tv Laurence Fox GB News August 4, 2023 8:00pm-9:01pm BST
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gb news ten. >> a man who has crammed an awful lot into his 34 years he's been on the planet, including a heart attack. we'll be talking about that later. a fascinating and moving story. and i can't wait speak with him. then, wait to speak with him. then, benjamin and charlie benjamin locklin and charlie lambdin are my newshounds in the foxhounds fox and the fox and the hounds panel tonight. yeah, it's not working. acas it's still not working. acas costa coffee. the latest company to align itself to the mutilation cult. joining the ranks of the likes of dr. martin
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and oxfam, amongst others . then and oxfam, amongst others. then we will be discussing whether the overfifties should lob on a cagoule and start working for deliveroo . plus box on the spot deliveroo. plus box on the spot is back , and i'm sure you'll is back, and i'm sure you'll have a lot of lovely questions for me about my byelection victory . so the inbox is open. victory. so the inbox is open. send your messages this way to gbviews@gbnews.com or tweet me at or at gb news. that's all coming up after the latest news headunes coming up after the latest news headlines with our anne armstrong . armstrong. >> hey, good evening to you. i'm karen armstrong here in the gb newsroom. a man has been jailed for life for the murder of his ten month old stepson and he will serve a minimum term of 28 years. accused years. craig crouch accused acute physical and mental suffering to jacob crouch over six months before assaulting him in a fatal attack in december 2020. jake cobb had 39 rib fractures and internal injuries
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likened to those seen in car crash victims. jacob's mother , crash victims. jacob's mother, gemma barton, was jailed for ten years for causing or allowing his death , but she was cleared his death, but she was cleared of murder , mr justice his death, but she was cleared of murder , mrjustice kerr said of murder, mrjustice kerr said crouch caused jacob intense and prolonged harm. >> he was a small baby who had not yet learned to walk or talk. sadie he never did. so your attacks on him were an abuse of trust , of the grossest kind attacks on him were an abuse of trust, of the grossest kind you knew he was dependent on the adults caring for him to protect him from harm instead of protecting him. you killed him . protecting him. you killed him. >> a tiktok influencer and her mother have been found guilty of murdering two men in a high speed car chase near leicester. mahek bukhari and her mother, anne sareen , ambushed saqib anne sareen, ambushed saqib hussain and mohammed hashem aijazuddin and rammed their car off the road after mr hussain threatened to use sexually explicit material to expose an affair he was having with ms bukhari's mother. two affair he was having with ms bukhari's mother . two further bukhari's mother. two further defendants were also found
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guilty of murder and three more were found guilty of manslaughter. the government's turning to the private sector in an effort to clear record nhs waiting times . eight of 13 new waiting times. eight of 13 new community diagnostic centres to be opened in england will be operated by independent companies. but services will remain free for patients. they'll carry out almost 750,000 additional scans checks and tests every year. additional scans checks and tests every year . the additional scans checks and tests every year. the russian opposition leader, alexei navalny, has been sentenced to a further 19 years in jail . further 19 years in jail. vladimir putin's most vocal political critic has been found guilty of creating and funding an extremist organisation. he's already serving sentences for fraud and contempt of court charges he has always denied. the foreign secretary james cleverly, has called for his immediate release . meanwhile, immediate release. meanwhile, a russian warship has been seriously damaged in an attack by ukrainian naval drones. kyiv claims this footage taken from the drone captures the moments
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of impact. a video circulating on social media appears to show the same ship listing to one side while being towed . moscow side while being towed. moscow claims it repelled the attack and made no mention of damage or casualties as. and made no mention of damage or casualties as . controversial casualties as. controversial influencer andrew tate says he'll be exonerated after being released from house arrest in romania . he and his brother romania. he and his brother tristan have been held in bucharest on rape and human trafficking charges pending trial. they deny any wrongdoing . excuse me. unseasonably strong winds are expected to batter parts of the uk this weekend with forecasters warning of a danger to life. storm anthony, the first to be named by the met office this season, will hit wales and southwest england later with winds of up to 65mph predicted. a yellow rain warning has also been issued for northern ireland this is gb news across the uk , on tv, on digital across the uk, on tv, on digital radio and also on your smart speaken radio and also on your smart speaker. now it's over to
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lawrence . lawrence. >> a great man once said , when >> a great man once said, when there is no enemy within the enemy is outside, cannot hurt you . in the good old days, prior you. in the good old days, prior to the detonation of the brexit bomb, those who sought to leave the european union had overseas enemies to engage with an enemy without, if you will, the patronising. guy verhofstadt at the worryingly serene gulf, ursula von der leyen and the sexy grandad michel barnier. they were real, tangible foes with which to engage in debate, negotiate nation or simple name calling . but the big day came . calling. but the big day came. the decision was made and suddenly the far off foes of guy ursula and michel drifted off
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into the distance , no longer into the distance, no longer visible, tangible or seemingly able to interfere with our sovereignty . as we removed sovereignty. as we removed ourselves from the european mega blob . a guilty pleasure is to blob. a guilty pleasure is to occasionally watch the faces of the bbc blob fall. then desperately reshape as they stuttered through announcing the unimaginable news that the plebs hadnt unimaginable news that the plebs hadn't done as they were told. but just as one battle was over , another had begun . the enemy , another had begun. the enemy without may have been defeated. but the enemy within were not so ready to surrender. the european collaborators may have failed in their permission to deny the plebs their voice, but the war was far from over. plebs their voice, but the war was far from over . brexit plebs their voice, but the war was far from over. brexit has never really gone away , and i never really gone away, and i suspect it never will. where once we were taking on nations across the channel we now face a brexit of home just in different
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disguises and methods. parliament obsessed for years under the always charismatic theresa may over deals. no deals , withdrawal agreements, protocols and the like. not much else seemed to get done or matter. then came bumbling boris and the hard or soft boiled borders debate . it seemed that borders debate. it seemed that as much as brexit was meant to be a practical, cultural and symbolic vote , the passage of symbolic vote, the passage of time has made it not only impossible to fully implement, but has also rendered it in many ways a mostly symbolic victory and a pyrrhic victory for those who voted to leave. and all the while, the enemy within were making sure that such errors would never, ever be repeated . would never, ever be repeated. and the volume was turned up on the culture wars, the persecution of the deplorables , persecution of the deplorables, the somewhere people , the flag the somewhere people, the flag flutters and history lovers , the flutters and history lovers, the green and pleasant land people . green and pleasant land people. the leavers began in earnest with all the brexit
