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tv   Headliners  GB News  July 30, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am BST

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year in small boats so far this year . dame pretty warns the clock is ticking for the government to implement its new illegal migration bill. we need a deterrent factor, for a start . deterrent factor, for a start. >> and removals and returns marijuana . the plan was central marijuana. the plan was central to that. the returns agreements that i put in place and others are now putting in place. we have to get planes leaving the country and show that if you come here illegally, you can't just get a free pass. being firm is actually the stance that we should take, and that means removing returning removing people and returning people to other third countries or country of origin. >> the energy and security secretary says he and his family have struggled to open accounts at major banks in the wake of the nigel farage row . grant the nigel farage row. grant shapps told the sun newspaper the problem stems from being a politico exposed person. he accused banks of going too far. it comes as mr farage launched a new website to help people who like him, have had their bank accounts forcibly closed. the gb news presenter says 1000 accounts are being shut every
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day. >> what i've learned in the three weeks since i came out, as it were, i've just been inundated by small businesses, by folk all around the country. people in absolute fear , terror people in absolute fear, terror lives being ruined . thousands of lives being ruined. thousands of businesses being closed . businesses being closed. >> and the prime minister is ordering a review into the rollout of low traffic neighbourhoods. the scheme, which has been used by councils to stop drivers cutting through residential areas, has been seen by some as an attack on motorists . in by some as an attack on motorists. in an by some as an attack on motorists . in an interview with motorists. in an interview with the sunday telegraph , rishi the sunday telegraph, rishi sunak said he supports people's right to use their cars to do all the things that matter to them . shadow international trade them. shadow international trade secretary nick thomas—symonds says the minister should says the prime minister should leave the decision to local areas. >> our position is that it is for communities to make these decisions, whether it is in terms of low traffic, neighbourhood where by the way, there are communities up and down the country who want to reduce traffic going through
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their neighbourhoods, whether it is in terms of, you know, clean air zones. we've talked obviously specifically about ulez . yes, we certainly believe ulez. yes, we certainly believe a well—planned low traffic neighbourhood is a good thing. the uk's most senior accident and emergency doctor warning is warning that inadequate government provision plans could see thousands of people die needlessly this winter . needlessly this winter. >> dr. adrian boyle, president of the royal college of emergency medicine , warns that emergency medicine, warns that plans are insufficient , allowing plans are insufficient, allowing for less than half of the beds needed to cope with the crisis. he said that less than 11,000 more staff beds should be provided at hospitals across the country . you're up to date on gb country. you're up to date on gb news now it's time for headliners . headliners. >> hello and welcome to
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headliners . headliners. >> you run through the next day's newspaper papers with three comedians. i'm one of them. i'm leo pearson. i'm joined by two people who don't them. i'm leo pearson. i'm joii'ieilo y two people who don't them. i'm leo pearson. i'm joii'ieilo callo people who don't them. i'm leo pearson. i'm joii'ieilo call each ple who don't them. i'm leo pearson. i'm joii'ieilo call each other1o don't them. i'm leo pearson. i'm joii'ieilo call each other to don't need to call each other to check. they're wearing the check. they're not wearing the same clothes. i've josh same clothes. i've got josh howie . i'm victor daniels. how same clothes. i've got josh hovyou i'm victor daniels. how same clothes. i've got josh hovyou both iictor daniels. how same clothes. i've got josh hovyou both doing?aniels. how are you both doing? >> good. yeah. we're safe. >> good. yeah. okay. we're safe. yeah, we're lucky . yeah, we're lucky. >> and you've got writing on youn >> and you've got writing on your. your shirt. >> what does that actually say? no laugh, love. no idea. live laugh, love. it was ? okay. it says was cheap, right? okay. it says that good . you smell that you smell good. you smell great, victor. love when great, victor. i love when victor's best victor's on. he's the best smelling the smelling of all of the headliners. right. well, unfortunately , we're unfortunately, we're not broadcast vision , but broadcast in smell 0 vision, but let's have a look at the front pages newspapers. pages of tomorrow's newspapers. the mail leads with £10 the daily mail leads with £10 billion boost from scrapping tourist tax. the telegraph has 50,000 extra families to face inheritance tax . it's a tax inheritance tax. it's a tax heavy line—up. the guardian has ministers seek kerbs on 20 mile an hour limits in push to woo motorists . the mirror has don't motorists. the mirror has don't let my son's death be for nothing. that's about dangerous dogs. the times leads with prime
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minister gives green light for more north sea oil drilling. and finally the daily star has summer brolly days. we've got more bad weather coming up. and those were your front pages . those were your front pages. unless of a closer look at those front pages starting with the sun. josh, just want to get one more with it's so good . more with it's so good. >> it's really good. >> it's really good. >> if you want me to help with a complaint to hr, just let me know. >> victor yeah, yeah, exactly . >> victor yeah, yeah, exactly. all right, now get a move on. rishi that's the headline there of the sun . and essentially of the sun. and essentially because they just squeaked through with that by—election in last week or the week in uxbridge, they've gone . you know uxbridge, they've gone. you know what? that's a real it's a vote winner. that's that's sort of out because it won it won the force. >> i think that's the definition. >> 154 votes. >> 154 votes. >> but it was a seat. everybody was predicting that it was definitely go to the definitely going to go to the lib whatever .
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lib dems or labour or whatever. >> i mean, the lib dems know there's politics, there's no definite in politics, but they've he sees but the point is they've he sees some of hope. the some a glimmer of hope. the skies have aligned a bit of pollution is like a let up and now they're like okay this is the angle that we're going to be pushing. things pushing. so one of the things is and what i hate them and you know what i hate them as well, low traffic neighbourhoods. i don't who neighbourhoods. i don't know who have oh, have you got one near you? oh, we have we had put near we have we had one put in near us the reason they put in us and the reason they put it in and it in and they didn't put it in to sort the traffic better sort of make the traffic better because a lot of these times they push they actually just push the traffic worse . traffic away and make it worse. they had some money the they had some money in the budget. , and budget. the local council, and they in, implemented they put it in, they implemented it try out. it just it to try it out. and it just absolutely backfired. and my sister's a business in sister's got a business in oxford and it's been totally ruined by one of these things. and it's again , if it was proven and it's again, if it was proven to work , there's an argument to work, there's an argument there. but a lot of cases it actually it doesn't. >> yeah. when you're >> yeah. but when you're bringing communism, think >> yeah. but when you're brinlast communism, think >> yeah. but when you're brinlast thingmmunism, think >> yeah. but when you're brinlast thing you1nism, think >> yeah. but when you're brinlast thing you want, think >> yeah. but when you're brinlast thing you want is think the last thing you want is actually like an evidence base for how going work out. for how it's going to work out. and victor, of things and victor, some of these things like, i mean, 20 mile an hour zones on zones that were mentioned on another another page. another another front page. i mean , i'm worried when i hit
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mean, i'm worried when i hit a 20 zone, you know, 20 mile an hour zone, you know, you've got to drive slower than 20 hour, feels so 20 miles an hour, which feels so slow. i'm worried i'm going to get crawling, slow. i'm worried i'm going to get honest crawling, slow. i'm worried i'm going to get honest with crawling, slow. i'm worried i'm going to get honest with you. crawling, to be honest with you. >> bad the >> yeah, it is bad for the drivers, i like to ride my bike. >> i like the line bike so it's 12mph for me. but what i 12mph is good for me. but what i like about this story though like about this story is though , it shows that power has , it shows that people power has some power. i mean, we really need to start using it because before he he wouldn't have said anything. now that he's seen anything. but now that he's seen that really that the public are really against this, he's using it as a political weapon . political weapon. >> the public. >> well, some of the public. but yeah, the majority >> well, some of the public. but yeaieveryone's e majority >> well, some of the public. but yeaieveryone's talking ity it. >> well, some of the public. but yaneahyone's talking ity it. >> well, some of the public. but yaneah it ne's talking ity it. >> well, some of the public. but yaneah it could alking ity it. >> well, some of the public. but yaneah it couldalkingitend it. >> well, some of the public. but yaneah it couldalkingitend of. >> yeah it could be the end of sort of authoritarian , elitist sort of authoritarian, elitist governments, you know, pushing , pushing. >> come on. i mean, in scotland there's some of the ideas, the climate ideas, green ideas that the snp pushed through because they untouchable , they think they're untouchable, they're never going to get voted out. also, i mean, out. and also, i mean, the tories and labour have been pretty indistinguishable up until recently on a lot of until quite recently on a lot of green issues. >> it's about how these policies are implemented and that is, i think, frustration that think, the frustration that a lot people is don't lot of people feel is they don't feel to. like with
