tv Headliners Replay GB News July 24, 2023 5:00am-6:01am BST
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gb news. >> good evening. i'm rory smith in the newsroom. the government has sent a rapid deployment team to rhodes to support british nationals as wildfires continue to spread across greece . to spread across greece. evacuations are being described as the biggest in the country's history, as thousands of people flee homes and hotels . easyjet flee homes and hotels. easyjet will operate three flights from rhodes next week to bring british holidaymakers back to the uk. several holiday firms, including jet2 , tui and thomas including jet2, tui and thomas cook, have cancelled all flights to the island until the end of the month . labour says its party the month. labour says its party gathering this weekend has laid the groundwork for an election
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winning manifesto . a winning manifesto. a spokesperson says the final document produced by the national policy forum contains no unfunded spending commitments and will lead to the building of and will lead to the building of a better britain. but the unite union says it can't support the document due to what it described as the weakening of language around zero hour contracts report reports suggest that london's mayor sadiq khan, is now in control. that london's mayor sadiq khan, is now in control . active is now in control. active listening mode over plans to expand london's ultra low emission zone. it comes after opposition from within his own party over the policy, which was widely blamed for labour failing to win the seat of uxbridge and south ruislip at the recent by elections. it comes as conservative mp michael gove says that some net zero measures should be relaxed . the prime should be relaxed. the prime minister says the government is on course to meet its target of building 1 million homes by 2024. tomorrow the government will outline plans to provide
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critize housebuilding in inner city areas with the aim of not wanting to concrete over the countryside . it comes two weeks countryside. it comes two weeks after a cross—party panel of mps warned that tory ministers are unlikely . to deliver 300,000 new unlikely. to deliver 300,000 new homes per year after the prime minister made the target advisory rather than mandatory . advisory rather than mandatory. we use brains. president says he had hoped to start a counter—offensive against russia earlier, but lacked the necessary weapons . vladimir necessary weapons. vladimir zelenskyy told cnn the delay allowed russia time to build several lines of defence, complicating his country's ability to fight back against the invasion . his comments come the invasion. his comments come after russia pummelled the city of odesa in southern ukraine, killing at least one person and damaging scores of historical buildings . damaging scores of historical buildings. tributes continue to pourin buildings. tributes continue to pour in for the british pop singer vince hill, who has died at the age of 89. >> hey . little one, i say .
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>> hey. little one, i say. >> hey. little one, i say. >> right. >> right. >> it's version of edelweiss first heard in the sound of music reached number two in the uk charts in 1967. in a career that included 25 studio albums, he worked with some of britain's best loved musical legends. he passed away peacefully at his home in oxfordshire . online dab+ home in oxfordshire. online dab+ radio and on tunein. this is gb news. now, though, time for headliners . headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners. >> i'm your host, stephen allan, taking you through your first look at monday's papers, i'm joined by two comedians who missed songs of praise. >> to prepare for this , it's leo >> to prepare for this, it's leo kearse victor daniels . kearse and victor daniels. >> taped it. >> sorry, i taped it. >> sorry, i taped it. >> yeah . watch it i get >> oh, yeah. watch it when i get home. enjoying heatwave .7
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home. enjoying the heatwave.7 yep. not much of a yep. well, it's not much of a heatwave i feel like. yeah heatwave here, i feel like. yeah la's in june. everybody was like, , god, warm. like, oh, my god, it's warm. that climate change must that means climate change must be is it not real this month? >> no, because that's weather rather than climate, isn't it? >> sure there's about >> i'm sure there's we're about to that. to get on to that. >> have to do every >> we seem to have to do every single >> we seem to have to do every singlet's on to the front >> let's crack on to the front pages then. >> with the daily mail. >> i'm blessed. my cancer was caught quickly. is there front page? >> the times goes with tory retreat from green policies to woo voters. >> the guardian thousands forced to flee roads fire nightmare. >> the express says hell on earth i news tories warned over fiddling with green policies while road burns at and finally the daily star wait for wait for the daily star wait for wait for the green man. >> there's the pun. and those were your front pages . were your front pages. >> let's get into this then kicking off with the in—depth look into the papers, the main
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news stories of the day. let's go to the i paper. >> leo so the i has tories warned over fiddling green warned over fiddling with green policies roads burn. policies while roads burn. >> there's forest fires, >> so there's forest fires, wildfires and roads at the moment which as we've already discussed , weather not discussed, is weather and not climate . so there's no it's not climate. so there's no it's not an indication of climate change or anything getting worse. it's just, you know, if anything, it's there's too many it's because there's too many trees. got too many trees. it's because there's too many trees. to got too many trees. it's because there's too many trees. to cutt too many trees. it's because there's too many trees. to cut these nany trees. it's because there's too many trees. to cut these treestrees. it's because there's too many trees. to cut these trees down. we need to cut these trees down. then won't be able to then they won't be able to burn, burn basically know burn us. but basically know they're trying to whip up hysteria over this. they're saying amid devastating wildfires and an extreme heat wave across europe , we left wave across europe, we left europe, obviously. so don't europe, obviously. so we don't we get a chunk of that. we don't get a chunk of that. the minister the prime minister has been warned mistake to warned it would be a mistake to tone because tone down green policies because that would make a sort of what colour make lilacs? that would make a sort of what colomit'd make lilacs? that would make a sort of what colomit'd like make lilacs? that would make a sort of what colomit'd like this (e lilacs? that would make a sort of what colomit'd like this shirt. cs? yeah, it'd be like this shirt. so at the moment the prime minister is looking again at green policies because they're going to cost people a lot of money. so and also, you know, extreme weather is not really hitting britain as badly as it's hitting, you know, some other places. you know, we're going to
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if weather the if we get extreme weather in the in get extreme in the uk, we get extreme drizzle , which is just rain and, drizzle, which is just rain and, you know, if temperatures rise by 1.6 degrees, is that just means that people in scotland have to undo the top button on their coat not end their duffle coat is not the end of world britain and the of the world in britain and the green policies like switching everybody over to these heat pumps that , it pumps and stuff like that, it costs and what costs loads of money. and what are we sort of ignore with the whole fossil fuel is whole fossil fuel thing? is all our , you know, all our lifestyles, you know, all the all the great things that we have, including, know, have, including, you know, access cheap and abundant access to cheap and abundant food and clothing and transport and everything in our lives is due to the exploitation of fossil fuels . fossil fuels. >> i mean, even if we did get our energy from elsewhere, we'd still have to oil produce lubricants. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> victor, your take on this story, the is this are you worried by. i'm not worried. europe burning. >> i'm not worried about it at all. >> i feel that the tories are using this disaster to just make money because looked into it money because i looked into it some police over some more and the police over there suspect arsonists . there suspect arsonists. >> we go. but it just >> so there we go. but it just to slightly counter that , you
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to slightly counter that, you know, for balance and all the stuff we're do, if know, for balance and all the sth as we're do, if know, for balance and all the sth as an we're do, if know, for balance and all the sth as an arsonist do, if know, for balance and all the sth as an arsonist set do, if know, for balance and all the sth as an arsonist set fire do, if know, for balance and all the sth as an arsonist set fire to if you as an arsonist set fire to a tree, you burn a tree . tree, you burn a tree. >> but for it to absolutely go across all of the tinder dry forest. yeah, but that's not the arsonist didn't go around deliberately hair drying everything. >> yeah, in that country, if >> yeah, but in that country, if you fire to a tree, the you do set fire to a tree, the chances start a chances are it could start a bushfire. yeah. >> summertime. >> summertime. >> what? we're trying to say is it's not necessarily the weather that's this. so what that's caused this. so what would and this could, you know, we both have a at all we can both have a crack at all three at answering this. >> e- e would have e“ >> what would you have to see to think? yeah, is think? oh yeah, this is a climate issue. >> i'll have to see. >> seeing increased >> we're seeing increased amounts weather. amounts of extreme weather. >> you, doesn't >> so that for you, doesn't prove we seeing increased >> well, are we seeing increased amounts weather? amounts of extreme weather? i mean, stations mean, all the weather stations tend to be because we've urbanise so places, urbanise so, so many places, weather stations that used to be in a field now surrounded by in a field are now surrounded by tarmac. so obviously, that's going the going to increase the temperature measured by that weather in when weather station in the 90s when they them. weather station in the 90s when the so them. weather station in the 90s when the so if them. weather station in the 90s when the so if just1. at the >> so if we just look at the data the seeing an data from the 90s, seeing an increase does that prove temperatures, does that prove anything? if the anything? well, if the government was to do something