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hand—wringing, the fatally divided conservative party forgot to do what it said on the tin to promote social conservatism with a dash of left leaning economics putting aside the fact that since we took back control of our borders, illegal immigration has increased tenfold . notably, not only are tenfold. notably, not only are the conservatives not socially conservative at all anymore, they have in reality become radically progressive , blind to radically progressive, blind to the indoctrination and hypersexualization of our children in school. blind to the suppression of free speech and the rise of cancel culture, which would make the people of salem blind to the erosion salem proud blind to the erosion of prosperity and individual liberty by lockdown and the inflation tax on the poor required to pay for them. people who wanted a fresh start and a get out of the way government got exactly the opposite. our taxes are sky high. in fact , taxes are sky high. in fact, everything. you wouldn't want to be sky high is sky high. and not in a good way. but then you have
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labour and its suspicion . really labour and its suspicion. really quiet leader keir starmer. lord knows what he's got planned for his inevitable stumbles through the door of number ten next yeah the door of number ten next year. but doing what labour says on the tin won't be too high on the agenda, won't imagines. to be fair for trying to find room to the left of the conservative party on the political spectrum is pretty tough going these days and so it does lead one to wonder if these parties are actually what we thought they were or whether, as the orange man bad guy and others have declared democracy is more of an illusion than we have been led to believe. our western nations, democracies with decisions taken by politicians in representation, representation of their constituents or is a deeper state at work. a small number of ideologically determined social engineers who will change the character of the western world permanently and irrevocably. whether we like it or not. social media has been
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swamped this week with private companies in lockstep with government sanctioned and rac classes in schools, painting their coffee vans and dr. martin boots . once a symbol of an edgy boots. once a symbol of an edgy and rebellious nature with pictures of happy girls with scars on their chests where their breasts used to be joyously celebrating the mutilation of confused and neurodivergent young children in not enough to erase the word woman from the language. now let's erase her physical characteristics as well. mussolini said that fascism should be more rightly defined as corporatism . the merger of as corporatism. the merger of state and corporate power. polling on the issues surrounding the sexualisation of children is unequivocal. both traditional left and traditional right meaningless terms in the era of the uni party loathe this vile deviancy with a visceral passion. and yet the government
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and the corporations push on, inundating us with pictures of young people who have been grievously bodily harmed . and grievously bodily harmed. and the people are not represented in their repulsion and rejection of this cruel and permanent mutilation. media and social media cry phobe at anyone who takes a torch to the flag. the mutilation cult parasitising so conveniently the rights of gay and lesbian people . then there and lesbian people. then there is the insanity of net zero. i see people jumping for joy that even rishi sunak has spotted the fury and also possibility in people drawing a line at being made poorer still during the poorest times. for many, a climate crisis , which apparently climate crisis, which apparently affects only britain's future generations. because whilst our children must suffer , the next children must suffer, the next generation of chinese kids will be booming on the prosperity of britain's regressive guilt . britain's regressive guilt. rishi started making these pseudo conservative noises on the 31st of august, when the
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chamber of the house sat empty, possibly only because it doesn't take enormous courage to give a performance in an empty theatre . i suspect normal service will resume when mps gather to pretend to disagree about everything again , making sure everything again, making sure never to debate the issues prohibited from discussion by the enemy within. and once the labour puppets are in brexit will be back on the table. never to leave us in peace. the enemy within displeased at the errors of the previous referendum . of the previous referendum. alastair heath argued and suggested in an article in the telegraph this week. referenda as a way of loosening the strangle hold of the managerial elite that they have around the population's neck . not a bad population's neck. not a bad idea, one might think. i know which way i would bet over the schools issue and as we approach the next election and the £1 trillion price tag for net zero looms starkly into view , perhaps looms starkly into view, perhaps a referendum on that madness would be a promise the
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conservatives should consider. there is some logic to it. the enemy within has decided it is the other half of the union party's turn to run ruin the country for a while. so the chance of it happening are almost zero. but it would at least give the ever more cynical and demoralised public some hope that politicians weren't merely puppets enemies within who puppets of enemies within who wield power from out in the darkness . oh, and the person who darkness. oh, and the person who said it. when there is no enemy within the enemy outside cannot hurt you was one winston spencer churchill . so hurt you was one winston spencer churchill. so along side hurt you was one winston spencer churchill . so along side that churchill. so along side that tonight i am going to ask you why are over 50 such lazy fat slobs .7 email me at slobs.7 email me at gbviews@gbnews.com or tweet me at . gb news. at. gb news. the temperature's rising, but first, solar proud
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sponsors of weather on . gb news. sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hi there . it's aidan mcgivern >> hi there. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office with the gb news forecast. another low this weekend. this one has been named storm anthony by the met because of risk met office because of the risk of gales some of disruptive gales for some heavy rain for many others. storm anthony is arriving through friday night. it's this area of low pressure that has been named and it's basically because it's arriving at such a busy time of year for holiday makers, people who are taking part in outdoor activities, camping, caravanning and so on. initially, it's the rain that is of concern overnight, especially across parts of northern ireland where the ground is saturated. that rain heading into western parts of the uk by the end of the night as well, accompanied by strengthening winds, dry initially across some eastern and northern parts aside from the but this spell the odd shower. but this spell of weather clears northern of wet weather clears northern ireland pushes into england and wales. southern scotland. showers for much of the showers continue for much of the rest of scotland and northern ireland. by the end of the
