tv Mark Dolan Tonight Replay GB News August 27, 2023 3:00am-5:01am BST
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gb news. >> it's 9:00 on television on radio and online in the united kingdom . across the world, i'm kingdom. across the world, i'm leo kearse, for in the legendary mr mark dolan , in my big mr mark dolan, in my big opinion, has multi culturalism field. and i'm joined by a former gang member turned anti—violence activist to hear his remarkable story. it might take at ten, sadiq khan suggests ulez opponents are far right. conspiracy theorists. but what does conspiracy theorist even mean anymore . so it's a busy two mean anymore. so it's a busy two hours to come. so put something cold and fizzy in the fridge or fire up the kettle and let's make a night of it. first,
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though, headlines with though, the headlines with tatiana . tatiana sanchez. >> leo, thank you and good evening. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. tory mp nadiezda dorries has resigned her commons seat, accusing nadiezda dorries has resigned her commons seat , accusing the her commons seat, accusing the prime minister rishi sunak of demeaning his office by opening the gates to whip a public the gates to whip up a public frenzy against her in her resignation letter, ms dorries accused mr sunak of abandoning the fundamental principles of conservatism , and she said conservatism, and she said history will not judge you kindly. she declared in june that she would leave her mid beds odsherred seat with immediate effect. but despite this, she went on to try to find out why she was refused a seat in the house of lords. it was thought she'd get peerage in thought she'd get a peerage in bofis thought she'd get a peerage in boris resignation boris johnsons resignation honours . she'd been coming honours list. she'd been coming under pressure to step under increased pressure to step down since june . most of spain's down since june. most of spain's coaching staff has resigned following the conduct of luis rubiales at last weekend's women's world cup final. rubiales is currently suspended
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by fifa from all football related activities as he's accused of grabbing star player jenni hermoso's head and kissing her on the lips following spain's victory over england in the world cup, he said it was a spontaneous consensual spontaneous and consensual little peck and said false feminists were trying to kill him . a statement from the him. a statement from the coaches offered a story coaches said he offered a story that not reflect in any way that does not reflect in any way the feelings of jenni, who stated felt victim of stated she felt a victim of aggression . by the rmt union, aggression. by the rmt union, says a roadmap to a negotiated settlement could bring an end to the ongoing dispute over pay, jobs and conditions. today's train strikes continuing for a second year come as many people head off on summer holidays or travel to events such as notting hill , travel to events such as notting hill, carnival. travel to events such as notting hill, carnival . police hill, carnival. police investigating the disappearance of a 54 year old woman in kent have now found a body. clare knights was last seen in a village near canterbury on august 23rd. it's believed she was walking her white and brown spaniel to the area of minnis
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bay in birchington , where she bay in birchington, where she was reportedly seen that afternoon in a body was found in afternoon in a body was found in a location near to that location this evening. a man in his 20s remains in custody on suspicion of her murder. remains in custody on suspicion of her murder . and finally, the of her murder. and finally, the deputy head of the british museum stepping aside while a police investigation into stolen artefacts is underway. the museum's head, hartwig fischer, resigned yesterday and an unnamed member of staff has been sacked. it's understood that the items, which include gold jewellery and semi—precious stones, were taken over a significant period of time. former chancellor george osborne, who's now the museum's chairman, some the items chairman, says some of the items have already been recovered. he's promised an independent review look into how the review to look into how the museum missed the warning signs . this is gb news across the uk on tv , in your car, on digital on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by simply saying play gb news. now it's back to . leo
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now it's back to. leo >> thank you, tatiana , and >> thank you, tatiana, and welcome to mark dolan tonight with me, leo kearse. in my big opinion , has multiculturalism opinion, has multiculturalism failed in the big story is the ukraine counter—offensive of stalling. and i'm joined by a former gang member turned anti—violence activist to hear his remarkable story. it might take at ten. sadiq khan suggest ulez opponents are far right. conspiracy theorists. but what is conspiracy theorists? even mean anymore? tonight's mean anymore? and tonight's newsmaker is the queen of us royal and showbusiness reporting. kinsey schofield gb news is the home of the papers with tomorrow's front pages from 10:30 pm. sharp with three top punst 10:30 pm. sharp with three top pundits who haven't been told what to say and who don't follow the script. tonight, we have former olympic gymnast lisa mason, political commentator and writer matthew stadlen , and writer matthew stadlen, and author and journalist peter lloyd. and tonight, i'll be asking the pundits as nadine dorries steps down from parliament and launches a scathing attack on rishi sunak .