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feel listened to. like with brexit and that's i think that's a danger. brexit and that's i think that's a youianger. brexit and that's i think that's a you can't'. brexit and that's i think that's a you can't implement that. >> you can't implement that. it's just too £12 drive your >> you can't implement that. it's jcar. too £12 drive your >> you can't implement that. it's jcar. welli2 drive your >> you can't implement that. it's jcar. well this drive your >> you can't implement that. it's jcar. well this is'ive your >> you can't implement that. it's jcar. well this is the your >> you can't implement that. it's jcar. well this is the thing. own car. well this is the thing. how do implement that one how do you implement that one panel how do you implement that one parwell, they have they >> well, they have looked they have central london have done it in central london and but and it has been successful. but what's the point in doing now what's the point in doing it now when going electric what's the point in doing it now when 2030, going electric what's the point in doing it now when 2030, they're ng electric what's the point in doing it now when 2030, they're phasingric and by 2030, they're phasing out, you know, they out, you know, well, they were going out petrol and going to phase out petrol and diesel. again , diesel. well, that's again, that's difference that's the difference thing. it's thing it's a chicken and the egg thing where that where they put a date like that and is to us and the idea is to push us towards then if towards that date. but then if they have they don't have the infrastructure , then does infrastructure built, then does it go indefinitely or not? it go back indefinitely or not? so they're even questioning that it go back indefinitely or not? sothe y're even questioning that it go back indefinitely or not? sothe moment questioning that at the moment. >> honest >> yeah, to be honest with you, it's going to central london. makes croydon, i mean. >> no, no, no. >> you . yeah. >> i agree with you. yeah. >> i agree with you. yeah. >> to croydon. doesn't make >> go to croydon. doesn't make sense. you there. sense. i agree with you there. absolutely >> and moving on, what, £20 to go daily meal go there. what if the daily meal got on cover? victor, i've got on the cover? victor, i've got on the cover? victor, i've got i'm just a quick one. i love >> i'm just a quick one. i love the daily mail. i'm renaming it the daily nonsense. yeah. why i split up with whams adam wrigley. just a quick one. >> andrew. >> andrew. >> oh, andrew. >> oh, andrew. >> come on, mate. be a fan . is
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>> come on, mate. be a fan. is thatis >> come on, mate. be a fan. is that is that the songs ? victor that is that the songs? victor is it? kylie it looks like. >> kylie it looks like kylie but i don't know . i don't know. >> i thought that was is that not anyway, not gwyneth paltrow but anyway, that's not gwyneth paltrow but anyway, thatmain story. that's not the the main story. that's not the big . big story. >> i know, but it's just a quick it's picture to it's a nicer picture to be another says another article that just says why the public don't care. we don't that's just wanted don't care. that's just wanted to speak yourself. did >> speak for yourself. why did you him? he's you break up with him? he's beautiful, but the main story is £10 billion boost from scrapping tourist tax. >> so basically in english, when tourists come over to england , tourists come over to england, they no longer have to pay tax on their shopping, which is totally out of order, bro. totally bang out of order, bro. >> they can buy stuff >> so they they can buy stuff here and they don't have pay. >> so they they can buy stuff hguessd they don't have pay. >> so they they can buy stuff hguess it'sey don't have pay. >> so they they can buy stuff hguess it'sey dthat have pay. >> so they they can buy stuff hguess it'sey dthat have don't(. i guess it's vat that they don't have , so. but that have to pay, so. but that doesn't . i mean, if doesn't sound fair. i mean, if some rich enough to some rich guy is rich enough to come to britain, one of most come to britain, one of the most expensive places to go on houday expensive places to go on holiday and buy stuff and then like not have to pay tax . i like not have to pay tax. i mean, he's stealing. he's stealing pay taxes other ways. >> w- w— @ point is , if it's >> but the point is, if it's going to us billion going to give us 10 billion extra. let's implement it. extra. yeah let's implement it. >> going give us the
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public. >> it's public. » n-s >> it's going to give well, it will in long will in the in the long run it'll won't. it'll go round. we won't. yeah it'll go round. we won't. yeah it course it goes. can it will. of course it goes. can we do with we do this. can we do this with other if we scrap the income >> i mean if we scrap the income tax spend more tax then i would spend more money. i would spend. >> if there was evidence there, then sure. when you look at it, i said it. i said ijust said it. >> money. >> spend more money. >> spend more money. >> you the >> yeah, but you have the evidence. this is the point is, there's come out there's a report that's come out that that, that said that if they do that, it's going to billion it's going to make 10 billion more it's going to make 10 billion mo look at ulez. don't need >> look at ulez. you don't need evidence. scrap income tax evidence. just scrap income tax and i will spend more. yeah, okay, great. >> i'm not too worried about tourist tax. i'd rather they scrapped that i pay. yeah. scrapped a tax that i pay. yeah. >> i'd rather we got >> okay. well i'd rather we got an extra billion this an extra 10 billion in this economy. take it. economy. i'll take it. >> well, i don't because >> well, i don't know, because if the government gets 10 billion, waste 10 billion, they'll just waste 10 billion. anyway, moving on. what's cover the what's on the front cover of the times, what's on the front cover of the tinyeah , so the big one is pm >> yeah, so the big one is pm gives light for more north gives green light for more north sea drilling . we've seen this sea drilling. we've seen this before. we've seen the sort of the rumours and again, this ties into the general sense that this is a vote winner , i think. and is a vote winner, i think. and but it does make sense. we have that stuff out there. why give
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this to money foreign companies? yeah make the money here. what i would say is that they could maybe look into going, hey, the profit that we're going to get from this stuff, maybe put from this stuff, maybe we'll put that renewables that into nuclear or renewables or whatever. so we know that money is actually going go money is actually going to go towards something. but long term , doesn't this affect the environment ? well, look, the environment? well, look, the sadiq know about this. sadiq khan know about this. >> yeah, they put ulez >> yeah, but they might put ulez out in the north sea. out there in the north sea. >> but as it is , you know, we >> but as it is, you know, we haven't got the infrastructure in place yet to not use gas, to not use oil. well, we might as well have it. >> and we've been dependent on autocratic, despotic , tyrannical autocratic, despotic, tyrannical states like russia, like saudi arabia. yeah, norway . don't get arabia. yeah, norway. don't get me started on norway. all that , me started on norway. all that, all that pillaging they did in my part . but, but yeah, i mean, my part. but, but yeah, i mean, we've funding i mean europe we've been funding i mean europe to a great extent has been funding putin's war. we're still yeah. scotland's got plenty of oil but you know these oil and gas but you know these green zealots convinced us that we should, should it in we should, we should leave it in the ground get oil from
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the ground and get our oil from russia, our gas from russia . and russia, our gas from russia. and that would be for europe, that would be better for europe, which absolute nonsense that would be better for europe, whicioh, absolute nonsense that would be better for europe, whicioh, wow absolute nonsense that would be better for europe, whicioh, wow . absolute nonsense now. oh, wow. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and it's surely not eco >> and also, it's surely not eco friendly to oil from saudi friendly to get oil from saudi arabia instead of getting it from a locally locally source like organic. >> yeah. yeah the farmers market support your small businesses. >> exactly . >> exactly. >> exactly. >> yeah. moving on. what's what's on the front cover of the daily star? victor daily star. >> they're with the >> they're coming with the hardness . so >> they're coming with the hardness. so i'm up early days. so basically what's happening is we're to going experience a lot of weather from other countries come into the uk. so we're going to invading this country. to see invading this country. >> is that you're saying? >> is that what you're saying? basically boats? yes, exactly what i'm >> yes, that's exactly what i'm saying. we're looking rain, snow , sun, everything. >> but we're not getting sun. we're not getting snow. but we are getting planting. we're getting rain over the getting plenty of rain over the next 5—5 of atlantic delusions going camping next week. you're going camping next week. you're going camping. oh my god. in the uk? >> yeah. next well, that's my summer holiday. yeah that's my
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only country where you can have 4—4 different weathers in one day. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> horrible. yeah. okay well, that's it for part one. coming up, we've got eight two hitting the buffers . ethical investors the buffers. ethical investors helping putin and a benefit of climate change. don't go away. we'll see you in a
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welcome back to headliners. i'm still leo kearse. this guy is still leo kearse. this guy is still josh howie. and guy still josh howie. and that guy over there is still victor daniels. into it. daniels. let's get back into it.