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afternoon as skies brighten afternoon, as the skies brighten for wales in the southwest, that's strongest winds that's when the strongest winds kick risk of kick in, with the risk of widespread gales, not just around coasts but inland as well. potential for travel disruption and certainly some dangerous conditions around beaches. dangerous conditions around beaches . but storm anthony does beaches. but storm anthony does move through and by sunday, a brighter day is expected. still some heavy showers around , some heavy showers around, lighter winds. however, these showers will be slow moving where they do occur, but they'll be hit and miss. sunny spells in between the trend between and then the trend through week is for the through next week is for the weather become gradually weather to become gradually dnen and weather to become gradually drier, and warmer. drier, brighter and warmer. >> the temperatures rising , boxt >> the temperatures rising, boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. well come back. on. gb news. well come back. >> apparently the microphone works now, which is good. on a national television channel. anyway, a man who has crammed an awful lot into the 34 years he's been on the planet, as i said earlier, including a heart attack, joins me and his name is
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charlie sansom. i was lucky enough to spend some time with him in uxbridge when i was campaigning. and here a bit of what he's been through. charlie thank you for joining what he's been through. charlie thank you forjoining me. thank you for joining me. >> evening. lovely be >> good evening. lovely to be here. good . here. i'm good. >> good. you look good . >> good. you look good. >> good. you look good. >> i'm doing all right. >> i'm doing all right. >> you've been through. >> you've been through. >> should we have celebratory >> should we have a celebratory dnnk >> should we have a celebratory drink together? let's drink to you . why you. why not? >> don't we drink both of >> why don't we drink to both of our good health? >> there we go. to our surgery. >> there we go. to our surgery. >> was bit more severe. >> yeah, a little bit just >> yeah, a little bit more. just a touch. right. >> yeah, a little bit more. just a t(so1. right. >> yeah, a little bit more. just a t(so. right. >> yeah, a little bit more. just a t(so . so;ht. >> yeah, a little bit more. just a t(so . so first all, what on >> so. so first of all, what on earth is a musician doing? having any anything other than really woke opinions ? really woke opinions? >> well, i think maybe that's why i'm not very well known. woke musician because i don't have those kinds of opinions . have those kinds of opinions. i've got no idea why what happened to me happened to me. but i certainly know that my opinions won't change because of the industry that i'm in. so you know. >> so what happened? when did you you joined the you first you joined the conservative you? you first you joined the conzwere ive you? you first you joined the conzwere into you? you first you joined the conzwere into brexit you? you first you joined the conzwere into brexit or you? you first you joined the conzwere into brexit or terrible you were into brexit or terrible crime ? crime? >> well, it could have been a
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great success if we had proper leadership in government. but my interest in brexit really come early on, years before it became a word with nigel farage. i mean, seeing him take down was the man in the european parliament called called a damp, a damp squib or a damp rag. and i saw him take down tony blair, which was fantastic . which i thought was fantastic. there out there. there was somebody out there. now i thought, he speaks to now that i thought, he speaks to me . and you didn't get that with me. and you didn't get that with politicians the mean, politicians at the time. i mean, tony blair was a was tony blair was was a was a goliath in 97. but he gradually let us down. and then nigel farage came along and i thought, wow, a man. wow, what a man. >> so you joined so in the absence actually being absence of farage actually being an conservative mp or an elected conservative mp or anything like that, you're like, i'll take next best thing and i will join the. >> well, once the referendum came through, result came came through, the result came through. obviously farage decided a little bit decided to step a little bit further away from the frontline of politics and the only party with the mantle to take this forward was the conservatives. so that was the party that i joined. and i initially believed that would their
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that they would fulfil their promises and as we promises of brexit. and as we can see, they certainly haven't i >> right. so fast forwarding , >> right. so fast forwarding, how long are you a member for? probably about four years. >> right. >> right. >> four years. when did you when did you jump ship? >> i left them in december 2021. dufing >> i left them in december 2021. during a live bbc interview where i quit my position because i couldn't stand their covid policies. >> okay. which covid policy didn't you like? >> mandatory vaccination is vaccine passports . there was vaccine passports. there was something about the way we were told to clap for nurses on our doorstep . but then in the end , doorstep. but then in the end, we were being told that they would lose their jobs if they didn't get a jab. so in my mind it was. are we grateful or are we couldn't quite we ungrateful? i couldn't quite work what we were, what we work out what we were, what we were and i just were doing there, and i just thought it was completely disgraceful. and were disgraceful. so. and you were bit being bit and obviously we were being told that it wasn't told all the time that it wasn't mandatory, was mandatory. told all the time that it wasn't ma it atory, was mandatory. told all the time that it wasn't ma it wasy, was mandatory. told all the time that it wasn't ma it was very was mandatory. told all the time that it wasn't ma it was very unsettling.|datory. >> it was very unsettling. >> it was very unsettling. >> there was lot of coercion. >> there was a lot of coercion. >> ended up am i right >> yeah. you ended up am i right in that your cousin ,
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in thinking that your cousin, who was a frontline health worker, were said, can worker, were said, look, i can get you jab , you can get in get you the jab, you can get in the jab. >> you know, were believer >> you know, you were a believer at point. at that point. >> this pre propaganda >> this is pre the propaganda era. you got jabbed. >> yeah, absolutely eye to eye to done. yeah. >> and then a couple of years later , a couple of years later, later, a couple of years later, i found myself 34, 34 man vulnerable, very old, very fragile, you know, not got many years left in me. >> yeah. what happened? i had a heart attack . i just. >> yeah. what happened? i had a heart attack. i just. i was getting out of bed and there was something in my chest. there was this pain. was this. this this pain. there was this. this burning sensation in the centre, which wouldn't up. and which wouldn't give up. and i wasn't worried. which sounds a little bit like i'm being full of myself. i genuinely wasn't worried, but . but of myself. i genuinely wasn't worried, but. but i of myself. i genuinely wasn't worried, but . but i knew what it worried, but. but i knew what it was right ? so worried, but. but i knew what it was right? so i drove worried, but. but i knew what it was right ? so i drove myself to was right? so i drove myself to hospital. that's not advice for anybody at home. but you know, i did did take myself in and did i did take myself in and when i eventually got confirmed as having a heart attack, i was like, wow , this could be this like, wow, this could be this could be it for me. you know, she had a triple heart bypass . i
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did. >> and tell me the thing that really bothers me, not bothers me, but interests me about this , other than the fact that 34 year old man is having a triple heart bypass, we don't need to go into the reasons why at the moment that you've got a 12 moment is that you've got a 12 year old daughter and you've got a family. >> yeah. taught me through what effect this surgery had on them i >>i -- >> i think. >> i think . i m >> i think . i think deep down a >> i think. i think deep down a lot of my family thought i was going to die . there was an going to die. there was an element of , oh, why is it element of, oh, why is it happening to me so young? you know, with all due respect , it's know, with all due respect, it's common for men in their mid 60s and onwards to have these kind of issues that i had so the impact it had , you know, my impact it had, you know, my mother in particular, i remember one time she said goodbye to me. it was it was a night before my surgery and she gave me this. this this embrace, which i'll never forget because she was so sad and she was so worried and she her head was in my chest. and she said, please come back
