Skip to main content

tv   Laurence Fox  GB News  July 28, 2023 8:00pm-9:01pm BST

8:00 pm
>>iam >> i am laurence fox. coming up, how manly should a man be.7 is how manly should a man be? is andrew tate the ideal that you mere mortals should be looking up to? or is the kinda more gentle man the true alpha of the pack then in have the courts pushed through the ulez expansion in london? surprise, surprise. but what does this mean for you at home in sheffield , newcastle and sheffield, newcastle and bradford is it coming to a city near you? so we debate why you should be worried. plus fox on the spot is back. you send me your questions mostly annoying and i will answer them. then you ask me the inbox is open. vaiews@gbnews.com or tweet me at fox or at gb news. that's all coming up after the latest news headunes coming up after the latest news headlines with tatiana sanchez .
8:01 pm
headlines with tatiana sanchez. >> lawrence, thank you very much and good evening. this is the latest from the gb newsroom plans to move 2000 migrants to raf scampton in lincolnshire have been delayed until october. officials had indicated the first group would be begin arriving at the former airbase in august. it comes as the home office is reportedly preparing to erect marquees to accommodate 2000 people at the manston airfield in kent by the end of august . but there are warnings august. but there are warnings it could trigger legal challenges based on inhumane treatment . the ultra low treatment. the ultra low emission zone is set to be expanded in london after a high court ruled the plan is lawful. legal action was brought by five conservative led councils . it conservative led councils. it means drivers will pay a £12.50 daily fee if their vehicle doesn't meet the required emission standards . a emission standards. a spokesperson for the aa says the ruling is hugely disappointing , ruling is hugely disappointing, but it hopes london will follow other cities by adopting measures to reduce the impact on those who cannot afford it. the
8:02 pm
london mayor, sadiq khan, says there will be support the decision to expand and the ultra low emission zone was a difficult one, not one. >> i took lightly. but it's essential . next week there'll be essential. next week there'll be a massive expansion of the support we give to families, to businesses and charities. as it is , 96% of cars in inner london is, 96% of cars in inner london are compliant. nine out of ten cars in outer london are compliant. they won't pay a penny more from august 29th, but we'll see the benefits of clean air. but i'll carry on listening to what more support we can give i >> -- >> the chancellor says no decisions have been made on compensation for victims of the contaminated blood scandal. thousands of people contracted hiv and hepatitis after being contaminated by blood products in the 1970s and 80s jeff hunt told the official infected blood inquiry the injustice is being addressed . addressed. >> we told totally understand
8:03 pm
the urgency of this situation . the urgency of this situation. >> mean, you know, we recognise the fact that as i think i wrote in a letter before i was chancellor, that one person is dying approximately every four days and there is a need for justice to be as quick as possible for what has been a terrible scandal . terrible scandal. >> a 14 year old boy has been arrested following a hit and run in walsall. a seven year old girl was taken to hospital in a critical condition . she later critical condition. she later died of her injuries. critical condition. she later died of her injuries . police say died of her injuries. police say the incident happened shortly after 7:00 yesterday evening . after 7:00 yesterday evening. they're now looking for a blue and black motorcycle. the teenager remains in custody and finally , natwest has appointed a finally, natwest has appointed a law firm to conduct an independent review following the closure of nigel farage's bank account. it comes as the banking group announces profits of £3.6 billion for the first half of the year. both the group ceo, dame alison rose and coutts boss
8:04 pm
peter flavel resigned this week . you're up to date on gb news. .you're up to date on gb news. now it's back to lawrence . now it's back to lawrence. >> there is a theatrical device often used to keep an audience gnpped often used to keep an audience gripped to a play. they're watching. it's called the dread fear of some malevolent force manifests itself off stage , manifests itself off stage, which throughout the play encroaches ever closer into the seemingly banal, everyday drama being played out on stage. a fire which glows behind the curtains in a scandi navian production, perhaps growing ever brighter as the drama unfolds, its encroaching and supercharging the urgency of the play supercharging the urgency of the play and the behaviour of the characters. giving each word new
8:05 pm
and possibly significant meanings as the tension and anticipation of the dread, fear off stage becoming a dread fear on stage drives characters into confessions they might otherwise have kept to themselves or actions they would never have dreamt have committing in ordinary circumstances is a confected hyperreality where circumstances shift so quickly that an unreal set of circumstances begin to play out in very real situations. circumstances begin to play out in very real situations . as in very real situations. as i know, this to be true in real life, as well. at school, lots of us toyed with the idea of joining the army, spending hours in the armoury with our regimental sergeant major and affable man with a distinguished service record who had seen action in the falklands. he used to say that you could never tell what a man was made of until he was being shot at. and those who you'd expect to run whimpering behind the nearest rock were often the ones who were the coolest, calmest and bravest
8:06 pm
under fire, and the burly men who strutted arrogantly across parade grounds and over assault courses were often the ones to be found crouched under the aforementioned rock , in tears, aforementioned rock, in tears, shaking in fear when the gunfire began. shaking in fear when the gunfire began . or as mike tyson so began. or as mike tyson so beautifully put it, everybody has a plan until they are punched in the face. perhaps it is only possible to glimpse the authentic human when the proverbial hits the fan. that is when we reveal ourselves to each other and when we get the true measure of each other in return. when a real crisis begins to unfold . i remember very , very unfold. i remember very, very well meeting a friend after his first tour in iraq, a well meeting a friend after his first tour in iraq , a hollow boy first tour in iraq, a hollow boy to the man i'd known before . he to the man i'd known before. he talked me through the final hushed words of comfort , the hushed words of comfort, the crew comforting . over ten of a crew comforting. over ten of a marsh, gave each other before
8:07 pm
radio contact . but along with radio contact. but along with their lives , was lost as they their lives, was lost as they sank. unsaveable into the mud . sank. unsaveable into the mud. real tragedies play out every day just as conflicted ones do, like the fire burning brighter behind the windows of each house as the play . as each actor of as the play. as each actor of the play completes, forcing characters to reveal the very centre of their souls. except that in these dramas, the lights come back on and everyone goes for a pint , come back on and everyone goes for a pint, and then the real ones. there is only an everlasting dark . what we everlasting dark. what we witnessed most of the time is a combination of both, but currently there is an unhealthy mingling of truth and fiction . mingling of truth and fiction. there was that new disease which swept across the world a few years ago, like many times before. some beastly pathogen reared its ugly head and started to use people to reproduce its beastliness perhaps helped on its way with a little assistance from some quacks in a lab in wuhan in the media industrial
