tv Mark Dolan Tonight GB News August 4, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm BST
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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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we stop it. so it's a heck of a busy hour to come put something cold and fizzy in the fridge or fire up that kettle and let's make a friday night of it, shall we.7 but friday night of it, shall we? but first, it is the headlines with the wonderful karen armstrong . armstrong. >> very good evening to you. i'm karen armstrong in the gb news room. emergency services in birmingham are dealing with an ongoing incident following reports of an explosion . reports of an explosion. residents in the hall green area reported hearing one or more loud bangs this afternoon on sarehole road. west midlands fire service says the blaze is now under control. no more details, but we'll bring you more on this as soon as we get it . a man who murdered his baby it. a man who murdered his baby stepson has been sentenced to a minimum of 28 years in prison. craig crouch has been convicted of killing ten month old jacob, who was found dead in his cot in
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december 2020. he'd suffered 39 rib fractures from numerous assaults in the months leading up to his death . jacob's mother, up to his death. jacob's mother, gemma barton, was sentenced to ten years for causing or allowing his death. mrjustice kerr said crouch caused jacob intense and prolonged suffering. >> he was a small baby who had not yet learned to walk or talk. sadly he never did. so. your attacks on him were an abuse of trust , of the grossest 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. >> now, 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, ann serene , ambushed mother, ann serene, ambushed saqib hussain and mohammed hashim aijazuddin and rammed their car off the road . it their car off the road. it happened after mr hussain threatened to use sexually explicit material to expose an affair he was having with ms
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bukhari's mother. two further defendants were found guilty of murder, while three others were found guilty of manslaughter. the government is turning to the private sector in an effort to clear record nhs waiting lists . clear record nhs waiting lists. eight of 13 new community diagnostic centres to be opened in england will be operated by independent companies and services, though will be free to patients. they will carry out almost 750,000 additional scans, checks and tests every year . the checks and tests every year. the russian opposition leader, alexei navalny, says vladimir putin must not be allowed to achieve his goals after being sentenced to a further 19 years in jail. the kremlin's most vocal political critic was found guilty of creating and funding an extremist organisation , nye an extremist organisation, nye bevan. he's currently serving an 11 year sentence for fraud at a maximum security penal colony. in a tweet this evening, mr navalny said russians are being forced to surrender their country without a fight to a gang of traitors and has urged
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followers not to lose the will to resist . and unseasonably to resist. and unseasonably strong winds are expected to batter parts of the uk this weekend with forecasters warning of a danger to life . storm of a danger to life. storm antony, the first to be named by the met office this season, will hit wales and southwest england from tonight with winds of up to 65mph predicted and a yellow rain warning has also been issued for northern ireland. mr gb news across the uk on tv , on gb news across the uk on tv, on digital radio and on your smart speaken digital radio and on your smart speaker. now it is over to . patrick >> welcome to mark dolan tonight . i am, of course, patrick christys . . i am, of course, patrick christys. i'm in for mark while he's sunning himself abroad. who do thing like that? hey but do a thing like that? hey but coming tonight, in big coming up tonight, in my big opinion are labour party opinion are the labour party wants the party to give a voice
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to the working class. now it seems only interested in seems their only interested in standing up for illegal immigrants. how on earth did that happen? the big that happen? and in the big story , as king charles story, as king charles reportedly harry and reportedly snubs harry and meghan for the one year memorial for queen elizabeth ii at balmoral, royal expert charlie rae joins me to discuss whether the king is right to do so. i think is he's actually grown think he is he's actually grown a hasn't but what a backbone, hasn't he? but what do and this story had do you think? and this story had me stitches. the falkland me in stitches. the falkland islands advertises for an equality tsar costing over 40 grand a year despite the population being outnumbered by sheep to the tune of 136 to 1. we better hope that sheep never go to war with humans on the falkland islands, but with diversity officers still being hired and paid more than a lot of nurses, whilst the health service is under unbearable strain, has this obsession with diversity gone too far ? it might diversity gone too far? it might take at ten from illegal immigration to critical race theory to de—banking country
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sportsman, british culture is bang under attack and i think we should be very worried about that. my newsmaker tonight is the eminent political editor of express online . it's david mad express online. it's david mad dog maddox , who brings us the dog maddox, who brings us the latest on rishi sunaks house being for an eco warrior being used for an eco warrior stunt. he's got an interesting but deeply illegal way of handung but deeply illegal way of handling that lot. gb news is, of course, the home of the papers well with tomorrow's papers as well with tomorrow's front from 10:30 pm. front pages from 10:30 pm. sharp, we'll be bringing you all of the latest with the three top punst of the latest with the three top pundits who haven't been told what to say and who don't follow the script. we've got political commentator chloe dobbs , former commentator chloe dobbs, former editor of labourlist peter edwards, and of course , as well, edwards, and of course, as well, deputy leader of the uk independence party, rebecca jane, all looking mighty glamorous this evening, may i say so? i'm bang up for this now . here we go. our talented, sincere people being put off, going into politics because of stunts like we saw from greenpeace this week . why would greenpeace this week. why would you go into politics if someone's just going climb
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someone's just going to climb your everything your house, dig up everything from past, do everything. from your past, do everything. what enticing the good folk what is enticing the good folk of into the political of britain into the political sphere? days? anything at sphere? these days? anything at all? i deeply suspect that we're just to going entice psychopaths to be our politicians. if we haven't already. and as reports say that many country sports clubs are being denied accounts or credits , are we witnessing or credits, are we witnessing the demise of our british countryside activity ? liz i countryside activity? liz i think we're probably going to have time to squeeze in 1 or 2 more. are we with a labour councillor posting advice on loopholes for bypassing immigration laws? would a labour government ever deal with illegal migration plus your emails? it says here in my script, even the spicy ones, i'm going to change that only the spicy ones get on board. gb views and gbnews.com this show has a golden rule . we don't do has a golden rule. we don't do boring. not on my watch . i just boring. not on my watch. i just won't have it. let's get to work, shall we? and we start with my big opinion . well,
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with my big opinion. well, labour used to be the party of the working class, but now they are the party of illegal immigrants. it appears labour have refused to sack a councillor who filmed herself essentially offering her services to help illegal immigrants stay in britain. check this out . check this out. >> hi listeners irum ali here immigration solicitor for are you in the uk without a valid visa ? are you illegal or have visa? are you illegal or have you overstayed your visa? do not fear irum ali is here to help you regularise your visa in the uk and submit an application to the home office based on your human rights. it is extremely important to make sure you become legal in the uk . there is become legal in the uk. there is an extremely hostile environment for overstay is here, so you must make sure that you can
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submit an application to the home office , become legal and be home office, become legal and be en route to indefinite leave. to remain so, contact me. let's have that conversation in and work out what needs to be done to get your stay here in the uk, she should make another video. >> there is an incredibly hostile environment for people who have illegally broken into someone's house and want to stay there forever. hire me as your solicitor and i will help you. now, the one good thing about that video for me is this, right? which is that it should make it very easy to deport people. we can just check to see who's replied, saying that they need services bingo , get need her services and bingo, get the on the runway. the plane ready on the runway. but this shows the attitude of the labour party. they want the labour party. do they want to illegals stay in to help illegals stay in britain? they arguably want more illegals to come here, given that they've opposed the illegal migration bill they've been against deporting foreign murderers , rapists and drug murderers, rapists and drug dealers. accused of dealers. they've been accused of helping with fraud by helping with voter fraud by opposing voter id . now, if we
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opposing voter id. now, if we get a labour government it will just be a green light. will it not, for everyone to come here illegally after we've seen that video? fact that labour video? the fact that labour haven't rid this as haven't got rid of this lady as a newcastle just a councillor in newcastle just shows that in my view they don't actually take illegal immigration seriously at all. but also puts the spotlight but it also puts the spotlight firmly on the legal profession. again in a sting operation recently exposed several law firms for making up asylum claims in return for wads of cash. claims in return for wads of cash . now, i am convinced that cash. now, i am convinced that this is happening all over the country. forget ambulance chasers. we've got an army of small boat chasers and other illegal immigrant chasers . no illegal immigrant chasers. no wonder that labour are in favour of mass immigration. seemingly as well. seemingly pro—illegal immigration in some cases. let them in. say that you're on their side and then get all their side and then get all their votes. load the dice with wrong'uns and watch the labour votes come rolling .
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votes come rolling. in well, what do you think? do you agree ? do you disagree? gb views agree? do you disagree? gb views gbnews.com. i will get to your emails after the break, but reacting to my big opinion tonight. oh my brilliant panel of political commentator chloe dobbs , former editor of dobbs, former editor of labourlist political labourlist and political commentator edwards, and commentator peter edwards, and deputy leader of the uk independence party , rebecca independence party, rebecca jane. rebecca i will start with you. what do you make of all that? >> wow. a labour council are using political problem for using a political problem for a raw personal gain . raw personal gain. >> not surprising in the slightest . she's about as slightest. she's about as corrupt as every other politician that we've got today as well. in my personal opinion, it's appalling. i don't understand why labour will ever stand by her, but of course they will because that is all that labour want. they want to be pro—immigration about these pro—immigration, all about these safe routes and all safe and legal routes and all the of it. in meantime, the rest of it. in the meantime, our can't and if our country can't cope and if they power it'll be far
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they get in power it'll be far worse than what we're experiencing now. right? >> well, look, always >> okay. well, look, it's always ladies i will double ladies first, so i will double up that that's right, up on that if that's all right, peter, you're to to peter, you're going to have to hold afraid. hold your horses. i'm afraid. chloe, you about chloe, what do you think about this? is it unfair to say that that a lot people that fear that a lot of people have about vote labour just get have about vote labourjust get legal immigration to max? legal immigration to the max? might true? might actually be coming true? >> absolutely . now, on the >> yes, absolutely. now, on the one it is good if there one hand, it is good if there are out there putting out are people out there putting out legal information on for immigrants because a lot of the people who come over on small boats, they have absolutely no idea what the rules are here. they just come here because my cousin's says cousin's here and he says it's good the for example. good in the uk, for example. however way that she's however for the way that she's put it across is come here. put it across is just come here. it if you're an it doesn't matter if you're an illegal we'll illegal immigrant because we'll just illegal. one, just make you illegal. one, there absolutely incentive just make you illegal. one, ththe absolutely incentive just make you illegal. one, ththe momenttely incentive just make you illegal. one, ththe momenttely to incentive just make you illegal. one, ththe momenttely to cross1tive just make you illegal. one, ththe momenttely to cross the at the moment not to cross the channel can't move channel because we can't move them out of the country. we'll put them luxury flat and put them up in a luxury flat and we'll give you free lawyer to we'll give you a free lawyer to help become indefinite. >> so why didn't the labour party get rid of this party just get rid of this woman? well, i have to say, i think under think you risk collapsing under the hysteria the weight of your own hysteria
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for papers like the daily for the papers like the daily mail the express will mail and the daily express will be in ecstasy when they see a video like that, but it's not really borne by reality, really borne out by reality, you know, can labour just sack a council that? council like that? >> doesn't that . so >> it doesn't work like that. so erramalli took down the video, a lots source quotes and lots of source quotes and newspapers she'd been spoken to. i think as a journalist, you know, someone's know, when someone's being spoken they've spoken to, that means they've been bit by someone been told off a bit by someone else in the labour party. she won't the next labour won't be in the next labour government elected. won't be in the next labour governme a elected. won't be in the next labour governmea member elected. won't be in the next labour governme a member of lected. she's not a member of parliament. not standing parliament. she's not standing as member of parliament. so as a member of parliament. so does speak to culture, does it not speak to a culture, though modest? does it not speak to a culture, tho d01 modest? does it not speak to a culture, tho do you modest? does it not speak to a culture, tho do you not)dest? does it not speak to a culture, tho do you not speak to a culture >> do you not speak to a culture though, got somebody though, that you've got somebody there who feels comfortable enough councillor to enough as a labour councillor to sit in their car and basically tout their wares as someone who can get illegal immigrants to stay well first of stay in britain? well first of all, i don't know why it would speak to a culture. >> of thousands of >> there's tens of thousands of councillors of all parties >> there's tens of thousands of councilthe of all parties >> there's tens of thousands of councilthe ukall parties >> there's tens of thousands of councilthe uk notiarties >> there's tens of thousands of councilthe uk not doing that, around the uk not doing that, though, are they? no, they're not the labour not doing that. if the labour one. a very unwise video one. it was a very unwise video to make, which is why it's been taken but think the taken down. but i think the danger to essentially danger is trying to essentially go the of the daily go with the flow of the daily mail and daily to
