherlands . i was surprised to netherlands. i was surprised to find out that the country isn't completely holland, that there is these places called freeze and limburger that's like i know it's a funny name. so holland is just part of the netherlands, is that right? holland is q is there's upper holland, the lower holland , the big heart. there's holland, the big heart. there's like two holland is just one part of it and there's other states around which are which we have those funny little accents
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because of your your heritage suppose because your your american people to say oh that scotland in england and then want to go to lysette how is that blaming me as an american that blaming me as an american that emboldened by this idea that emboldened by this idea that there's one word that describes an area within country. i don't think it's that shocking. i think we grew offices, british people doing the same . they call it holland the same. they call it holland now . nevertheless, they do never now. nevertheless, they do never happened. now. nevertheless, they do never happened . tweet, tweet, whether happened. tweet, tweet, whether you've that, that's the whole country of the netherlands we respect. it's to great i want an apology. it's to. great see democracy democracy working people rising up against these authoritarian, ridiculous strictures of the eu's pity on people . there's no way the 50% people. there's no way the 50% of a euro dutch should be shut down. yeah, these are some of the most productive and efficient, well—run farms going back hundreds of years. so they really know what they're doing to them then. then to shut them down then. then they'll who knew this they'll be like, who knew this thing just get the meat thing would just get the meat from russia? like we said, with gas and. that turned gas and. look how that turned out. point. excellent, out. excellent point. excellent, excellent the mail.
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excellent point. the mail. on sunday, lewis sent a story about offensive opinions about women. and for more on this, we turn to our offensive opinion about women's schafer women's correspondent. schafer well i am i am one of those kind of people, some woman, a book that they when the women's that they said when the women's auxiliary force was founded auxiliary air force was founded in 1939, during the war or the beginning days of the war they didn't think that women could do good job because they were hysterical and it says the rf chiefs initially feared women were too gossipy and prone to hysterics for vital, both military in the second world war and book reveals and more likely cw and book reveals and more likely cry as well. yeah and of course like one of these happy happy stories and they were wrong because were amazing . women are because were amazing. women are amazing. they can do everything man can do. but the question is why year after year they do studies and they women. would you rather have a male or a female boss and ev and it's
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overwhelmingly the male bosses because women are hysterics it only shows if you had to have someone being your pilot, would you pick a woman or am i in the fighter pilot in the back? i mean . well, this is interesting mean. well, this is interesting because one of the things they say is they thought we would be gossipy and reveal secrets to despise or whatever. but apparently men reveal more more secrets because . it's easier to secrets because. it's easier to trick men through conceit or or let by their arrogance in their ego. but the thing about women crying , like ego. but the thing about women crying, like women ego. but the thing about women crying , like women definitely crying, like women definitely crying, like women definitely crying more than men . crying, like women definitely crying more than men. i'm not i'm not like i mean, any time of birth in an office like women you may cry no but won't . yeah you may cry no but won't. yeah but like but no, not just me. like women cry more easily than men. i don't think there's a controversial thing to say. and even people who start the
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hormones to become, you know, their authentic selves. see, i'm becoming more emotional and more prone to crying . so it's a real prone to crying. so it's a real thing . i'm prone to crying. so it's a real thing. i'm not i and i, ithink thing. i'm not i and i, i think i might be off. we he was she was was she was up she was in dunng was was she was up she was in during world war ii, serving in oxford . so she was hero. and you oxford. so she was hero. and you were right i, i think most women could do betterjob than me . could do betterjob than me. coming up, why a teacher was for showing a picture of a statue. why a statue? because the first a train station and might want to disable your airtag .
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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, plus up to £900 in cost of living payments.
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welcome back to headliners the sunday times. now leo and the tech firm apple revolutionised phones music and now they're helping out these stalking
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community. yes, they are. so this this is a bit the rise of the airtag stalkers and how you can stop them. so they give an example, basically , these little example, basically, these little discs that can be they record send a location to other apple devices so you can track if you put one in a suitcase or something and somebody nicked your suitcase, you can track that down. if you always want to be able to find your car keys, you can attach to one of these for one of these fobs to your car keys and. then you can always find some people always find it. but some people are that system to out are abusing that system to out where their ex—wives are. i don't know why i smiled there, but roberta apple richie do a man and some guy his estranged wife went on holiday to brazil and so he put one of these tracking devices in a spare wheel and he showing up at events just unannounced. and she was like . how is he? i couldn't was like. how is he? i couldn't find him here. then she scans. you got this app that scans your car phone this this, this airtag and now he's going to jail where
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been fined . nothing is 125 hours been fined. nothing is 125 hours of unpaid work. so doesn't see what the work is. i mean, if you enjoy your job, that's not really a punishment. luis this seems like the kind of thing where you think about doing this. i think everybody does. but have to able to afford but i have to be able to afford an it's you have to have an an and it's you have to have an iphone and it's £35 for each one of these tags. so i'm thinking, yes , worth it, really. and while yes, worth it, really. and while will bring out a £2 tag soon that you can get at end of the day, at the end of the day it's kind of thing that you can actually check for. they have this app that you can get app detector something or airtag detector something or airtag detect . you can find out what's detect. you can find out what's going on. and if they make it illegal to do, then people won't do it. it's like setting up a camera under in a in a toilet. yeah you can't really outlaw that you can outlaw it, but you can't prevent it happening. you just to make it illegal. just have to make it illegal. yeah and the thing is, like this article was very interesting because mostly men because it was just mostly men who this, which meant who were doing this, which meant either is either one or two things is they're really prejudicial