8:08 pm
complex went into overdrive on the theatrical front. the laughable modelling from professor pantsdown swallowed hook line and sinker by even some of the smartest people i know, revealing perhaps an uncomfortable relationship with their own mortality . those early their own mortality. those early pictures from italy and the less convincing ones from china are likely to get oscars for their performances. dropping dead in the streets. apparently so some of those i'd abetted were made of those i'd abetted were made of sterner stuff. look themselves up, look themselves up in houses in masks, jetwash, everything into oblivion with hand sanitiser. everything into oblivion with hand sanitiser . well, other mika hand sanitiser. well, other mika humans in my previous estimation, rose like lions to commit unbelievers acts of bravery like walking the dog and having dinner with friends who weren't even in their bubble , weren't even in their bubble, feared a strange things to people . they call it the dread people. they call it the dread fear of death. then all of a sudden the deadly virus was gone. we don't talk about hastily removed medical treatments anymore. we don't
8:09 pm
mention inconvenient things like excess deaths . god forbid excess deaths. god forbid anybody who mentions sweden, but never fear the virus may be gone. but we have a new piece of theatre and a new dread fear of a new fire glowing behind the curtains on the stage whilst we sit here in jumpers in the pounng sit here in jumpers in the pouring rain in the sun monster breathes fire across europe also , breathes fire across europe also a , breathes fire across europe also , a blonde lady insists every day on the television that there is some truth to the fact that it is indeed a hot summer, the likes of which we have seen many times before. but after three years of cortisol driving, almost every decision we make , almost every decision we make, people are primed and they're ready for another potential apocalypse . we may have survived apocalypse. we may have survived the deadly virus, but the nearly million mile wide great ball of fire is coming for us now. and this time it means business. quick call the chinese . get them quick call the chinese. get them to crank up a coal fired power station so they can knock up a dodgy solar panel. station so they can knock up a
8:10 pm
dodgy solar panel . quick, wake dodgy solar panel. quick, wake up. those lazy congolese toddlers . we need some more rare toddlers. we need some more rare earth minerals for our four wheeled virtue wagons . and now, wheeled virtue wagons. and now, look, i'm not a huge one for polling, but one poll i did do about the so called climate emergency was very interesting indeed. emergency was very interesting indeed . and i was surprised to indeed. and i was surprised to find out that about 75% of people do believe that there is an imminent climate crisis. but here's the interesting part. also, 75% don't feel they should personally have to do anything about it . personally have to do anything about it. this personally have to do anything about it . this suggests to personally have to do anything about it. this suggests to me that in polite society, to even raise an eyebrow when someone says the end is nigh is heavily frowned upon, but that privately people know it's not an imminent emergency. and they're just saying, well , they're expected saying, well, they're expected to say they have more important things to deal with . and that is things to deal with. and that is the problem with when you suppress free speech, people tend to go along with things even if they know they're ridiculous. also reveals that ridiculous. it also reveals that if you tell a lie often enough, it becomes the truth. now the gb
8:11 pm
news stasi would like me to point out that 97% of the scientists say that there is a climate crisis. >> but i would like to remind oberleutnant von . gb news that oberleutnant von. gb news that 100% of the doomsday predictions have failed to materialise ever the climate alarmism and some might say common garden arson bngade might say common garden arson brigade are hell bent on this being the last summer, the few of us who can afford it anymore can go on holiday or every flight. >> another decimal point on the climate graph to catastrophe . climate graph to catastrophe. they don't care that we've seen wildfires before. they don't care that the vast majority of people want a cleaner and more sustainable everybody sustainable future for everybody . it will never be enough . they . it will never be enough. they won't stop the miserable sods until there is zero or summer zero fun zero relief from the mundanity of taking a well—earned break by the sea after a year of packed lunches,
8:12 pm
school runs and homework and unsatisfactory employment. a week or two to read a book and get drunk at lunch and maybe siesta it off. or swim in the sea, go snorkelling with the kids and fall over while trying to walk backwards in flippers. all with that glorious sun, boosting your vitamin d and your mood in preparation for another six months of rain and cold. you know there is a fire burning, so you must stay at home. >> protect mother earth, save lives. this time, though, we see the beginnings of another fire, not much more than an ember at the moment, but a fire in the making nonetheless. >> it is those who know that this trick has been tried before and it didn't work. i speak to people every day who said they bought the regime's rubbish over covid and they won't do so again . i hope as these flames . so i hope as these flames continue to thrust at us from continue to be thrust at us from all angles actual fire all angles and actual fire begins to take hold, one that burns strong and so brightly
8:13 pm
burns so strong and so brightly that it's those who dabble in fake flames generated by lights shouting wrong and misleading illusions who turn and run for the hills when confronted with the hills when confronted with the real thing . the flames of the real thing. the flames of our refuse all to submit to yet another mass delusion . so another mass delusion. so tonight i'm asking you is this the hottest july you've had on record? email me at gbviews@gbnews.uk or tweet me at lozza fox or at gb news. now, before we kick off with our main event , the stasi at gb news event, the stasi at gb news asked me to interview senior meteorologists from the british weather services, jim dale. >> jim good evening. you heard my monologue. is there a climate emergency ? emergency? >> i'll tell you what it is. it's a crisis. it's a crisis for you, laurence, and i'll tell you why. you've had a bad ten days, nine, ten days. first of all, you came fourth in in uxbridge. >> what's that got to do with
8:14 pm
the climate emergency? it's yes or no answer. jim a lot of people know that. >> know your views. okay so let's start with that one. no, no, let's just answer the question. >> is there a climate emergency ? >> 7- >> yeah, 7 >> yeah, there's ? >> yeah, there's a crisis. the crisis is. thank you, jim. >> good to speak. good evening. okay right. moving on. >> let me speak. >> let me speak. >> i think i was jolly fair. now that cass is saying that i wasn't jolly fair, but, you know, come on. i'm allowed an opinion. surely he's still in this world of communists. i'm allowed an opinion. right. let's get on to something more interesting than whether the climate crisis is covid and climate crisis is covid 2.0. and the biggest fake known to the next biggest fake known to mankind, is . are men mankind, which it is. are men missing something? is the burly fireman running through the flames in slow motion with a babyin flames in slow motion with a baby in arms ? so last decade are baby in arms? so last decade are a decent set of abs, abhorrent . a decent set of abs, abhorrent. do biceps make you bath ? do we
8:15 pm