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kicking things off with the independentproject behind government project is behind schedule government project is behind sch> hs2 rail plans rated unachievable by official watchdog. unachievable by official watctht]. meant cost so far. it was meant to cost 33 billion. it's going to cost about far, billion. it's going to cost amean far, billion. it's going to cost amean end far, billion. it's going to cost amean end will', i mean by the end of it will cost they've i mean by the end of it will cost delayed they've i mean by the end of it will cost delayed the they've i mean by the end of it will cost delayed the second"ve already delayed the second part of it, which was birmingham to crewe of it, which was birmingham to cr still ahead, and is still going ahead, but an and but yeah if it means it's unachievable but yeah if it means it's urit:hievable but yeah if it means it's urit unachievable? but yeah if it means it's uri'd0|achievable? but yeah if it means it's uri'd0|achiemean? actually >> do they mean do they actually mean unachievable? or as it's >> do they mean do they actually me.physicallyvable? or as it's >> do they mean do they actually me.physically possible' as it's not physically possible because it sounds it sounds pretty physical. well, they they really they've physical. well, they they really the it's it's and >> it's like it's up and running. when >> it's like it's up and runsay]. when >> it's like it's up and runsay]. billion, when >> it's like it's up and runsay]. billion, that's when we say 71 billion, that's not taxpayer we say 71 billion, that's not taxpayeyeah. is. >> oh, yeah. that is. >> oh, yeah. that is. >> want some >> so now you want to see some of. 10 billion of. yeah but 10 billion of it, it's going stop just you it's going to be stop just you know, really know, everything is really expensive in this country. >> you paying tax because >> are you paying tax because you're paying of tax . you you're paying lots of tax. you pay you're paying lots of tax. you pay time open it. pay tax every time you open it. every any money, every time you spend any money, any money, move anywhere, do anything you're spending loads of this kind of tax. it's going on. this kind of tax. it's going on. this kind of thing. of tax. it's going on. this kind of tyeah. of tax. it's going on. this kind of tanyway, know what it >> anyway, and you know what it does? the journey does? it reduces the journey time from london to birmingham . time from london to birmingham. by time from london to birmingham. by 12 minutes or something like that. >> massive , massive impact. it >> massive, massive impact. it doesn't come with strippers . doesn't come with strippers. >> no, no . >> no, no, no. >> i mean, unless that's the reason for the overspend. >> josh? yes, that would be fair. and that's why a lot of the denominations .
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the money is low denominations. >> are you sure it's just going to might be london, to birmingham? might be london, birmingham, , 71 billion, birmingham, dubai, 71 billion, maybe. space >> it seems like the tories were elected in 2019, re—elected with a with a mandate to level up the north and they got they broke the red wall but instead they've done they've levelled up london with faster links and greater birmingham. they could have done , they could have done faster train links between northern towns and cities . towns and cities. >> are they just trying to do it so labour so they can get cheaper labour into london, possibly . into london, possibly. >> possibly. do to >> possibly. they do seem to like anyway, but they don't like that anyway, but they don't actually say here. >> i mean like to what level? it's unachievable. that's the only frustrating thing in the article. whatever . article. but whatever. >> back. article. but whatever. >> we back. article. but whatever. >> we all back. article. but whatever. >> we all do. back. article. but whatever. >> we all do. moving)ack. article. but whatever. >> we all do. moving on. . article. but whatever. >> we all do. moving on. we've got telegraph with a story got the telegraph with a story that idiocy of that reveals the idiocy of so—called ethical invest ing. >> victor yeah. britain's security at risk from virtue signalling banks. ministers one in english. basically, banks are looking to close down the accounts of company that deal with defence. i got that right .
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with defence. i got that right. >> no, you apparently have not got that right . no, they're not got that right. no, they're not looking off investing. >> and so because of the esg. >> and so because of the esg. >> oh, so close. so many, so many banks now, so many investment firms like vanguard, blackrock . blackrock. >> so they're bound by esg . so >> so they're bound by esg. so it's environmental, social and chinese food, don't they? so it's about as much as much good for you as that is. so, i mean, it basically means they've got to their to be virtuous in their investing. so instead of trying to be virtuous in their immake]. so instead of trying to be virtuous in their immake]. so insthey've trying to be virtuous in their immake]. so insthey've got1g to be virtuous in their immake]. so insthey've got to to make money, they've got to make place. make the world a better place. obviously, tries obviously, anytime anybody tries to make the world a better place, everybody place, it ends with everybody starving and getting shot. so they're saying , okay, to agree they're saying, okay, to agree with there's no with the bank, but there's no but the so they but this is the thing. so they haven't investing in haven't been investing in defence companies like bae systems because they make, you know, missiles and weapons and tanks and defence is a slight misnomer. but then , but then misnomer. but then, but then like so, so they're saying, you know, missiles are bad because they people up. then they blow people up. but then what invades what happens when putin invades ukraine, these ukraine, all of a sudden these missiles that previously were unethical very ethical unethical become very ethical because you're using them to defend. >> shouldn't the government be the ones making not
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the ones making missiles, not companies . companies. >> yeah, but i mean, the government , government outsources, outsources, mean . outsources, everything. i mean. yeah, but you wouldn't the yeah, but you wouldn't want the nhs its own ambulance. >> i didn't nhs. >> i didn't say nhs. >> i didn't say nhs. >> yeah, i the >> yeah, but i mean the government to, to government outsources to, to subject matter experts such as bae systems who i used to work for, funnily enough. okay, fair enough. >> so, so these companies are just making missiles on just not making missiles on their what their own accord. that's what i'm . i'm thinking. >> i they they need >> i mean, they well, they need investment . all companies need investment. all companies need investment. all companies need investment. be investment. i mean, to be honest, bae is doing honest, bae systems is doing all right. i think it's doing it's not no tomorrow not there's no tomorrow and decide . decide to make missiles. >> that's okay. >> that's okay. >> well, download a pdf >> well, if you download a pdf file that tells you how to make bombs and then and make file that tells you how to make bombs .youthen and make file that tells you how to make bombs .you might and make file that tells you how to make bombs .you might get|d make bombs, you might get into trouble. job trouble. but if you get a job with systems , then you can with bae systems, then you can probably use them personally. i'll selling them . you >> i'll be selling them. you know what they're doing . know what they're doing. >> this doesn't sound like a good legal defence anyway , the good legal defence anyway, the point ministers good legal defence anyway, the point going ministers good legal defence anyway, the point going look, ministers good legal defence anyway, the point going look, you isters good legal defence anyway, the point going look, you should good legal defence anyway, the poiinvestingg look, you should good legal defence anyway, the poiinvesting in.ook, you should good legal defence anyway, the poiinvesting in defence should be investing in defence companies because they're saving lives by building bombs. >> the gist of it. >> it. the whole it. >> the whole essence >> and the whole essence of ethical investing is ridiculous because what's because you used to say, what's ethical the because you used to say, what's ethic ethical the because you used to say, what's ethicethical thing the because you used to say, what's
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ethicethical thing for the only ethical thing for investment. so yeah. anyway, okay, moving on. we've got the times now and the government has bad news for mark zuckerberg's plan to help stay in touch. josh yeah. >> braverman fights meta encryption plans that aids. so facebook and instagram, they're going to have end to end encryption. so essentially the governments can't spy on us anymore , right? yeah. and part anymore, right? yeah. and part of that is going to be criminals will be able to communicate with each other and police can't sort of get get into that and also and it turns out a huge amount of are caught via facebook. but i think they say here 25. i had noidea i think they say here 25. i had no idea it was to that level yet of all referrals in relation to child abuse that we act on comes directly from facebook because at the moment facebook and its various different companies have to legally report any dodgy goings on. >> would it be a good idea if maybe people are children who are under 18 are not allowed to be on facebook messaging? >> yeah, yeah. but yeah yeah
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that's that's one thing. but obviously this is people also sending each other photos and various other things. and also the children are going to communicate. they are to going use get phones from communicate. they are to going use 11 get phones from communicate. they are to going use 11 12, phones from communicate. they are to going use 11 12, phorare from communicate. they are to going use 11 12, phorare going their 11 and 12, they are going to communicate with their 11 and 12, they are going to other. communicate with their 11 and 12, they are going to other. and:ommunicate with their 11 and 12, they are going to other. and it�*nmunicate with their 11 and 12, they are going to other. and it is.|unicate with their 11 and 12, they are going to other. and it is. but,3te with their 11 and 12, they are going to other. and it is. but, you vith each other. and it is. but, you know, you're to give kid know, you're going to give a kid to because know, you're going to give a kid to want because know, you're going to give a kid to want to because know, you're going to give a kid to want to in because know, you're going to give a kid to want to in contactuse know, you're going to give a kid to want to in contact with you want to keep in contact with them to school. you want to keep in contact with the and to school. you want to keep in contact with the and talking school. you want to keep in contact with the and talking aboutl. >> and you're talking about messi, about messi, i'm just talking about facebook particular, but facebook in particular, but there's stories in here about children know, children being, you know, teenagers and teenagers being blackmail and sort of groomed into into sending photographs. >> so they also say , go on. what >> so they also say, go on. what are what are the ones that are the what are the ones that telegram like ? so it's like if telegram like? so it's like if you someone saying, hey, you got someone saying, hey, let's chat telegram, let's go chat over telegram, that's a red flag. but that's a red flag. yeah, but it's . it's weird. >> yeah. encryption , i >> yeah. and also encryption, i mean, for all the government is sort fear mongering by saying sort of fear mongering by saying it criminals and all it protects criminals and all the rest of it. it also protects , you know, if you want to have the rest of it. it also protects , private w, if you want to have the rest of it. it also protects , private conversation,t to have a private conversation, you don't government see don't want the government to see perhaps i perhaps victor and i are discussing a bomb. perhaps victor and i are disc know, a bomb. perhaps victor and i are disc know, there's a bomb. perhaps victor and i are disc know, there's legitimate>mb. you know, there's legitimate reasons that you might want to might not want the government to see what you're doing. know, see what you're doing. you know, look iran. look at look at iran and iran. you don't to look at look at iran and iran. you the don't to look at look at iran and iran. you the governmentin't to look at look at iran and iran.