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to me. and if you can picture this, she's had to walk down a long corridor now and i've had to walk in the opposite direction in another down the other end of the corridor door and the thought of that still replays in my mind because, you know, the last thing you want to do is worry your mother and i had no choice but to be stoic for her. i didn't let my guard down in front of her. i had to be, you know, the man, as it were. >> you've got to stoic for >> you've got to be stoic for everyone, so you've got a everyone, right? so you've got a 12 year old daughter, too. so how did that work how is that how did that work out? to head out? when you're about to head into heart bypass, into a triple heart bypass, which, let's face it, isn't an ingrown toenail? >> tried to limit the >> well, i tried to limit the amount of time spent with me amount of time she spent with me in to protect in hospital purely to protect her because there people her because there were people around in the ward that were around me in the ward that were seriously ill. >> some people, unfortunately , >> some people, unfortunately, that i was with have passed away , which you know, incredibly , which is, you know, incredibly sad were lovely sad because they were lovely people. but the impact it had on her, i realised the day of my
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operation when in the morning of she was texting me, you know, daddy, i love you, daddy, you're going to be okay. but then i knew that my surgery time was around 8:00, so about 10 to 8. she's texting me saying, daddy , she's texting me saying, daddy, do you have to go now ? daddy, do you have to go now? daddy, please don't go . i miss you. please don't go. i miss you. i love you . and the hardest thing love you. and the hardest thing for me was in that moment, even though it's text messages that she's sending me, you can feel the anguish. you can feel the pain that she's and the worry that she's going through. and then i had to turn my phone off because i was due to go down and all i could think about was the time when she and i were in majorca on a beach. there's a lovely picture that i've got at home of us just looking out towards the sea. and there's a picture of us, our backs and that was the only thing that i thought about going into that, into that . dan would say, yeah,
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into that. dan would say, yeah, it's hard . it's hard. it's hard. it's hard. >> i mean, you you came out of the operation. i've seen your scars. and to see some of your undercarriage , to get some of undercarriage, to get some of the scars . but it's, it's just the scars. but it's, it's just incredible what you've been through . and to me, what is so through. and to me, what is so inspiring about you is you don't jump inspiring about you is you don't jump you're not a conspiracy theorist . you don't leap at theorist. you don't leap at people and go, oh, it's because of this, because of that. but you would, as far as i can gather, like it to be gather, you would like it to be looked at and understood why there's been a surge in there's been such a surge in heart attacks between guys between 45. is that right? >> yeah. i mean, it's incredible. like the statistics that seeing now, that if that we're seeing now, that if you if you said this two years ago, you'd never be allowed to be television the be on television or be in the press anything it press or anything and say it again. so i'm glad that we are actually open actually coming towards open debate this . and, you debate about this. and, you know, mentioned i'm know, you mentioned i'm not a conspiracy theorist. i'm not the every single reaction that i've had to. you've had a heart attack is did you have the jab ? attack is did you have the jab? and that's not hyperbole. that's
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not made up. every single person i've spoken to has said, did you get i've got colleague here. >> he's got had here. >> he's got had to have his >> he's got he's had to have his heart tested he's heart being tested and he's a young kid as well. >> it's terrible. and when you look at i went in with, look at what i went in with, with no high blood with no diabetes, no high blood pressure, no high cholesterol , pressure, no high cholesterol, no i don't smoke and i don't take drugs. >> what is wrong with you? >> what is wrong with you? >> exactly. come on, man , let's >> exactly. come on, man, let's party. >> but again , i'm realistic. >> but again, i'm realistic. i know that i'm overweight. i was a lot heavier when i went in. i've lost about two stones since i've lost about two stones since i had my heart attack. and i asked could it be my diet? asked them, could it be my diet? could it be what i'm eating? what you i like what i'm doing? you know, i like a i like a drink now and a beer. i like a drink now and again. said, even if again. but they said, even if you a and ate you were a pig and you ate mcdonald's every day, coke every day, whatever , there are other day, whatever, there are other brands available. obviously yeah. you wouldn't be yeah. they said you wouldn't be in this position. so i said to them, well, what about the covid jab ? and every i spoke to seven jab? and every i spoke to seven different doctors . two of them different doctors. two of them were surgeons , and it was like
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were surgeons, and it was like they'd seen a ghost . it was like they'd seen a ghost. it was like they'd seen a ghost. it was like they had better things, like not better things to do. but it was a bit like we've got somewhere else right now or, you a bit like we've got somewhere else sorry, ght now or, you a bit like we've got somewhere else sorry, but now or, you a bit like we've got somewhere else sorry, but you or, you a bit like we've got somewhere else sorry, but you ki'iow,j a bit like we've got somewhere else sorry, but you know, maybe know, sorry, but you know, maybe we should go and talk to patient number and, you know, but number 10 and, you know, but then doctors then when you speak to doctors outside, you, outside, they'll ask you, they'll you said to they'll but so, so you said to me something when we were having our today our pre conversation chat today a , our pre conversation chat today , a quote that you received which touched me because obviously mine was minor. >> i just had a little neck surgery. but it does make you feel more sore. and can feel a bit more sore. and can you tell us what that quote is? and can you us what and then can you tell us what you're to and how you're going to do and how people you in the world? >> absolutely. the quote that i got sent was from one of my best friends in canada. his is friends in canada. his name is josh was actually friends in canada. his name is josiuk was actually friends in canada. his name is josiuk entry was actually friends in canada. his name is josiuk entry for was actually friends in canada. his name is josiuk entry for eurovision lly friends in canada. his name is josiuk entry for eurovision back the uk entry for eurovision back in 2010. and he sent me a quote which said , a man only has two which said, a man only has two lives and the second one begins when he realises that he only has one. >> amen . >> amen. >> amen. >> amen, brother. >> amen, brother. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> thank you for being such a