do biceps make you bath? do we need more men in dresses? is masculinity as we know it on life support ? but joining me in life support? but joining me in the studio is social commentator bushra sheikh and live from new orleans is journalist nathan robinson. bush i'm going to read one of your tweets. and nathan, good evening. i'd like to get your response to it. bush retweeted if a greater number of british men were still strong and muscular and principled. i tell you, the unruly bunch of migrants coming in would be too. sh one scared had to do half the stuff they do. they get away with it because brits have become weak, fat . yes. jim, what become weak, fat. yes. jim, what do you have to say to that? nathan sorry . nathan sorry. >> i mean, i don't really know much about the situation in britain. obviously, i'm an american commentator. i take it the implication is that you want more men to fight, fight immigrants in the streets? no, i
8:16 pm
beat them up. >> let bush explain what she meant. but i was asking you if you had an instant reaction to that. you had an instant reaction to that . bush why don't you speak that. bush why don't you speak to jim ? yeah. to jim? yeah. >> hi, nathan. i feel like generally in britain we're finding that it is softer when mean softer, i mean generalised just about principles and values when it comes to religion, when it becomes when we talk about men and the way that they used to be many years ago versus men, the way that they are now, generally becoming generally we are becoming a flaky society . we do not uphold flaky society. we do not uphold values and principles that in innately are means strength. it means to anyone that comes into our country that you need to live by those principles and values or we will not put up with it . and i feel like when with it. and i feel like when you combine in men who are no longer muscular in and people that lose their values and principles, you are going to get a softer society that is susceptible . well, we've been susceptible. well, we've been taken over forjim. taken over for jim. >> what would you describe ? i
8:17 pm
>> what would you describe? i read a story from i was reading about you this afternoon , and i about you this afternoon, and i read a story that you you had an incident with what you thought was an intruder in your home and you went downstairs with your glock to deal with the problem and you found out that it was actually somebody who was looking for a different address. and it could have been an example of your masculinity going would say to going wrong. and i would say to you i would ask you you that i would ask you a question. what would you say to someone who said that if you truly believe that masculinity someone who said that if you truly b aieve that masculinity someone who said that if you truly b a ieve deal, masculinity someone who said that if you truly b a ieve deal, why:ulinity someone who said that if you truly b aieve deal, why didn't' wasn't a big deal, why didn't you missus with you send your missus down with the glock ? the glock? >> sorry, that's never happened to me. >> i think. i think your source is wrong . is wrong. >> so this. this hasn't happened to you? the glock story? no, i don't have a gun. you don't have a gun ? a gun? >> i don't have a gun on television. >> you live in america, for god's sake . god's sake. >> so, jim, what's the difference between. >> one? >> one? >> is there a difference between masculinity and femininity . masculinity and femininity. >> you're asking me ? >> you're asking me? >> you're asking me? >> i've just never found the
8:18 pm
idea of masculinity particularly meaningful. meaningful in my own life. i know a lot of people place a lot of stock in these concepts. they've just they've just never been things that have animated my personal aspirations for who i want to be. i know there are traits that are sort of associated with different sexes , but, you know, don't try sexes, but, you know, don't try and be a man. i just try and be and be a man. i just try and be a decent person for sure . a decent person for sure. >> can you just be a dick? is there a difference between men and women? masculinity and femininity? oh, absolutely. >> it's so important to define on femininity and on what femininity and masculinity is. i mean, ultimately , we you know, the end ultimately, we you know, the end goal is, is how can society operate at its best? and it's when we understand what gender roles are and what those genders do that looks like . so do and what that looks like. so there a huge space for there is a huge space for masculine ity and you know, for you to say, nathan, that you've never needed it, understand. never needed it, i understand. perhaps never needed it, perhaps you've never needed it, but you haven't. you know, but maybe you haven't. you know, really yourself to really looked at yourself to understand why might need understand why you might need it. like it's really
8:19 pm
it. i feel like it's really important that people understand that roles are defined that these roles are defined mass salinity is incredibly important , mass salinity is incredibly important, and if we lose sight of that, everything just becomes vanilla plain and everyone vanilla and plain and everyone lives like a hippie. and you know what? you know, what is it? are you just going to live how you and care about you want? and not care about what like and how it what that looks like and how it affects people? what that looks like and how it afereah, people? what that looks like and how it afereah, i people? what that looks like and how it afereah, i mean,le? what that looks like and how it afereah, i mean, ia? what that looks like and how it afereah, i mean, i try. >> yeah, i mean, i try. >>— >> yeah, i mean, i try. >> i think there are virtues, you know, i think like moral courage is a virtue sticking up for the things you believe in. i mean, believe trying to mean, i believe in in trying to oppose and i try oppose injustice. rs and i try to do in life. i'm not to do that in my life. i'm not saying just live. however you want to live, even if it hurts other people. i just don't really quite understand you really quite understand what you think ought to be that think that i ought to be that i'm not, because i'm not thinking about masculinity. >> i mean, it's not. it's not personal. it's not about you, personal. it's not about you, per se. it's more about. do you believe that men are the protectors of women? do you do you believe that men should take a stand when it comes to things like that? i think that's the example that lawrence was giving, an giving, was if you had an intruder your you
8:20 pm
intruder in your house, you would be expected that you would go family. go and defend the family. >> i certainly would defend my family. think everyone my family. i think everyone in my family. i think everyone in my family every other family would defend every other member family. member of my family. >> so let's just imagine >> okay. so let's just imagine that there's a quite a well—built man walking through the front door of your house. you want some of your property? yeah. who would you send out to defend your family and your property? first? >> would it be you or i send out ? >> well, 7- >> well, i 7_ >> well, i live. 7— >> well, i live. i ? >> well, i live. i live alone. so i would send. i would. i would speak to the person and try and dissuade them from taking my property . taking my property. >> yeah, maybe you should buy a glock, so. well, yeah , but could glock, so. well, yeah, but could probably . probably. >> well, that's not a great idea i >> -- >> no, it's lam >> no, it's not a great idea . >> no, it's not a great idea. >> no, it's not a great idea. >> because, you know, buying a gun, you're more likely to be injured with it yourself than to injured with it yourself than to injure anyone else. >> and so nathan , tell me, is >> and so nathan, tell me, is there so are you basically telling me there's absolutely no need , need for a masculine need, need for a masculine energy or a female energy?