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scathing attack on rishi sunak. should it be easier to recall our mps as the former head of m16 our mps as the former head of mi6 says, that we should question the scientists over artificial intelligence after they were wrong on covid? have we lost faith in experts and is it okay to forget your manners at work whilst under stress? plus, your emails, even the spicy ones send them into gb views. gbnews.com and i'll get to them later in the show. this show has a golden rule. we don't do boring. not on watch. do boring. not on my watch. i just won't so let's get just won't have it. so let's get to start with my to work. and we start with my big opinion . a video has emerged big opinion. a video has emerged onune big opinion. a video has emerged online of lectures given at the green lane mosque in birmingham, where an unnamed speaker describes the process for stoning a woman to death. he says according to the sharia , says according to the sharia, again, when it comes to women, there must be a hole dug in the earth must covered earth and she must be covered up to of her body so that so to half of her body so that so that does not appear. well. that her does not appear. well. it's nice that he's worried
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about modesty. i suppose about her modesty. i suppose this wasn't being in saudi this wasn't being said in saudi arabia by the way, but this was here in the uk, birmingham, arabia by the way, but this was hethe1 the uk, birmingham, arabia by the way, but this was hethe greenik, birmingham, arabia by the way, but this was hethe green lane birmingham, arabia by the way, but this was hethe green lane mosque 1am, arabia by the way, but this was hethe green lane mosque ,1m, arabia by the way, but this was hethe green lane mosque , which in the green lane mosque, which is other is apparently hosted other controversial sermons pertaining to sexuality and adultery to women sexuality and adultery . i mean, i suppose it's debateable that birmingham is a less radicalised place in saudi arabia , but another preacher was arabia, but another preacher was allegedly filmed saying, take that homosexual man and throw him from the mountain and that women intellectually women were intellectually deficient and that it takes two witnesses of a woman to equal the of and the one witness of a man. and they probably said some bad things . in statement, they probably said some bad thingreen . in statement, they probably said some bad thingreen lane in statement, they probably said some bad thingreen lane mosque tement, they probably said some bad thingreen lane mosque andznt, the green lane mosque and community said that it community centre said that it has been the forefront of has been in the forefront of civic engagement, community integration and interfaith collaboration in birmingham for many years. we promote sincere adherence to islam as a religion of peace, and are also deeply of peace, and we are also deeply committed in committed to supporting those in needin committed to supporting those in need in our community. we take pride in upholding the laws of this and reject this country and we reject violence and extremism unequivocally . you might think unequivocally. you might think that this is a fringe mosque for
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radicals, but green lane radicals, but the green lane mosque huge . with space for mosque is huge. with space for 3500 worshippers. and it's not just tolerated by the authorities , it's funded by authorities, it's funded by them. the government awarded this mosque £22 million to work with young people . and guess who with young people. and guess who the head of education at the mosque is? it seems to be the same guy who's preaching in the videos . man, we should be videos. man, we should be spending keep him away videos. man, we should be speniyoung keep him away videos. man, we should be speniyoung people, keep him away videos. man, we should be speniyoung people, not) him away videos. man, we should be speniyoung people, not puttingvay from young people, not putting them together. you them together. next time you look pay slip and wonder look at your pay slip and wonder where money's gone, the where all your money's gone, the government's it you government's taking it off. you to groups such as this. to give to groups such as this. the government grant is the government says the grant is for marginalised for empowering marginalised communities . as i mean, i guess communities. as i mean, i guess islamic fundamentalist are a bit marginalised , but i think that's marginalised, but i think that's a good thing and i really don't want the government to empower them much. the mosque said them that much. the mosque said in new youth in a statement. the new youth centre we plan to build will provide a safe for all centre we plan to build will provid