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good guy and for being so optimist and hopeful with under what must have been some pretty hard times. yeah, it was difficult. >> huge respect to you. >> huge respect to you. >> yeah. thank you. >> yeah. thank you. >> cheers , man . and you're >> cheers, man. and you're watching gb news. and we'll be back
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in three yakshemash. i am laurence fox and joining me in the studio for this evening's fox nouns panel is benjamin , lachlan and charlie is benjamin, lachlan and charlie lambdin. now charlie , this is lambdin. now charlie, this is our first meeting and i would like to say that that leather jacket is doing things to me that i'd rather it didn't. >> think that's my partner >> i think that's my partner bought it for me. thank you very much. i'd be very happy. >> one it's bringing out the side of me, which is a little bit way, if you what
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bit that way, if you know what i mean. right. first story. do you remember the good old where remember the good old days where you shopping not you could go shopping and not be bombarded complete and bombarded with complete and utter shine , maybe picking utter bull shine, maybe picking up a tin of paint from your local diy store or a coffee on the way to work ? well, not the way to work? well, not anymore. is brand costa anymore. here is brand costa coffee promote cutting mutilation . so charlie should mutilation. so charlie should costa be glorifying top surgery as they call it? >> well , as they call it? >> well, given that we're as they call it? >> well , given that we're lucky >> well, given that we're lucky enough to live in this in this free country, it is their freedom to do so if they so wish , and their customers will be able to vote with their wallets if they feel inclined . i if they feel so inclined. i think that it smacks to me of horrible corporate. how can we maximise and get some pr out of this? because it'll really stir things up. i don't. >> oh, so you think it's deliberate goading? >> without a doubt . >> without a doubt. >> without a doubt. >> you're much more machiavellian and i take you for
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i think, i machiavellian and i take you for ithink, i mean, machiavellian and i take you for i think, i mean, that's their job, isn't it? >> you know, the guys in the marketing department say how do we get noticed? >> would go the 95% we get noticed? >>the would go the 95% we get noticed? >>the populationi go the 95% we get noticed? >>the population that go the 95% we get noticed? >>the population that are the 95% of the population that are completely against mutilation of children? get coverage like >> probably to get coverage like this so their brand being this on tv so their brand being talked about. >> right , machiavelli. >> all right, machiavelli. >> all right, machiavelli. >> no, it's not a good thing. ben. >> e— e you lefty , vile, vile , >> yeah, you lefty, vile, vile, socialist scumbag. >> what do you make of it? i've got a beer. >> i completely agree. i think no publicity is bad publicity. they just want their name in the headunes they just want their name in the headlines and frankly, a lot of people forget about this stuff. they, know, want they, you know, they want coffee. in their coffee. the name lodges in their mind, haven't tweeted mind, but they haven't tweeted for but i you for three days. but i think, you know maybe would come know, maybe starbucks would come along free air tea along and offer free air tea with coffee or with every sixth coffee or something, loyalty something, sort of loyalty program your trans program to get your trans stuff done. you go in, go get a done. you know, go in, go get a coffee and get your bits chopped off. >> i mean, they haven't tweeted . they haven't tweeted for four days. must have an days. so they must have an emergency going. emergency company going. >> maybe it's backfired like the bud situation where bud light situation where they're stock absolutely tanked after dylan mulvaney fiasco. after the dylan mulvaney fiasco.
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okay >> so here's here's my thing. you know, and, you know, it's really bad taste to compare anything to the. i love. i think we should compare more things to the. so i would say that if you do not stand against the mutilation of young bodies, especially of neurodiverse children and stuff like this, then you are complicit in its act right ? would you say that act right? would you say that thatis act right? would you say that that is a fair comment or would you disagree? >> it's a fair comment. i think ultimately the physical gender reassignment of minors is you can dress it up whichever way you like. i don't mind what you call it. we can call it. right. right. chopping yourself up to make feel better. make yourself feel better. however to call it, however you want to call it, however you want slice it. so however you want to slice it. so is . a choice that if they're is. a choice that if they're a minor , their parents need to minor, their parents need to approve it and sign it off. right? so the parents got to live with that decision. okay. it's a major personal choice. it's a major personal choice.
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it's not something that, again, we have the freedom in this country to decide if we want to do that or not. and it's a it's a ultra personal choice. i think it's a horrifically poor taste . it's a horrifically poor taste. and i think that mastectomies are 99, about people fighting death , deadly diseases and that death, deadly diseases and that kind of stuff. so i think they've gone crass and it's worked and gotten some pr coverage. but i don't think i don't think they'll look back and go that was good. i'm glad we did that. yeah, i agree. >> so, ben, what charlie is saying which quite saying there, which is quite interesting, that there interesting, which is that there is of personal choice is an element of personal choice and being a believer in personal choice, the choice, i can't really fault the argument should, it argument. should, should it should those that perform these mutilations on children, should they the doctors, should they be threatened with jail instead and leave the families and the parents alone to go and the children to go through the struggling? but if a doctor or a surgeon something, the surgeon performs something, the child should, they be jailed for the time as the same amount of time as anyone else who commits gbh? >> mean, look, personal choice >> i mean, look, personal choice is thing is one thing. it's another thing to harmful lifestyle to promote harmful lifestyle decisions with mental
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decisions to people with mental health someone health issues. so if someone has an and you tell them the an issue and you tell them the solution is mutilate their solution is to mutilate their body irreversibly and then they still have the issue they had before for they mutilated before for when they mutilated their but can't their body. but they can't reverse they've done . reverse the thing they've done. that's suicide that's why the trans suicide rate is so high, because they get themselves into a situation where thought would be where they thought this would be the solution to the panacea or the solution to all problems. and then all their problems. and then it's they've still got it's not they've still got the same do think the same issues. so i do think the people these things same issues. so i do think the pec money these things same issues. so i do think the pec money and these things same issues. so i do think the pecmoney and the these things same issues. so i do think the pecmoney and the same;e things same issues. so i do think the pecmoney and the same applies; for money and the same applies to like plastic surgeons, people who prey on people's vanity and their know, self image their self, you know, self image issues in order to make money and to profit off of it. i do think that's a disgraceful crime. but i'm not sure, you know, maybe not prison, but certainly should be shut down. >> well, the law would have to be changed for that to happen, wouldn't it? so we'd have to we'd lobby our mps and we'd have to lobby our mps and say, right, we now want anyone that this to be prosecuted that does this to be prosecuted for offence, if for a criminal offence, if that's if that's what that's what we if that's what we decide as an electorate, decide as a as an electorate, it's very difficult. i mean , i it's very difficult. i mean, i don't disagree with anything that said at all. i but