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you the governmentin't them 0 see the government see them arranging . arranging. >> i think is whole >> i think this is a whole i think a double bluff. think it's a double bluff. right. cracked right. i think they've cracked the end encryption the end to end encryption and they're saying, oh, we don't want doing it. we're want you stop doing it. we're going all are going to. and then all the are going to. and then all the are going to. and then all the are going to on yeah. going to go on it. yeah. and then to going get then they're to going get captured, well fingers >> all right. well fingers crossed what's to crossed that's what's going to happen. crossed that's what's going to happen . moving got happen. moving on, we've got the mail and the government is mail now and the government is stopping foreign criminals from moving this literally moving here. this is literally fascism. but if you are an overseas criminal and want to come britain , don't worry, come to britain, don't worry, labour be in soon, i'm labour will be back in soon, i'm sure. victor. >> yeah, it is a crackdown on foreign criminals uk foreign criminals getting uk citizenships comes into force tomorrow , so with time so you tomorrow, so with time so you better get get it all in tonight i'm going to throw my uncle. >> he's got about 40 minutes. >> he's got about 40 minutes. >> yeah . with tougher rules >> yeah. with tougher rules appued >> yeah. with tougher rules applied to anyone handed prison terms of over 12 months. i think it's a bit. i think that's a bit harsh . harsh. >> but what do you it'd >> but what do you think it'd be? ten years over 12 months. >> 12 months in prison? that's a substantial sentence. >> if they've been to prison for a year, it's like not
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a year, it's like they've not done nothing. >> country it >> but in another country it could be, well, this is it could be, well, this is what it does. federer could be, well, this is what it does. you federer could be, well, this is what it does. you that? the >> no, you know what? that's the thing actually thing is, it doesn't actually say believe say at all. i think i believe even though they don't lay it out, about out, they're talking about people country . but people in this country. but yeah, because, of course, if you've a foreign you've been in a foreign country, you could be a political who's been political prisoner who's been there, prison for there, sent to prison for various different reasons, like you so assuming they are you say. so assuming they are talking the uk and we have talking about the uk and we have people coming over here and then committing spending committing crimes and spending a yearin committing crimes and spending a year in prison, then yeah. and at the moment it's amazing to see actually think see that it's actually i think it's four years the moment. see that it's actually i think it's fo which s the moment. see that it's actually i think it's fo which s likee moment. see that it's actually i think it's fo which s like just»ment. see that it's actually i think it's fo which s like just get tl. see that it's actually i think it's fo which s like just get any yeah. which is like just get any anybody has been to prison for. yeah like a year. sounds reasonable. get him out of the country. why should they. yeah >> yeah yeah. a year is like i mean that's a substantial something pretty bad. you're in prison like i know people prison for like i know people who of a mobile who robbed someone of a mobile phone got years, so phone and got three years, so they shouldn't allowed in. phone and got three years, so the that's.dn't allowed in. phone and got three years, so the that's.d|bad. allowed in. phone and got three years, so thethat's.d|bad. allowedbad >> that's a bad. that's a bad thing to do. >> that's a bad. that's a bad thiri| to do. >> that's a bad. that's a bad thiri| to dcwant someone who's >> i don't want someone who's robbed if they're not a uk >> i mean, if they're not a uk citizen, why should they get a uk a country uk live in a country that is really harsh . really harsh. >> it's poor. so. >> they're rob , go
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>> well, they're going rob, go and phones another country. you go back there and try country. �*not go back there and try country. �*not and)ack there and try country. �*not and staythere and try country. �*not and stay jaile and try country. �*not and stay jail there. try and not try and stay jail there. i actually be a i think that would actually be a good thing because it i think that would actually be a go so don't feel safe on this panel. , been panel. i mean, i've been to prison . prison. >> yeah, but you're a british citizen . citizen. >> but in other countries . we're >> but in other countries. we're learning about you , victor. learning about you, victor. >> moving on, we've got the i with another benefit of climate change. a boost to the insurance industry. >> josh yeah. uk tourists to be offered extreme temperature insurance for holidays abroad as heat waves change travel habits . so this is an american based company called sensible weather, but they already provide travel insurance, weather insurance . insurance, weather insurance. but for rain, basically . so if but for rain, basically. so if you go on holiday to greece and it's raining, good luck with that. it's raining, good luck with that . you will get like half of that. you will get like half of your money back or something. that's the gist of it. >> now they're adding to prove it provide a jar of rain. it like provide a jar of rain. >> they check >> no, i think that they check out local weather. out the weather local weather. right. but now they're going to add this element to if it gets too hot, you'll also be able to
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get some. >> that. yeah. >> i agree with that. yeah. because i i've seen a lot of white go barbados and white people go to barbados and when back look white people go to barbados and whe they're back look white people go to barbados and whe they're kenya look white people go to barbados and whe they're kenya . look white people go to barbados and whe they're kenya . so ook like they're from kenya. so i totally with that. they totally agree with that. they need it. >> yeah, well , this is yeah, so >> yeah, well, this is yeah, so this is what they're going to implement. whole implement. but this whole idea that of not that people are sort of not going holiday is ridiculous. going on holiday is ridiculous. you had michael gove last week , you had michael gove last week, all people, it ? all these people, who was it? someone online was like saying, oh , this is terrible, what's oh, this is terrible, what's going literally the going on? and then literally the next day was off in spain somewhere . yeah, it's like and somewhere. yeah, it's like and also somebody being also saw somebody being interviewed in rhodes they interviewed in rhodes and they were , know, they've were, you know, where they've had devastating fires had these devastating fires caused climate change and caused by climate change and also people starting fires also people starting the fires with lighters, which there's been footage of but saw somebody being interviewed and she was in a fleece and it's like, wow, wow, be wow, it must be wow, it must be wow, it must be so over there. so hot over there. >> 47 and you're wearing so hot over there. >.fleece and you're wearing so hot over there. >.fleece . and you're wearing a fleece. >> yeah, but anyway, this is it's an interesting idea. we'll see if it takes off. we'll see if they lose money or not. >> makes sense. >> yeah, that makes sense. i mean, an optional thing. mean, it's an optional thing. it's people it's not something that people are standard are getting as know as standard . anyway, that's it for part
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two. tuned for part three two. stay tuned for part three where we'll look at the cia in scotland the end of freshers week . and kevin spacey's dodgy week. and kevin spacey's dodgy meet and greet. don't go away . meet and greet. don't go away. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello there. i'm jonathan vautrey here with your evening. news. weather updates provided by the met office as we head into a new week. we are still holding. onto the unsettled theme that's been building throughout weekend as this throughout this weekend as this area pressure. pushing area of low pressure. is pushing its way from atlantic . its way in from the atlantic. those isobars squeezing together a touch . these weather fronts as a touch. these weather fronts as well rain to well already providing rain to parts of wales, england parts of wales, southern england increasingly spreading into northern england. northern ireland heavy ireland could be heavy for a time . really breezy time. really quite breezy around coastal . gusts of 35mph coastal areas. gusts of 35mph possible. all that rain will slowly track its way up towards scotland. but the far north of scotland. but the far north of scotland staying relatively dry and clear could turn a bit and skies clear could turn a bit chilly as temperatures drop down there. but elsewhere, a rather humid and night.