8:21 pm
>> because obviously in america we see that the overwhelming number of gun crimes, for example , are committed by 7% of example, are committed by 7% of the population, which are young black men who commit 50% of the murders . and these happened to murders. and these happened to coincide with young men who don't have fathers around the home. 75% of them don't have fathers around the home. so surely there must be a role for men in the home in america . men in the home in america. >> well, i mean, i think everyone needs a happy and loving family. everyone needs a happy and loving family . but i think what loving family. but i think what you'll find is that children are less likely to be violent and to end up in prison if they have a happy and loving family , no happy and loving family, no matter what the gender of the people in the family is. matter what the gender of the people in the family is . you people in the family is. you know, two men, two women can raise a child . and if they raise raise a child. and if they raise them in a loving and compassionate supportive way compassionate and supportive way and teach them basic moral and they teach them basic moral principles and they are prosperous they have prosperous and they don't have to their basic to worry about their basic needs, child generally turns needs, the child generally turns out okay. >> do think there are red
8:22 pm
>> do you think there are red lines, bushra? do you think there are red lines between perhaps a male energy is best to transmit to a to a young child and then a female? do you think male and females have different roles when it comes to raising child? >> i think it's important and it's imperative that children have both of those roles. they have both of those roles. they have the masculine role and they have the masculine role and they have the masculine role and they have the one that's also feminine. therefore, i'm actually agreeance with actually not in agreeance with that. two men or two women should raising i mean, should be raising kids. i mean, that's nother that's a whole nother discussion. like there is discussion. i feel like there is an importance having in an importance of having that in in a child's life any given in a child's life at any given stage. reason why that stage. and the reason why that is, is because each gender teaches the child something different. we start just wish different. if we start just wish washing our way in society and saying that there are no rules and there no boundaries, and there are no boundaries, then is never an end to, then there is never an end to, let's say, something just let's say, something that just doesn't work . feel like when doesn't work. i feel like when people have this very blase attitude way a family attitude about the way a family unit and what that looks unit looks and what that looks like and feels like, we lose the very essence of what is good for a family. and whilst i understand what you're trying to
8:23 pm
say, nathan , and it sounds very say, nathan, and it sounds very nice it's all rainbows and nice and it's all rainbows and colours, mind the pun, colours, you know, mind the pun, but true, you know what but it's true, you know what i mean? like you've , we've got to mean? like you've, we've got to understand when something works, it works for a reason . and if we it works for a reason. and if we start to just avoid that conversation and say, you know, you can be raised by sheep, you know, fine. know, it's fine. >> could we point to >> could we, could we point to the two perhaps to , to what the two perhaps to, to what you're , nathan, as being you're saying, nathan, as being the product of white privilege or not? >> the fact white privilege . yeah. >> the fact that being a, you know, a middle class white liberal affords you some of the things that other people don't have. you know , younger men of have. you know, younger men of colour, for example, who don't have dads and don't have opportunity boys where where they can be loved in a home. >> actually, my family, you know, my own family background is that i grew up in a pretty egalitarian family without really clear, kind of clear cut like gender roles like this was, you know, my dad was the protector of my mom, you know, my mother and father treat each
8:24 pm
other as equals. they divide things according to what they prefer, and they don't always break down along of gender break down along kind of gender lines . and it worked well. and lines. and it worked well. and i had very happy upbringing and had a very happy upbringing and it's worked me. that's it's worked for me. and that's one the reasons you one of the reasons why, you know, i have female role models and male role models. i mean, i admire like rosa parks admire people like rosa parks and i don't see and helen keller and i don't see why that's not enough for a young man. i don't feel like i've needed, like, specific masculine models. my masculine role models. my political role model is bernie sanders . like, political role model is bernie sanders. like, is he masculine? well, he's a man. is he masculine to be my role masculine enough to be my role model? know, i just think model? you know, i just think that you should admire people who strong and morally who are strong and morally courageous . and have over the courageous. and i have over the course my life, it's worked course of my life, it's worked out me. you know, it out fine for me. you know, if it doesn't for people, doesn't work for other people, that's it's just that i've that's fine. it's just that i've never this need like never felt this need for like masculine role models in my life , for sure. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> you know, that's interesting because i was saying i was talking about this earlier. i feel like we've just moved into a very selfish, self—serving way of nathan because of living. and. nathan because you to yourself a lot
8:25 pm
you do refer to yourself a lot in this conversation you in this conversation when you talk yourself. me my talk about yourself. me my parents, family and i think parents, my family and i think that's what we're seeing a lot more. i think people have become selfish. they don't understand that sacrifice that they have to sacrifice stuff in their life that is greater a wider society and greater for a wider society and a community. people are more a community. 80 people are more about want to do me. i about i just want to do me. i don't what looks like. don't care what that looks like. and think that's destroying and i think that's destroying communities families. if communities and families. and if we re—establish the boundaries and those lines, i think we're going to go ahead into going to go into ahead into a much society overall. if much better society overall. if we do not do something now. and i think i get that sense from from right it's from nathan right now. it's a very self—serving that's that's completely wrong. >> i think you don't know very much about mean, i said much about me. i mean, i said very that think people very clearly that i think people have moral principles have to have moral principles and have to you know, they and they have to you know, they have to discipline themselves. and to good people. and they have to be good people. i you should be able and they have to be good people. i just you should be able and they have to be good people. i just do you should be able and they have to be good people. i just do whateverould be able and they have to be good people. i just do whatever you be able and they have to be good people. i just do whatever you want.»le to just do whatever you want. i just that, again, i speak just think that, again, i speak about myself because can only, about myself because i can only, you we only live our own you know, we only live our own lives. only really know our lives. we only really know our own experiences. i don't want to speculate too much on what other
8:26 pm
people but people need in the world, but i just never really found just have never really found i've never really understood the this case for a strong masculinity. it just seems to me to be irrelevant. i mean , just to be irrelevant. i mean, just to be irrelevant. i mean, just to all of the issues i care about and everything that i see in the world that needs doing, i just it just strikes me as so unimportant. >> it would seem to me that you have a valid case. we live in a world of the hyper individual where you know and we live in such a nihilistic world that the only thing we know is, is what we know about ourselves. and we and we find it very, very difficult to look to others and look to systemic issues that occupy our world. i'd like to thank the journalist nathan robinson. sorry for getting your name wrong, nathan. at the beginning, my autocue was wrong and bushra shaikh, who's a bit whoa, she's a bit like that. >> and she anyway , coming up >> and she anyway, coming up after the . break after the. break >> oh, i've got two tease to it.