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where the companies have to fall back on the influence back on some of the influence that they're having on the weather, then yeah then i'll say okay, a serious issue , okay, now it's a serious issue, but going to do is but if all you're going to do is penalise public, then penalise the public, then it just money exercise. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> also, if we go back >> and also, if we go back through weather through history, has the weather , ever changed? through history, has the weather , mean, ever changed? through history, has the weather , mean, is ever changed? through history, has the weather , mean, is it ever changed? through history, has the weather , mean, is it something hanged? i mean, is it something that sometimes just happens regardless of weather? i drive my audi to swindon . my audi to swindon. >> let's have a look at the front page of the telegraph . front page of the telegraph. they've got in their front pages. something about banks. victor yes . victor yes. >> three more banks, close accounts , overviews. yeah, it's accounts, overviews. yeah, it's getting , it's getting worrying getting, it's getting worrying now. yeah i think i might have to move to north korea. they seem to have freedom over seem to have more freedom over there like, can't there. like, you can't say nothing . nothing. >> we've got a better rate of inflation as well. exactly. >> bank ? what's your >> what's your bank? what's your bank do your views? bank got to do with your views? that yeah that makes no sense. yeah >> are you worried now you've appeared on this show, very worried . worried. >> all the views that i say today just nothing is today are just jokes. nothing is serious on nationwide. please just keep my basic flexaccount alive. >> you don't want to get kicked
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out of the nationwide as well because the benefits of being a long there all they long term member there all they know you. that's how know how to trap you. that's how you . surely no one, no one you do it. surely no one, no one should think that this is a win , people you , even if the people you disagree politically don't disagree with politically don't have not have a bank account, you've not won any arguments there. >> absolutely . and you >> yeah, absolutely. and you don't next know, don't know the next you know, the managers of the bank the next managers of the bank or the next managers of the bank or the next managers of the bank or the next political might the next political regime might decide that you're the person with the incorrect political views . so, i mean, i don't know. views. so, i mean, i don't know. i just i views. so, i mean, i don't know. ijust i miss views. so, i mean, i don't know. i just i miss the when i just i miss the days when banks money. they banks just wanted money. they just wanted money. and they didn't care whether came didn't care whether that came from or russian from cocaine dealers or russian oligarch or people who voted for brexit. they just wanted the money. just, you know , be money. just, you know, be a commercial organisation, stop trying to stop to, trying to stop trying to, you know, the world in your know, mould the world in your own image because that never that also all that never works. and also all the who have bank the people who have bank accounts coots or who are accounts with coots or who are worried they've been spied worried that they've been spied on their bank and they've on by their bank and they've been discussed disparaged been discussed and disparaged and defamed by their bank, should they should ask for a get a data subject access request.
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it costs the bank loads of money to process and it can reveal all kinds of nasty things like it did for farage. >> and i think we need to expose who is running these banks because i'm starting to think it's dark. vader, james bond villains . it's dark. vader, james bond villains. mean, to villains. i mean, we need to know who is closing these accounts. yeah we'll look into that then. >> next to the guardian a >> next to the guardian with a story about spanish elections. >> leo yes. »- >> leo yes. >> so the spanish election results, they had a general election today. they pulled a snap election . that's like snap election. that's like pulling a cracker. but but basically for the first time since 1975, it looked like the i mean, they call it the hard right. i call it the sensible bell party box of lefties. yeah, yeah . it looked like they were yeah. it looked like they were going to actually, you know, get to be part of the form of parliament with the sort of centre right people's party , centre right people's party, which would be the first sort of right wing , right wing people in right wing, right wing people in government since , since general government since, since general franco was, was deposed as the
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dictator in 1975. however it looks like they're not actually getting the majority. so people's party and vox between them, they need 176 seats for a majority , it's about 98% of the majority, it's about 98% of the votes have been counted so far. they've got 169 seats. but it still means that the left don't have a majority either. so the right can either do some do some horse trading with some of the other smaller parties to see if they can form a coalition government with them or they'll government with them or they'll go election. and go to another election. and today was was an interesting day today was was an interesting day to have an election because they've extreme heat as the they've had extreme heat as the middle summer. people middle of the summer. so people are it's not are away on holiday. so it's not are away on holiday. so it's not a to have an a normal time to have an election the can did get election. so if the can did get kicked down the road, it'd be interesting to see if all those people who you know because if you can afford go on holiday you can afford to go on holiday you're probably right wing. so they vote vox. >> basically my trip spain >> so basically my trip to spain with ryanair is still on. it's still on, still safe, it's still on. >> and i think whoever whoever gets power, you're still gets into power, you're still going to able go. going to be able to go. >> telling my black >> i'm telling all my black friends in spain to move to
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croydon. are safe. >> well , safe. >> well, yeah, mean, croydon >> well, yeah, i mean, croydon and going to be like and the uk is going to be like pretty much only wing pretty much the only left wing country of country in europe. the whole of europe to right. europe is going to the right. it's glorious to see. but obviously the interests obviously in the interests of being a disingenuous grifter, which apparently that which apparently i'm told that on every day, i'm really on twitter every day, i'm really glad labour are going to glad that labour are going to get in power the uk because get in power in the uk because then fun them. then i can make fun of them. >> just so i >> yeah, just so i can understand what just at understand what you just said at the you the start that you were, you were to a return were looking forward to a return to old franco days. to the good old franco days. >> the high fertility >> yeah. with the high fertility rates and traditional values . rates and traditional values. you. no, i mean, obviously not. franco i mean, but this is the thing people, if you're even like a little bit right wing, everybody's that means you're like hitler. that means you like franco. no, they like hitler. that means you like francyou no, they like hitler. that means you like francyou know no, they like hitler. that means you like francyou know , no, they like hitler. that means you like francyou know , they're ey like hitler. that means you like francyou know , they're just just, you know, they're just rejecting of that. and rejecting some of that. and this is thing, man, like centrist is the thing, man, like centrist parties in the uk and across europe have to listen to the people . there's so many policies people. there's so many policies around net zero, around uncontrolled immigration, you know, open , open borders that know, open, open borders that just aren't popular with the people. so you know, listen to the people and then right wing
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parties won't get into power , right? >> yeah. you would think that actually listening to the people is elections are about. is what elections are about. the result, try not result, even if you try to not listen can listen to people, but you can listen to people, but you can listen people. listen to people, but you can list but people. listen to people, but you can list but far people. listen to people, but you can list but far right.ple. listen to people, but you can list but far right. i'm just >> but far right. i'm just thinking martin thinking bald heads. dr. martin can't people, thinking bald heads. dr. martin can't yeah people, surely. yeah >> so they should be like a dress code before you get to vote? yes. yeah yeah. >> because i'm saying i think there's of the most there's some of the most marginalised and we need there's some of the most m'elevate ed and we need there's some of the most m'elevate their and we need there's some of the most m'elevate their voice. nd we need to elevate their voice. >> yeah, i agree with that . and >> yeah, i agree with that. and finally, to daily star . finally, to the daily star. >> victor, this is a big one. we vote for the green man . vote for the green man. >> so basically fat people are getting penalised for crossing the they're going make the road. they're going to make the road. they're going to make the last longer . the road. they're going to make the last longer. i don't the lights last longer. i don't know how long it is. maybe 30s to an hour so that the fat people can the road. this people can cross the road. this is just ridiculous. they're just making this making things up. this is this is on on fat is discrimination on on fat people. eat their food people. let them eat their food in is discrimination on me >> this is discrimination on me as like trying as a motorist. i'm like trying to somewhere and i've got to to get somewhere and i've got to wait for somebody waddle wait for somebody to waddle across previously across the road. previously i could just, you know, nudge them as turns, my lights as soon as it turns, my lights turn green and just nudge them with catcher on the with the cattle catcher on the