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humid and muggy night. not dropping 15 or 16 c. dropping much below 15 or 16 c. there will be outbreaks of rain still across the channel islands southern coast of england. first still across the channel islands southethe oast of england. first still across the channel islands southethe windsf england. first still across the channel islands southethe winds willjland. first still across the channel islands southethe winds will slow first still across the channel islands southethe winds will slow ease thing, the winds will slow ease their way off, but stay their way off, but it will stay relatively breezy many of their way off, but it will stay releshowers aezy many of their way off, but it will stay releshowers and many of their way off, but it will stay releshowers and longerny of their way off, but it will stay releshowers and longer spells of us. showers and longer spells of rain continuing many rain continuing for many locations throughout monday . a locations throughout monday. a few brighter spells trying to poke their way through times, poke their way through at times, particularly southwest particularly perhaps southwest england into central areas of england into central areas of england and wales that will allow those temperatures to climb towards 20 or 22 c. those showers outbreaks of rain still lingering as we head into tuesday as well. some sharp ones around, wales, around, particularly for wales, southern first thing in southern england, first thing in the , some sunny the morning, again, some sunny spells trying to poke through. but merge but where those bands merge into longer of rain at times, longer spells of rain at times, it also be rather cloudy it could also be rather cloudy in places. further wet and windy weather is on the cards as weather is also on the cards as weather is also on the cards as we towards wednesday we head towards wednesday as well gales possible. enjoy well with gales possible. enjoy your evening . your evening. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> welcome back to headliners . >> welcome back to headliners. kicking off this section with the daily mail and scottish airports are being used for torture flights. listen i'm six foot six. all flights are torture flights for me. victor yeah. >> there's a probe into the us . >> there's a probe into the us. the us? there's a probe into the use of scottish airports by cia torture flights is still going on. this has been going on for about ten years. yeah. legends colombo would have solved this in an hour. yeah well, that's all. >> that's all the time he's got for the show. but yeah, this was ordered out with ordered to be carried out with no dilly dallying. they no dilly dallying. maybe they should more specific should have used more specific language the word language than than the word dilly dally being some dilly dally. >> it's a scottish word, right? >> it's a scottish word, right? >> if it >> i'm not sure if it is. i mean, do do a of dilly dallying. >> dilly dallying . >> dilly dallying. >> dilly dallying. >> by the way, said it >> by the way, you just said it , but surprised because it's , but i'm surprised because it's in a scottish airport. so did none of the other. and what is just see what is the actual issue ? the issue that has been issue? the issue that has been going for years and what
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going on for ten years and what can i say, lord, they're taking these they're using scottish airports for like stop offs for extreme rendition by the cia. >> so when they've got when they've seized somebody from syria or afghanistan and they want to take them to guantanamo bay or somewhere that , bay or somewhere like that, they're stopping off scotland they're stopping off in scotland for . for refuelling. >> yeah, well, or they could be using like threaten the using it to like threaten the terrorists or potential terrorists. we're going to feed you haggis. no, we're like , you haggis. no, we're like, we'll let you off saturday we'll let you off on a saturday night centre. night in the town centre. see how . but this stuff how you survive. but this stuff was originally from was originally like from probably end up becoming first minister. >> yeah this like post minister. >> �*stuff. this like post 9/11 stuff. >> this is like 2004, 2006. so then they started the investigation in 2013 and it's been going on for ten years. they said that it's cost a it's cost so much, it's too costly to work out how much this investigation is cost. also, it's still ongoing ing, which is genius. so you know that like police scotland, there's a couple of people there and they're like, oh, any any development yet. and they're like, , just more
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like, oh, we just need one more trip . see something trip to miami. see something there ? there? >> we've seen scottish politicians love their all expenses paid trips abroad for climate conferences and stuff . climate conferences and stuff. so yeah, no doubt they want to they be going and who so yeah, no doubt they want to thejthey be going and who so yeah, no doubt they want to thejthey goinga going and who so yeah, no doubt they want to thejthey going to oing and who so yeah, no doubt they want to thejthey going to arrest nd who so yeah, no doubt they want to thejthey going to arrest or who are they going to arrest or whatever they say are we're going get some capture. >> it's like stuff happened >> it's like this stuff happened a long, long ago . those a long, long time ago. those people, some of them are probably i'm not even talking people, some of them are probalthe 'm not even talking people, some of them are probalthe terrorists,3n talking people, some of them are probalthe terrorists,3n telikeg about the terrorists, but like the the agent. the people at the cia agent. well, going to go and well, they're going to go and arrest yeah arrest the cia agent. yeah >> how can you arrest cia >> how can you arrest the cia agent ? i'm taking that agent? yeah, i'm not taking that task. >> yeah, i've some films >> yeah, i've seen some films there was no kung so get away. >> just get up. but the fact is , costs so much money, they can't how much can't even quantify how much money is. >> ridiculous . yeah, that is >> is ridiculous. yeah, that is ridiculous. moving on. ridiculous. okay, moving on. we've got the guardian in we've got the guardian now in academe six are leaving florida university, but without the academics who will convince children that their gender fluid, non—binary communists. josh indeed. >> i'm not wanted florida universities hit by brain drain as academics flee . now this is as academics flee. now this is the guardian. it's one university that seems to be a
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particularly affected university. basically, it got so bad they had to get loads of other republicans on the board that what they were pushing. i assumed it would be all like the humanities that were just leaving, which is generally the areas which have been pushing so much of this ideology. yeah, but actually this critical race theory and things like. exactly. but know fine teach but you know and it's fine teach that stuff but teach with that stuff but teach it with balance . teach it this is balance. teach it that this is what critical race theory says and other and then this is what other people like, teach people say, like, don't teach this gender ideology. >> also it's nonsense. >> and also it's nonsense. >> and also it's nonsense. >> well , >> and also it's nonsense. >> well, yeah, but the people they they use examples are like someone from a neuro neurobiology associate professor. and so , like i said, professor. and so, like i said, they're using one university, one local college to kind of indicative because then later on they say, oh, actually there's no other information that reveals that it could be wider than that. >> why would you need >> yeah, but why would you need to at a university? to learn this at a university? what's to learn this at a university? wh.job market? well i mean, if the job market? well i mean, if you go diversity you go into diversity and inclusion , you can make a racket
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i >> -- >> that's where the money is nowadays . but yeah, it's because nowadays. but yeah, it's because desantis has come in and some of the stuff they're talking about here is like, oh, my god, they banned the discussion of gender identity to elementary school students in kindergarten and whatever. like , i don't whatever. it's like, i don't want kindergarten students to be taught this ridiculous ideology. yeah but because of that, what now leaving and now people are leaving and there's a brain drain. it's like, you're that, like, well, if you're that, you're brain that i you're the kind of brain that i don't want to teach so much of it was was around sort of stopping the overly sexualised content being taught to primary kids . kids. >> so i mean, it looks like a lot of these a lot of these people who've resigned have just outed as sort outed themselves as as the sort of go of people who want to go into primary and about primary schools and talk about completely adult. >> well, they they want people to able that. also, to be able to do that. but also, one of assistant professor to be able to do that. but also, on mathematics tant professor to be able to do that. but also, on mathematics ,ant professor to be able to do that. but also, on mathematics , she)rofessor to be able to do that. but also, on mathematics , she said;sor to be able to do that. but also, on mathematics , she said it's of mathematics, she said it's becoming clear that the university was becoming politicised . and you're like, politicised. and you're like, that's kind of the point. if you think that this is the politicised, politicised
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politicisation of it , though, politicisation of it, though, the point is it became politicised and this is the counterforce and this is because it got they pushed too far. yeah. and now there's a push back on it. >> if the mathematical teacher is saying this, what does she have teach in her class? have to teach in her class? so she's maths and then she's teaching maths and then quickly, to be best. quickly, people like to be best. and now back marxism . and now back to marxism. >> yeah , basically, it's like in >> yeah, basically, it's like in every lesson we have to learn about this. >> and some of the stuff >> yeah. and some of the stuff they're saying, they say, imagine scientists who are studying imagine scientists who are stu�*imagine an executive branch. >> imagine an executive branch. so government comes in and so the government comes in and they climate change. they they deny climate change. they could use laws to intimidate or dismiss scientists, but dismiss those scientists, but we're seeing teachers we're already seeing teachers who scientific facts or who teach scientific facts or biology fact that males and females exist and can be identified in nature from chromosomes and other identifying factors . we're identifying factors. we're seeing them being silenced and expelled from universities for teaching biological facts . so teaching biological facts. so for them to come out and say, oh, but this will stop us teaching fact is teaching scientific fact is there's been lots of examples of