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mail and the daily express to have read across about have a massive read across about what this could lead to under a labour government. remember, the labour government. remember, the labour led a labour party is led by a barrister, know , who wants barrister, you know, who wants to uphold the rule of law. >> well who is of course >> well indeed, who is of course also at pains to us that also at pains to tell us that his was a toolmaker, his dad was a toolmaker, although people you although many people say you don't need to remind us of that. your course, is your existence of course, is evidence you're evidence alone, but you're shaking head, rebecca, shaking your head, rebecca, there. why >> wi w- e all a load of >> because it's all a load of absolute , isn't we absolute nonsense, isn't it? we can make excuses, but the can all make excuses, but the one politicians one thing about politicians and the entered the reason why i entered politics goodness sakes, is politics for goodness sakes, is because people are not honest about who they are , and this is about who they are, and this is flushing out . this is who flushing them out. this is who this person really was . i want this person really was. i want to exactly who they are to know exactly who they are before them into before we start voting them into power. the definition power. she's the definition of labour the exact reason why labour and the exact reason why they need to not get in power. >> okay. all right. and i'll throw it back over to you, >> okay. all right. and i'll throw ibecause ver to you, >> okay. all right. and i'll throw ibecause immigration will chloe, because immigration will be people's minds be a big thing on people's minds when they go into that polling booth at the next general election, as will things like net i wonder whether net zero. i wonder now whether or tories are starting or not the tories are starting to distinctive lines to draw clear, distinctive lines between themselves the between themselves and the labour party on some key issues
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when it comes to things like actually at least trying to control our borders, not just pretending about it, and also things the net agenda things like the net zero agenda to . to. >> so firstly, i'd say that there are a lot of people , there are a lot of people, including labour voters, who voted for brexit on the basis that they wanted us to have control of our borders and tiktoks like that coming out are not going to sway those voters from vote to vote labour . from vote to vote for labour. however, rishi sunak doesn't seem to be getting a strong grip on the small boats at the moment, so can the conservatives really say we are the ones who are going to protect our borders and labour are going to mess it up? can't. going to mess. >> no, they can't. and that is a problem. do think problem. peter, do you think that there should be a deeper investigation into the legal profession mail have just done because the mail have just done a operation quite a few a sting operation on quite a few law that willing law firms that were willing to be dodgy about it be incredibly dodgy about it all. i really do think that there is a cottage industry of small boat chasers at the moment , chasers. small boat chasers at the moment , i chasers. small boat chasers at the moment , i mean chasers. small boat chasers at the moment , i mean , chasers. small boat chasers at the moment , i mean , ihasers. small boat chasers at the moment , i mean , i think;. small boat chasers at the moment , i mean , i think you've been >> i mean, i think you've been reading too many newspapers and
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too you know, this too frequently, you know, this kind what do for a living. kind of what i do for a living. >> mate, fair, that >> no, mate, to be fair, that this is very technical. >> solicitors >> there's a solicitors regulation they can regulation authority they can investigate like investigate whether they've like if evidence if they've got evidence of wrongdoing. want to so, wrongdoing. but i want to so, you know, that's to down them. they know more the legal they know more about the legal profession i want profession than i do. but i want to that ukip to make the point that ukip i think are largely irrelevant now. they have zero seats in the house of commons and they're probably going to have zero after this. here we go. so i think where did that come from? >> peter? >> peter? >> peter? >> peter there is cruising for a bruising on a friday night. this is what we're going to get. you see don't have to go down to see you don't have to go down to the see a massive the pub to see a massive physical scrap. you're going to get right here. so. so you get one right here. so. so you think are irrelevant? think that ukip are irrelevant? rebecca respond rebecca i'll get you to respond to because why not? to that because yeah, why not? because you have to legally go on. >> you can have a right to listen. >> i love your little diversion. i love your little sledgehammer of a personal attack there. >> it's lovely of you. no, no, no. knock it off. i'm ready for it now, so that's fine. you can have that opinion. quite a few
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people do. i don't that in people do. i don't mind that in the because know the slightest, because you know what? we do need to make a comeback nowhere near as comeback with nowhere near as big we were. and that's big as what we were. and that's absolutely fine. i'm not to absolutely fine. i'm not here to lie to you. i'm not a corrupt politician. so yeah, we're coming we're coming coming back and we're coming back truth about back to tell you the truth about all corrupt politicians that all the corrupt politicians that would fertile because would be fertile because a lot of people, said, of people, as chloe said, they're accurately feel unrepresented who's unrepresented by anybody who's currently to handle the currently trying to handle the migrant crisis. >> coming up next in the big >> but coming up next in the big story with reports that king charles has snubbed harry and meghan memorial meghan from a one year memorial for late queen. is this the for our late queen. is this the right decision from our sovereign legendary royal expert , royal guru charles rea is here in just a moment. you're not going to want to miss that.
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whinge. and ginge. but i'm going to go into your terrifying world of my inbox at the moment dennis has been on. thank you very much, everyone who's been getting in touch, spot on. patrick we're off flyer patrick we're off to a flyer here. dennis the thoughts of millions people. millions of ordinary people. yes. says this is yes. okay. so sue says this is exactly vote labour exactly why i can't vote labour , did a little bit of , so i just did a little bit of a diatribe on there a diatribe earlier on there about think that labour now a diatribe earlier on there ab0|gone1ink that labour now a diatribe earlier on there ab0|gone from hat labour now a diatribe earlier on there ab0|gone from being oour now a diatribe earlier on there ab0|gone from being the now a diatribe earlier on there ab0|gone from being the party of has gone from being the party of the working class to possibly the working class to possibly the backing illegal the party of backing illegal immigrants, tehrani says. you all shine on. all all look fabulous. shine on. all right. cheers. i'm sure right. serrano cheers. i'm sure you do. as well. right now, back to matter the duke to the matter in hand. the duke and duchess of wokester sussex have been snubbed by king charles by failing to receive an invite to the one year memorial for our beloved late monarch, queen elizabeth ii. at balmoral next month . gosh, it doesn't next month. gosh, it doesn't really feel like a year ago, does it? that. but anyway, despite being in europe for the invictus games, reports have revealed harry and meghan revealed that harry and meghan have not had any outreach from the family ahead of this the royal family ahead of this gathering the king made gathering. but has the king made the right move excluding the right move in, excluding them the commemorations?
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them from the commemorations? i certainly think so. but joining me now is the legend himself, his royal expert, royal guru , his royal expert, royal guru, it's charles rea charles. thank you. i'll tell you why i think it's a good idea because it didn't give them the chance to say if you give them the say no. if you give them the chance to no, you put the chance to say no, you put the power in whinge ginger's power in whinge and ginger's hands. than hands. and they've had more than enough . enough of that. >> well, absolutely . see, you >> well, absolutely. see, you wouldn't want harry and meghan anywhere near near the family. i mean, he's had enough . i mean, mean, he's had enough. i mean, he's a loving father. he's tried everything to poor, you know , everything to poor, you know, get all peaceful and everything else. it's not working. and i think that that he's made the right decision to not invite them at all. and also, it is the duchess of sussex, 42nd birthday today. and interestingly , not today. and interestingly, not one member of the royal family has publicly wished her a happy birthday, which is in return for them not wishing camilla happy birthday. well, let's get this let's get this right, this memorial. there is no actual memorial. there is no actual memorial , memorial. there is no actual memorial, patrick. that is the
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anniversary on the 8th of september. and the palace already announce that the king is going to mark the day, which is going to mark the day, which is also the day that he ascended to the throne . yeah, in private to the throne. yeah, in private , quietly in privately . now, , quietly in privately. now, other members of the royal family will be at balmoral sometime throughout the summer, not necessarily on that day. and they will be spending time quietly and privately, you know , in memory of the late queen, which is something that she used to do throughout her reign at sandringham when she had appeared quiet reflection on the anniversary of the death of her father, george, the sixth at sandringham. so the fact that harry and meghan are coming oven harry and meghan are coming over, they're going to dusseldorf the day after for the invictus games, fantastic. you know, they've done well in know, they've done very well in all sort of stuff, but all that sort of stuff, but they're coming across to they're not coming across to england or scotland all. and england or scotland at all. and nobody wants them here. no, the family don't want them. we don't want stay away. want them stay away. >> look you said >> yeah, exactly. look you said about meghan markle's birthday .
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about meghan markle's birthday. happy birthday, but this happy birthday, meghan, but this is a great present from king charles, which is basically saying you're not welcome here. she's. she's served up a load of presents , doesn't she, to the presents, doesn't she, to the royal family. you know, just as prince philip was was dying, there was a hoo ha with there was a big hoo ha with harry just literally the harry just literally as the queen was dying, there was a massive hoo ha there that supposedly meant that harry didn't a plane with his didn't get on a plane with his immediate that's immediate family. i think that's probably more than half of his fault as well. the way, fault as well. by the way, you've be a about you've got to be a man about this sometimes. and say, look, you've got to be a man about thisbacketimes. and say, look, you've got to be a man about thisbacketiryourand say, look, you've got to be a man about this backetiryour box. say, look, you've got to be a man about this backetiryour box. this.ook, you've got to be a man about thisbacketiryour box. this is�*k, you've got to be a man about thisbacketiryour box. this is my get back in your box. this is my grandma, for goodness sake. he didn't do that. why? because he's in he's totally spineless, in my view. served up view. she's then served up numerous other presents. you know, oprah's know, she cried into oprah's bosom, sake. she bosom, for goodness sake. she accused family of accused the royal family of racism . just an racism. she's just driven an absolute coach and horses through one of the greatest institutes country has institutes that this country has ever produced , the greatest ever produced, the greatest institution. say , you know institution. i say, you know what? well done, king charles, for finally growing a spine. and that will do him well in the opinion polls. it will do well in the opinion polls , because i
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in the opinion polls, because i think the monarchy is riding on a high at the moment. >> he's doing not a bad job. we've got camilla who is who is the queen and she's not doing a bad job. we've got the prince and princess of wales who are very, very popular in this country and throughout the world. as a matter of fact, even more popular in america than harry and meghan are, which is which is not because it's real, charlie. >> because real. this >> because it's real. this is the people stupid. the thing. people aren't stupid. and know people have a and i know that people have a bit a laugh at americans bit of a laugh at americans sometimes because sometimes mainly because they eat but eat cake for breakfast. but they're not actually stupid. they recognise is real they can recognise what is real and prince harry is going to realise this. charlie mark my words. royal family will be words. the royal family will be around forever . our pound shop around forever. our pound shop american actresses come and go . american actresses come and go. >> that's absolute . that's >> that's absolute. that's absolutely right. i mean , who absolutely right. i mean, who knows what's going to happen with with this couple. i mean, they and a lot of problems. they're they're deals are going down the swanee her political aspiration options have gone up in smoke everything that they
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touch seems to turn to the opposite of gold . have not said opposite of gold. have not said the word yet . and that's the way the word yet. and that's the way it's going for them. so it's just not any good and we had so much high hopes for this couple. let's not forget that when they came to this country, when she came to this country, when she came to this country, when she came to this country, she was feted by the royal family, feted by the country, and she they have turned their backs on us. well, now's our turn. yeah no. >> we just couldn't >> 100. and we just couldn't trust them anyway. who's to say that wouldn't turn up with that they wouldn't turn up with some kind netflix in tow some kind of netflix crew in tow 7 some kind of netflix crew in tow ? you mentioned there, though, you there, though, you mentioned there, though, about political ambitions about her political ambitions going smoke. well, going up in smoke. well, supposedly biden's activist supposedly joe biden's activist sister has endorsed meghan markle for a go in politics and maybe even a go at the white house. well somebody who already endorses a bloke who's exhibiting all of the signs of senile probably isn't exhibiting all of the signs of sen best probably isn't exhibiting all of the signs of sen best endorsement bly isn't exhibiting all of the signs of sen best endorsement that sn't exhibiting all of the signs of sen best endorsement that you the best endorsement that you could get. but i wonder could possibly get. but i wonder whether prince now whether or not prince harry now has of being first has the chance of being a first lady. that is possible. lady. yeah that is possible. >> but however , when i say that
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>> but however, when i say that she's had a problem, she she she was besieging the governor of california, the democratic governor of california, with phone calls so much because she was asking for advice, allegedly that he's blocked her phone calls . so it's not it's not calls. so it's not it's not going great for her at all. if she's going to be president of the united states, god help god help us. i mean, we've already got a problem, though, with joe biden and donald trump. and a lot is going to come and meghan's to smooth things meghan's going to smooth things oven meghan's going to smooth things over. god, like over. oh god, i'd like it. >> like to see her try and >> i'd like to see her try and hug putin. you know, she says, i'm a hugger. i'm a hugger. yeah, not for long. you know, if she could hug putin, maybe she could ask him to do the interview that harry wanted to do putin for yeah, do with putin for netflix. yeah, 100. that would be it. she would. she would being the would. she would use being the president as a way to try to get some more screen time in suits. look thank you very much, look thank you very, very much, charlie the fabulous charlie ray there, the fabulous man royal expert. look, man himself, royal expert. look, it's me and it's not just about me and people charlie. et cetera. people like charlie. et cetera. on show, it's all about on this show, it's all about
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you, which is why we asked you in our little twitter poll. was the harry and the king right to snub harry and meghan next month? the results are . in 85.5% of you say yes, are. in 85.5% of you say yes, while 14.5% of you say no, no. there we go . now the 14.5% of there we go. now the 14.5% of you email in. tell me why. there we go. now the 14.5% of you email in. tell me why . why you email in. tell me why. why do you think you should have ianed do you think you should have invited him? it's been olive branch after olive after branch after olive branch after olive having olive branch. it's not having any you know, harry any of it. you know, harry swerved away off the swerved straight away off the back of king charles's coronation i'm sorry, that coronation i'm sorry, but that was wasn't it ? was rude again, wasn't it? anyway, coming up next with the pundits, losing out on pundits, are we losing out on talented people going into politics because of the nonsense that politicians have to put up with on a daily basis? who would want to go into politics at the minute you're not going to get rich. your family. going minute you're not going to get ric be (our family. going minute you're not going to get ricbe ruined nily. going minute you're not going to get ricbe ruined and going minute you're not going to get ricbe ruined and you'll going minute you're not going to get ricbe ruined and you'llgoingup to be ruined and you'll end up with some vegan numpties on your roof. just going roof. we're just going to attract psychopaths want attract psychopaths who want power. see you in to that power. i'll see you in to that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers >> proud sponsors of weather on