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other way around. with the cattle catcher on the oth if way around. with the cattle catcher on the oth if you're ound. hit >> if you're going to hit someone, who doesn't >> if you're going to hit someo much, who doesn't >> if you're going to hit someo much, little» doesn't weigh much, do very little damage you a damage to your car, you hit a large person. >> it could be a write off. yeah but been but who really who's been sitting lights sitting at the traffic lights and measuring how long it takes for fat people cross road? >> nobody. nobody. i do it. >> nobody. me, nobody. i do it. yeah, nobody . yeah, nobody. >> well, that's it for part one. part two awaits with value added to the
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radio. >> welcome back to headliners. i'm here with a man who hates the bbc, leo curse, and a man who's got one. >> victor daniel moving on to the independent . the independent. >> leo and a low emission zone is causing a bit of a stink. so a stink . a stink. >> sadiq khan is to stand by ulez after starmer stark warning over uxbridge defeat when , say, over uxbridge defeat when, say, ulez, it's not a homophobic slur . it's the ultra low emission zone which sadiq don't want it to expand out to like the whole of basically cornwall everywhere he went, the whole universe to
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be a ulez. so he could raise money because there's a huge hole in the middle of the middle of his finances because because a lockdown is down. billions of pounds. so he needs to fill it somehow. so he's doing it by by just basically holding everybody over a barrel and charging them £12.50 to drive of anyway . where £12.50 to drive of anyway. where across the whole of london. so this lost them the vote in uxbndge this lost them the vote in uxbridge they were expected bofis uxbridge they were expected boris johnson's seat. he he stood down so was a byelection and they were expected to lose that to labour. instead the tories held on to that seat, which is actually a victory for rishi. nobody's nobody's really sort of, you know, pointing out that that's, you know, that wasn't stay with the wasn't expected to stay with the tories. huge victory for , tories. so a huge victory for, for starmer is for rishi. but keir starmer is furious about this ulez thing. so he phoned up sadiq khan and said, look, you've got to stop with this nonsense and with this ulez nonsense and sadiq khan has said, well, look , i still want that money. , i still want all that money. so i'm still doing it. so you're
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still doing it and it's going to make him hugely unpopular with londoners, but not unpopular enough because i think not enough because i think not enough of have cars. enough because i think not enoi gh of have cars. enough because i think not enoi don't have cars. enough because i think not enoi don't h nobody cars. enough because i think not enoi don't h nobody of �*s. >> i don't accuse nobody of fraud, sadiq khan's taking a fraud, but sadiq khan's taking a cut. clear. nobody cut. it's clear. yeah, nobody wants . nobody. even wants this. nobody. even cyclists have voted against this. so it's clear to me that this. so it's clear to me that this is just a money making exercise to penalise again the public. like they hate the public. it's like they hate the public. it's like they hate the public. we're voting public. yeah, we're voting people that voting for , people that we're voting for, people that we're voting for, people that we're voting for, people that don't us. yeah. people that don't like us. yeah. >> just us down, >> they're just shaking us down, just squeezing until can just squeezing us until they can feel was al feel the pips. it was like al capone . yeah. feel the pips. it was like al capthere yeah. feel the pips. it was like al capthere yeaha feel the pips. it was like al capthereyeaha news feel the pips. it was like al capthere yeaha news story >> there was a news story a couple of weeks ago about the fact councils able couple of weeks ago about the fa especially with london. >> exactly. yeah >> exactly. yeah >> imagine paying £12.50 to go. croydon. know . croydon. i know. >> and a of people in the in >> and a lot of people in the in the suburbs. that's where families live. it's not like you know the centre london where know in the centre london where you the tube everywhere know in the centre london where ycyou're the tube everywhere know in the centre london where ycyou're an the tube everywhere know in the centre london where ycyou're an oxbridge,everywhere know in the centre london where ycyou're an oxbridge, youywhere know in the centre london where ycyou're an oxbridge, you kind'e if you're an oxbridge, you kind of you've of need a car and you've probably family. so you probably got a family. so you know, drop the know, you've got to drop the kids or football
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know, you've got to drop the ki(whatever or football know, you've got to drop the ki(whatever . or football or whatever. >> you can't even go on a date now because if you're going to go on date want to go on a date yet, you want to know exactly what's going to happen because i'm paying £12.50 before we've even eaten anything. are anything. so i need to know, are we back doubling the we going back to doubling the cost of the evening? yeah >> on the dating apps, do you live in the ulez zone? >> that's not exactly £12.50 >> so that's not exactly £12.50 every day. >> yeah. on your lime bike. >> yeah. on your lime bike. >> honestly. yeah >> honestly. yeah >> to telegraph. victor and >> to the telegraph. victor and we'd better hope that global warming is real because scotland might lose its gas heaters. might soon lose its gas heaters. >> oh, this ridiculous . snp >> oh, this is ridiculous. snp plans of homes with plans to ban sale of homes with gas boilers . scottish home gas boilers. scottish home owners looking to sell may have to pay up to £10,000 for a heat pump . i don't even know what pump. i don't even know what a heat pump is yet, but who the hell has £10,000 just laying around in the house? yeah i think it it pumps heat. i kind of figured that part. okay but it's just, again, another money making exercise. i mean, you're going to have scottish people moving to croydon. i mean , you moving to croydon. i mean, you already do. >> that's why i'm here. >> that's why i'm here. >> oh, sorry. that's making sense. because was wondering >> oh, sorry. that's making sensyou'reause was wondering >> oh, sorry. that's making sensyou're here. was wondering >> oh, sorry. that's making sensyou're here. it's; wondering >> oh, sorry. that's making
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sensyou're here. it's nuts dering >> oh, sorry. that's making sensyou're here. it's nuts .ering why you're here. it's nuts. >> yeah. and so suppose the >> yeah. and so i suppose the argument is it's all about trying reduce emissions or trying to reduce emissions or something, bringing in the rule. that means you can't build new properties is one thing. i >> boilers is one thing. i suppose but idea you suppose, but the idea that you can't sell the one currently can't sell the one you currently have unless you change it so it no longer has gas boiler and no longer has a gas boiler and then put a heat pump, i then put in a heat pump, i suppose don't say suppose they don't actually say you a heat you have to put in a heat pump. >> a house >> you could just have a house with you could with no heating. yeah you could sell it then. yeah. >> rip everything but >> just rip everything out. but it's ridiculous. i mean at the moment our, our whole infrastructure runs on oil and gas and these heat pumps, they cost four times as much as a as a boiler, as a gas boiler. and, and they're not as effective . and they're not as effective. lviv you don't get like a nice hot power shower. you get this sort of drizzling greta thunberg. know, we weak thunberg. you know, we weak shower, which is not what you needin shower, which is not what you need in scotland because it gets very scotland. want need in scotland because it gets ve get scotland. want need in scotland because it gets ve get out scotland. want need in scotland because it gets ve get out of scotland. want need in scotland because it gets ve get out of the .and. want need in scotland because it gets ve get out of the cold want need in scotland because it gets ve get out of the cold and want need in scotland because it gets ve get out of the cold and jump to get out of the cold and jump in hot shower have in in a hot shower and have proper heating in your house. and so, i mean, i don't know why they just let the market they can't just let the market just replace it, replace things they can't just let the market just rep of e it, replace things they can't just let the market just rep of tryingeplace things they can't just let the market just rep of trying to ace things they can't just let the market just rep of trying to rush1ings instead of trying to rush everything through like the move
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from gas happened. you from coal to gas happened. you know, it's quite it's quite a not long winded, but it wasn't forced through like this. but the scottish government, who are sort of propped up by the by the green party so patrick harvie, the minister for green stuff in scotland , he's actually said scotland, he's actually said it's far right if you want to work in oil and gas in scotland , you're far right. this is how indoctrinate and how crazy these people are. but unfortunately in scotland you've got a sort of elective dictatorship elective elective dictatorship because, you know, because they've got independence they've got that independence flag nobody votes flag to wave and nobody votes for anything else. >> i think it did take >> i think if it did take a while for the technology to come in, better by the in, it would be better by the time have it's time we all have it. it's a great idea. it's reverse great idea. it's a reverse fridge this fridge where you get this expansion microwave no, expansion of microwave. no, no, honestly, like you live on honestly, it's like you live on the outside of the fridge , which the outside of the fridge, which is so you've a is the world. so you've got a pump takes heat from pump that takes heat from outside brings in outside and brings it in the house of sorry, house instead of sorry, nothing's £10,000. >> yeah , it shouldn't cost that >> yeah, it shouldn't cost that £10,000 fridge. >> i've already got a fridge and it didn't. well didn't cost it didn't. well it didn't cost anything it with flat.