8:27 pm
don't forget this. thanks. thanks. cast what do i. what do i. what do i do? oh, yeah, yeah . sorry. it's fox news and panel . sorry. it's fox news and panel. sorry that's cash. she's fired again . panel. sorry that's cash. she's fired again. firing her this week. she's definitely gone. see you. afternoon. three. >> that warm feeling inside from the boxt boilers. proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. of weather on. gb news. >> hello there. i'm jonathan vawter here with your latest gb news weather forecast provided by the met office. hope you're able to enjoy some of the sunnier spells we did see around today, but into the weekend there increasing chance there is the increasing chance that showers and that we see some showers and that we see some showers and that all thanks to this area that is all thanks to this area of low pressure that is pushing its in from the northwest, its way in from the northwest, those squeezing those isobars squeezing together so blustery so we'll turn quite blustery into as well. and into the weekend as well. and those that you those frontal systems that you saw swathes of saw bringing in swathes of showers thing during the showers first thing during the overnight of overnight period for parts of western into western scotland down into northern wales. also northern england and wales. also the potential another band the potential for another band pushing across southeast england, just some uncertainty regards to positioning of regards to the positioning of that but definitely some
8:28 pm
that one, but definitely some heavy pulses of rain possible. first saturday. not first thing on saturday. not going cold night all. going to be a cold night at all. actually in the actually pretty mild in the southeast, slightly fresher. southeast, but slightly fresher. further lows further towards the west. lows of around 12 to 13 c. saturday then turns into a day of sunshine and showers for the vast majority of us, particularly for northern ireland and western scotland. that's where we'll see the most frequent potential for frequent showers. potential for those heavy some those to turn heavy with some hail thunderstorms well . hail and thunderstorms as well. with those blustery winds, though, all areas, those though, across all areas, those showers will pushing through showers will be pushing through relatively so still showers will be pushing through relati\sunny so still showers will be pushing through relati\sunny spells'>o still showers will be pushing through relati\sunny spells around and in some sunny spells around and in that sunshine climbing to highs between 19 and 24 c. that main low pressure centre stays with us through sunday as well. some heavier showers for southern scotland down into northern england. focusing england. but we're then focusing our this area of our attention on this area of rain going to start rain that's going to start pushing from the pushing its way in from the south—west again. got to watch the timings of that, but the exact timings of that, but certainly could quite damp certainly could turn quite damp for england for wales, southwest england later showers into later on. further showers into the well. that's all the new week as well. that's all for bye bye. for now. bye bye. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. proud sponsors of weather on .
8:29 pm
8:30 pm
8:31 pm
8:32 pm
gb news. >> hello again. i don't feel satisfied by the end of that conversation. so i am joined by jenny trent. huge and conor tomlinson . jenny you work in tomlinson. jenny you work in behaviour? yes >> yes. >> yes. >> what was he talking about? >> what was he talking about? >> i'm not really sure what i think. he didn't want to offend anybody. i think he was intimidated by you , intimidated intimidated by you, intimidated by bushra , and he thought he by bushra, and he thought he would just sail under the radar so that . so that. >> okay, that's actually quite an interesting take. so you thought that i went i didn't feel like i went into hard. i feel like i went into hard. i feel like i read him a tweet and said, do you have a response? and he went, are you asking me about immigration ? you know, about immigration? you know, like, well, you probably never feel that you're going in too
8:33 pm
hard . hard. >> but not everyone would agree i >> -- >> oh, -_ >> oh, dear , i have a feeling >> oh, dear, i have a feeling that jenny and i may have to go for a pint after conor. >> what did you. what do you make of this man stuff? >> i think that you probably shouldn't have asked a man who dresses in that way on his opinion on masculinity. lawrence but be rude, conor yeah, just because he wears purple, the colour of the devil, it's a bit rude . i think the, the rude. i think the, the civilisation has lost the ability to have participation in rituals for men. so lots of men don't know when they can call themselves men. they're having families a lot later. fatherhood is a obvious marker of masculinity, proper fatherhood, of also men of course. and also most men don't have a proximity to danger anymore. there's a joke about how the atomic bomb has emasculated because emasculated every man because there's not much of a way to actually work our actually work out our disagreements via urgently, but also settle the disputes between ourselves and very few men now have the scouts that's become
8:34 pm
unisex gun clubs, things like this which put you in the proximity to something that is dangerous, but sure that dangerous, but make sure that you master it and learn the you can master it and learn the skills that you protect your skills that you can protect your family in the future. those things just gone. so when things have just gone. so when do we call ourselves same time? >> know, putting man in >> you know, like putting man in front dangerous stuff. we front of dangerous stuff. we dropped a load of cluster bombs on a load innocent in on a load of innocent kids in the your ukraine. the middle of your ukraine. you're going to walk over a field ploughing day and field ploughing it one day and blow legs. there's blow off their legs. there's nothing masculine that. nothing masculine about that. >> that's drone >> no, but that's all drone warfare, isn't like we've warfare, isn't it? like we've outsourced raf tornados flying. >> there a crisis in >> is there a crisis in masculinity ? do you think men masculinity? do you think men are feeling insecure about their role in the world at the moment ? >> sadly 7- >> sadly , i 7_ >> sadly , i do ? >> sadly , i do think so. and >> sadly, i do think so. and i say that as a woman with a 28 year old son and knowing a lot of the boys that he grew up with and how they're all dealing with the concept of being men , i the concept of being men, i think that it's funny because a lot of the times we use the term
8:35 pm
masculinity , and i think that masculinity, and i think that what we really need to focus on instead of i hate this, but masculinity is strength. so i live on a boat and i live. i live. yeah, i live on a narrow boat. >> dr. pouch or narrowboat narrow boat . narrow boat. >> i know when i have money, when i get my own show on gb news. cuz i'll, i'll get a dutch barge. but you know, i go out there and it weighs 27 tonnes and i have to haul it around thruster. oh well, don't use it. i don't use it. >> i do use it, i don't use it. 0h— >> i do use it, i don't use it. oh you do. >> i don't because i went to the royal yacht association. oh, sorry. sorry sorry. okay, okay. back, back. >> my bad. i'm terrible at this back. >> so strength. so in the year and a half that i've lived on it, i've learned how to hold the boat around. i live there in the winter with no heat. i now feel strong . and there was a time strong. and there was a time when i thought, ooh, this must be what it feels like to be a