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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's been named storm anthony by the met office because of the risk of for some of disruptive gales for some heavy rain. for many others , 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 , 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 ireland where the ground saturated. where the ground is saturated. that rain heading into western parts of the uk by the end of the night as well, accompanied by winds, by strengthening winds, dry initially across some eastern and northern parts aside from the shower. but this spell the odd shower. but this spell of wet weather clears northern ireland england and ireland pushes into england and wales. showers wales. southern scotland showers continue for much the rest of continue for much of the rest of scotland and northern ireland. by scotland and northern ireland. by of the afternoon, as by the end of the afternoon, as the skies brighten for wales in
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the skies brighten for wales in the southwest , that's when the the southwest, that's when the strongest kick in, with strongest winds kick in, with the widespread gales, the risk of widespread gales, not just around coasts but inland as well. potential for travel disruption and add certainly some dangerous conditions around beaches . but conditions around beaches. but storm entity does move through and by sunday, a brighter day is expected. still some heavy showers around. lighter winds, however , these showers will be however, these showers will be slow moving. where they do occur, but they'll be hit and miss spells between. occur, but they'll be hit and missthen spells between. occur, but they'll be hit and missthen the pells between. occur, but they'll be hit and missthen the trend between. occur, but they'll be hit and missthen the trend through en. occur, but they'll be hit and missthen the trend through next and then the trend through next week for the weather to week is for the weather to become gradually brighter become gradually drier, brighter and warmer . and warmer. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, proud sponsors of weather on
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says if we had proportional representation, then maybe we'd get real government who would get a real government who would actually something about actually do something about immigration. like the way you immigration. i like the way you think, i coming round to think, and i am coming round to that . i think only that idea. i think the only problem with problem is that with proportional representation and there chance that there is also the chance that you any you would never get any governments actually you would never get any goranything; actually you would never get any goranything about actually you would never get any goranything about immigrationly do anything about immigration because they might all be leftie. in leftie. but even in buckinghamshire political buckinghamshire says political correctness our correctness is destroying our democracy. not on this show , democracy. not on this show, ivan, that's sure. chris ivan, that's for sure. chris says about prince harry, the king was a loving father to harry, but i don't blame him for getting away from them all. yet there a point i think, there comes a point i think, doesn't there? and his priority should be william, because should now be william, because william's next line to the william's next in line to the throne. william's eating it all william's next in line to the throwilliam'sm's eating it all william's next in line to the throwilliam's stuck|ting it all william's next in line to the throwilliam's stuck with it all william's next in line to the throwilliam's stuck with them. up. william's stuck with them. and i think if he's going to have after anyone, i'm have to look after anyone, i'm afraid going to be afraid it is going to have to be william not harry. will william and not harry. that will be view. with me now be my view. but back with me now and talking to me about some other i have other firecracker topics. i have got chloe got political commentator chloe dobbs editor dobbs, former editor of labourlist and political commentator , and commentator peter edwards, and as well, deputy leader of the uk independence party , rebecca jane
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independence party, rebecca jane . now i am sure by now that you've all seen the greenpeace activists protesting the home of our prime minister. it really is a sign of the times when the elected leader of the country can't escape from these eco zealots. we wonder, i think don't we, why we have such a poor group of people who are running our country, who are in opposition, who are very often anywhere near politics. and i don't actually think it's that much of a surprise they have to put up with far too much for not enoughin put up with far too much for not enough in return. so i'm going to be deciding now with my panel to be deciding now with my panel. i will start again with you, chloe, if that's all right. do you think that we are going to end up being run by psychopaths because they're the only ever want only people who would ever want to go politics? to go into politics? >> sadly , yes. i mean, there is >> sadly, yes. i mean, there is just so little incentive for people to get into politics. now. i'm coming out of university and my friends around me who are very intelligent people who amazing people who do amazing in politics, see the pay is
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politics, they see the pay is far better in finance and consulting. that gap has grown bigger bigger , and politics bigger and bigger, and politics is as an is only worth it as an alternative if it's going to be really . but what really enjoyable. but what is enjoyable having your family enjoyable of having your family home broken into constantly? just having fight scandal just having to fight scandal after scandal rather than actually being able to feel like you're a meaningful you're making a meaningful difference government. you're making a meaningful differenjust government. you're making a meaningful differenjust really'nment. you're making a meaningful differenjust really notent. you're making a meaningful differenjust really not much incentive. >> yeah. peter i'll ask your opinion on this. >> yeah. peter i'll ask your opinion on this . if someone opinion on this. if someone trawls through absolutely everything that you've ever said and done right up, people that you might have met when you were no more than a child that had some kind of bad interaction with you , breaks into your with you, breaks into your house, to hammer you, house, tries to hammer you, left, right and centre. your kids are getting bullied at school. of this stuff. why kids are getting bullied at schoolyou of this stuff. why kids are getting bullied at schoolyou go this stuff. why kids are getting bullied at schoolyou go into stuff. why kids are getting bullied at schoolyou go into politics hy would you go into politics unless you were just a power hungry like public service? >> so breaking into someone's house is illegal. that's a crime, i think. i don't know what happened to greenpeace what happened to the greenpeace protesters, failed. what protesters, but i failed. what they did was very unpleasant and very because much very stupid because it was much more than protest. it was an attempt to intimidate. i don't like policies.
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like rishi sunaks policies. i think he's hopeless. but trying to someone their to intimidate someone at their family home, the fact he was on houday family home, the fact he was on holiday doesn't excuse irrelevant. so i thought was irrelevant. so i thought it was a very mean and stupid thing to do, i worked for mp in do, but i worked for an mp in the party many years ago the labour party many years ago and greatly. and and i enjoyed it greatly. and the say about the thing you'd say about british i hope british politics, and i hope everyone is that whether everyone agrees, is that whether there people you disagree there are people you disagree with as do , like with enormously, as i do, like perhaps rees—mogg or boris perhaps jacob rees—mogg or boris johnson or people that i'm on the same page as everyone , the same page as everyone, nearly everyone in out of nearly everyone goes in out of anidea nearly everyone goes in out of an idea of public service, and we about what we argue vigorously about what that they've all got that is. but they've all got their own idea of how to make their own idea of how to make the better and more the country better and more prosperous and fairer. so i think they'll always be demand for into politics, for going into politics, but i think especially the protest that people's homes are thankfully rare. it's social media some of the well, media and some of the well, that's another element that trips over from criticism into threats and abuse. i think that will put people off. yeah, 100% it's stop every single aspect of your life is now apparently a fair game if you go into
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politics and manage to reach a certain level and i think that's actually discussed thing and it's completely self defeating because you end up with idiots or that would be my view. >> i know you've got into politics. i want to tell you with that same brush. but you know, you were are you a yeah no, but we all know that. come on. so, no, but seriously. so you're. you're in politics, right? you're in politics. >> it's horrific. yeah, it's absurd . absolutely. absurd. absolutely. >> the most thankless task in the whole entire world and in the whole entire world and in the last, oh, two months, i've been threaten ed physically. my safety has come into question. i've lost actually count of how many times now hustings were called off because of security threats. not so long ago i constantly get a stream of trolling on social media. it is endless. and you know what? i don't mind people delving into my background and saying what they want. that's the truth. where line is when they
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where i draw a line is when they start and because tell you start lying and because tell you what the amount of that i what the amount of lies that i have about myself is lunacy have read about myself is lunacy . but i don't want people coming through university. you want to you want to move to someone else? >> no, no, no. i want to ask you i want to ask you i want to ask you about important question. i'm going to bit of a just i'm going to do a bit of a just just a straightforward yes and no. moving. no. so we keep this moving. all right. politicians right. would you pay politicians more? or no? more? yes or no? >> no. they should be in it. for the of job they the love of the job and they shouldn't politicians. shouldn't be career politicians. we want normal people fighting for normal people's rights. and it's lot are it's not the lot that are in power at the minute because the completely out touch. so completely out of touch. so no great more. great pay them more. >> or no. the best. >> yes or no. entice the best. no. >> because if 80 grand is not enough for you, then you're in the wrong job. >> come. what do you think, greg? because think that even >> no, because i think that even if it slightly, if you increase it slightly, it's probably going to be way less still to be less than it's still going to be better anyway. it's got to be an enjoyable job. and means a enjoyable job. and that means a job receiving job where you're not receiving threats and abuse like you have been, is i just don't see been, which is i just don't see that happening. >> this thing the genie that happening. >:outis thing the genie that happening. >:outis the thing the genie that happening. >:outis the bottle. the genie that happening. >:outis the bottle. the genie is out of the bottle. the genie is out of the bottle. the genie
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is out of the bottle. the genie is out the bottle. and we're going up now with people going to end up now with people who are, i think, just desperate for else. for power and nothing else. i know people be know a lot of people will be shouting their tv screens shouting at their tv screens saying we've already saying that's what we've already got. but it will get got. yeah fine, but it will get worse now shooting businesses have victim have become the latest victim of de—banking. have become the latest victim of degunnking. have become the latest victim of degun clubs reporting that of gun clubs reporting that their accounts suddenly their accounts were suddenly closed high street closed by major high street banks , you may well go banks, you may well not go shooting. i have never woken up one morning and had the desire to slaughter a guinea fowl or a deer or anything. however, these are rural countryside , are often rural countryside, traditionally british pursuits and they are being debunked even though they are legal. it first hit the headlines. the de—banking scandal with nigel farage didn't. he had his account shut for his political views. this prompted a load of other organisations to be closed, but with these perfectly legal shooting clubs being denied accounts or credit, are we now witnessing the cancellation of british countryside activities? record do you think that there is now an attack here on anything that people just seem to be a bit too
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much of british culture that's like like the fake fox hunting, for example , the drag hunting for example, the drag hunting that's legal. for example, the drag hunting that's legal . they're getting that's legal. they're getting cancelled as well. what's going on? >> yeah, banks think that they're the government today. that's the problem. they they don't the government don't like what the government are so they're are doing, so they're doing whatever regardless . whatever they want regardless. and down and they're shutting down whatever like . it's whatever they don't like. it's absolutely horrendous. if absolutely horrendous. and if there's we should there's one thing that we should all right to and all have a basic right to and even, you know, sporting clubs and an extent, as and to an extent, as long as it's legal. yeah. we it's legal. yeah. why are we trying to their way? trying to step in their way? it's about control. >> i wonder this is going >> i wonder where this is going to for peter, to end, for peter, the countryside a because countryside as a whole, because if the next step is if we end up, the next step is going you are a beef going to be well, you are a beef farmer or whatever, and we are. we're pro vegan or we're pro animal rights is what they'll say. and then all of a sudden farmers get debunked . farmers get debunked. >> well, patrick, someone who's so strong with their views, you you terrified so much of you sound terrified so much of the time. you're living in a dystopia, would where dystopia, i would say where everything getting worse. everything is getting worse. britain free country. but britain is a free country. but on point shooting , on the point about shooting, perhaps you, i can't stand perhaps like you, i can't stand
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shooting . i've never and shooting. i've never done it and i will. and i've not eaten i never will. and i've not eaten meat something like 20 or 25 meat for something like 20 or 25 years. activity years. but it's a legal activity and i don't think unlike rebecca, it's banks wanting to be the government . i think if be the government. i think if banks are going woke and i'm not sure they are, but you know, if banks going how much banks are going woke, how much evidence you need? they're evidence do you need? they're doing they're doing the reason they're doing that for it's not. that is for money. it's not. they our lives they want to rule our lives control. that's the primary driver activity of large driver of activity of large banks. it's for money. and if they felt public sentiment was blowing the other way, there'd be less woke. >> know how they are >> i don't know how they are doing it for money. i think they're doing it for the virtue signalling element of it. i really do think that they're doing it for virtue signalling element. >> would imagine if you're >> i would imagine if you're running bank with running a large bank with hundreds of branches around the uk, dotted line uk, you see a dotted line between your reputation and your income. >> well, they that >> well, and they got that wrong, didn't they? they got, they with nigel. they got it wrong with nigel. that thing. mean, that would be the thing. i mean, that's going to costing that's going to end up costing them what they did. >> point about that was >> and the point about that was because it was fairness. so again, i disagree with nigel farage. i'm pretty much everything but his views are