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anything. it came with a flat. >> put fridge facing >> if you put your fridge facing outside with you living near the back why we just do back of it, why don't we just do that. save yourself ten that. you just save yourself ten grand go. that. you just save yourself ten gra maybe. go. that. you just save yourself ten gra maybe. don't go. that. you just save yourself ten gra maybe. don't try go.at home. >> the express leo. >> the express leo. >> freedom movement might >> freedom of movement might return so you don't to have return so you don't have to have ex steelworkers as au pairs. >> so the uk could open its doors to thousands of young europeans the workforce europeans to plug the workforce gaps. they've got this youth mobility scheme and the government likes it because apparently it doesn't count towards net migration figures. so these people come to the country and somehow just, you know, even though they got to live somewhere. so they've got to like, know, they're to to like, you know, they're to going use housing and use them. they are here. they are here. but according to the government spreadsheet , they're not here. spreadsheet, they're not here. they're here. they're just temporarily here. so they sign this two year thing. and yeah, people can come here. don't know. of here. i don't know. i kind of think if , if here. i don't know. i kind of think if, if it's think it's i mean, if, if it's this or just random people , this or just random people, random fighting age men coming across the channel and ripping up their passports on the way coming from, you know , failed coming from, you know, failed
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states with the horrific mediaeval ideologies . i don't mediaeval ideologies. i don't know. this sounds this sounds a lot better . so yeah, i know. this sounds this sounds a lot better. so yeah, i mean, why not? if we need if we need workers until we can train the robots up, why not this? workers until we can train the rob�*is; up, why not this? workers until we can train the rob�*is there vhy not this? workers until we can train the rob�*is there ay not this? workers until we can train the rob�*is there a class this? workers until we can train the rob�*is there a class thing s? >> is there a class thing here as i've never as well? because i've never worried get my au worried about where to get my au pair worried about where to get my au paiii didn't really know >> i didn't even really know what i'm not of what au pair means. i'm not of that strata in society, but that that strata in society, but when i look into this, i just think to myself, we've got question. >> the british workers like, don't people want to don't british people want to work anymore? it seems that we're about making work anymore? it seems that we're videos about making work anymore? it seems that we're videos . about making tiktok videos. >> did you work this morning? >> did you work this morning? >> no, but that's not the point. >> no, but that's not the point. >> i'm working now. >> i'm working now. >> yeah , but i think that's the >> yeah, but i think that's the key issue. >> like, why are british people not working? we need to start getting people into work. >> it to do pay, though, >> is it to do with pay, though, like bad like if forget about the bad bag. if i could pick stuff out of there's a certain of a field, there's a certain amount that want of a field, there's a certain am it. tl that want of a field, there's a certain am it. so that want of a field, there's a certain am it. so you that want of a field, there's a certain am it. so you pay that want of a field, there's a certain am it. so you pay met want of a field, there's a certain am it. so you pay me that want of a field, there's a certain am it. so you pay me that i'd1t for it. so you pay me that i'd do that and if i. if you do that job. and if i. if you don't pay that don't offer to pay me that i won't do the job. >> yeah. >> well, yeah. >> well, yeah. >> certainly need to >> so we certainly need to rebalance this rebalance the economy. and this is seen with, you is what we've seen with, you
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know, the know, with brexit. so the truckers, for example, get paid a lot more now because, you truckers, for example, get paid a lot rthey'rew because, you truckers, for example, get paid a lot rthey're notacause, you truckers, for example, get paid a lot rthey're not competing with know, they're not competing with truckers from the continent anymore. and, you know, that's that's really why people voted for brexit. so if you don't have this sort of unlink fitted tap of workers that you can just turn on, then the workers that are bargaining are in the uk have bargaining power and we just need to let that sort of rebalance the economy a bit because people should paid for it. should get paid more for it. >> if you're saying in >> if you're saying bring in young that young people, that means that the young the people here aren't the young people here aren't working. i think do think we might need to do another know , another brexit vote. you know, because just not because again, it's just not working and leave even further . working and leave even further. people come back into brexit. >> we need people here to have kids. the problem is, know, kids. the problem is, you know, we're demographic cliff we're facing a demographic cliff because having because people aren't having enough ? yeah. enough kids really? yeah. >> been newham? >> you've been to newham? >> you've been to newham? >> some people are having >> yeah. some people are having kids because. >> where are you going? to get an au pair from the guardian. victor it seems that for the uk government does victor it seems that for the uk goverr at ent does victor it seems that for the uk goverr at home. does victor it seems that for the uk goverrat home. yeah does victor it seems that for the uk goverrat home. yeah what does victor it seems that for the uk goverrat home. yeah what canes victor it seems that for the uk goverrat home. yeah what can i say? >> absolutely. physically knackered uk workers .