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the youth investment fund. how did happen ? britain is the did this happen? britain is the birthplace of western liberal democracy. i blame tony blair. tony blair left us with a few issues that have damaged the country. devolution created corrupt satellite parliaments that tried to tear the country apart, and pfi lumbered the taxpayer with debts for decades . but tony blair's drive for multiculturalism where import cultures are ghettoised instead of being integrated into our society , has been a disaster. we society, has been a disaster. we now have grooming gangs and 40,000 islamists on terror watch lists. we don't just have terror attacks on our shores. britain is now an exporter of islamic terror with a texas synagogue terrorist hailing from blackburn in lancashire, victims are targeted for their politics, as when david amess was tragically stabbed to death. or for their lifestyle as when men were horrifically executed by a jihadist in redding for being gay and all this engenders resentment and fear of the majority of decent muslims who just want to get along and don't
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deserve to be caught up in any backlash . and it doesn't look backlash. and it doesn't look like the problems caused by fundamentalist and fundamentalist islam and segregation are going to get better anytime soon. and we already have de facto islamic blasphemy laws in this country . blasphemy laws in this country. when an autistic 14 year old in wakefield brought a quran into school and he got slightly scuffed, received death scuffed, he received death threats. of threats. but instead of prosecute the people making the threats, which are illegal, the police charged the child with a non—crime hate incident at a super mosque is opening in the former trocadero in london's soho , a traditionally gay area. soho, a traditionally gay area. i'm sure that won't cause any friction. how long before gay men are told by the police to tone it down a bit to avoid inflaming tensions? most people around the world don't live in freedom. liberal freedom. western liberal democracy is an exception . the democracy is an exception. the liberty we take for granted is fragile. blair sowed the seeds of its downfall . of course, of its downfall. of course, anyone who suggests that , hey, anyone who suggests that, hey, maybe we shouldn't be allowing violent ideologies to flourish in uk or maybe we shouldn't in the uk or maybe we shouldn't import thousands fighting age
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import thousands of fighting age men from failed islamic states is decried as a racist. so i'm not going to do that. i'm just going to grab a bag of popcorn, sit and the clown going to grab a bag of popcorn, sit unfold the clown going to grab a bag of popcorn, sit unfold . the clown show unfold. anyway, what do you think? do you agree? do you disagree? send your emails into gbviews@gbnews.com and i'll get to your emails after the break. anyway, reacting to my big opinion tonight are my brilliant panel of former olympic gymnast lisa mason, political commentator and writer matthew stadlen, and author and journalist peter lewis died. now matthew, i'm going to start with you . what do you make of this? you. what do you make of this? does this concern you at all? i know you're probably on the other side of the political spectrum . spectrum moment. >> were >> i thought you were introducing former introducing me as a former olympic gymnast . i was going to olympic gymnast. i was going to get the show off to a very good start . i don't really know where start. i don't really know where you're getting at, what you need
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to do, obviously. we all you're getting at, what you need to do to bviously. we all you're getting at, what you need to do to d0)usly. we all you're getting at, what you need to do to do is;ly. we all you're getting at, what you need to do to do is call we all you're getting at, what you need to do to do is call out we all you're getting at, what you need to do to do is call out extremism need to do is call out extremism in form , but we're all in whatever form, but we're all stakeholders in this society as well. so we want to try to be positive, bring people together. and i don't quite know how committed to that particular cause you are. i live in the middle of notting hill. i've lived in various guises, lived there in various guises, initially with my parents. all right. no need now with my family, say, showing off notting hill is a real mixture of well off of social housing. my street, for example, is half privately owned homes, half social housing. it is also a great mixture of different races, different religions, different ethnicities . a lot of different ethnicities. a lot of the people in this country who have a problem with different races or different religions, different identities don't actually mix with people from those identities. i do. i have all my life. >> that's unfair. i mean, the victims of the grooming gangs mixed with people of different ideologies . mixed with people of different ideologies. his. so i think i think the burden of integration often falls on working class people. so we see the