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lawful. were being everything but his views are lawfuland were being everything but his views are lawfuland hypocriticalere being everything but his views are lawfuland hypocritical ins being unfair and hypocritical in cancelling his account. >> talking this >> but talking of this cancellation are cancellation now, i think we are seeing metropolitan liberal elites in ivory, multi—million pound towers in the city, looking at rural communities and treating them with absolute disdain and saying that hobby that you have enjoyed for generations. we're going to debunk you over that because we think evil . think it's evil. >> uh, yeah, i think it's a great shame that we've now entered this age where all companies the need to be so companies feel the need to be so politicised and have such a woke agenda. politicised and have such a woke agenda . your job as a business agenda. yourjob as a business should be to provide the service that you provide. provide that well , and that you provide. provide that well, and also with banking. what i'd say is unique about this we need to be able to this is we need to be able to bank to survive. it's very different to say ferrari saying that we're not going to sell ferraris to people who have certain views because that's not an essential . you can't operate an essential. you can't operate as well if they stop selling in the middle east and they might nofice the middle east and they might notice olympic . notice that there's olympic. >> that'd be >> yeah, you know, that'd be something. certain >> yeah, you know, that'd be sometlike. certain >> yeah, you know, that'd be sometlike like certain >> yeah, you know, that'd be sometlike like a certain >> yeah, you know, that'd be sometlike like a lot certain >> yeah, you know, that'd be sometlike like a lot of certain >> yeah, you know, that'd be sometlike like a lot of the tain
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views like like a lot of the people. yeah. anyway. right. thank you very, much. great thank you very, very much. great to the show. to have you all on the show. coming residents of coming up next, the residents of our beloved falkland islands are outnumbered by sheep to the tune of 136 to 1. that's not the story, by the way. don't worry. yeah our cherished overseas territory wants to hire an equalities officer , presumably equalities officer, presumably to introduce some goats. has this obsessive drive for diverse diversity gone to too far? let's just hope and pray now for the people of the falklands that the sheep never rise up against them because they really would have a scrap on their hands. has diversity gone too far? synthetic .
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a £43,000 a year equality guru for the falkland islands . the for the falkland islands. the role comes with 41 days holiday. although let's be honest , where although let's be honest, where are you going to go from there? tax breaks, a relocation package possibly to somewhere other than the falklands and a free annual return flight. now it's being offered as a four year opportunity . you could go we opportunity. you could go we used to send out christian missionaries, didn't we, around the world? but that would just send officers the send diversity officers to the falkland i'm falkland islands. i'm sure they'll their work cut out they'll have their work cut out because there's a population of 3662 people who are outnumbered by 500,000 sheep and 1 million penguins. why are we doing this? who cares ? the argentinians who cares? the argentinians tried a bit of diversity on the falklands and it didn't end that well for them, did it? but what about the uk ? well, not to about the uk? well, not to worry. not to worry because taxpayer is also being taxpayer money is also being thrown at other highly necessary jobs in the nhs. you know that nhs with 7.5 million people on a
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waiting list, record highs, they're having to rope in the private sector now in the nhs because , well, we're all getting because, well, we're all getting sicker . well, because, well, we're all getting sicker. well, you'll because, well, we're all getting sicker . well, you'll love because, well, we're all getting sicker. well, you'll love this . sicker. well, you'll love this. it's got a director of lived experience, which is ironic , i experience, which is ironic, i think, given most people's experience of the nhs on £100,000 a year, a climate change manager. good job. we've got someone on that. considering the hysteria over recent weeks haven't we? we could go on with all of this. so have we as a society become too obsessed with diversity? joining me now is political commentator and uk director of the common sense society . it's the wonderful emma society. it's the wonderful emma webb . emma, are we too obsessed webb. emma, are we too obsessed with diversity in some senses , yes. >> but when it comes to things , >> but when it comes to things, there's a horrible phrase viewpoint , diversity, which viewpoint, diversity, which i absolutely hate because it shoves people's freedom of expression and opinion into categories relating to diversity. but of course it's diversity. but of course it's diversity only. in one sense,
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it's diversity according to crude character , mystics, race, crude character, mystics, race, genden crude character, mystics, race, gender, sexual ality. but it's got no recognition for, for example , all the diversity of example, all the diversity of opinion within certain categories. people who are categorised , you know, within categorised, you know, within one of those identities are expected to toe the line and hold particular opinions and put forward certain views. and very often they get demonised when they don't toe that line . so they don't toe that line. so this isn't real diversity . this this isn't real diversity. this is sort of paper thin veneer of diversity . but yes, ultimately diversity. but yes, ultimately the answer to your question, patrick, is yes, we have become completely obsessed with with diversity. and it's absurd. and i can imagine this whoever who is appointed to this role, making the recommendation that to get more diversity, they should have more argentinians on the falkland islands. >> oh, yeah, big time. oh, yeah. just just. marvellous just let's just. marvellous malvinas on the falklands . malvinas day on the falklands. why it a full time why not make it a full time thing? anyone ever that thing? has anyone ever had that idea sure that would idea before? i'm sure that would work. to read out some
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work. i'm going to read out some jobs currently available jobs now. currently available in the equality manager. the nhs equality manager. £62,000 a year. you could also be a diversity manager. so slightly different sides of the coin there. £77,000 a year if you add those two salaries together , you could probably pay together, you could probably pay the annual salary of about six nurses. and that is why i think we are too obsessed with diversity . maybe they would diversity. maybe they would prioritise that over actually saving people's lives . yeah it's nuts. >> it's total bureaucracy. there in comparison to some of these diversity hires. actually 30, 30, £43,000 a year is actually not as much when you compare it to the hundreds of thousand pounds. some other people are getting. and also , like you getting. and also, like you said, 40 odd days, holiday year is something that most people could only dream of. so this is a really cushy job job for anyone who get it and who can get it. and it's become a sort of, um, industry that feeds
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itself. people coming from subjects like gender studies or anything. it really ends in studies . and like you said, you studies. and like you said, you know , most people's lived know, most people's lived experience at the moment, at know, most people's lived experience at the moment , at the experience at the moment, at the moment of the nhs is that, you know, it's fairly useless and that they should be possibly redistributing some of that wealth if they're if we're to going sort of use the language that some of these i'm sorry , go that some of these i'm sorry, go ahead, patrick. >> well, you know what i'd like to see? i mean, you said something there that got me thinking this. i'd like to see the amongst the the diversity amongst the diversity want to the diversity amongst the divewhat want to the diversity amongst the divewhat they want to the diversity amongst the divewhat they look want to the diversity amongst the divewhat they look like. to the diversity amongst the divewhat they look like. and see what they look like. and what backgrounds come what backgrounds they come from, because i've got a sneaking suspicion the old working suspicion that the old working class white trope , which is class white boys trope, which is of far too disadvantaged of course far too disadvantaged in country for liking, in this country for my liking, i don't reckon there'll be that much diversity when comes much diversity when it comes to the who to go out the people who we tell to go out and the world. mean, and educate the world. i mean, this kind woke this whatever kind of woke missionary that we're about to send over to the falkland islands and talk to some islands to go and talk to some sheep some penguins about sheep and some penguins about whether they all whether or not they should all love a little bit love each other a little bit more. and sheep decides
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more. and if that sheep decides that to sleep with that it also likes to sleep with another sheep, that's another male sheep, then that's absolutely . why are we absolutely fine. why are we doing there should doing this really? there should be of thought, be more diversity of thought, not necessarily just diversity of things like ethnicity . of things like ethnicity. >> completely . we've we've >> completely. we've we've started to cultivate what is basically an intellectual monoculture. and there's no room at all for any real diversity in there. like i said, people find themselves being discriminated against or demonised if they belong to a certain identity category. but they don't, you know, say, for example , somebody know, say, for example, somebody who's an ethnic minority, but also a concern native. there's no room for them in this in this understanding of diversity. i think you said what's on think you said what's going on here? well, in your previous section, talking about section, you were talking about de—banking, has lot de—banking, and that has a lot to do esg policies , to do with esg policies, environment, social and governance, doesn't get governance, which doesn't get spoken about very much. but the s in that the social part of that involves doing things like appointing officers diversity , appointing officers diversity, equality and inclusion, which is what we're seeing across the pubuc what we're seeing across the public and private sector. and i
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think it's because so many of these organisations are signed up to esg and that it affects how much investment they get . how much investment they get. >> and it's you're exactly right. and it's the tail wagging the dog they sign up with them because what they don't want is the dog they sign up with them becau employee ey don't want is the dog they sign up with them becau employee crying 't want is the dog they sign up with them becau employee crying racism is the dog they sign up with them becau employee crying racism or some employee crying racism or whatever else. and for them to be to say, well, have you be able to say, well, have you got any policies in place? so they say that we've got some policies in place, but then those policies in place end up leading and leading what they do. and lo and behold with behold, we end up with a diversity and equality tsar going to the falklands, which is basically an underpopulated set of rocks in the middle of the ocean. but thank you very much, emma. always an honour and a privilege. emma webster, who is the director of the common the uk director of the common sense society. and you can tell that, anyway, this that, don't you? anyway, this show falkland show contacted the falkland islands for comment. islands government for comment. they said an internal they said this is an internal falkland islands government role. not a uk government role. it is not a uk government position. the position was advertised within the advertised locally within the falkland islands before going out for overseas applications. this is gold. post has been this is gold. the post has been appointed by democratically
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elected members of the falkland islands legislative assembly and it is not being paid for by the uk taxpayer. yeah that's fine. i still think it's absolutely nuts. coming up next, british culture is under attack and we should be very, very worried . i should be very, very worried. i will be telling you why in just a tick. see you soon. >> looks like things are heating up with boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on gb news is . hi there. is. 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 risk because of the risk of disruptive for some heavy disruptive gales for some heavy rain. for many others , storm rain. for many others, storm anthony is arriving through friday night. it's this area of low pressure that has been named andifs 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
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parts of northern ireland where the ground is such rated that rain into western parts rain heading into western parts of the uk by the end of the night as well, accompanied by strengthening winds. dry initially some eastern initially across some eastern and parts aside from and northern parts aside from the odd shower. but this spell of clears northern of wet weather clears northern ireland into england and ireland pushes into england and wales. scotland . wales. southern scotland. showers much of the showers continue for much of the rest and northern rest of scotland and northern ireland. by the end of the afternoon, as the skies brighten for wales in the southwest, 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 entity does beaches. but storm entity does move through and by sunday, a brighter day is expected . still 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 trend between and then the trend through week for the through next week is for the weather to become gradually dnen weather to become gradually drier, brighter and warmer. >> looks like things are heating up, boxt boilers, proud sponsors
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gb news. >> it's 10:00 gb news. >> it's10:00 on gb news. >> it's 10:00 on television, on >> it's10:00 on television, on radio and online all over the uk andindeed radio and online all over the uk and indeed all over the world. i am patrick christys and tonight i identify as mr mark dolan in my take at ten. british culture is well and truly under attack. tonight's newsmaker is the esteemed political editor of the express online. it's the one and only david mad dog maddox, who has some rather fruity ways that he thinks we could handle these climate protesters . not all of climate protesters. not all of them are legal, it must be said. and gb news is the home of the papers. yes, we have got tomorrow's front pages from exactly 10:30 pm. sharp. so strap yourselves in because you will be bang up to date, way
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ahead of all of your mates before they even wake up tomorrow. you will know the . news it's a really busy hour coming up. why don't you nip to the fridge, get yourself an alcoholic drink and get absolutely smashed or fire up the kettle make a night of the kettle and make a night of it. either or. but first, it's the headlines with anne armstrong . armstrong. >> very good evening to you. i'm aaron armstrong in the gb newsroom. a man's been jailed for life for the murder of his ten month old stepson and will serve minimum term of 28 serve a minimum term of 28 years. craig crouch caused acute physical and mental suffering to jacob crouch over six months before assaulting him in a fatal attack in december 2020. jacob had 39 rib fractures and internal injuries, likened to those seen in car crash victims. jacob's mother, gemma barton,
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was jailed for ten years for causing or allowing his death. mr justice kerr, in sentencing , mrjustice kerr, in sentencing, said crouch, caused jacob intense and prolonged harm . intense and prolonged harm. >> he was a small baby who had not yet learned to walk or talk. sadly, he never did. so your 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 and shireen ambushed saqib hussain and mohammed hashem aijazuddin and mohammed hashem aijazuddin and rammed their car off the road . it happened after mr road. it happened after mr hussain threatened to use sexually explicit material to expose an affair he was having with ms bukhari's mother. two further defendants were found guilty of murder, while three others were found guilty of
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manslaughter. emergency services in birmingham are still dealing with an ongoing incident following a number of explosions . in west midlands. fire service responded to what they have described as a huge blaze in the hall green area after residents on serralde road reported heanng on serralde road reported hearing several loud explosions this afternoon. authorities say the blaze is now under control and more updates as and when we get it on this story , the get it on this story, the government's turning to the private sector in an effort to clear record nhs waiting lists . clear record nhs waiting lists. eight of 13 new community diagnostic centres to be opened in england will be operated by independent companies. in england will be operated by independent companies . services independent companies. services will be free to patients . will be free to 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, says vladimir putin must not be allowed to achieve his goals after being sentenced to a further 19 years in jail.