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knackered uk workers. >> i think we're on a different one. i skipped onto a different one. >> there's the one about the so hundreds of millions of pounds in uk aid returns to the treasury and vat on asylum hotel bills . so treasury and vat on asylum hotel bills. so there's this. yeah, there's this. we've got a foreign aid budget and the uk is pretty generous with our foreign aid. so we give £13 billion a yearin aid. so we give £13 billion a year in foreign aid and fortunately none of it seems to go anywhere overseas. it's all gets spent on hotels for the people coming across the channel and so then the government pockets a nice little chunk of it in the form of vat . so that's it in the form of vat. so that's actually made me feel a lot better this whole farrago better about this whole farrago with the with, you know, cross—channel migrants and the cost of the cost to the taxpayer of the hotel bills. we're getting a dividend that. dividend on that. >> what hotels they >> what what hotels are they staying shard man they're staying in the shard man they're basically . basically yeah. >> beasley because there's not enough spaces so they've got to put them and not like put them up and it's not like they can pick and choose. it's not everywhere like not like everywhere is like a travelodge a night. travelodge for £29 a night. they've take they've just got to take whatever's it's proper sometimes it's like proper stately know,
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stately homes, you know, hundreds night. hundreds of pounds a night. and yes . and even the tiktok adverts yes. and even the tiktok adverts that the people traffickers put out to encourage people to use their services to cross the channel their services to cross the channel, they say like, look at these look at amazing these look at these amazing hotels going hotels you're going to be staying british staying in. and the british taxpayer paying taxpayer is going to be paying for it. >> wetherspoons to open up >> wetherspoons needs to open up a and get of these a hotel and get some of these people this is people in there because this is ridiculous. much i had ridiculous. how much i had millions being spent. >> oh, man. yeah, it's crazy. i think it's 6 million a day. >> the uk government. >> the uk government. >> the uk government. >> the government, isn't it? the government processing the government by not processing the backlog enough then means backlog fast enough then means loads people to loads of people need to be in a hotel, which then means they pocket the off back of it. >> it's not h- h" >> it's not the fault of the government, of government, it's the fault of all wing politician government, it's the fault of all the wing politician government, it's the fault of all the humani politician government, it's the fault of all the human rights:ian government, it's the fault of all the human rights lawyers, runs the human rights lawyers, the ngos, the activists who stop the ngos, the activists who stop the doing anything the government doing anything about they're letting about it. they're letting they're basically helping the people traffickers bring people across the channel. and we're talking thousands tens talking thousands, tens of thousands i think it thousands every year. i think it was 45,000 last year. and so, i mean, that's a huge cost to to the the taxpayer. but it's also hugely dangerous for them. we see people dying , you know,
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see people dying, you know, drowning the channel and also drowning in the channel and also in the mediterranean when they're they're setting off they're when they're setting off in confused. they're when they're setting off in ever confused. they're when they're setting off in ever brexit, confused. they're when they're setting off in ever brexit, thereised. >> ever since brexit, there seems more foreigners seems to be more foreigners coming having coming into the countries having hotels. mean, the taxpayers hotels. i mean, do the taxpayers get a little refund here? >> well, yeah. >> well, yeah. >> i mean, this is the story, isn't comes back isn't it? the vat comes back into exchequer suppose isn't it? the vat comes back intotax exchequer suppose isn't it? the vat comes back intotax paid|equer suppose isn't it? the vat comes back intotax paid byuer suppose isn't it? the vat comes back intotax paid by the suppose isn't it? the vat comes back intotax paid by the peoplelppose isn't it? the vat comes back intotax paid by the people who ;e the tax paid by the people who own that's even own the hotels. that's not even been but i guess we been mentioned. but i guess we get kickback that. get a kickback from that. yeah someone's money someone's there's a money laundering and a laundering thing and we get a cheap car wash as well. laundering thing and we get a cheyeah.' wash as well. laundering thing and we get a cheyeah. from| as well. laundering thing and we get a cheyeah. from the well. laundering thing and we get a cheyeah. from the people for >> yeah. from the people for £100 you can put these people up in a box junction. >> the guardian. leo with a woman who says that her job has gotten harder in the last two decades nothing do decades and it's nothing to do with 20 decades and it's nothing to do with older. 20 years older. >> so this is a teacher called karen wilson, who started work as a secondary school teacher, almost 40 years ago and found she had of energy for she had plenty of energy for life outside of school. she loved in choirs loved singing in choirs and opera enjoyed opera groups and enjoyed her evenings as now she is tired evenings as and now she is tired and has had to go part time because she says the work is more draining now. but yeah, like you say, i mean , yeah,
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like you say, i mean, yeah, you're young then you had loads of energy. i mean, when i was 20, i was, you know, i didn't need to sleep. could, you need to sleep. i could, you know, whatever know, run around doing whatever . i barely make it . and now i can barely make it through hour on gb news. so through an hour on gb news. so yeah, they're saying apparently uk workers are having more intensive working conditions. i think it's because of pointless bureaucracy. all the sort of hr , all the diversity and inclusion training and all that sort of nonsense. it just sort of expands like insulated and foam in a cavity to wall take up all available bandwidth for companies, finances and people's time. >> and it must be tough on the teachers. i mean , before there's teachers. i mean, before there's two sexes now there's 5000. you've got to teach that to the kids. must so confusing kids. it must be so confusing and draining. i feel kids. it must be so confusing and draining . i feel sorry for and draining. i feel sorry for them. yeah, and i think we should four day a should go down to a four day a week, right? >> yeah . yeah, that's. >> yeah. yeah, that's. >> yeah. yeah, that's. >> that's what the problem is. >> that's what the problem is. >> you >> how many days a week are you doing moment? look, it's doing at the moment? look, it's not about me . not about me. >> right. that's it for part two. but coming up, we'll be talking about gary lineker because of course we will. and
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we'll be talking about trans issues because, of course we will. shortly . will. we'll see you shortly. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello and welcome to your latest weather update from the met office. i'm marco petagna. we on to unsettled weather we hold on to unsettled weather conditions across uk during conditions across the uk during the ahead. we'll the week ahead. i think we'll see rain at times and see further rain at times and feeling chilly too in the feeling quite chilly too in the brisk pressure is brisk breeze. low pressure is dominating at the moment. a fairly area of pressure fairly deep area of low pressure gradually towards gradually pulling away towards the the uk over the next the east of the uk over the next day this slow day or so. but notice this slow moving rain across a moving band of rain across a central of the uk that central slice of the uk that continues to give some heavy bursts evening . in bursts through the evening. in fact, weather warning bursts through the evening. in fa
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morning, bursts morning, some heavy bursts of rain to rain at times giving way to brighter skies from the north and northwest. but fresher air moving so as we head moving in, too. so as we head into the afternoon, most parts are becoming brighter still. a scattering , scattering of showers, particularly north particularly towards the north and and once again, and northwest and once again, fairly chilly for time of fairly chilly for the time of yeah fairly chilly for the time of year. temperatures generally fairly chilly for the time of year. terineratures generally fairly chilly for the time of year. terin eratimid generally fairly chilly for the time of year. terineratimid teensally fairly chilly for the time of year. terineratimid teens towards peaking in the mid teens towards the high down towards the the north, high down towards the south of 19 or 2020 and 68 in fahrenheit . tuesday looks set to fahrenheit. tuesday looks set to see another day of sunshine and showers. the showers quite well scattered towards the south and east of the uk, quite a few east of the uk, but quite a few packing the north packing in towards the north and northwest a chilly northwest in a fairly chilly northwest in a fairly chilly north northwesterly breeze . north to northwesterly breeze. and temperatures and once again, temperatures peaking high teens peaking in the high teens locally to 20 degrees. locally to around 20 degrees. further expected around further rain is expected around the middle the week, giving the middle of the week, giving way to sunshine and showers again . again on thursday. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather