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against number two that against men or a number two that women are as technologically or or women are better at getting away with it, but it takes getting smaller and cheaper and this sort of thing hidden cameras hidden recording devices are becoming really really cheap and, easy, easy to hide. but the is also doing it all the time i mean i'm less worried about ex—girlfriends than i am about the government . well think the government. well i think what want to do is they what they want to do is they want to make sure that only the government these techniques government has these techniques and rest us don't have it. and the rest us don't have it. my and the rest us don't have it. my mother . stole my work so my own mother. stole my work so on issues she is dead . she on issues she is dead. she stalked my father and they would drive around looking for him. and then she saw walking home and tried to run him over with the car , like literally tried to the car, like literally tried to kill him and then she realised it wasn't so the male on sunday, lewis and you can find out if
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that's even a joke. that's like a true about my own family . that's even a joke. that's like a true about my own family. i mean, it wouldn't have happened if she'd have had those airtags so the mail on sunday. lewis so you can find out if a computer will replace you. according to a computer? well, yeah, it says according mail william according to daily mail william roberts interactive roberts, your job interactive tool reveals the risk you'll be be replaced by a machine. it was by ecole polytechnique . you, of by ecole polytechnique. you, of course, you could pronounce this better than i am with your superior english education federal aid. the lesson recently developed an interactive which basically like said they had a machine figure out what's going to be what jobs they were going to be what jobs they were going to lose. and they said the jobs at risk are slaughter, meatpacking pressers, tile garment and related materials , garment and related materials, and louis schafer, iv headliners could be i could be replaced . could be i could be replaced. this is good. that means all these things are going to get cheapen these things are going to get cheaper. it's going to be done by a robot. instead of a person. and robots are cheaper than the complaint list. and the cry ehhen complaint list. and the cry either. they do a better to either. and they do a better to
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do that's the main do their jobs. that's the main like , painting, like for example, painting, painting cars the inside of cars is humans did have a good job, but they weren't as good as actually it was. more money for actually it was. more money for a machine . actually it was. more money for a machine. paint actually it was. more money for a machine . paint the inside of a machine. paint the inside of a car. she's into the people who don't have jobs as long as can afford to live. this all afford to live. then this all gets sorted. repurposed in other productive areas of the economy. so everybody why so everybody, that's why we've got better standard of living got a better standard of living now when were cavemen. now than when we were cavemen. we'll have some of that. they don't get repurposed. they just put into a piece put in we can get into a piece in hour no matter joe in another hour no matter joe louis and my watch boasted it can metres underwater can work 50 metres underwater and there's finally a map that means could use it like that. well is this is the most interesting story that's the least interesting is like you know there about 10 to 24000 years ago during the late palaeolithic period, according to metro , this was a huge to the metro, this was a huge rise in water and the earth, of course, you know this where came from, do you not? i'm not that old. no, you don't. because nobody where the water comes from. but there was a sudden
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rise in water the entire world. and it just happened to come when . all the great societies when. all the great societies were writing giant floods. the mayans the and the truth is that emanuel villa comiskey emanuel villa. well i'm going to have to move on there's a map that then tells you where those are they? we go right to the end of it. the show is nearly so. let's take quick look at take another quick look at sunday's front pages. the sun ricci. i will let the victim how to punish sunday telegraph to punish yobs. sunday telegraph european may be overruled on rwanda deportations. observer tory mps ask for £10,000 a day to work for fake company the sun express rishi crime blitz to woo red wall the sunday times strip searches of children as young as eight and finally the daily says the guy who works on the chocolate chip shop swears easy to those different pages. that's all we've got for. thanks to my guests, leo kearse schaefer. guests, leo kearse and schaefer. tune and leo will
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tune in tomorrow. and leo will hosting in this seat with josh howie and scott will be howie and scott cooper will be on and remember, if on the panel. and remember, if you're 5 am. you're watching the 5 am. repeat, tuned for show is repeat, stay tuned for show is on way .
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good evening, fellow travellers. lovely to have you with me. welcome along to neil oliver live on gb news tv and on radio . it's a new start to the line—up tonight. i'll be here for one hour instead of two. but as loud said, and it's only the first time i'll quote on this evening, the flame that burns twice as bright lasts half as long. tonight i'll be joined by medical activist and holocaust survivor of to explore survivor version of to explore her motivations behind a new documentary series . we'll find documentary series. we'll find out why local communities around
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the country are concerned about technology, terror, sweeping wildlife and woodlands . and wildlife and woodlands. and we'll hear how a metal detectorist from warwickshire stumbled upon an intricate gold pendant associated with king henry iv and his first wife, catherine, of aragon. all of that and more coming up. but first, the news this evening with rae addison . thanks. now with rae addison. thanks. now here's the latest . the here's the latest. the statistics watchdog says the prime minister used incorrect figures when discussing the asylum claims backlog. the uk statistics authority has written to the government saying numbers used by rishi sunak do not reflect official stats . it's reflect official stats. it's wrong, they say, to claim the conservatives have half the number of people waiting for their asylum application to be processed when the backlog has increased by 150,000 since they took office . bus drivers in

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