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some real sort of miscarriages of justice within the academic institutions within america , institutions within america, like great, like famous scientists , leaders of their scientists, leaders of their field, kind of like basically hunted down. >> and it turns out that they hadnt >> and it turns out that they hadn't committed these heinous sex crimes or anything like that. it was just like one person's ex person's accusation from an ex girlfriend. enough girlfriend. and that was enough to careers. so to seize people's careers. so yeah, so basically, to yeah, so basically, we have to agree 5000 genders agree that there's 5000 genders out and yeah, no, it's 5002. >> moving on, we've got the sun now with the latest victim of inclusivity , freshers week, no inclusivity, freshers week, no more £1 pints. victor tell us more. >> this is ridiculous . student >> this is ridiculous. student unions have ditched the idea of freshers to get away from the image of mad parties initiated ceremonies and binge drinking . ceremonies and binge drinking. >> so what are they replacing them with ? them with? >> oh, the classic american universities . no, no, no, no. universities. no, no, no, no. they replacing it with trips they are replacing it with trips to ikea. what what have you been to ikea. what what have you been to ? ikea? to? ikea? >> yeah, i've been to ikea. >> yeah, i've been to ikea. >> take away the host, me and the nothing >> take away the host, me and th> take away the host, me and th> yeah, but have ever been >> yeah, but have you ever been on in ikea? >> yeah, but have you ever been
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on and in ikea? >> yeah, but have you ever been on and in ikea�*worse. there's >> and it gets worse. there's more. more. there's >> and it gets worse. there's more. friendingiore. there's >> and it gets worse. there's more. friending , re. there's >> and it gets worse. there's more. friending , speed�*re's >> and it gets worse. there's more. friending , speed friending i >> -- >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i've never heard of it. it's new. okay, but you meet friends, i guess . i guess. >> i went to scottish >> i went to a scottish university, i'm pretty sure university, and i'm pretty sure speed you take speed friending is when you take lots of speed and make friends with someone. >> no chat, loads of rubbish very yeah. called illegal. >> right . >> right. >> right. >> yeah, stuff they've >> so yeah, this stuff they've got and sober. sober ceilidhs . got and sober. sober ceilidhs. that's like a scottish dance. i mean, to be honest, you don't really drink anything to really need to drink anything to feel this because >> i think this is because they've a real problem they've got a real problem in scotland because they of free scotland of because they of free universities to local students but but but they want to get the foreign students in because that's what actually pays for the universities . so i think the universities. so i think this a way of this is actually just a way of them trying to get local students not go to students to not go to university. right. i think it's work . yeah, it will work once university. right. i think it's worigo yeah, it will work once university. right. i think it's worigo tonh, it will work once university. right. i think it's worigo to university. 'ork once university. right. i think it's worigo to university. ifk once university. right. i think it's worigo to university. if you ce you go to university. if you can't back. but can't drink, just go back. but no, no . no, no. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> okay. well, moving on. we've got the guardian and tobacco companies want people to chew tobacco or chewbacca. sounds like a wookie error.
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>> josh indeed. influencers and freebies. big tobacco's push to sell nicotine pouches in the uk. have you seen these? they basically , you know, i've done basically, you know, i've done some gigs like in the netherlands and norway and they're very it's very popular there. they basically tuck these sort of little patches, not patches like i don't know how. tea bags. tea bags. yeah. like little small and they put them on lip and they all sort on their lip and they all sort of like they're doing of it's like they're all doing these kind of godfather impressions. and they're impressions. yeah and they're very and they're very popular there and they're trying to sell over here. trying to sell them over here. they are getting more popular. they're the classic sort they're using the classic sort of influencers whatnot . but of influencers and whatnot. but the thing that annoys me the thing that really annoys me about is even though the about this is even though the market because also market is growing, because also we necessary laws we don't have the necessary laws to stop it, because technically it's not illegal, because it's not tobacco, it's just the nicotine . and but, and but there nicotine. and but, and but there are issues with it because it's there's evidence that it causes mouth cancer and various other things. anyway, the point is , at things. anyway, the point is, at the end of it, they go to the government look, government and say, look, are you out government and say, look, are you and out government and say, look, are you and they out government and say, look, are you and they said, out government and say, look, are you and they said, no, out government and say, look, are you and they said, no, it's out here? and they said, no, it's the pouches remain low at the
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moment . so there's no there's no moment. so there's no there's no plans regulate them further. plans to regulate them further. and this is classic thing of and this is the classic thing of this government is don't wait for these companies to pull this money into advertising. they've been that for free, been giving that for free, making them cool using influencers , stuff like that. so influencers, stuff like that. so it in the it gets a foothold in the market. and then you're going to go and say, oh, we're going to regulate it because it's a problem. while it's problem. now do it while it's still not that big. >> isn't it better than >> but isn't it better than smoking? that's the smoking? so maybe that's the incentive for government incentive for the government to let market flourish. let the market flourish. >> is >> you know, the best thing is to . to do neither. >> yeah, we've do >> yeah, but we've got to do something . we just something. we can't just feel normal . normal. >> oh, it's starting to sound like companies control the government. >> i don't know about that. oh, you're crazy . you're you're going go crazy. you're going to fit right in. it's not crazy. >> it's true. like >> it's true. it's like they, the could sell the companies could sell anything to the without anything to the public without the government saying anything. anything to the public without the well, 'nment saying anything. anything to the public without the well,'nmercan'ting anything. anything to the public without the well, 'nmercan't .|g anything. anything to the public without the well, 'nmercan't . yeah.thing. anything to the public without the well, 'nmercan't . yeah. until >> well, they can't. yeah. until a enough all kicks off. a big enough for all kicks off. but it's just really. it's really frustrating. they could close loopholes , sort this close these loopholes, sort this out now. instead, they'll close these loopholes, sort this out it now. instead, they'll close these loopholes, sort this out it foryw. instead, they'll close these loopholes, sort this out it for anotherad, they'll close these loopholes, sort this out it for another five hey'll close these loopholes, sort this out it for another five years. leave it for another five years. suddenly have suddenly we're going to have a bunch this. we're bunch of kids doing this. we're going some negative going to see some negative medical it . medical ramifications for it. well, they are going care
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well, they are going to care eventually, by it's too eventually, but by then it's too late it's that >> yeah, i don't think it's that big anyway, on, big a deal. anyway, moving on, we've with we've got the daily mail with the finding a celebrity the perks of finding a celebrity innocent. victor yeah. >> jews were taken to meet kevin spacey and shook hands with him after clearing him of sexually assaulting four men. >> not just hands. >> not just hands. >> i mean. oh, i did not say that. >> that seems. that seems like it's almost incentivising any future jury to find a celebrity innocent because you might get an autograph . an autograph. >> it depends on how good an actor they are. oh, you can't defend no. but i'm defend it. no, no. but i'm saying it's good mistake, defend it. no, no. but i'm sayi if it's good mistake, defend it. no, no. but i'm sayi if he's's good mistake, defend it. no, no. but i'm sayi if he's a good mistake, defend it. no, no. but i'm sayi if he's a goodyd mistake, defend it. no, no. but i'm sayi if he's a good atnistake, defend it. no, no. but i'm sayi if he's a good at likeike, defend it. no, no. but i'm sayi if he's a good at like he's like if he's a good at like he's he's great he's starred in some great stuff. so you're like, it's stuff. so you're like, oh, it's kevin it's some kevin spacey. but if it's some someone from someone who's sort of like from love island. >> presenter like us >> gb news presenter like us don't get to leave the house. >> i'm safe. >> i'm safe. >> there's no chance of . >> there's no chance of. >> there's no chance of. >> when he shook the hands, what did lads , he did he say? thanks, lads, he said, yeah, go pub. he's said, yeah, go to the pub. he's a yeah. said, yeah, go to the pub. he's a yeah . he was said, yeah, go to the pub. he's a yeah. he was drinking a >> yeah. he was drinking a whisky and saying he's an innocent man. >> that's what's fun. yeah. good for you. no, look, he's men for you. no, look, he's got men accused innocent. >> you're not innocent. >> you're not innocent.
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>> well, he's been found to be innocent also in innocent and. and also in america, been be america, he's been found to be innocent. need to innocent. they need to do a retrial new jury. retrial and get a new jury. >> just. one guy, myself , >> just. just one guy, myself, and then we'll go through the evidence and then i'll tell you, if not, how the criminal if he's not, how the criminal justice works , victor gao justice system works, victor gao it's clearly working . no, it is. >> i mean, is.— >> i mean, he's he's is. >> i mean, he's he's been i mean, he's in front jury. mean, he's in front of a jury. you you can't ask for it. you can't you can't ask for it. it's just judge it's not just like a judge or a magistrate this a magistrate deciding this is a jury magistrate deciding this is a jury of your peers. but the suggestion seems to be in this article that to they let him off just they could get handshake. >> of course, the gist of it and also it's a such a bizarrely written thing because they go later to the groucho later on he went to the groucho club. and no club. he had this whisky and no one sang him birthday . and one sang him happy birthday. and then when he left , he had an then when he left, he had an umbrella shielding him from the rain. you're like, much rain. you're like, how much filler is going be this filler is going to be in this article ? it's ridiculous. yeah, article? it's ridiculous. yeah, but ends. but also ends. >> it says that he had to pay more than £25 million to the producers of house of cards after he was sacked. so i wonder now that he's found now that he's been found innocent, he's going innocent, if he's going to have some well that's some some recourse? well that's the he a career?