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the daily mail, victor. >> and it's a planned terrorist attack, racial if it was done on the isle of wight . the isle of wight. >> i'm going to change daily mail to daily nonsense. here we go . check out this story. once go. check out this story. once upon a time by m15 for its plot to target isle of wight festival for terror. outrage on 90,000 people. an m15 operative have foiled a plot from islamic extremists to unleash terror at the isle of wight festival. i don't even know. isle of wight had a festival, but i do not believe the story. >> why it never happened, why mi5 >> why it never happened, why m15 haven't been working for the last. >> they work from home. they don't do nothing. >> yeah, but we've had there . >> yeah, but we've had there. we've had terror attacks in this country. had, you i country. we've had, you know, i mean, obviously london. mean, like obviously in london. there was the 77 attack. >> we've had terror >> there was we've had terror attacks. but they're saying they foiled how we foiled one in ireland. how do we how verify because how can we verify this? because the teams of people working on it, an evidence it, they'll have an evidence trail it, they'll have an evidence trai they'll all. it, they'll have an evidence traithey'll all. i mean, >> they'll have it all. i mean, they're just guys they're not just like guys sitting pub. they're not just like guys sitt they pub. they're not just like guys sitt they are pub. they're not just like guys sitt they are guys in >> they are guys sitting in the pub. exactly what they
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pub. that's exactly what they are. do know there's are. they don't do know there's are. they don't do know there's a send in m15 to a war in ukraine. send in m15 to go over there. >> but i'd say my sixth saying team a bit. >> they are over there. mi6 will be over there. >> you're working from home watching netflix. >> they don't do nothing. watching netflix. >> ihey don't do nothing. watching netflix. >> i believe.t do nothing. >> i believe. >> i believe. >> honestly, i believe that you believe >> honestly, i believe that you bel no, i believe but i do >> no, i believe this. but i do also m15 and all also believe that m15 and all government departments are inherently, inherently lazy. but government departments are inherejust, inherently lazy. but government departments are inherejust, inheknow lazy. but government departments are inherejust, inhe know , azy. but government departments are inherejust, inhe know , isis,3ut yeah, just, you know, isis, we're going to bomb this festival music festival in the isle of wight and i don't know the thing with music festivals all the people there are like glastonbury and stuff. people are open are like, oh my god, open borders . man, know, let borders. hey man, you know, let everybody in. meanwhile, they've got to got a big fence around them to stop into stop anybody getting into the festival, the ones festival, but they're the ones who open borders, who want the open borders, the ones the, you know, ones who want the, you know, islamic militants over islamic militants coming over like the like salman abedi, the manchester arena bomber was manchester arena bomber who was rescued from libya by the royal navy. yeah, i mean, isis navy. so yeah, i mean, if isis picked more deserving targets, i think people would have some sympathy for them. >> i mean, like like isis. >> i mean, like like isis. >> isis were doing these things in france where they like just
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drive truck, they drive a truck, they drive a truck people having picnic drive a truck, they drive a terhatever.3le having picnic drive a truck, they drive a terhatever.3leilike1g picnic drive a truck, they drive a terhatever.3le ilikeig got nic or whatever. it's like we got just already in the just stop oil already in the street. you know, you street. like, you know, you could public would be could public opinion would be like, well, maybe we maybe there are some upsides downsides an are some upsides downsides to an islamic caliphate as you're clearing the roads for ambulances, you believe this? ambulances, do you believe this? >> i believe it. no >> of course i believe it. no way, man. do you not believe this? >> they did nonsense. this? >> what did nonsense. this? >> what are nonsense. this? >> what are ntalkinge. this? >> what are ntalking about? there's >> there's been plots before. they've literally they've killed they've literally killed . killed people. >> they've. >> they've. >> they've. >> they've done planning >> they've done mass planning to kill to kill people. you're not going to kill people. you're not going to kill ireland . they kill people from ireland. they don't kill people from ireland. they dorit's festival on the isle >> it's a festival on the isle of wight. so people go from from >> it's a festival on the isle of iaroundso people go from from >> it's a festival on the isle of iaroundso ng ple go from from >> it's a festival on the isle of iaroundso ng toe go from from >> it's a festival on the isle of iaroundso ng to the from from >> it's a festival on the isle of iaroundso ng to the fronof'om all around to go to the isle of wight. all around to go to the isle of wigand obviously >> and obviously the isle of wight be to get to. >> and it's from a 15 year old. that's caught. >> and it's from a 15 year old. that's it caught. >> and it's from a 15 year old. that's it ? caught. >> and it's from a 15 year old. that's it ? oh, caught. >> and it's from a 15 year old. that's it? oh, yeah.it. >> was it? oh, yeah. >> was it? oh, yeah. >> 15 year old boy was thought to be setting in. to be setting up in. >> some source comes from >> some of the source comes from the seriously, >> some of the source comes from tiprodigy seriously, >> some of the source comes from tiprodigy , seriously, >> some of the source comes from tiprodigy , you seriously, >> some of the source comes from tiprodigy , you know. »usly, a prodigy, you know. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> they start young stage. >> they start young on stage. that's right on to that's the point, right on to the des lynam the telegraph, leo des lynam clearly wants to this clearly wants to join this station he's been gary station because he's been gary lineker which i believe lineker bashing, which i believe is part the interview is still part of the interview process. des lynam has told process. so des lynam has told gary lineker to stick to
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football he criticised the football as he criticised the match of the day host for his political of social media political use of social media for first time ever. political use of social media for so first time ever. political use of social media for so gary time ever. political use of social media for so gary lineker er. political use of social media for so gary lineker is obviously >> so gary lineker is obviously he's all this he's always tweeting all this like, you know, be kind all this this stuff and but also, you know some pretty know tweeting some pretty horrific and offensive stuff. he compared policy compared the government's policy on crossings to on on small boats crossings to germany. and i don't remember people risking their lives to cross in rubber dinghies to get into germany. they were trying to get out of it. >> if he were here to defend himself, which honest, himself, which let's be honest, it's is it's never going to happen, is it? defender. it? he was a terrible defender. he say nice, but he would he would say nice, but he would say he compared the use of language , not the policy. language, not the policy. >> all right. well, i interpreted it a different way. did liberally to make him look even worse. but he is a pretty terrible i mean, terrible guy because, i mean, i judge people their actions, judge people on their actions, not they because not on what they say because i'm right . and gary lineker, right wing. and gary lineker, for his virtue signalling, for all his virtue signalling, he took £1.6 million from the qatar state broadcaster while virtue signalling that, you know , qatar's got all these human rights issues and stuff. he was
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pursued by hmrc for nearly £5 million in tax. and his excuse his thing that said, look, i'm not a direct employee of the bbc because i'm a political activist . so his virtue signalling tweets were his excuse for getting off that tax bill. it's disgusting. and it's like, man , disgusting. and it's like, man, like people say, oh, laurence fox is a bad guy. laurence fox pays his tax . like whatever he pays his tax. like whatever he tweets, pays his tax. gary tweets, he pays his tax. gary lineker pay his tax . lineker should pay his tax. >> you're very passionate about this. >> e- e very passionate. this. >> i very passionate. this. >> i ve wantssionate. this. >> i ve want to mate. this. >> i ve want to saye. this. >> i vewant to saye.didn't >> i didn't want to say i didn't want your monologue, want to disturb your monologue, but what about the freedom of speech but what about the freedom of speyou know, he's free tweet >> you know, he's free to tweet as as saying this as long as he's not saying this in commentary in the middle of commentary about , the thing he's about football, the thing he's paid man can tweet paid for. surely a man can tweet whatever wants. whatever he wants. >> tweet he >> a man can tweet whatever he wants. with des wants. yeah, but i'm with des lynam. this guy is on millions of shut up. just of pounds a year. shut up. just get your money and just shut up. don't. as we. as we say, secure the bag. just make sure you get paid. go on against the politics. you just matching the date guy. no one's not interested in what you got to say. >> he does have a fair few twitter followers, though. i mean, argument no one's mean, the argument that no one's interested well, interested in it. yeah, well, we