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the kremlin's most vocal political critic was found guilty of creating and funding an extremist organisation when he's already serving an 11 year sentence at a maximum security penal colony . in a social media penal colony. in a social media post this evening, mr navalny said russians are being forced to surrender their country to a gang of traitors and thieves. the foreign secretary , james the foreign secretary, james cleverly, has called for his immediate release and unseasonably strong winds are expected to hit parts of the uk this weekend , with forecasters this weekend, with forecasters warning of a danger to life . 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 this evening with winds of up to 65mph predicted and a yellow rain and wind and weather warning has also been issued for . northern ireland. this is gb news on tv on digital radio and on your smart speaker , too. on your smart speaker, too. that's it for the moment. now it's over to .
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it's over to. patrick >> it's 10:00 it's over to. patrick >> it's10:00 on television, on radio, and online in the uk. right around the world. it's me, patrick christys and tonight, yes, i am identifying as mark dolan. look, tonight's newsmaker is the esteemed political editor of express online. it's david mad dog maddox. let me tell you what his views are when it comes to some of these climate idiots. i think he wants to do exactly what you all wish we could, but we'll find out in a second. we've got all the papers as well. 10:30 pm. sharp, full pundh well. 10:30 pm. sharp, full pundit reaction. plus, we will have all of tonight's headlines , heroes and back page zeroes, big stories , big gaffes, always big stories, big gaffes, always big stories, big gaffes, always big opinions. big stories, big gaffes, always big opinions . but here is my big opinions. but here is my take . at ten british culture is take. at ten british culture is under attack. we are being
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ground down, broken up, diluted and shafted bit by bit and piece by piece . the latest round of by piece. the latest round of the de—banking scandal reveals that traditional rural countryside pursuits like shooting are being crushed. companies who make guns perfectly legally . for the perfectly legally. for the 650,000 odd licenced gun owners in the uk, they're having their accounts closed. people who run companies focussed on drag hunting as well . i mean, the hunting as well. i mean, the irony is of course that companies that send highly sexualised drag acts into primary schools so that can get their genitals out in front of kids. they can have a bank account, but not the hunting kind. no, not them. what will come next? meat farmers a debunked because it doesn't suit a bank's vegan agenda . all these a bank's vegan agenda. all these are rural british countryside pastimes and they are being stigmatised and depher funded cancelled. but this is just the latest attack on british culture. we've got the illegal migration crisis , the net migration crisis, the net migration crisis, the net migration crisis, the net migration crisis . i mean, we now migration crisis. i mean, we now live in a country where an
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illegal immigrant often has more rights than someone with a british passport. but we're teaching children in schools that being white is bad. we're being taught that our history is bad. even the falkland islands are rising up. inequality's officer britain used to be a nafion officer britain used to be a nation of shopkeepers . here's nation of shopkeepers. here's our entrepreneurial spirit and ingentu our entrepreneurial spirit and ingenuity was the envy of the world. but thanks to a high tax , high regulation system , , high regulation system, individualism is being strangled. now all songs are deemed to be offensive. it seems like every little aspect of british national identity is being attack . right? and you being attack. right? and you have to ask, why don't you? why? because once it's lost, it's gone forever . and if we're all gone forever. and if we're all divided up into tiny, different pigeonholes , we become very easy pigeonholes, we become very easy to rule . if you destroy to rule. if you destroy identity, you destroy unity, and that only serves to benefit people. right right at the top .
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people. right right at the top. what do you think? do you agree? do you disagree? gb views gb news.com . i will go to your news.com. i will go to your emails very , very shortly. emails very, very shortly. reacting to all of this take at ten business for tonight's panel ten business for tonight's panel. and it's going rather well so far. political commentator chloe dobbs, former editor of labourlist and political commentator peter edwards and deputy leader of the uk independence party, rebecca jane. uk independence party, rebecca jane . rebecca, i will start with jane. rebecca, i will start with you and work my way back down the line . do you feel as though the line. do you feel as though british culture is being deliberately attacked and undermined ? undermined? >> absolutely, yes. it's becoming almost unpopular to be british. i'm proud of being british. i'm proud of being british. i'm proud of being british. i think that, you know, great britain is for great a very valid reason. i'm proud of everything that we stand for. yeah. okay there's been some mistakes history and all mistakes in our history and all the rest of it, but we can't keep living in the past. we need to celebrate are. we to celebrate what we are. we need this virtue need to stop all this virtue signalling nonsense that is cancelling very british cancelling our very british culture. it to stop because culture. it has to stop because we're incredible and we just
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need to focus on our positives and move on. >> peter, do you ever worry that there is some kind of underhand agenda make all more agenda here to make us all more governable us all? governable by dividing us all? no i think the opposite. >> there's an open >> i think there's an open agenda to make britain a fairer place and think one thing all agenda to make britain a fairer pla
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been a nice place to live and we've got be honest, think we've got to be honest, think about doors about those signs on pub doors in the but it's remarkable. >> can i just say to that, though, it's remarkable, >> can i just say to that, though, because s remarkable, >> can i just say to that, though, because ifremarkable, >> can i just say to that, though, because if that rkable, >> can i just say to that, though, because if that really, though, because if that really is true, then people have had 50 or 60 or 70 years to figure out that britain isn't a nice place to live. and it makes me really question why on earth, why on earth desperate to earth people are desperate to come record numbers, earth people are desperate to comerisking record numbers, earth people are desperate to come risking crossing1umbers, earth people are desperate to come risking crossing the bers, even risking crossing the busiest shipping lane in the world. >> but i'm i'm saying the opposite. and i know you want to speak to chloe as well, but i'm saying the opposite. britain is a more open place. it's a fairer place. and yes, there are many things we wrong past, things we did wrong in the past, particularly in the 18th and 19th around empire, but 19th century around empire, but we've made huge strides, certainly and certainly in my lifetime, and i'm so there i'm in my 40s. so there are reasons positive about reasons to be positive about britain, that involves an britain, but that involves an element as about element of honesty as well about what's wrong. what's gone wrong. >> okay, look, chloe, i obviously a genuine fear obviously do have a genuine fear that lose what it means that we will lose what it means to be quintessentially british. that british culture itself will be beaten out of people and just replaced horrible replaced with a horrible smorgasbord nothingness. smorgasbord of nothingness. >> yeah, i agree. i think it's absolutely abhorrent that it is
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apparently cancelable to fly your own british flag . that's your own british flag. that's insane. now, peter is right that we have to be honest about the mistakes that our country has made in the past. we have to study history to make sure we don't make the same mistakes again. can still again. but you can still celebrate even without again. but you can still celeiindirectly even without again. but you can still celeiindirectly , even without again. but you can still celeiindirectly , meaningthout again. but you can still celeiindirectly , meaning that: that indirectly, meaning that you support colonialism and our mistakes of the past. we're celebrating the good parts of britain accepting the britain whilst accepting the things went wrong. that's things that went wrong. that's perfectly . we don't need to perfectly fine. we don't need to start british flags, start burning british flags, people. and rebecca. it's >> yeah. and rebecca. it's starting in schools though , and starting in schools though, and it's very young it's starting very, very young people being taught about white privileged people being taught as well about the gender ideology. and it really fascinates me that it's not to okay do a drag hunt, but it is okay do a drag hunt, but it is okay to do a drag show in front of kids. >> yeah, i know. honestly, it's absolutely ridiculous that the things that are going on in our schools today, it has to stop, you know? and again, it's becoming unpopular and everything just said, everything you've just said, peter, literally every single thing are completely and utterly
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disagree with how long do we have to keep on beating this stick for? we've all said we all absolutely know. know absolutely know. people know what past is not what we did in the past is not acceptable we need to move acceptable and we need to move on. how long do we do you agree with me? how long do have to with me? how long do we have to keep no, no, no. because keep on? no, no, no. because you're we have to carry you're saying we have to carry on stick. all on going. beat this stick. all you're creating a civil you're doing is creating a civil divide it's going to it's divide and it's going to it's starting younger now. what starting even younger now. what is the future generations going to be? there is horrific mistakes made in the past, but the starting to make horrific mistakes with our future and in 30 years time, i'm genuinely concerned for white middle class males because honestly, they will be completely and utterly demonised. they already are now. and if we carry on with your attitude, it's going to get even worse . woi'se. >> worse. >> peter, you've been given a ticking off there. come back. >> i mean, think it's a >> yes. i mean, i think it's a ticking from another reality ticking off from another reality . i've friends of . you know, i've got friends of all different faiths and of so do i. that's not the point i'm making. i've got friends from lots of different backgrounds.