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that you just said at all. i but again, it's very, very hard for anyone to cast judgement on people who are suffering from mental health issues and what may or may not be best for them. yeah, there are some people who do feel better off. they've done it. they genuinely and they it. they genuinely do and they live happy life. it. they genuinely do and they livethat's happy life. it. they genuinely do and they livethat's true. ipy life. it. they genuinely do and they livethat's true.)py are it. they genuinely do and they livethat's true. ipy are talking. >> that's true. we are talking. yeah, be true yeah, it's got to be true because the of unintended because the law of unintended consequences some people because the law of unintended consbejences some people because the law of unintended consbe happy some people because the law of unintended consbe happy and some people because the law of unintended consbe happy and also�*me people will be happy and also my personal view is the transgender community left out of it. >> really. >> really. >> i agree. they just it's like they for this. it's they didn't ask for this. it's they didn't ask for this. it's the same as the gay lesbian the same as the gay and lesbian community out of community want to be left out of the the of black the out of the sort of black lives matter bit. it's like when they them all into one they lump them all into one flag. i get upset you flag. i get upset because, you know, i, i went to public school and my friend came out to me when we left some holiday and when we left on some holiday and he couldn't tell anyone he was gay at public he gay at public school. he literally would had the literally would have had the i mean, bearing in mind that they are the exact thing they accuse you of, all of this was you of, all of this stuff was going anyway. but going on at school anyway. but if to being gay, if he'd admitted to being gay, he have had living he would have had the living bejesus kicked him. so it bejesus kicked out of him. so it as working towards a solution to
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this problem. the fact that schools through rac and psa are telling a hypersexualized our children in my view and from the documents i've seen and from the works and the papers that i've looked through, do we think that there good age where there should be a good age where we talk to kids about about we talk to kids about sex, about what's happen moving what's going to happen moving forward lives or do what's going to happen moving forwthink lives or do what's going to happen moving forwthink it's lives or do what's going to happen moving forwthink it's the ves or do what's going to happen moving forwthink it's the earlier do what's going to happen moving forwthink it's the earlier the better? >> i think it's up to the parents, yes. i think parents are blamed every time children do wrong . so you can't do something wrong. so you can't take responsibility away from parents then blame them. so parents and then blame them. so i up to the parents i think it is up to the parents to decide what's best for their children live with the children and to live with the consequences their decisions. children and to live with the c don't uences their decisions. children and to live with the c don't thinks their decisions. children and to live with the c don't think it's their decisions. children and to live with the c don't think it's thethe ecisions. children and to live with the c don't think it's thethe forions. i don't think it's for the for a broad brush say at this age, broad brush to say at this age, we and that and we will teach this and that and this actually one of the this is actually one of the reasons why i home educate my children, take children, because i want to take responsibility what they responsibility for what they learn they learn it, learn and when they learn it, because not want because i absolutely do not want someone else who may disagree with to going with me going, no, i'm to going imprint your imprint these ideas on your child's young child's mind while they're young and impressionable. yeah, and impressionable. well, yeah, when counter it. >> yeah. i hu- h— >> yeah. i mean, it's ultimately what you are saying is that it's
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my right and responsibility. i'll take the rough with the smooth and then my kids and i will help take them out into the world. ben, your thoughts? >> completely in >> well, i'm completely in favour home education, favour of home education, but it is mean, a lot of is a luxury. i mean, a lot of people don't option. people don't have the option. it's you if you're it's something if you if you're lucky be able to home lucky enough to be able to home educate children. educate your children. absolutely because why would absolutely do. because why would you who's you trust some teacher who's just with just come out of university with all sorts of woke ideas to, you know, imprint morals and know, imprint their morals and their your children? i their values on your children? i mean, valuable mean, it's the most valuable thing in your thing you'll ever do in your life, your children life, is raising your children and your on and passing your values on to them. don't think people them. and i don't think people should take it so lightly. the schools gone completely should take it so lightly. the schoolyou gone completely should take it so lightly. the schoolyou know, |e completely should take it so lightly. the schoolyou know, what'siletely should take it so lightly. the schoolyou know, what's happening woke. you know, what's happening in the schools with the in the schools now with the gender where they in the schools now with the gendeeven where they in the schools now with the gendeeven tell where they in the schools now with the gendeeven tell the where they in the schools now with the gendeeven tell the parents? they in the schools now with the gendeyeah tell the parents? they in the schools now with the gendeyeah ,all the parents? they in the schools now with the gendeyeah , there'sparents? they in the schools now with the gendeyeah , there's social;? they well, yeah, there's social transitioning thing, social transitioning, social transitioning, social transitioning is a major problem because, you know , i've said because, you know, i've said this before and i'll just repeat it. >> my i can't it.— >> my i can't i it. >> my i can't i don't even know whatever. there's a kid with long hair who calls himself a girl and he's getting of an age now where this is happening . and now where this is happening. and at some point, isn't the mea
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culpa the role back for that person who's now got hair down to their shows , shoulders and to their shows, shoulders and he's wearing a dress and all their friends are girls and they're being called girl, the they're being called a girl, the minute that that isn't there just no way out for that kid other than to continue down the path of puberty blocking and then putting mutilation in their body. >> it's that whole scenario is just horrific . i can't >> it's that whole scenario is just horrific. i can't imagine it. and it's what but, you know, one thing i react to what ben just said is that i think it's more the education system itself as a whole than the as a whole rather than the individual teachers. lot of individual teachers. a lot of those teachers come out those young teachers come out and have they themselves those young teachers come out and been ave they themselves those young teachers come out and been guidedy themselves those young teachers come out and been guided productslves those young teachers come out and been guided products of s those young teachers come out and been guided products of the have been guided products of the same. there same. and they actually there there there are products that are cautious. are so i'm very cautious. i actually think teachers have a incredibly yeah, incredibly difficult job. yeah, they underpaid they do. they're underpaid and unden they do. they're underpaid and under. think the under. but but i think the school system is the problem. >> well, acas is shouting me >> well, acas is shouting at me in apparently in my ear because apparently they fire her after last they didn't fire her after last week, which is a shame . i they didn't fire her after last week, which is a shame. i did ask apparently . now that's ask her, apparently. now that's it for part one. i am tooting the halftime horn. what do you