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followed was followed him because he was doing now he's doing football and then now he's trying into politics. >> carries em" >> if he carries on, his twitter followers come followers are going to come down. unfollowed that's down. i've unfollowed that's probably going to hit him hard. >> know he's upset. the daily >> i know he's upset. the daily mail people are accusing waterstones not to waterstones of not wanting to sell books. >> i love this waterstones >> i love this one. waterstones customers accused bookshop of censorship amid claims that they can't find works from sharon davis and other gender critical feminists , including helen joyce feminists, including helen joyce , on shelves . tears came from my , on shelves. tears came from my eyes when i read that story. but seriously, though, this is so bang out of order. when are we going to start to look into this properly? you can't have a man who turns into a woman and go and compete like, i've got a little son. he wants to be a footballer, but he's not very good. so i said to him , we're good. so i said to him, we're going to change your sex. are you going to become karen mbappe? and then you can play? i mean, that's what he's doing . so mean, that's what he's doing. so it's bang out of order. so obviously women are going to speak this and another speak out about this and another thing i like this is thing what i like about this is finally movement where
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finally there's a movement where i can meet lots of women and join in with their arguments and be and attract be on their side and attract more women . more women. >> as a gender critical feminist, a gender critical feminist, as a gender critical feminist. feminist, as a gender critical fenyeah. oh, by the way, >> yeah. nice. oh, by the way, bank really a genden >> that a joke. >> that was a joke. >> that was a joke. >> i don't want no problems . >> i don't want no problems. >> i don't want no problems. >> leo in the story they did say that some people complain that the books were put the shelf the books were put on the shelf side like side on, you know, like bookstores. yeah. >> isn't that how you put books in i mean, how do they >> isn't that how you put books in upside i mean, how do they >> isn't that how you put books in upside down, n, how do they >> isn't that how you put books in upside down, like »w do they >> isn't that how you put books in upside down, like with they put upside down, like with a back facing? mean, that's one back facing? i mean, that's one of is that of the complaints is that because weren't of the complaints is that becausout weren't of the complaints is that becausout , weren't of the complaints is that becausout , they weren't of the complaints is that becausout , they were veren't of the complaints is that becausout , they were harder to see. >> i've got to see that complaining. >> what's her name? karen. by any chance? >> i've got to see it. >> when i mean, i haven't been looking books by by sharon looking for books by by sharon davies. but when douglas murray's latest the in murray's latest book, the war in the out, i went down the west, came out, i went down to i'm pretty sure it was waterstones near waterstones in like near chiswick . and chiswick or in chiswick. and i went and i couldn't went down there and i couldn't find it. and i'm like, where is this one. this book? it's like number one. it's the biggest book. it's it's like the biggest book. it's out week and they're like, out this week and they're like, they like, don't they were like, no, i don't think it. and like,
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think we've got it. and like, either out of all either they sold out of all their or they just their copies or they were just hiding it because they've all they're and, and the thing, they're all and, and the thing, they're all and, and the thing, the thing about is, while the thing about it is, while they're stalking sharon they're not stalking sharon davies book because apparently she's this massive threat to humanity, were stalking humanity, they were stalking anders breivik's manifesto this far right murderous terrorist who killed 69 people, mostly mostly teenagers in a gun attack. >> you're far right, attack. >> you're far right , though. >> you're far right, though. >> you're far right, though. >> no, i'm not far right. same team. no, no, no . team. no, no, no. >> i don't know what team is. what team ? what team? >> i'm just right wing. i'm right wing. >> i'm not. i'm not plotting any terror attack. >> no , i don't feel safe all >> no, no, i don't feel safe all of a sudden . just. of a sudden. just. >> to ruin that story like >> just to ruin that story like i do. it was more that i always do. it was more that they got data from they got the data from publishers where they get the isbn number, name of the isbn number, the name of the book, name of the book, and the name of the author. they just list them. author. and they just list them. all right. millions of all right. and it's millions of data comes across. and then data that comes across. and then if they go through and find one that's a problem, it that's a problem, they take it off and that's what they've done with you couldn't have with that. so you couldn't have bought from bought his manifesto from waterstones. it just turned up on books with
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waterstones. it just turned up on then books with waterstones. it just turned up on then where books with waterstones. it just turned up on then where did oks with waterstones. it just turned up on then where did i steve daily mail just got all our i'm joking. that's >> steve daily mail just got all ouri'm joking. that's it. >> i'm joking. that's it. >> i'm joking. that's it. >> that's the notes for the next story. the telegraph . leo >> write to the telegraph. leo and marmite and the people behind marmite have won't have done something that won't please have done something that won't ple so unilever will allow its >> so unilever will allow its thousands of russian workers to be conscripted into the ukraine war as the row deepens over their decision to keep sailing in russia . i mean, it's in russia. i mean, it's disgusting. unilever so they own brands like dove and ben and jerry's. so really sort of woke virtue signalling brands . you virtue signalling brands. you know, they pride themselves on having a social purpose. you know, dove is all fat women. it's inclusive. you know, everybody's got and the adverts is because that's, you is ugly because that's, you know, that's inclusive . know, that's that's inclusive. ben call every one ben and jerry's call every one racist and homophobic and virtue signal all the time mean while they're actually selling the working in russia. whereas most companies , most western companies, most western companies, most western companies have left russia because i mean i don't know if you know this, there's the you know this, but there's the invasion they're invasion of ukraine. they're working in russia. they say their defence is that, oh, we're selling essential food. selling everyday essential food. ben an everyday
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ben and jerry's is an everyday essential food is, you know, it's luxury ice cream for it's posh luxury ice cream for virtue hippies. so virtue signalling hippies. so yeah, i mean it's ridiculous. and they're also paying a of and they're also paying a lot of tax to fund war effort . tax to fund putin's war effort. so unilever paid £33 million worth of tax to putin last year to pay for him to slaughter ukrainian women and children. >> sounds bad when you put it like that. yeah >> are you surprised by this, though? because the brands that you list with the virtue signalling, they're the ones where value counts, where the brand value counts, like, dove friendly, oh, ice like, oh, dove friendly, oh, ice cream. surprised. cream. i'm very surprised. but unilever not a brand unilever is not a brand that anyone to about . it's anyone needs to know about. it's the background. the the one in the background. the big no soul. the one in the background. the big i no soul. the one in the background. the bigi don't no soul. the one in the background. the bigi don't know no soul. the one in the background. the bigi don't know who no soul. the one in the background. the big i don't know who unilever. >> i don't know who unilever sounds like breaking bad, but what i don't understand is marmite dove and ben and jerry's are selling while there's a war going on in russia and people are buying while there's a war going on. is this war on playstation on? i mean, these are the last things that'll be on my mind when there's a war going on is in russia. >> so the war is not in russia?
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>> so the war is not in russia? >> no, but there's a war. >> so the war is not in russia? >> i wouldn'tare's a war. >> so the war is not in russia? >> i wouldn't evena war. >> so the war is not in russia? >> i wouldn't even leave my house a house if britons are having a war be war with ukraine, i'll be worried be might be worried. i'll be mom might be the my mind . no, sir. >> you've already got marmite sir. >> ydoesn'tready got marmite sir. >> ydoesn't go dy got marmite sir. >> ydoesn't go off. |ot marmite sir. >> ydoesn't go off. useiarmite sir. >> ydoesn't go off. use the|ite sir. >> ydoesn't go off. use the one that doesn't go off. use the one that's on the. >> know. that's on the. marmite. >> disgusting. >> still disgusting. but soap, you that's it for you know. right. that's it for part but coming the part three. but coming up in the final section, the beano has gone are aliens gone woke. and are there aliens on mars? no, but let's not ruin it yet. we'll see you shortly
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welcome back to the final part of headliners. let's get straight back into it. and it turns out if you have surgery on your genitals, it can be a bit sore. >> yeah, daily nonsense. coming with the top stories today . with the top stories today. trans surgery, nightmares revealed 81% endure pain in the first five years after gender change procedures. i mean , change procedures. i mean, you're having your bits chopped off. there's going to be a little bit of pain. yeah, just a little bit of pain. yeah, just a little bit. just a tab.