8:36 pm
man. and then i realised, oh, wait , that's actually not quite wait, that's actually not quite right . and i think that we live right. and i think that we live in an age now where we need to expand . all men don't, expand. all men don't, unfortunately , we don't have unfortunately, we don't have hair on their chest anymore . all hair on their chest anymore. all women don't have the vapours . women don't have the vapours. >> oh. >> oh. >> four hairs on either nipple. >> four hairs on either nipple. >> oh, thank you very much. >> oh, thank you very much. >> ooh ooh. now i can't concentrate anyway, you know , i concentrate anyway, you know, i do think that. i do think that we are struggling, but i think that men and women need to work more on being strong . so rather more on being strong. so rather not feminine, not masculine, but strong. >> okay . >> okay. >> okay. >> right. connor, that's a good argument. no it's not. >> no, because that's unisex . >> no, because that's unisex. and most of the assumptions now. >> no, no, no, johnny, hang on. okay but strength manifest in very different ways . very different ways. >> but the unisex assumption that men and women need to work on the same things is why we're largely less attracted to each other than ever. the economy pushes us to do the same sort of jobs. it treats us as fungible
8:37 pm
because men and women can just it doesn't doesn't matter it doesn't it doesn't matter what you can what your parts are. you can just there at just sit there typing at a keyboard. and so that's made us competitors rather than complementary. we need complementary. so what we need to on the specific to do is focus on the specific gendered virtues. and with masculinity, this masculinity, i think and this has by by people better has been put by by people better than me, be a man is to than me, but to be a man is to be the dependable person of last resort. happens if resort. what happens if something breaks or there's a threat or you need something properly the most properly done? you call the most dependable in life. if dependable man in your life. if you're pallbearer, you're you're a pallbearer, if you're the to go the man that needs to go downstairs fend off a downstairs and fend off a burglar, even if just burglar, even if it's just opening a pickle jar or telling someone time, as a man someone the time, you as a man are bedrock of all the are the bedrock of all the dependent people in your in your life. are the person they life. you are the person they will fix a problem. will always go to fix a problem. >> and why it okay? >> and why is it okay? >> and why is it okay? >> agree. yes but we live in >> i agree. yes but we live in 2023. yes you go on your phone, you chinese takeaway. it you go on a chinese takeaway. it gets delivered, your plumbing breaks , you get it delivered. breaks, you get it delivered. everything's electronic. you can't go outside and mend your car. do the things my dad used to do with the lawnmower. you can't in a very innocent way, but you know, he could adjust
8:38 pm
the height of my bed and do the oil and stuff . you can't do that oil and stuff. you can't do that in a car. i open the top of my car nowadays. it's just like i don't even know what bits what. so is there. no, it's not about a non gendered world. of course you want the man to go down the stairs first, but if you're on a narrowboat and there is no man to go down the stairs first, why shouldn't a woman up and shouldn't a woman stand up and display strength? because you should hopefully pair each other. are you judging jenny then, for not. >> well, i don't know. >> well, i don't know. >> assuming you don't have someone, a male living with you on the boat? >> no. >> no. >> right. so no, jenny has to take on a different role. right. so are going to offer a value so are we going to offer a value judgement her say , well, judgement to her and say, well, you just need find man you just need to find a man then, are we going to turn then, or are we going to turn around this 20, 23 around and say in this 20, 23 imperfect world that we in, imperfect world that we live in, that we the product of that we are the product of something else ? are we to something else? are we going to turn and say strength is turn around and say strength is actually interesting actually more interesting than than masculinity ? than traditional masculinity? because that's a fairly because i think that's a fairly decent . decent argument. >> well, i don't know jenny's
8:39 pm
life circumstances, but to speak on that you on a particular point that you made. yes. technology and the technology we've created is making humanity largely obsolete. making making humanity largely ob�*verya. making making humanity largely ob�*very unisex making making humanity largely ob�*very unisex . making making humanity largely ob�*very unisex . and making making humanity largely ob�*very unisex . and mak as us very unisex. and i think as we've seen with lots of the behavioural the types behavioural policies, the types that world forum that the world economic forum types foist on us to types want to foist on us to make us sit in vr renewably powered, even be human. and powered, not even be human. and in world i don't think we're in the world i don't think we're going to get there without things collapsing properly first because to create because we're going to create tools can't use. so tools that we can't use. so we're to go back we're going to have to go back to that self sufficiency. you said we're going have to tune said we're going to have to tune our cars the cheese our own cars and the cheese chicken. >> i say something. yes, absolutely. please yes, go ahead. so one said anything about >> so no one said anything about the unisex business? i never said about at all. said anything about that at all. i i think that we i said that i think that we should be equal and that relationships work well. when people give and take. so so one day, lawrence is doing the cooking, and i'm fixing the car. then you know, but then. then the next day it's reversed . and the next day it's reversed. and that's how modern relationships that's how modern relationships that work, that's how they play
8:40 pm
out. it's not one person takes out. it's not one person takes out the trash all the time and the other one does. we're to going we're going to carry this on at some annoying woman called cass is screaming in my ear. >> apparently she's not been removed from the building yet. you be. you're watching gb you will be. you're watching gb news. and still to come, the climate doomsayers, the back and forth. should we be worried? i may mean, about may not. i mean, talk about something else. but
8:41 pm
8:42 pm
8:43 pm
yet sharm el sheikh . yet sharm el sheikh. >> welcome back. >> welcome back. >> earlier i asked you whether this is the hottest july that you remember. andrew says not in norfolk, it isn't. you need to get out there, andrew, a bit more. dino says i'm freezing woolly socks on and heating on. that's a wasteful . well, i had that's a wasteful. well, i had the heating on last night, rob says. i'm pretty sure we've had hotter ones. i'd say. winters, toby says , you've got to be toby says, you've got to be joking. i'm lucky not to be