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in three. . in three. >>- in three. >> great success on the sound. >> great success on the sound. >> welcome back . so tonight, i'm >> welcome back. so tonight, i'm asking you the most important question of all time. why are the overfifties such lazy , fat? the overfifties such lazy, fat? sorry what do they call economically inactive slobs? stewart says maybe they've seen what you can get for nothing and decided the uplift is not worth getting out of bed for. there's a video about socialism, which covers this one. chris says . i covers this one. chris says. i worked for i worked nearly 60 hours a week. well, i hope you're over 60. my father is currently delivering uber eats at 84 years old on a penny
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farthing at the age of 54. deliver three things for the elderly and disabled , like elderly and disabled, like electric chairs, electric beds, mobility scooters, electric wheelchairs, etcetera. and i'm not doing it any more. eileen says. perhaps they're fed up with watching so many other people sit at home and get more than they do. yep adrian says perhaps they're fed up with watching so many other people said no because adrian and eileen can't say the same thing . fired again. and . cass, you're fired again. and look. and then it says, welcome back. but you didn't go anywhere . i'm so good at autocue . you . i'm so good at autocue. you see, it's natural. the relationship up, right? ben charlie fat people , economically charlie fat people, economically inactive people. let's start with ben this time, because i don't want to flirt with you too much. ben economically fat people. yeah. sorry yeah. what are they called? they called employment rebellion. employment. rebellion they're called. >> yeah. oh, very good . >> yeah. oh, very good. >> yeah. oh, very good. >> should. should we be sending granddad out to work? >> well , i granddad out to work? >> well, i think, look, everyone
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should work . if you're able to should work. if you're able to work, you should work. you shouldn't be on benefits on the dole time. i dole all the time. but then i understand why would go out understand why would you go out and work when you see nothing in return? the cost and work when you see nothing in retliving the cost and work when you see nothing in retliving out the cost and work when you see nothing in retliving out of the cost and work when you see nothing in retliving out of control,the cost of living out of control, inflation death spiral, inflation and a death spiral, half people never half these people are never going they don't going to own a home. they don't see any return on the work. so i don't blame them for sitting at home doing nothing. you home and doing nothing. you know, a moral know, i, i do from a moral perspective, but from an economic perspective, they're never fruits of never to going see the fruits of their labour, are they? >> that's in no way >> well, that's in no way depressing suicidal. you've depressing and suicidal. you've got offer? i got anything to offer? yes, i have. >> as a over 50 fat, lazy slob myself leather myself with a nice leather jacket . i know that people have jacket. i know that people have my generation and older actually find modern workplaces, intimidate thing because they keep worrying. they're going to slip up and be accused of being a bigot. >> i am scared of it and i'm young ish, so genuinely i know because i'm the age that i am. >> i met people who work in there and they've fallen out with their children over it. and they don't. they actually don't understand what understand it. but this is what i've always this how
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i've always said. this is how i've always said. this is how i've it was never i've always said. this is how i"problem it was never i've always said. this is how i"problem before, it was never i've always said. this is how i"problem before, and was never i've always said. this is how i"problem before, and they're'er a problem before, and they're genuinely terrify side of going into where they don't into workplaces where they don't know people because anything they they're going to get they say they're going to get picked you're blaming picked up on, you're blaming political correctness the picked up on, you're blaming poli'thatcorrectness the picked up on, you're blaming poli'that fat,ectness the picked up on, you're blaming poli'that fat,ectne50 the picked up on, you're blaming poli'that fat,ectne 50 th olds fact that fat, lazy 50 year olds can't be bothered to get to work . doesn't it ? . sounds good, doesn't it? >> what should they be doing ? >> well, 7 >> well, again , ? >> well, again , they have the >> well, again, they have the freedom of choice . yeah, i think freedom of choice. yeah, i think they should. >> we make them do make them . >> we make them do make them. >> we make them do make them. >> make them very fast. sure. to do the jobs. rich jobs . good do the jobs. rich jobs. good jobs. yes >> well, the workers. >> well, the workers. >> oh , wait. yeah. what about >> oh, wait. yeah. what about fruit picking so you can stop the migrants coming over every yeah >> seasonal workers, you know, get them out picking old people, bin them out in the fields. they're and they're they're lazy and they're fat. get picking fruit and they get them picking fruit and they can eat the fruit and lose some weight. >> i don't over here seems >> i don't lane over here seems to solution. would not to have a solution. i would not like to in the britain that like to live in the britain that you charge of, but this you were in charge of, but this is okay. >> have a solution to your >> i have a solution to your back problem. pick strawberries. it's great for your back.
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>> i. >> i. >> i. >> i think that the hospitality industry benefits from people having from having staff who are in their 50s working. >> they're charming people. yeah. yeah. >> because that's you get >> because that's what you get when because you when you're older. because you care they're happy to care less and they're happy to be . be there. >> you know, they genuinely seem to they don't give the impression they're just, impression that they're just, oh, i've got oh, come on, hurry up. i've got to off in a minute. to get off in a minute. >> it's like america, in >> it's like in america, in walmart, they've got the greeters, the people who stand at just say, hello. at the door and just say, hello. hope having day. hope you're having a lovely day. and they're always pensioners or old people. >> or in the case of the mexicans illegals, they go, mexicans and illegals, they go, hello, welcome here's some hello, welcome in. here's some free conditioning free air conditioning because you at home. you can't afford it at home. yeah. so entire families yeah. so you get entire families who there going, who just sit there going, it's so the so hot. how have you found the global boiling? week ? global boiling? this week? >> enjoying cold and >> i've been enjoying cold and wet weather , unsettled weather wet weather, unsettled weather down in the west country . down in the west country. >> are you concerned about the global boiling ? i'm much more global boiling? i'm much more concerned about how any rise in global temperature is being manipulated . manipulated. >> yes, that's what i'm much more concerned about. there's no question the climate is changing. but why it's changing? i buy.