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>> but this the gender little bit. just a tab. >> but isis the gender little bit. just a tab. >> but is soldthe gender little bit. just a tab. >> but is sold to gender little bit. just a tab. >> but is sold to usender little bit. just a tab. >> but is sold to us isier little bit. just a tab. >> but is sold to us is like, surgery is sold to us is like, oh, this is protecting kids and it's them safe. and it's it's making them safe. and it's like not apparently the third or left continent . 81% endure left in continent. 81% endure pain. and up to five years after the operation. so it doesn't sound that safe to me. i mean, i'd rather i'd rather just keep i'd rather i'd ratherjust keep my keep my stuff where it is . my keep my stuff where it is. >> and you are allowed to keep your stuff. it is, though. your stuff. where it is, though. >> are. >> well, this year we are. but labour in year labour are getting in next year and they're saying they and they're saying that they suck for pain during sex and two questions came to my mind which maybe i don't want to answer to. >> god, i didn't know trans >> oh god, i didn't know trans have sex. i'll be brutally honest. i didn't know. right. and my second question is with who and my third one is i don't even to know. right. even want to know. right. >> one of those isn't a question right ? right? >> well, yeah, but i just >> well, yeah, true. but i just don't want to know. >> i suppose when >> yeah. i mean, i suppose when you full article, even you read the full article, even the groups are favour well the groups are in favour of well i can't the euphemism i can't remember the euphemism that everyone is that they use, but everyone is saying is not something saying this is not something that should done children that should be done on children . is. then get into . this is. but then you get into the, into the weeds on it and
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you that taking you realise that by taking puberty blockers you actually make later, possibly make the surgery later, possibly more . yeah. because more painful. yeah. because you've developed enough skin you've not developed enough skin to into whatever the things to turn into whatever the things they turn into. yeah. >> and then you don't have enough your penis doesn't get large enough to create a vagina and, and also like. yeah girls sometimes have to have like skin taken off their arm or their leg to make a fake penis. then a lot, a lot of trans people don't go through with the surgery because i mean, there's other issues as well. >> like why? >> like why? >> well, a third because. because then. because like a third. a third of them won't have an if they go through. yeah. yeah. >> and some of them already >> and some of them are already quite >> and some of them are already qui'so they need to de—stress. >> so they need to de—stress. i think it's just as that think it's just as well that they hold of it and not they keep hold of it and not hold of it like that. but i mean just, you know, you don't know a lot about this. >> did a trans girl. okay. >> well, also this show, >> well, also on this show, three times every section we can. yeah, yeah. let's go to the daily mail. leo and the beano has woke , so i guess that has gone woke, so i guess that means to buying it. >> remaining it. remaining mostly
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>> so after remaining mostly untouched for almost seven decades, the is going woke decades, the beano is going woke the bash street kids are being joined by five new pupils. harsher man khadija mahira and stevie star in an effort to be more inclusive and illustrate the demographics of modern britain . so they're going to britain. so they're going to have hijab wearing artists and a wheelchair using scientists. and they're also getting rid of fatty and spotty. well, they're being given less pejorative names . so this has been done names. so this has been done with the help of the publishing censors who came under fire for rewriting roald dahl's books. so so i don't know if it's what the kids want , so i don't know if it's what the kids want, you so i don't know if it's what the kids want , you know, so i don't know if it's what the kids want, you know, and that's the thing. >> they do argue that they're doing that's what >> they do argue that they're doingaudience that's what >> they do argue that they're doingaudience wants, at's what >> they do argue that they're doingaudience wants, rather|at their audience wants, rather than they have to than they feel like they have to try society how to be. try and teach society how to be. i agree. try and teach society how to be. i agrimean, they're trying to >> i mean, they're trying to just trying inclusive just be trying to be inclusive of but i read of everyone. yeah, but i read one part where they said they're going a black going to have a black ghost—writer if ghost—writer i don't know if i don't if the people do don't know if the people who do beano are watching this program right do right now, but black people do not so just cancel not hunt ghosts. so just cancel that character now. it's just
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just wasting your time to the mirror. >> leo and kids in manchester were throwing eggs at police. have they seen the price of eggs these days ? these days? >> it's terrible. these days? >> so. terrible. these days? >> so hundreds schoolkids >> so hundreds of schoolkids stormed manchester and egg police in a disgraceful holiday stunt. a bit of a vickers wife headune stunt. a bit of a vickers wife headline there . so basically, headline there. so basically, yeah, i mean, the kids are going on holiday, so they're tearing up the town and chucking eggs and stuff. know , i didn't do and stuff. you know, i didn't do it was a kid, it's it when i was a kid, but it's a thing do like. my thing that kids do like. my village small it. village was too small to do it. everybody knew who you were, so you away everybody knew who you were, so you it. away everybody knew who you were, so you it. yeah. away everybody knew who you were, so you it. yeah. wow. away everybody knew who you were, so you it. yeah. wow. from nay with it. yeah. wow. from scotland , we don't really have scotland, we don't really have anything so glasgow anything religious, so glasgow just . yeah, no, we're in just seemed. yeah, no, we're in the sticks . so we did have just seemed. yeah, no, we're in the sticks. so we did have eggs with lots of eggs because there's chickens, but we didn't throw them. >> w- w— >> do you want to do a quick version telegraph version of this? the telegraph story, victor, about the fact that there's some rocks on mars? were caused by aliens? the were they caused by aliens? the story doesn't story saying no, but it doesn't write does it? write it that way, does it? >> the telegraph >> yeah, the telegraph are battling out who do the battling out for who can do the most with the most nonsense story with the daily basically they're most nonsense story with the daily alien basically they're most nonsense story with the daily alien spaceships' they're most nonsense story with the daily alien spaceships couldre saying alien spaceships could have on scientists
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have landed on mars. scientists say they cannot discount possibly that pointy objects found on the red planet are debns found on the red planet are debris from extraterrestrial vehicles . i don't know who vehicles. i don't know who smokes the most in the telegraph or daily mail, but this is ridiculous. i mean, who knows if it alien debris, it could it was alien debris, it could have been deliveroo drivers. we just know. and then i was just don't know. and then i was reading somewhere and it says reading it somewhere and it says that there's nafal that there's a doctor nafal kabul that there's a doctor nafal kabul, who works in the extraterrestrial intelligence. so it means there's a person who studies for aliens, studies for rocks, and there's a building where they where they look for auens. where they where they look for aliens. ridiculous. >> i totally agree. show's nearly over. let's take a quick look at the pages . the look at the front pages. the daily blessed with my daily mail. i'm blessed with my cancer caught quickly. cancer was caught quickly. the times tory retreat from times says tory retreat from green policies to woo voters. the guardian says thousands forced to flee roads fire nightmare express hell on earth, the news says. tories warned over fiddling with green policies while road burns. and the daily star says wait for the green man. those were your front pages. thank you to my guests.
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we'll tomorrow do it we'll be back tomorrow to do it again if you're again at 11. and if you're watching at five. again at 11. and if you're wathtuned at five. again at 11. and if you're wathtuned for at five. again at 11. and if you're wathtuned for breakfast. re. stay tuned for breakfast. >> the temperatures rising, boxt solar. proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hello and welcome to your latest weather update from the met office . i'm marco petagna. met office. i'm marco petagna. we hold to on unsettled weather conditions the during conditions across the uk during the think we'll the week ahead. i think we'll see rain at times see further rain at times and feeling too in the feeling quite chilly too in the brisk pressure is brisk breeze. low pressure is dominating at the moment. a fairly deep area of low pressure gradually towards gradually pulling away towards the east of uk over the next the east of the uk over the next day slow day or so. but notice this slow moving rain across a moving band of rain across a central the uk that central slice of the uk that continues to give some heavy bursts evening . in bursts through the evening. in fact, a weather warning fact, we have a weather warning in and that fact, we have a weather warning in then and that fact, we have a weather warning in then pushes and that fact, we have a weather warning in then pushes south nd that fact, we have a weather warning in then pushes south into 1at band then pushes south into southern parts of england and wales the wales into the early hours. the far south—east hold on to some clear spells and clearer with a few towards the north few showers towards the north and turning and northwest, but turning chilly those clear chilly under those clear spots towards north—west, towards the north—west, two temperatures figures temperatures into single figures here. as for monday , well, it's here. as for monday, well, it's a case of fairly wet conditions
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across the south. during the morning, of morning, some heavy bursts of rain giving to rain at times giving way to brighter skies from the north and northwest, but fresher air moving as we head moving in, too. so as we head into afternoon, parts into the afternoon, most parts are brighter , a still a are becoming brighter, a still a scattering showers, scattering of showers, particularly north particularly towards the north and once again, and northwest. and once again, fairly time of fairly chilly for the time of yeah fairly chilly for the time of year. temperatures generally peaking teens towards peaking in the mid teens towards the high down towards the the north, high down towards the south 19 or 2020 and 68in south of 19 or 2020 and 68in fahrenheit. tuesday looks set to see another day of sunshine and showers . the showers quite well showers. the showers quite well scattered towards the south and east of the uk, quite a few east of the uk, but quite a few packing north and packing in towards the north and northwest in a fairly chilly northwest in a fairly chilly north northwesterly breeze. north to northwesterly breeze. and again, temperatures and once again, temperatures peaking in the teens peaking in the high teens locally to around 20 degrees. further rain is expected around the giving the middle of the week, giving way to sunshine and showers again way to sunshine and showers agathe temperatures rising . a >> the temperatures rising. a boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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travel companies scramble to repatriate british families after thousands flee wildfires in roads. >> very good morning to you. at 6:00 on monday, the 24th of july. this is breakfast on gb news with eamonn holmes and isabel webster. >> leading the news this morning, the government is putting pressure on airlines to rescue families and rescue british families and roads after tens of thousands were forced to flee the wildfires that engulfed their accommodation . displaced accommodation. displaced holidaymakers described the scenes as like hell on earth. >> it comes as rishi sunak faces a split within his own party on his commitment to net zero following the conservative victory in uxbridge. seen by many as a rejection of
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