8:44 pm
going rusty and freezing to death over here on the coast . death over here on the coast. leave russell brand alone . leave russell brand alone. anyway, welcome back. still with me in the studio is connor thompson and jenni trent hughes, guy says we have to cover ulez . guy says we have to cover ulez. sadiq has won his fight to make £12.50 from every londoner who has a non—compliant car. and in order to nick the £10.09 and give it away as a free school dinner ulez a good idea or bad idea? you les sucks the big one. >> are you allowed to say that? >> are you allowed to say that? >> i don't even give me a high 500. >> i had to get another car. did you? yeah. >> bastards. yeah. but yeah , i >> bastards. yeah. but yeah, i had to. >> i had to get another car by diesel first. >> and then you bought the diesel and then you had to get the other car. >> no, i wasn't that daft. even i knew that that was rubbish. what? >> well, i need a life guru. >> well, i need a life guru. >> and you're looking pretty good. >> well, there you go, connor. >> well, there you go, connor. >> oh, it's dreadful. this is obviously just a behavioural
8:45 pm
nudge tactic to price people out of because they of driving cars because they can't them out of cars. well can't get them out of cars. well sadiq, quite a while ago, must have been january now tweeted his climate predictions, and it was a graphic ripped from was just a graphic ripped from the economic forum's the world economic forum's website. that website. and we all know that they to own nothing. they want us to own nothing. >> on a minute. hang on a >> hang on a minute. hang on a minute. you're trying to say it's part of the world economic forum. >> now, look. yeah yeah. >> now, look. yeah yeah. >> this is a national show. >> this is a national show. >> bradford, have had the >> so, bradford, have had the clean air zone. yes >> oxford, cambridge. every where. >> birmingham. so are we trying it out in to london see what sadiq turpin can get away with in order to throw it around the country to tax you? >> not because we know we're not going give our cars. going to give away our cars. we're taxed out them. we're being taxed out of them. just getting is going to just getting in them is going to cost too much money to live. cost us too much money to live. >> and there's some >> absolutely. and there's some places. i live in places. so i live in warwickshire, but used to live warwickshire, but i used to live in bath was the in wiltshire and bath was the first place that actually had ulez and if you live in in the environs, you cannot go anywhere without a car. where i live , without a car. where i live, which is relatively the closest
8:46 pm
big place is birmingham. you can't go anywhere without a car . and the thing is that they know that they have a spy. the are you allowed to say kyrees? well, i was to going say short and curlies, but cajones works like it either way. either way . like it either way. either way. and they know that they have us where and that we where they want us and that we are to have to pay to, you are going to have to pay to, you know, to sort of go to tesco or whatever supermarket you go to. >> so that's that's actually a good point. >> connor here's a good point. you've got the giant tesco express, the tesco extra giant one. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> where there's 26 aisles of bacon and you're just like, wow, i didn't know there were so many different brands of bacon. and have they built the infrastructure in order to make it possible to tax you whether you like it or not? >> well, what they're hoping is when electric when they bring in electric cars, they're to do road cars, they're going to do road pricing. they're going tax pricing. so they're going to tax you by the back door anyway. and electric cars going to be electric cars are going to be really because of all really expensive because of all the rare earth minerals. so, the rare earth minerals. and so, so people are actually
8:47 pm
so very few people are actually going get to drive them. so going to get to drive them. so what's to happen is, as what's going to happen is, as you back earlier, you're you came back to earlier, you're going get deliveries. so going to get door deliveries. so you're reliant on you're going to be reliant on using digital currency as using your digital currency as long said long as you haven't said something a something dodgy to use a delivery service to drone, drop it to you eventually the it to you eventually in the future. just nudging future. so this is just nudging you into a de facto you basically into a de facto lockdown where get lockdown where you get everything brought your door everything brought to your door and have to interact and you don't have to interact with anyone. >> such good news. >> it's all such good news. who's thought would such who's thought it would be such good news a friday night anyway? >> because i messed up. we have to another advert break. to have another advert break. see you
8:48 pm
8:49 pm
8:50 pm
in three. welcome back to another flawless show conducted by me, lawrence fox with my. >> why are you laughing ? stop >> why are you laughing? stop laughing. sorry. oh, look , i laughing. sorry. oh, look, i asked you to put me on the spot with any question, and it's time for fox on the spot. >> i've got. i'm really looking forward to this. lynn asks, have
8:51 pm
you paid your speeding? fine. oh no . lord, forgive me for driving no. lord, forgive me for driving 24 miles an hour in a 20 zone. saint siddique of the khan for the charge for £24 know how much was it anyway ? i want to thank was it anyway? i want to thank the evening standard. journalist who let me know that i'd been fined 300 and £220, which is £55 per extra mile an hour. do you remember that old speeding advert when it went at 30, 30 miles an hour? your child has an 80% of chance of living at 40. it's an 80% chance of dying. well at nought miles an hour, everyone's got an 100% chance of dying when they're 100. anyway. victoria via twitter asks, is it possible that the banks are deliberately leaving free cash machines not working 100? you leave my office, you try and get cash out of the three cash machines nearest my office. nothing there. they're getting rid of your cash whether you like not. jemmy from like it or not. jemmy from twitter should all mps twitter asks, should all mps from political parties have from all political parties have second jobs? none of them should have second jobs. right panel,
8:52 pm