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i don't buy. >> you concerned about the >> are you concerned about the global climate has global warming, the climate has always changed throughout history always changed throughout historjthe 1800s, the thames used >> in the 1800s, the thames used to freeze over, and in the middle in the middle ages we make wine in the north england . goes north of england. it goes in cycles. always changes. we cycles. it always changes. we need to stop this religion of if we around enough and make we dance around enough and make enough sacrifices , we can change enough sacrifices, we can change the weather. it's going to the weather. it's going back to paganism. we're aztecs paganism. it's like we're aztecs dancing around we're dancing around saying, we're going sacrifice going to make these sacrifice faces to the sun god to stop it. that saw apocalypto . if you take >> i saw apocalypto. if you take out 10,000 people's hearts, is an eclipse of the sun. >> then i saw that fact checking you on that . you on that. >> that's evidence that film. >> that's evidence that film. >> so no, i don't want to too be personal, but as a as a somebody who's homeschooling their kids, what are the things that you definitely don't teach them? you avoid that . avoid that. >> i don't teach my children . >> i don't teach my children. god, that's a good question . god, that's a good question. >> where don't you go? >> where don't you go? >> uh , anything that's not fun >> uh, anything that's not fun because they're still young , so because they're still young, so i just want them to have fun. i mean, couldn't that be school?
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yeah yeah. and that tends to lead to happier kids who are much less worried things much less worried about things that children shouldn't be worrying about anything. or their children. you know, that's their children. you know, that's the give the least we could try and give them well, them if possible. well, what don't teach them? i don't. don't i teach them? i don't. i just want them to be kids for as long they can. yeah you know, long as they can. yeah you know, when asking questions when they start asking questions and really mean when they start asking questions arabout really mean when they start asking questions arabout more really mean when they start asking questions arabout more difficult lly mean when they start asking questions arabout more difficult topics an it about more difficult topics and i'll just check really and i'll just check they really want they do, want to know. and if they do, then we'll go there and i'll share with them views. but share with them my views. but i will them not to believe will tell them not to believe anything to form their anything i say and to form their own and to someone own opinion and to ask someone else same i will else the same question. i will always them how to think, always teach them how to think, not think. always teach them how to think, not you're think. always teach them how to think, notyou're inthink. always teach them how to think, notyou're in danger of being >> you're in danger of being a sort mean, you're far sort of i mean, you're far right. extreme is by being this liberal. >> yeah. shall we cancel you? >> yeah. shall we cancel you? >> well, i. >> well, i. >> i'd like to cancel. we? okay we have a woman who hasn't been fired is going telling me we got to go to break. >> cast your show .
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at three. >> hello and welcome back to the home of free speech, where i now have to read out statement that there is no definitive evidence that the jab causes heart problems at all in regard . problems at all in regard. sorry. read it into my ear. hair sense to right whatever . sense to right whatever. apparently the covid vaccine is really safe, really effective if you question it, you get off covid. whoa now, i asked you to put me on the spot with any question. it's time fox and spot graham asked who put the ball in the bop bop , bop. who put the the bop bop, bop. who put the ram in the rama? lama ding dong . i'm asking for a friend . well, . i'm asking for a friend. well, i'll tell you what. back in the day, nigella lawson put ramalama in my ding dong . glenn says this in my ding dong. glenn says this must be a joke. what are you talking about? my question about
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overfifties ask my dad. he's on a 16 hour shift for uber eats on his penny farthing, delivering you bottle of malbec as we you your bottle of malbec as we speak. clive says , why don't you speak. clive says, why don't you stop smoking? i said, clive, i have stopped smoking. what i just haven't stopped smoking is really hot. plastic . is better. really hot. plastic. is better. i'm going to live . it's going to i'm going to live. it's going to be good . guys, what puts the be good. guys, what puts the ding dong in your ding a ling long people . long people. >> people. >> people. >> i have no idea what the question means. >> okay. is should old people be sent to work ? sent to work? >> no, they should have to read statements like that on a national tv because there are two terrified to sort out whether it's okay to question that jab, which is increasing heart attacks in people, whether they like it or not. >> and we have 2500 excess deaths every week by the way, which i'm not blaming on the jab, but they happen. and we're not allowed to anything. >> i think plenty of >> i think we have plenty of balance across the media. i
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mean, when every other media organisation completely organisation is completely one sided , on the sided on this issue, on the other side, it doesn't hurt to have other side presented elsewhere. >> will you become a radical in time, do you think, trying to hold the central position i'm keeping on moment. keeping a lid on at the moment. >> it's to know. >> it's hard to know. >> it's hard to know. >> genuinely. mean it like as >> genuinely. i mean it like as someone is screaming in my ear going, i've just an going, i've just done an interview with guy who has interview with a guy who has deliberately i do not want deliberately said, i do not want to blame this on a vaccine of any kind because cause i don't think that's fair. but he's had a heart attack and he's 34 years old. there's another guy, a colleague of mine out there with a pasting, measuring his heart attack. and he's also 35. i didn't that in the past, are didn't see that in the past, are we not allowed to talk about this stuff ? this stuff? >> no, i don't know. but i would question that thing about whether there isn't any evidence. actually >> but i think it's. what would you say? >> sorry, i would want to question the assumption that there evidence that it there is no evidence that it actually disease. >> is increasing >> i think there is increasing evidence. i don't know. and i can't watch it right now. i'm going be ofcom.
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going to be ofcom. >> it. we're all fired. >> that's it. we're all fired. >> that's it. we're all fired. >> yeah. >> that's it. we're all fired. >> now. >> that's it. we're all fired. >> now look, next stop. it's the. what? what do you mean? you told me i only had five seconds. next up is patrick christys. in mark dolan patrick, the underused. goodbye >> see you when i get back from my holiday. >> lots of love, people . >> lots of love, people. >> lots of love, people. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hi there. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office. with the gb news forecast, another low this weekend, this one's been named storm anthony by the met office because of the risk of gales for some of disruptive gales for some heavy rain. for many others as storm anthony is arriving through friday night. it's this area of low pressure that has been named and it's basically because it's arriving at such a busy time of year for holiday makers. people who are taking part in outdoor activities, camping , part in outdoor activities, camping, caravanning and so on. initially it's the rain that is of concern overnight , especially of concern overnight, especially across parts of northern
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gb news. >> it's 9:00 on television, on radio and online in the united kingdom and all around the world. unless, of course, you are a flat earther. i am patrick christys standing in for the legendary mr mark dolan. coming up on the show in my big opinion, labour wants the party of the working class now the party of illegal immigrants in the big story is king charles right to snub harry and meghan from the one year memorial for queen elizabeth ii in my hot take at ten. british culture is under attack. everything from our food to our schools to our countryside . but how on earth do countryside. but how on earth do we stop it .
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