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>> is it does he have a career? would in? would you like to watch him in? also, because he was also, it says because he was he was of the ridley scott was cut out of the ridley scott film, all money the film, all the money in the world. and actually, i think that favour . that did him a favour. >> it wasn't that much of i >> it wasn't that much of a i can't fined him innocent. >> w“- e on. that's it >> anyway, moving on. that's it for three. up, we've >> anyway, moving on. that's it for prison ree. up, we've >> anyway, moving on. that's it for prison hooch up, we've >> anyway, moving on. that's it for prison hooch and up, we've >> anyway, moving on. that's it for prison hooch and narcove've got prison hooch and narco terrorist. and while you're fetish no longer makes you special. see you in a couple of minutes .
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welcome back to headliners. the final section now in the mail with a move that will make inmates fatter , prisoner cell inmates fatter, prisoner cell blocked arteries . nice. blocked arteries. nice. >> very nice. let them eat cake . prison chiefs rid tuckshops of fruit and veg after inmates use them to make moonshine. so i'm not going to bother reading the rest of that headline, but basically reading it, yeah, i was like , oh, give me some cake.
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was like, oh, give me some cake. too much. a long one. that was too much cake. so obviously , as too much cake. so obviously, as you know, we've all spent time in prison so you can ferment fruit, ferment fruit. well this is what you do. go in prison. first of all, first day of prison, out , find the biggest prison, go out, find the biggest guy, in the face. all guy, punch him in the face. all right ? yeah, that's the second right? yeah, that's the second thing to do. what did right? yeah, that's the second thi theo do. what did right? yeah, that's the second thi theo do.day what did right? yeah, that's the second thitheo do.day of what did right? yeah, that's the second thi theo do.day of what here. on the first day of work here. remember up to you? remember when i came up to you? and thing and then the second thing is, you fruit , and you go and get some fruit, and then you leave it the corner then you leave it in the corner and then it becomes cider. you put it in a bag behind the radiator . yeah. radiator. yeah. >> and turns cider. >> and then it turns into cider. it doesn't into cider. it doesn't turn into good cider. >> beating the >> i'm glad we're beating the stereotypes because stereotypes here because i didn't know any of this anyway. stereotypes here because i did well, ow any of this anyway. stereotypes here because i did well, ow a is of this anyway. stereotypes here because i did well, ow a is of tthing.yway. stereotypes here because i did well,ow ais of tthing. buty. stereotypes here because i did\.they're ais of tthing. buty. stereotypes here because i did\.they're not. of tthing. buty. stereotypes here because i did \.they're not. of 1they'veiuty. now they're not. so they've taken the fruit from taken the fruit away from the tuck and they've just got tuck shops and they've just got cakes . yeah. yeah. cakes and whatever. yeah. yeah. and then everyone's putting cakes and whatever. yeah. yeah. and tiaway/eryone's putting cakes and whatever. yeah. yeah. and tiaway andyne's putting cakes and whatever. yeah. yeah. and tiaway and alls putting cakes and whatever. yeah. yeah. and tiaway and all the tting cakes and whatever. yeah. yeah. and tiaway and all the people those away and all the people who are health conscious in prison are saying, wait a minute, actually will minute, some of us actually will eat fruit. yeah. minute, some of us actually will eat and fruit. yeah. minute, some of us actually will eat and the:. yeah. minute, some of us actually will eat and the alcoholics don't like >> and the alcoholics don't like it even if they are it either. and even if they are making so what? making alcohol, so what? >> these people are away from their from >> these people are away from their friends. from >> these people are away from their friends. there's from >> these people are away from their friends. there's no from >> these people are away from their friends. there's no wi—fi. let alcohol. their friends. there's no wi—fi. let you're alcohol. their friends. there's no wi—fi. let you're very alcohol. their friends. there's no wi—fi. let you're very alcoprisoner >> you're very pro prisoner today, victor.
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>> i'm just pro people . >> i'm just pro people. >> i'm just pro people. >> okay, moving on. we've got the times and it looks like britain missed out on a boost to the economy. victor. oh this is madness. >> pablo escobar offered to surrender . >> pablo escobar offered to surrender. his family has settled in uk and croydon to be specific . specific. >> there's too much competition with other drug dealers in croydon , so you probably want to croydon, so you probably want to live somewhere like oxfordshire i >> -- >> but what lam >> but what i found amazing was i he was generating i didn't know he was generating £340 million a week. >> yeah . >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> the money that cartel was >> the money that his cartel was generating, seventh richest guy in it ? what's in the world, was it? what's bizarre? banks . i can't bizarre? the banks. i can't remember which which bank it was, global bank, was, but it was a global bank, you big ones you know, one of the big ones like hsbc or whatever. they changed the shape of their taylor's windows to able taylor's windows to be able to accept that the cocaine dealers money more more easily so they could fit it through in these boxes. could fit it through in these boxes . and now you can't even boxes. and now you can't even get account if you just voted get an account if you just voted for brexit or, you know, retweet a ricky gervais joke. >> he sounds he i think he >> he sounds like he i think he should have come to the uk because mean, because him and sadiq, i mean, that's is going to be that's what sadiq is going to be earning ulez 340
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earning with this new ulez 340 million a week. i'm not sure why he went to croydon though, but yeah , pablo escobar wanted to. yeah, pablo escobar wanted to. >> to come to you. >> he wanted to come to you. yeah. country . yeah. it's a great country. yeah. it's a great country. yeah. yeah. even. maybe yeah. yeah. even. and maybe that could be part advertising could be part of our advertising campaign . yeah. you pablo campaign. yeah. you know, pablo escobar wanted to come here. i mean, no conspiracy theory. is he welsh ? come. so welsh . a he welsh? come. so welsh. a mixture on us. >> need for the job on cocaine . >> need for the job on cocaine. >> need for the job on cocaine. >> okay. moving on. we've got the daily mail and simon cowell is moving to oxfordshire . it is moving to oxfordshire. it must have the x factor. josh oh, my god . my god. >> been . is my god. >> been. is simon my god. >> been . is simon cowell >> been. is simon cowell quitting ? mogul turns his back quitting? mogul turns his back on fame but not fortune . that's on fame but not fortune. that's a ridiculous headline to be a stay at home dad. so basically he . we're stay at home dad. so basically he .we're seeing stay at home dad. so basically he . we're seeing less of he sold up. we're seeing less of him and they're saying him on tv and they're saying thatis him on tv and they're saying that is it choice . that's that is it by choice. that's what they're suggesting. or is it the fact that just it the fact that he's just been dominating for 20 dominating our screens for 20 plus years he's fulfilled plus years and he's fulfilled his time and now he you know, is it choice or is it is he being pushed? i don't know. he hasn't had a massive a while,
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had a massive hit for a while, but also, at some point , had a massive hit for a while, but also, at some point, when's enoughis but also, at some point, when's enough is enough? >> i think enough is enough. and i for black i think it's time for a black man wears white jumper man who wears a white jumper with his with writing on it, giving his time on that show. >> yes. yeah. i don't know who that guy is, if he's out that guy is, but if he's out there that guy is, but if he's out the okay, think be >> okay, do you think you'd be a good of singing and good judge of singing and dancing good dancing and i'd be good at anything for 45 million, literally . literally. >> yeah. i don't know how. this is a big story , but mr saturday is a big story, but mr saturday night will be staying in. >> okay moving on. we've >> yep. okay moving on. we've got the times and it's well known that fetishes only exist to the ugly. people have to the ugly. people can have sex. no wonder they're popular in victor in britain. victor >> yeah. this is crazy. this is absolute bonkers. filled the absolute bonkers. how filled the british sex app sent kink mainstream. basically, there's an app out there . i'm not an app out there. i'm not promoting this. not that i've already got it on my phone , but already got it on my phone, but there's an app out there where you can download and you can actually for actually just meet people for sex. yeah . sex. yeah, yeah. >> and it's not the only app like . no, no. but this like that. no, no. but this one's to tinder. one's specific to tinder. >> is sex. forget >> this is just sex. forget a date. no, but this is like kinky sex.