do we have any final moments that we want to offer the world? i feel this has been a very harmonious panel this evening. what would you like to offer us, jenny? is your final thoughts this evening? be kind. >> oh, don't say that . that's >> oh, don't say that. that's got a hashtag on it. >> oh, don't say that. that's got a hashtag on it . people >> oh, don't say that. that's got a hashtag on it. people in semi messages saying i want your kids dead. >> i want your ex—wife dead. that's i from people that's what i get from people with beck hiding their hashtag like, one another. they all like, love one another. they all leave trans flags outside my house. kind . what is being house. be kind. what is being kind ? kind? >> okay, let's take it somewhere else. >> strong. most of my friends are men . good shot. don't >> strong. most of my friends are men . good shot . don't say are men. good shot. don't say that word , connor. that word, connor. >> yeah. okay all right. jumping off the men one. i think we need to create more functional, meaningful roles for men in society. and if that means more sex segregated clubs male sex segregated clubs and male bonding then i think bonding areas, then i think we'll actually get along far better we take some time better if we take some time apart young men and apart to mentor young men and then together. then come back together. >> know. but when i had >> i know. but when i had a message, she used to have her
8:53 pm
own dressing room. got nothing. >> yeah, same in house. >> yeah, same in my house. >> yeah, same in my house. >> didn't get i didn't >> i didn't even get i didn't even get a separate room. >> yeah, i'm in the box >> yeah, i'm based in the box room and mum a bedroom room and my mum has a bedroom and dressing room and then and a dressing room and then everything's all the everything's all over the kitchen and living room. >> to have it. you need >> you need to have it. you need to need to have to have it. you need to have a word with her or me. i'm really happy. wherever you after you may have, you may have a new compound in your. >> feeling don't feel like >> i'm feeling don't feel like the gooseberry. >> just happening . it's >> it'sjust happening. it's natural, right? >> yeah . deal with it. >> yeah. deal with it. >> yeah. deal with it. >> serious right now. listen there's this man called mark dolan . he's handsome. he's tall dolan. he's handsome. he's tall . he moves me generally. and i want to ask him what is on your show tonight? mark >> well, i hope mrs. dolan is watching because she'll be very jealous. the bromance goes from strength to strength. we're going to talk about nigel farage, the most consequential politician of his generation , politician of his generation, the de—banking scandal
8:54 pm
surrounding farage is the tip of the woke iceberg . crazy leftist the woke iceberg. crazy leftist progressives are now running the country. these are people that even labour supporters can't stand. how do we make it stop? also unlimited net migration. 600,000. last year it's been argued that it's for the economy . is that a price worth paying or is it a brexit betrayal ? plus or is it a brexit betrayal? plus it might take at ten tv chef james martin has shouted at and sworn at his colleagues , what is sworn at his colleagues, what is it with these men behaving badly? if only they were as charming as laurence fox and me. it's a busy mark dolan tonight we're live from nine. but first, here is a bit of weather , a here is a bit of weather, a brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello there. i'm jonathan vautrey here with your latest gb news weather forecast provided by the met office hope you're
8:55 pm
able to enjoy some of the sunniest spells we did see around but into the around today, but into the weekend there is increasing weekend there is the increasing chance see some showers chance that we see some showers and thanks to this and that is all thanks to this area of low pressure that is pushing way in from the pushing its way in from the north—west. those isobars squeezing we'll squeezing together. so we'll turn into the turn quite blustery into the weekend and weekend as well. and those frontal systems you saw frontal systems that you saw bringing showers bringing in swathes of showers first thing during the overnight bringing in swathes of showers first thfor during the overnight bringing in swathes of showers first thfor partsg the overnight bringing in swathes of showers first thfor parts of he overnight bringing in swathes of showers first thfor parts of western ight period for parts of western scotland into northern scotland down into northern england wales. england and wales. also the potential band potential for another band pushing southeast potential for another band pushing just southeast potential for another band pushing just some heast potential for another band pushing just some uncertainty england, just some uncertainty in regards to the positioning of that but definitely that one, but definitely some heavy possible that one, but definitely some heavthing possible that one, but definitely some heavthing on possible that one, but definitely some heavthing on saturday. ssible that one, but definitely some heavthing on saturday. notle first thing on saturday. not going cold night at all. going to be a cold night at all. actually pretty mild in the southeast, but slightly fresher further west, lows further towards the west, lows of around 12 to 13 c saturday. then turns into a day of sunshine and showers for the vast majority of us, particularly for northern ireland western scotland. ireland and western scotland. that's where we'll see the most frequent showers for frequent showers potential for those heavy with some those to turn heavy with some hail thunderstorms well. hail and thunderstorms as well. with those blustery winds, though, all areas, those though, across all areas, those showers will pushing through showers will be pushing through relatively still relatively quickly. so still some spells around in some sunny spells around and in that climbing highs that sunshine climbing to highs between and 24 c. that main
8:56 pm
between 19 and 24 c. that main low pressure centre stays with us through sunday as well . some us through sunday as well. some heavier southern heavier showers for southern scotland into northern scotland down into northern england. we're then focusing england. but we're then focusing our area of our attention on this area of rain to going start rain that's to going start pushing its way in from the southwest watch southwest again. got to watch the timings of that, but the exact timings of that, but certainly could turn quite damp for southwest england for wales, southwest england later showers into later on. further showers into the that's all the new week as well. that's all for bye bye. for now. bye bye. >> brighter outlook with boxt >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
8:57 pm
8:58 pm
8:59 pm
gb news. >> it's 9:00 on television, on radio and online in the united kingdom and across the world. this is mark dolan tonight. in
9:00 pm
my big opinion, the decision to cancel nigel farage his bank account , that is the tip of the account, that is the tip of the woke iceberg . the radical left woke iceberg. the radical left who millions of labour supporters also can't stand, are infecting all of our major institutions. welcome to hell. plus, i'll be reacting to the news that remain supporting politics. gina miller has also had her account closed where does this end? my mark meets guest is football legend and britain's most outspoken commentator on a range of issues climate change, covid and political correctness . matt le political correctness. matt le tissier dropping some truth bombs in the studio shortly in my take at ten, my reaction to the shocking audio recording of mr nice guy, tv chef james martin yelling and swearing at his staff who do these people think they are . think they are. i'm an angel in front of and
9:01 pm
behind the scenes . ask

15 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on