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they're diverse. but they're very diverse. but actually, don't think talking actually, i don't think talking about the crimes britain's about the crimes in britain's past bring division. i actually think allows us to talk in a think it allows us to talk in a fair way because it's being open about what got right, as about what britain got right, as well got wrong, well as what britain got wrong, how do keep doing it for? >> forever. >> forever. >> forever. >> for forever . you would take >> for forever. you would take you would take the knee forever, would you? >> no. not about taking >> no, no. it's not about taking the it's about teaching the knee. it's about teaching history the knee. it's about teaching hiskids or we don't. we and to kids or we don't. we and i don't think rebecca would be daft enough to say should daft enough to say we should stop history. stop teaching history. so teaching means honesty stop teaching history. so teac realism means honesty stop teaching history. so teacrealism abouteans honesty stop teaching history. so teac realism about what honesty stop teaching history. so teacrealism about what britain. and realism about what britain. >> and about all the great >> and what about all the great things that we got right? >> created them >> well, i created two of them today, and you've created zero. i dab and do not i said, covid dab and we do not start off on the covid being start me off on the covid being a great thing. >> be ridiculous . >> don't be ridiculous. >> don't be ridiculous. >> i was positive. and you didn't have anything to cite. >> chloe, i will bring you in on this. now, you know, as somebody who's not too long out of university, do you not think that there is an endemic culture, especially with young people now, to believe that there nothing britain people now, to believe that ther> absolutely. i mean, peter is right that living standards in
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this country have improved massively to live in this country now is a lot better than it was 50 years ago. yet all we do is moan and say that it's horrible to live here. everyone around us oppressing and around us is oppressing us and that horrible country . that it's a horrible country. we, americans , like britain we, the americans, like britain more than we do ourselves . and more than we do ourselves. and it's ridiculous. and in schools, i think it is terrifying. what is happening in schools. we have to history , but teach to teach history, but also teach them britain is a good them that britain is a good country as well . country as well. >> but my negativity about this actually genuinely does come from a place of positivity. i believe that we are an exceptional full of exceptional country, full of exceptional country, full of exceptional with an exceptional people with an exceptional people with an exceptional history for the most part. and were let off the part. and if we were let off the leash a little bit, then we could wonderful could actually do wonderful things. there, things. like i said there, rebecca, used to a nation rebecca, we used to be a nation of and entrepreneurs of shopkeepers and entrepreneurs with great creative spirit, and now we've got things like rampant , massive rampant high taxation, massive overregulation and it just stops people from being able to flourish, in my view. and that is one element that i think forget all the culture side of it, forget the immigration side
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of area we are of it. that is one area we are struggling , killing people's struggling, killing people's ability to start doing things that they want to a bit more that they want to do a bit more and is where britain and that is where britain flourishes. absolutely. >> and we still have >> you know, and we still have nafion >> you know, and we still have nation of amazing shopkeepers and entrepreneurs and agricultural workers and we've stopped talking about them because we're all too busy talking about all of the negative things that are around there. we need to stop all of there. we need to stop all of the horrendous negative talk we need to fight back and we need to speak up for them because they are going out of fashion. it's becoming we have it's becoming unpopular. we have to rein that in and make to rein that back in and make britain bright. you've got to dangle the carrot. >> it wins me right up that people look at other countries and think, oh, i'm and really think, oh, i'm desperate. desperate desperate. i'm desperate to go and and over and escape britain and move over there. always had there. i know we've always had a bit that, don't me wrong. bit of that, don't get me wrong. i the community, of i mean, the expat community, of course, in fact, what they do is they just go and try and they tend to just go and try and live like they live in britain. but marbella. but but somewhere in marbella. but i do need be doing do think we need to be doing more for people here. you more for people here. thank you very pundit very much. fantastic pundit panel very much. fantastic pundit panel. time panel. we are out of time for
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you guys for moment, but you guys for the moment, but i will come back to you in about, what, minutes? the what, 15 minutes? i've got the front you be front pages, so you will be right finger on the right up to date. finger on the pulse all of the day's pulse with all of the day's latest news. but before that, it's newsmaker. it's tonight's newsmaker. it is the david mad dog the legendary david mad dog maddox . for the latest on the maddox. for the latest on the climate warrior chaos , mark my climate warrior chaos, mark my words, these climate activists are going to get more and more extreme. why because for them, the doomsday clock is ticking. and with every second and every second, we get closer to the end of the world, it legitimises them taking more and more extreme action. yeah all right. they were on rishi sunak roof this week. how long is it before some people decide to start saying bombs off? i'll see
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everybody who's been getting in touch, . used touch, chris says. i used to work nhs in the 1970s. we work in the nhs in the 1970s. we all just worked together. we didn't diversity managers all just worked together. we didna diversity managers all just worked together. we didna simpler'ersity managers all just worked together. we didna simpler time, managers all just worked together. we didna simpler time, wasn't|ers all just worked together. we didna simpler time, wasn't it? yet. a simpler time, wasn't it? a simpler time? and says as a number of prominent politicians have declared this week, we are not ready as a country for net zero in 2030? absolutely spot on. i'm going to make a little prediction here. now, was it an it was an make a little prediction now by the next general election, time general election, by the time that around, i reckon that rolls around, i reckon rishi will drop the pledge rishi sunak will drop the pledge of no new petrol and diesel cars by 2030. | of no new petrol and diesel cars by 2030. i think he might keep that one in his back pocket and i think he might lob it out there a week or two before the election and i think that could be a massive vote winner. would you that? says you vote for that? stephen says we don't have to do dive drive a standard of equality. we have a woke adversity and woke quality. okay. all right. get with the program. patrick, thank you very much. now, it's time now for the newsmaker in which a fearless commentator speaks out on the big stories of the day. the
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climate war rages on with greenpeace activists this week dousing rishi sunak , north dousing rishi sunak, north yorkshire home with oil black fabnc yorkshire home with oil black fabric to protest against britain drilling for oil and gas. look, you know that stuff that we use to heat our homes and drive our cars. i want to know how they got there, by the way. i want to know how they got there. i just how many there. i just wonder how many fossil were burnt the fossil fuels were burnt in the process of them actually doing that. some of the that. what were some of the things used to do that things that they used to do that stunt made out of anyway? the group of demonstrators have been arrested and the stunt has fuelled the debate on eco warrior antics even further . warrior antics even further. with us to discuss this is the acclaimed political editor of express online , john mad dog express online, john mad dog maddox . david, express online, john mad dog maddox. david, thank you very, very much . look, great to have very much. look, great to have you on the show . have you got you on the show. have you got any ideas in your back pocket as to how we can handle certain eco numpties ? numpties? >> well, i i've put around a call yesterday to a few of the tory backbenchers after after what happened and they came up
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with some ideas and think you were mentioning arming the police. i mean the first response i got was i'd have had them shot literally . it was them shot literally. it was obviously off the record one, but it was a um, but making a point that had this happened to the us president's house, the chances are they would have been shot because it would have been deemed such a security threat , deemed such a security threat, uh, you know, and had another one who was saying it's time to proscribe these groups as terrorist organisations because they are attacking our infrastructure. they are literally putting lives at risk. we're stopping ambulances going to hospitals and so forth. so you know, that is a fair that's a fair i mean, obviously fairly extreme kind of reaction. these are from mps. these are and i think it reflects that people have had enough of these fanatics of our fanatics , our
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fanatics of our fanatics, our zealots. you could you could. >> david david, let me let me just. >> climate change and religion , >> climate change and religion, you know. >> yeah, yeah. this is this is my big concern, though, right? which is exactly as you've mentioned, there, climate change, religion, climate change, religion, climate change, fear. and what happens, you end up with a load of i would argue quite often when young people straight out of school, straight out of university, i have interviewed some of these people and i can confirm that there are definitely some mental issues at play definitely some mental issues at play there. and they are vulnerable to certain things . vulnerable to certain things. climate fear is one of those things. and if they serious believe that the world is going to end for everybody within a matter of years, unless they act now, they view themselves as the saviours of the planet and that legitimate opposes any kind of action, including doing things like assassinating politicians, doing things like assassinating oil barons, doing things like letting bombs off. et cetera .
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letting bombs off. et cetera. and with every passing day , i and with every passing day, i worry, david, that we are getting closer to the big one. well and it's always possible. >> and that's that's the problem. you know , um, at the problem. you know, um, at the moment there doesn't seem to be. every moment they seem to be kind of allegedly peaceful protest. yes. but i would say go back to this blocking ambulances from going to hospital is not a peaceful protest, in my view . peaceful protest, in my view. and in fact, that the police weren't arresting these people instantly worries me. it still worries me, actually . you know, worries me, actually. you know, i mean, there was a story just, i mean, there was a story just, i think, last week with a woman trying to get her baby to hospital and they wouldn't get out of her way for her, which i think was shocking. i mean, it's outrageous . so, you know, we outrageous. so, you know, we have to start understanding . have to start understanding. there's a there's a view of this thing that climate change, because it's climate change, it's nice and liberal, it's soft . there's all these nice white middle class people, very elderly. so the mafia 70s or or
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very students. but you know, they just because they're well off and middle class does not mean that they shouldn't be treated as a threat to society . treated as a threat to society. >> you put one of those hats in a snazzy suit on them and give them an italian american accent . right. and they are the mafia. they . they don't they don't they are. they don't they don't like you're doing. so like what you're doing. so they're go round to they're going to go round to your house where family your house where your family live they're going live at night and they're going to go onto your roof. oh, it would be a shame, wouldn't it, if. yeah. if we turned up at your wedding and ruined your wedding day. i mean, we are . wedding day. i mean, we are. seriously, i think not so far away from a horse's head made out of kale , but being revealed out of kale, but being revealed from rishi sunaks bed at some point. this is. from rishi sunaks bed at some point. this is . this is where we point. this is. this is where we are. i think you could easily class them as a proscribed terror group . mainly. mainly terror group. mainly. mainly because actually it does fit the definition. but go on. >> david yeah, no, the only thing was don't give him any idea. that's all. i mean, i could just imagine somebody trying to work out the horse's head kale as, i will
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head in kale as, as it's. i will take that one. thank you very much. you yeah, but but it is, i mean, and i think that's where the frustrate with the mps you know they're frustration is coming from talking to their constituents and it's you know it's it is outrageous what is going on. and really i think actually the issue here is that the police have been given the powers to deal with it. they have now got to use those powers. they only used them on coronation day for obvious reasons. yeah, it was great. they've never used those powers because otherwise things are getting hand . getting get out of hand. >> what? and you >> and you know what? and you know what? seriously, what happened you're happened there? you're absolutely that absolutely right to raise that point day. was point about coronation day. was that day was it not better as that day or was it not better as a result of not having a load of republicans there protesting and putting up and causing putting banners up and causing a hoo ha and the day? it hoo ha and ruining the day? it was much better. and actually it was much better. and actually it was over quite quickly. the was over quite quickly. and the met a little apology met police did a little apology afterwards. know people afterwards. i know that people will say, well, that's a slippery slope towards tyranny. but know look at the but you know what? i look at the tactics of some these are
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tactics of some of these eco are using. think so what using. and i think so what get lifted we can apologise lifted and we can apologise later if need be. david thank you much. david mad later if need be. david thank you maddox. much. david mad later if need be. david thank you maddox. right.. david mad later if need be. david thank you maddox. right. coming mad later if need be. david thank you maddox. right. coming up, dog maddox. right. coming up, we've got the papers at 1030, so not long now i will be telling you. fact, i've a little you. fact, i've had a little sneak i'll get all the all sneak peek. i'll get all the all the advanced copies. and the advanced copies. anyway and we'll reaction as we'll have panel reaction as well, tonight , well, of course. plus, tonight, headune well, of course. plus, tonight, headline heroes and back page zeros . but i headline heroes and back page zeros. but i want to headline heroes and back page zeros . but i want to know yours. zeros. but i want to know yours. all right, gb views and gbnews.com. get in touch. don't go anywhere. i'll see you in a few seconds . few seconds. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on gb news is . on gb news is. >> 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 disruptive gales heavy 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 andifs
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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 activities, camping, caravanning and so on. initially it's the rain that is of concern overnight , but especially across overnight, but especially across parts of northern ireland where the ground is saturated . that the ground is saturated. that rain heading into western parts of uk end of the of the uk by the end of the night as well, accompanied by strengthening winds, dry initially across eastern initially across some eastern and northern parts. aside from the shower . but this spell the odd shower. but this spell of weather clears northern of wet weather clears northern ireland england and ireland pushes into england and wales scotland. 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 afternoon, the skies brighten afternoon, as the skies brighten for wales in the southwest, that's the strongest that's when the strongest winds kick with the risk of kick in with the risk of widespread gales not just around coast but inland as well . coast but inland as well. potential for travel disruption and certainly some dangerous conditions around beaches . but conditions around beaches. but storm anthony does move through and by sunday, a brighter day is expected. still some heavy showers around. lighter winds, however , these showers will be however, these showers will be slow moving where they do occur,
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but be hit and miss but they'll be hit and miss sunny between. sunny spells in between. and then trend through next week then the trend through next week is for weather to become is for the weather to become gradually drier, brighter and warmer , a brighter outlook with warmer, a brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> it's 10:30 gb news. >> it's10:30 p.m. gb news. >> it's10:30 pm. it's the papers . all right, let's go. papers. all right, let's go. i'll tell you what, some juicy stuff knocking about today. it's tomorrow morning's papers. but tonight, you lucky lot . i'm tonight, you lucky lot. i'm starting independent. starting with the independent. get this. ministers condemned for shameful eviction of afghan refugees. 8000 ordered out of hotels within weeks. 1 in 5 face homelessness . i will definitely homelessness. i will definitely be talking about that with my