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>> that's the difference . >> that's the difference. >> that's the difference. >> wow. this is. you dress up as a vicar , or if you're a vicar, a vicar, or if you're a vicar, you take your vicar costume off and dress something and dress up as something else. this that normal membership? because the membership >> because on the membership i've sex. no it's i've got, it's just sex. no it's crazy sex. >> but it's . it's about people. >> but it's. it's about people. they say it's for yearning for authenticity because if you like getting weed on and that's how you authentic , then this you feel authentic, then this is the allegedly . wow. the app for you allegedly. wow. but basically i this but basically this i know this article kind annoys article kind of annoys me because because kink because it's because kink shaming is a good thing. yeah, like exactly . we do it to like exactly. we do it to protect people . we don't need a protect people. we don't need a pride month. >> we need a shame month. shame is an excellent contraceptive. it stops all kinds of. >> yeah, well, this app. so this journalist is like, oh, i went on there was 97 on there and there was a 97 year old threesomes and old who wanted threesomes and isn't amazing? isn't this amazing? and what a great world that we now live in and whatnot . and whatnot. >> and seven old shouldn't and whatnot. >> able.seven old shouldn't be able. >> there's like this old >> there's like this 25 year old young woman is like on it. and she's yeah, i went she's like, oh, yeah, i went on and interest and i got so much interest really ? really? >> yeah . my seven year old >> yeah. my seven year old should be just, let's see if we can squeeze this one in in a
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minute. >> we've got metro minute. >> we've got the metro known. if you a holiday a you want a holiday like a prince, less than you want a holiday like a printhink. less than you think. >> w— >> josh yeah. prince william's houday >> josh yeah. prince william's holiday are holiday cottage rentals are cheaper , and cheaper than travelodge, and they're trying to play out they're trying to play it out like he's renting these as like for almost to help for charity almost to help people as don't go away in people as they don't go away in the really it's the summer. but really it's because they haven't not because they haven't they've not rented dropped rented out so they've dropped the oh yeah. the prices. oh really? yeah. well, the thing they've well, that's the thing they've got. they've got. oh in august they've dropped the price for whatever. they're not doing it for charity, they're doing it because price because obviously at the price that before didn't out. that was before didn't rent out. >> just the market responding. >> totally. but the way >> yeah, totally. but the way they're portray they're trying to portray this, like to help like he's trying to help the british obviously british people, we've obviously got cross—channel got lack of cross—channel migrants . migrants. >> that is problem >> that is the problem here. rishi success all rishi has been to success all i'm going up for prince i >> -- >> no, he's doing it for charity. him sound charity. you're making him sound like david brent of the royal family he is doing it for family maybe he is doing it for charity. maybe he is. i mean , charity. maybe he is. i mean, surely he's. >> well, he just it >> well, maybe he just had it rented they're rented out. and so now they're dropping the prices. i don't know well, is >> okay. well, the show is nearly . so let's take >> okay. well, the show is nearly quickso let's take >> okay. well, the show is nearly quickso letattake >> okay. well, the show is nearly quickso letat monday's another quick look at monday's front pages. the daily mail leads with £10 billion boost from scrapping tourist tax. the telegraph has 50,000 extra
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families to face inheritance tax. the guardian leads with ministers seek kerbs on 20 mile an hour limits in push to woo motorists. the mirror has don't let my son's death be for nothing. that's about dangerous dogs. nothing. that's about dangerous dogs . the times has prime dogs. the times has prime minister gives green light for more north sea drilling. and finally, the daily star has summer brolly days because it's going to rain. and those were your front pages. and that's it for tonight's show. thank you to my howie and victor my guest, josh howie and victor daniels. tomorrow, simon evans will be here at 11 pm. joined by and dixon . by josh howie and nick dixon. and you're watching a.m, by josh howie and nick dixon. and tuned re watching a.m, by josh howie and nick dixon. and tuned forvatching a.m, by josh howie and nick dixon. and tuned for breakfast a.m, by josh howie and nick dixon. and tuned for breakfast by a.m, stay tuned for breakfast by looks like things are heating up. >> bob boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello there i'm jonathan vautrey here with your evening news. weather updates provided by the met office as we head into a new week, we are still holding onto the unsettled theme that's been building throughout this weekend of this weekend as this area of low pressure is pushing its way in from the atlantic. those isobars
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squeezing together a touch these weather well, already weather fronts as well, already providing parts of providing rain to parts of wales. southern england increasingly spreading into northern england. northern ireland be heavy ireland could be heavy for a time. breezy around time. really quite breezy around coastal areas . gusts of 35mph coastal areas. gusts of 35mph possible. the rain will slowly track its way up towards scotland, but the far north of scotland, but the far north of scotland, staying relatively dry and skies clear could turn a bit chilly as temperatures drop down there. but elsewhere, rather there. but elsewhere, a rather humid and muggy night not dropping below 15 or 16 c. dropping much below 15 or 16 c. there will be outbreaks of rain still across the channel islands southern of england. southern coast of england. first thing, will slowly thing, the winds will slowly ease their but will ease their way off, but it will stay relatively for many stay relatively breezy for many of us. showers and spells of us. showers and longer spells of us. showers and longer spells of for many of rain continuing for many locations throughout monday. a few brighter trying to few brighter spells trying to poke their way through times, poke their way through at times, particularly perhaps southwest england, of england, into central areas of england, into central areas of england wales. will england and wales. that will allow to allow those temperatures to climb towards 20 or 22 c as those showers outbreaks of rain still lingering as we head into tuesday some sharp ones tuesday as well. some sharp ones around, wales , around, particularly for wales, southern england, first in southern england, first thing in the , again, sunny the morning, again, some sunny spells to poke through.
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spells trying to poke through. but merge into but where those bands merge into longer spells of rain at times, it be cloudy it could also be rather cloudy in . further wet and windy in places. further wet and windy weather is also on the cards as weather is also on the cards as we wednesday. as we head towards wednesday. as well with possible . enjoy well with gales possible. enjoy your evening . your evening. >> looks like things are heating up . boxed boilers proud sponsors up. boxed boilers proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> good evening. i'm tatiana sanchez in the newsroom. former home patel home secretary dame priti patel has government home secretary dame priti patel has clamp government home secretary dame priti patel has clamp on vernment home secretary dame priti patel has clamp on leftie ent home secretary dame priti patel has to lamp on leftie ent home secretary dame priti patel has to stop on leftie ent home secretary dame priti patel has to stop illegal)n leftie ent lawyers to stop illegal migration. says migration. when she says the attorney general and lord chancellor attorney general and lord chan how�*r attorney general and lord chanhow�*r firms that over how law firms behave, that says channel says the number of channel crossings continues to climb with more than 14,700 people intercepted with more than 14,700 people intethisyted dame warns far this year. dame pretty warns the the the clock is ticking for the government to implement its new illegal deterrent factor >> need a deterrent factor for a start returns. >> need a deterrent factor for a start plan returns. >> need a deterrent factor for a start plan was returns. >> need a deterrent factor for a start plan was central1s. >> need a deterrent factor for a start plan was central to my rwanda plan was central to that.| my rwanda plan was central to that.i put place and that i have put in place and others now putting place. that i have put in place and othyhave now putting place. that i have put in place and othyhave rgetputting place. that i have put in place and othyhave rget planes place. that i have put in place and othyhave rget planes leavinge. that i have put in place and othy country get planes leavinge. that i have put in place and othy country and planes leavinge. that i have put in place and othy country and shows leavinge. that i have put in place and othy country and shows leaviryou the country and show that if you come here illegally, you can't just get a free pass. being firm is actually the stance that we should take, and that means removing people and returning people countries removing people and returning people of countries removing people and returning people of origin countries or country of origin and the energy and security secretary says he and his family have struggled accounts at struggled to open accounts at major wake of the major banks in the wake of the nigel farage row grant shapps told the sun the problem stems from being politically exposed person. >> he accused banks of going too far. it comes as mr farage
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launched a new website to help people who like him , have had people who like him, have had their bank accounts forcibly closed. the gb news presenter says a thousand accounts are being shut every day . being shut every day. >> what i've learned in the three weeks since i came out, as it were , i've just been it were, i've just been inundated by small businesses , inundated by small businesses, by folk all around the country , by folk all around the country, people in absolute fear, terror like he's being ruined. thousands of businesses are being closed . being closed. >> the prime minister is ordering a review into the rollout of low traffic neighbourhoods. the scheme, which has been used by councils to stop drivers cutting through residential areas, has been seen by some as an attack on motorists. in an interview with the sunday telegraph, rishi sunak said he supports people's right to use their cars to do all the things that matter to them . shadow international trade them. shadow international trade secretary nick thomas—symonds says the prime minister should leave the decision on to local areas . areas. >> our position is that it is
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