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panel be talking about that with my panel. i'm moving on to the eye now. now, high street banks must do more for savers as the bank of england governor. yeah, inclined to agree about that. why aren't they seeing the rewards of interest rate hikes? we're going to the daily mirror now and we've got skint . £6.5 now and we've got skint. £6.5 million lotto lag now , a million lotto lag now, a decorator very much a mirror story that actually i must say, although to be fair, it is interesting. now strap yourselves in, because this is gold. okay we're on the telegraph to stories here. immediately jump out to me. firstly, children of seven to get trans treatment. yeah we will talk about that. but this one's fantastic . gary lineker one's fantastic. gary lineker yeah. on the front i got a standing ovation in m&s after the bbc suspended me. that isn't just a lie. gary that's an m&s lie, isn't it, mate? who else are we on now? the times. the times, the times. bad result for
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uk students. it's like my results day all over again. middle class british pupils lose out as top universities give 1 in 4 places to foreign candidates. it's a good news day this people. it's a good news day. the guardian playground for private equity fair for childcare couldn't give a toss what the guardian thinks. there we that . the daily star we go. have that. the daily star . the daily star. this is. this is more me a moose stabbed in skeggy. is more me a moose stabbed in skeggy . unexpected news from skeggy. unexpected news from imaceleb joe pasquale. i'm a celeb star. joe pasquale narrowly avoided death after tripping over and impaling himself on a moose antler in skegness. himself on a moose antler in skegness . right. okay, we're skegness. right. okay, we're back in the room, people. we're back in the room, people. we're back in the room, people. we're back in the room . i am going to back in the room. i am going to start with the daily telegraph and i'm going to start with gary lineker. i got a standing ovation in m&s the bbc ovation in m&s after the bbc suspended me. i think this says so much. this headline. rebecca i'll start with you. firstly, not a shock is it? m&s i actually secretly think he's in waitrose . that's the first lie waitrose. that's the first lie there . do you really think that
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there. do you really think that gary lineker got a standing ovation? i mean , presumably why ovation? i mean, presumably why would anyone can i just ask why everyone in m&s is already standing up for a start? no, no. so there's that. no, you don't walk into a vanessa and everyone's just sitting the everyone's just sitting on the floor, looking floor, do you? they're looking at foie gras. no. at the kind of foie gras. no. what do make that, what do you make of that, though? i think he's an absolute liar. >> he's a liar who's full of his own self—importance. >> ego, and he's just obnoxious and i think that we should just get rid . get rid. >> yeah, just think i just >> yeah, i just think i just think i just think it's absolute lunacy. is also something lunacy. there is also something else on the of the else on the front of the telegraph, which we'll come to shortly, peter, i'll shortly, but but peter, i'll start with you. gary lineker getting marks and getting applauded in marks and spencer's that was when he spencer's for that was when he got suspended by the bbc for saying that the rhetoric of the conservative party over illegal immigration was basically like what the said . so he apparently what the said. so he apparently got standing ovation and the bbc backed down, which is the interesting thing. >> some of his co >> after some of his co commentators and so on match of the day went on strike. look, i mean, i'm probably i probably
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agree with gary lineker a lot more of the more things than the rest of the panel do. but the point about gary lineker pay is far gary lineker is the pay is far too it's public money. too high. it's public money. i like him a lot. he's very good at his job. i'm on the same page politically, but the pay is far too high out public funds. too high out of public funds. >> chloe , i will to >> okay, chloe, i will come to you now. just move on you now. i'll just move it on slightly, that's right. slightly, if that's all right. i am actually going to stick with the just purely the telegraph just purely because the front because this is the best front page day tomorrow. page for the day for tomorrow. children get nhs children of seven to get nhs trans treatment . so service to trans treatment. so service to replace tavistock . that was that replace tavistock. that was that clinic that basically was shut down in a big hoo ha. will also consider the effect of medical and mental health issues. this just feels a bit like a backward step. old, step. if you're seven years old, you get nhs treatment to you can get nhs treatment to change your gender. yeah. >> yeah. trying to read the smaller print of this, it's not completely to here if completely clear to me here if my treatment they mean giving them hormones or if they mean giving them therapy to try and avoid having to reach that stage. that's not completely clear to me here. but if it is the case that the nhs is
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allowing seven year olds to change gender, that is change their gender, that is completely insane. you are not able at the age of seven to make able at the age of seven to make a well. >> one of the key lines in this for me here, rebecca, is this which is that campaigners are welcoming the move. yeah, fine. but the nhs at risk but the nhs is at risk apparently of putting children with mental health problems on a pathway towards irreversible biological change. and this this appears to be to be happening how. >> now. >> yeah. and they're also putting children on a pathway to irreversible mental health damage as well. so they may have mental health issues right now if they're starting to think about their gender, but they are going lifelong ones. if going to have lifelong ones. if we actually take this seriously and talk children about and talk to children about changing age changing their gender at the age of lunacy. and of seven, it's lunacy. and there's no place for it in this world. sorry >> on that, peter? >> any views on that, peter? >> any views on that, peter? >> well, we're just taking the story, understand it, story, but as i understand it, it's psychological and it's this psychological and emotional support because i think, all no think, again, we'd all agree, no one the age of 18 should one under the age of 18 should have life changing medical
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procedures. but as part of that and have quickly skimmed through it, like it's excluding it, it seems like it's excluding things like puberty blockers and giving emotional support to kids who are going through a tough time . time. >> $- ? story that >> okay. and a story that i think we all know a little bit more about without having to spend digesting it. at the spend ages digesting it. at the moment, it's the independents moment, it's on the independents on front of the on the front page of the independent ministers , condemned independent ministers, condemned for shameful eviction of for quotes shameful eviction of afghan refugees. i'll run through the bullet points under this. now, what it says is this 8000 ordered out of hotels within weeks. they say 1 in 5 would homelessness. most would face homelessness. most were rescued from for were rescued from kabul for heroic work alongside the british forces . former tory british forces. former tory leader urges the government to fix the issue, saying that we owe them. britain has a debt of honour to those who helped the war, navy chief peter. i'll war, says navy chief peter. i'll just stick with you on this. how do you feel then about the idea of afghan refugees being evicted from hotels and essentially lining well, in almost inevitably being sent to lie the streets of britain , i suppose? streets of britain, i suppose? >> well, it's hugely concerning
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for two reasons. one is the bafic for two reasons. one is the basic point about the risk of homelessness and everything that comes other comes with it. but the other point about our of point is about our debt of loyalty and people from across the spectrum have made the political spectrum have made the political spectrum have made the about the point, particularly about afghan interpreters, the times newspaper campaign for newspaper ran a campaign for several that point, several years on that point, saying need do more saying we need to do more because interpreters because the afghan interpreters who worked british forces who worked with british forces over a couple of decades, well, if they're britain , they need if they're in britain, they need support. if they're in support. and if they're still in afghanistan at afghanistan, then they're at risk persecution the risk of persecution by the taliban helping allies. taliban for helping the allies. >> this is really >> i think this is really bizarre me. before i go to bizarre to me. before i go to you, chloe, because it seems to me in this country at the moment that the people that we are welcoming in, that are we welcoming in, that we are we probably should be helping . so probably should be helping. so you've got ukrainian women and children who have actually been fleeing a war. and these fleeing a war. and if these people , the 8000 afghans here people, the 8000 afghans here who've been living in hotels have been protests processed, i should say, have been found to be genuine , i.e. have been found be genuine, i.e. have been found to have genuinely helped british personnel . and we are now personnel. and we are now booting them out of hotels , as
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booting them out of hotels, as one would imagine, quite possibly to shove those hotels full of loaded people who have literally just arrived across the channel and we make them homeless. does that the channel and we make them homel i don't understand and why we can put illegal migrants in fancy new flats , but we can't fancy new flats, but we can't look after people who sacrifice themselves to help our country. this is crazy. themselves to help our country. this is crazy . where are our this is crazy. where are our priorities in britain ? priorities in britain? >> you know what i worry about with this, rebecca, is that we'll turn a load of people into people hate britain, people who hate britain, actually. and will up with actually. and will end up with a load people on the streets load of people on the streets who quite happy help us who were quite happy to help us dunng who were quite happy to help us during afghanistan and during a war in afghanistan and have been declared as actually genuine . and then we turfed them genuine. and then we turfed them out onto the streets and then, you get bit miffed you know, they get a bit miffed about all of that. and then what happens? about all of that. and then what hapwhere's priority in the government? >> because mean , you >> because yeah, i mean, you know, actually see from know, we can't actually see from this but would this headline, but it would suggest they being suggest that they are being booted out favour of people booted out in favour of people that with their that are coming with their little small boats . where's the little small boats. where's the priority? are we supporting
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priority? why are we supporting the people that are coming here illegally now rather than the people have helped people that have helped the country? understand country? i don't understand it. it make to me, and it doesn't make sense to me, and it doesn't make sense to me, and i it's actually pretty i think it's actually pretty disgraceful behaviour. there's a lot of disgraceful behaviour that doing lot of disgraceful behaviour that now. doing right now. >> em- em— >> there is and it is seeming increasingly though the increasingly as though the rights of people just arriving in small boats do appear to trump the rights of pretty much everybody else that we have. i'm going to defer to you on this one, bad result for uk one, chloe. bad result for uk students here, middle class british pupils . this is the british pupils. this is the times, by way. it's on the times, by the way. it's on the front the times. middle front page of the times. middle class pupils out as class british pupils lose out as top university parties give 1 in 4 places to foreign candidates. your reaction to that ? right. your reaction to that? right. >> so my experience at my university is that they love the foreign students. why? because they pay way more in fees . they they pay way more in fees. they get so much more money than the foreign students. so if you had two candidates that were the same ability and you had to choose 1—1 was foreign, you probably choose the foreign one because you're going to a
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because you're going to get a lot more funding from peter. >> well, actually, it's completely different the completely different to the previous both previous story, but these both come of come back to the failures of the british so the university british state. so the university point, you know, universities are a bit like small businesses or medium size. they enough or medium size. they need enough income them going. i income to keep them going. i suspect than ever suspect that's harder than ever before. they're chasing the before. so they're chasing the pounds or the euros or the dollars or yen of foreign students, but it's purely because they want to keep going. but we've very but although we've had a very different story about the afghan interpreters, people on interpreters, people coming on small about small boats, they're all about in some ways a declining capacity of the british state to do what it used to do. >> no, indeed, i've thoroughly enjoyed picking through these papers. back papers. we've held a couple back for got the daily for you. we have got the daily mail for you in just a moment. and you're not going want to and you're not going to want to miss plus, obviously, miss that one. plus, obviously, tonight's headline, heroes. and backstage at backstage at backstage zeros, a back page zeros, of course , as well. zeros, of course, as well. i want to know yours . gb views want to know yours. gb views gbnews.com look, there are a lot of other stories that are nestled away on these front pages as well. so we'll be
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talking about them. i'll tell you am very jealous you what i am very jealous because going to be because whoever's going to be doing the shows tomorrow, if indeed my doing the shows tomorrow, if indeerslot my doing the shows tomorrow, if indeerslot of my doing the shows tomorrow, if indeerslot of three my doing the shows tomorrow, if indeerslot of three till my doing the shows tomorrow, if indeerslot of three till six, my usual slot of three till six, they going to have they aren't going to have a tremendous news day to go out here. loads more to talk here. loads more for us to talk about. i'll see you in a tick
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right quick. time into the inbox now. thank you very much. before we get stuck into the daily mails front page, which is spicy to say the least, helen says you're absolutely 100% right about britain. we are losing our identity. i woke has gone mad. dave says . we used to be a great dave says. we used to be a great country of design and manufacture, but now, with so many snowflakes willing to many snowflakes not willing to get dirty, we will get their hands dirty, we will never be again. now, never be great again. now, that's i disagree with that's where i disagree with you. i think be. we just that's where i disagree with you. ipeople be. we just that's where i disagree with you. ipeople to be. we just that's where i disagree with you. ipeople to get be. we just that's where i disagree with you. ipeople to get theirve just need people to get their backsides and to have backsides in gear and to have better leaders, amy says about gary lineker. brilliant. this, by gary lineker. okay, by the way. gary lineker. okay, says he's on the front of the telegraph that he got a round of
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applause from people in m&s when he got suspended from the bbc. i walked into my local m&s in barnes and i got a standing ovation. it was really cringe, not not as cringe as a lying about getting a standing ovation in m&s. gary, you utter loser. but amy says, sure , that was but amy says, sure, that was a slow hand clap not an ovation. yeah probably to be fair. probably right. okay. we are now going to the daily mail, which is the only front page that we did not give you last time. carp a load of this. two and a half grand to smuggle foreign criminals out of the uk. leave that on the screen for a second for me, please. people smugglers are cashing in twice, so they're bringing migrants to britain and then they're helping the criminals who've committed crimes in britain go out so that they can evade british justice. brazen albanian gangs are advertise ing escape routes in lorries for people quote for people who have problems and want to leave england as soon as possible, i.e. you've been
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caught with a load of drugs. we've bailed you and now you need to get out sharpish. the quoted fee was two and a half grand sterling. one criminal told undercover reporter told a male undercover reporter posing a relative a posing as a relative for a killer on the run that he could escape to the continent. that very night . escape to the continent. that very night. forjust escape to the continent. that very night . forjust £3,000. the very night. forjust £3,000. the fact that we can't even secure our borders on the way out, i think is absolutely fascinating . rebecca, i'll start with you. i mean, i've got to be honest with you. if they're leaving, i don't really mind . don't really mind. >> no, i'm the same opinion. i think i mean, this is just hilarious stroke, disturbing , hilarious stroke, disturbing, you know, let's stop giving all of that money to france to try and solve the problem . let's and solve the problem. let's just give it to the albanian gangs them all gangs, get them, get them all shipped whilst you're there shipped out whilst you're there on pizza. >> gm- gm— on pizza. >> you make of this then? >> well, it's hilarious to rebecca, your family has rebecca, but if your family has lost a loved murder, you lost a loved one to murder, you treat very seriously. so it's treat it very seriously. so it's hugely worrying . hugely worrying. >> let them in in >> shouldn't you let them in in the every thing for the first place? every thing for rebecca seems to come down to a debate about numbers.
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>> some people are actually interested in talking about solutions . as i said earlier, solutions. as i said earlier, ukip irrelevant . ukip is irrelevant. >> i can do that too. >> mps, but at the daily mail >> no mps, but at the daily mail give credit. it's a good give it credit. it's a good story. don't have all the story. we don't have all the detail yet, but it's incredibly alarming and imagine there'll alarming and i imagine there'll be of follow parliament. >> look, you make a great point, which that which is genuinely that of course does and course if somebody does come and commit i mean, we commit a crime here, i mean, we were focusing the of the were focusing on the idea of the albanian drug dealers, right? but could be anything. but yeah, it could be anything. it anything. and if it could be anything. and if someone murdered, well, someone had murdered, well, anyone, they should face justice, they then would be that flip side to it, i suppose, which that. well, do we which is chloe that. well, do we want continually clogging want them continually clogging up our prison system? i suppose if they stay then, if they stay here, then, you know, have to pay for them know, we'd have to pay for them again. shouldn't really again. but we shouldn't really be subject to deportation at that be subject to deportation at tha and we've got wary. we >> and we've got to be wary. we don't repeat the myths of ukip when people are, oh, where are you down, rebecca? >> honestly, no, give it a rest. you've got a personal grudge and you in for it. you go in for it. >> back down. peter. it's nonsense talking about policy. >> criminals are uncertainty >> so criminals are uncertainty about policy , right? about policy, right?
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>> interested in hearing >> i'm interested in hearing about peter queally. >> go on. peter queally. >> go on. peter queally. >> interrupt >> rebecca, i didn't interrupt you. criminals have a certain sentence. deported. sentence. get deported. so we want british justice want to see british justice wherever the criminal originates from. but we necessarily from. but we don't necessarily pay from. but we don't necessarily pay for a life sentence because they to their country of origin. >> all right, chloe, a word in edgewise. >> well, i think we know that we're not very good at deporting people i can't people in this country. i can't remember figures the remember the figures off the top of head, but we're really of my head, but we're really we're about we are about we're about as it we are about as we are bad at it. as it we are very bad at it. >> so we are essentially now outsourcing our deportation to albanian gangsters, which is an interesting turn of events, isn't it ? actually, when you isn't it? actually, when you think about it, look , i actually think about it, look, i actually think about it, look, i actually think you're all right genuinely. i'm not just saying that we shouldn't have let criminals in in the first place. no, we shouldn't. they should, however, be able to face justice in this country. absolutely you know, unfortunately , know, and yes, unfortunately, we're not very good at deporting them, would mean them, which probably would mean that lifetime that they just have a lifetime in at the in a british prison at the taxpayer's we're taxpayer's expense. so we're all winners all winners people. we're all winners people. we're all winners you very, very winners. thank you very, very much. right now, of course, am
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much. right now, of course, i am joined , as you've been hearing joined, as you've been hearing there by my wonderful pundits, we've chloe we've got we've got chloe dobbs. we've got peter got rebecca peter edwards, we've got rebecca jane, at least two of which are definitely going to fancy each other outside in the green room. but time for headlines but it is now time for headlines , and back page zeros. , heroes and back page zeros. this is where my wonderful punst this is where my wonderful pundits decide basically it's heroes and losers. isn't it? so come on then. who do i start with here? i'm going to start with here? i'm going to start with you, peter. >> so, heroes england's ashes team got back to 2—2 from 2—0 down. yes, with a bit more careful batting . it could have careful batting. it could have been was a great been 3—2, but it was a great fight back and it was exciting along fight back and it was exciting alo okay. it's a strong start. chloe >> my hero is theresa coffey for today. blacklisting greenpeace from defra. so they are no longer an insider lobby group. >> yeah. this girl. longer an insider lobby group. >> yeah. this girl . we're off to >> yeah. this girl. we're off to a strong start. go on. rebecca. my hero is piers corbyn. >> lovely. who is mad as a box of frogs, but absolutely against aldi's dystopian new shops and went in and tried to pay with cash and walked out with your
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strawberries and gave everybody strawberries and gave everybody strawberries . strawberries. >> yeah, absolutely. just >> yeah, absolutely. i'm just going with for going to stick with that one for a because piers corbyn is a minute because piers corbyn is hilarious. politely now, hilarious. right politely now, bit of a fruit loop . okay. bit of a fruit loop. okay. politely, a bit of a fruit loop. i mean, he makes jeremy look completely and utterly sane, doesn't he? and really is doesn't he? and that really is saying something. sorry, peter, but makes point. he but he makes a serious point. he walks into the it was an aldi or a co—op, wasn't it? aldi. there you go. yeah. and. and he's got a punnet of a punnet of fruit and got some coins and he and he's got some coins which are legal tender and he goes to pay for it and they say for whatever reason we're not taking that money. and then he just he essentially nicks just well he essentially nicks them, because them, but he's not because he's paid he's exposing paid for them. he's exposing exactly don't kill exactly why gb news don't kill cash so important. cash campaign is so important. chloe yeah. theresa coffey so theresa coffey what she's done now say in of now is say in light of greenpeace mounting, rishi sunak's roof, you are no longer going to have the ear of government, right? >> yes, exactly. and that means they're going to have even less influence, which just goes to show that these groups just stop
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oil. greenpeace doing crazy stuff . it's counterproductive stuff. it's counterproductive what at this what they're doing at this point. getting press point. yes, it's getting press attention, i don't think attention, but i don't think it's helping there. >> people would say that >> some people would say that you you can't negotiate you can't you can't negotiate with terrorists. on with terrorists. and it's on that i'm that greenpeace note that i'm going peter, going to go to you, peter, with the zeros for the back page. zeros for greenpeace ammaia zero. >> and i think, you know, i think you have to push the boundanes think you have to push the boundaries but boundaries in your protest. but this a stupid and mean thing this was a stupid and mean thing to attempt to to do as an attempt to intimidate the sunak family and exactly shouldn't in exactly what you shouldn't do in politics, give up on politics, which is give up on the just do nasty the ideas and just do nasty things get publicity. so it's things to get publicity. so it's wrong. things to get publicity. so it's wroyeah, think everyone agrees >> yeah, i think everyone agrees with chloe go with you on that one. chloe go on to you. back page zeros. on back to you. back page zeros. costa on back to you. back page zeros. cosoh, why . on back to you. back page zeros. cosoh, why. i'm on back to you. back page zeros. cosoh, why . i'm sorry, >> oh, i know why. i'm sorry, but i am not to going buy a coffee in that establishment ever again . if they think the ever again. if they think the good advertising putting good advertising is putting a cartoon a with chopped cartoon of a woman with chopped off boobs. >> well, i mean, i actually got a very email on that from a very strong email on that from a very strong email on that from a lady who had undergone a lady who sadly had undergone a double due to breast double mastectomy due to breast cancer and said that she cancer. and she said that she sympathised with anyone who wanted to go through that kind of but didn't want of surgery, but she didn't want to have to look at the scars
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even on a cartoon advert, because depressing because it was a depressing reminder. quickly, rebecca, reminder. very quickly, rebecca, who's page zero. who's your back? page zero. >> peter no, it's not. >> peter oh, no, it's not. >> it's not what's on my list. that's after saying, don't make it personal. that's after saying, don't make it pdon'tal. that's after saying, don't make it pdon't make it personal. >> don't make it personal. >> don't make it personal. >> you're done. >> you're done. >> sadiq khan the king of taxation and control , who >> sadiq khan the king of taxation and control, who is gloated about his ulez victory this week when all he's doing is penalising hard working individuals. >> i'll tell you what, this has been an absolutely fabulous show. i have loved every single second of it. can i thank you all personally taking time all personally for taking time out friday night out of your friday night to enlighten and the nation. enlighten myself and the nation. i would like thank i would really like to thank everybody been everybody else who's been watching and tuning in and listening absorbing listening in and absorbing all of on social media of our content on social media as well. now we've got headliners next. can i just headliners next. but can i just tell you going to be tell you, you are going to be absolutely loving the content they've up and we've they've got served up and we've got evicted onto the got afghans evicted onto the streets. so we're going to have a homeless afghan crisis. we've got who are got children of seven who are going nhs trans going to get nhs trans treatment. gary lineker has told an front an absolute whopper on the front of results of the telegraph band results for uk students and albania are
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trying smuggle criminals out trying to smuggle criminals out of you couldn't it of britain. you couldn't make it up. headliners next the up. headliners on next the temperatures rising boxt solar the proud sponsors of weather 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 disruptive some heavy 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 andifs 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 some eastern initially across some eastern and parts aside from and northern parts aside from the odd shower. but this spell
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of wet weather clears northern ireland pushes into england and wales. scotland. wales. southern scotland. showers of the showers continue for much of the rest scotland and northern rest of scotland and northern ireland the of the ireland by the end of the afternoon, skies brighten afternoon, as the skies brighten for wales in the southwest, that's when strongest winds that's when the strongest winds kick with the risk of kick in, with the risk of widespread not just widespread gales. not just around coast but inland as well . potential for travel disrupt and certainly some dangerous conditions around beaches . but conditions around beaches. but storm entity does move through and by sunday, a brighter day is expected. still 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 in between. occur, but they'll be hit and missthen 1y in between. occur, but they'll be hit and missthen the in between. occur, but they'll be hit and missthen the trend n between. occur, but they'll be hit and missthen the trend through en. occur, but they'll be hit and missthen the trend through next and then the trend through next week is the weather to week is for the weather to become drier, brighter become gradually drier, brighter and warmer . and warmer. >> the temperatures rising , boxt >> the temperatures rising, boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> very good evening to you. it is 11:00. i'm aaron armstrong in the newsroom . a man's been the newsroom. a man's been jailed for life for the murder of his ten month old stepson , of his ten month old stepson, and he will serve a minimum term of 28 years. craig crouch caused acute physical and mental suffering to jacob crouch over six months before assaulting him in a fatal attack in december 2020. j jacob had 39 rib fractures and internal injuries likened to those seen in car crash victims . jacob's mother, crash victims. jacob's mother, gemma barton , was jailed for ten gemma barton, was jailed for ten years for causing or allowing his death. mrjustice kerr, in sentencing, said crouch, caused jacob intense and prolonged harm. he was a small baby who had not yet learned to walk or talk. >> sadly, he never did. so. your attacks on him were an abuse of trust , of the grossest 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
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