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cross—channel migrants, for example , are predominantly example, are predominantly housed in deprived working class areas instead of being housed next to the metropolitan luvvies , such as yourself who demand that they be allowed. >> we've got >> you say that we've we've got we've seekers who we've got asylum seekers who live so this live on our streets. so this is this a myth. london very this is a myth. london is very mixed. of positives mixed. one of the positives about living in capital city about living in our capital city is unlike paris, where is that unlike paris, where minorities are sort of squeezed out to the mall here and paris, the centre is this sort of very glamorous , very white, very sort glamorous, very white, very sort of rich city, which has lots of appealin of rich city, which has lots of appeal in its beauty and its physical beauty. but people from nonh physical beauty. but people from north africa and people from muslim backgrounds are squeezed out. that can cause real tension. actually, london isn't like that, and i think it's a good thing. i just one thing good thing. i just say one thing here so we've got to here as well. so we've got to distinguish we're talking distinguish if we're talking about between extreme about islam between extreme islam, for which i have, i hold absolutely no candle homophobia, misogyny, whatever it the video that you say has been circulated this week. i've got no time for any of that stuff. obviously not. and it should be called
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out. but let's call it out for not. and it should be called out.rightlet's call it out for not. and it should be called out.right reasons. it out for not. and it should be called out.right reasons. anth for not. and it should be called out.right reasons. and remember the right reasons. and remember that the majority of british muslims are reasonable people, just like you me. we see just like you and me. we see majority and moderate. >> percentage >> what percentage would you say? i mean, i've seen say? because i mean, i've seen surveys of muslims . i surveys of british muslims. i know a lot british muslims know a lot of british muslims myself . and, myself. and, you know, i wouldn't say that it's an absolutely know, incredibly absolutely you know, incredibly tiny minority that have homophobic views or distasteful views. i haven't gone around. i'd like to i'd like to go to lisa just to get your perception of as a woman. >> i mean, wait, is she a woman ? >> ?- >> how 7- >> how we ? >> how we define a woman 7 >> how we define a woman these days ? how we define a woman ? can days? how we define a woman? can we just clarify this before we 90, we just clarify this before we go, leo? i don't want you crossing any lines here. >> i you're going to get this in any religion anyway, and i just feel like , get it and like feel like, get it and like they've got it in there. are the quakers, people in the christian faith in the catholic faith, in every religion. you're going to get it. >> i'm not worried about, you know, catholic extremist know, but my catholic extremist blowing up, blowing popcorn. blowing up, blowing up popcorn. >> think that's a >> but i think that's a narrative that especially the
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media push. like i said, media love to push. like i said, i know lot muslims are the catholic. >> where catholic >> where are the catholic extremists in the uk that are blowing? >> i mean, most of them are touching kids. really touching kids. let's be really honest. could sit there honest. so we could sit there and about that with and go about that with catholics. but my is catholics. but my point is everyone in on everyone likes to home in on muslims being terrorists and it's most catholics. >> no, it's not. it's not most muslims being terrorists. it's about that about an ideology that allows those flourish . and i those views to flourish. and i think i agree. think this i agree. >> it's not i've got the >> i think it's not i've got the people in the catholic thing as well. >> most catholics are not obviously not. >> i'm not saying. but people can on that narrative can go on that narrative and they onto one person or they can home onto one person or 1—1 church or a priest doing this , doing these things. this, doing these things. >> there are huge efforts to stamp out paedophilia in the catholic church. >> absolutely. and there should be there should be. there are huge efforts. >> there huge efforts. and >> there are huge efforts. and they have worked. they may not have always worked. and people unfortunately slipped they may not have always worked. and peothe unfortunately slipped they may not have always worked. and peothe unfcfornately slipped they may not have always worked. and peothe unfcfor disastrousped through the net for disastrous consequences for people who've died of british died at the hands of british terrorists. could all die terrorists. and we could all die at hands of british at the hands of british terrorists. we all terrorists. that's why we all have a stake in this society. but been
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but of course, there have been efforts to stamp out and de—radicalize islamofascism in this country . de—radicalize islamofascism in this country. i de—radicalize islamofascism in this country . i live de—radicalize islamofascism in this country. i live in the shadow of grenfell tower, right when grenfell tower went up, i saw it smoking . i got involved saw it smoking. i got involved with the local community because it is my local community got to do with. i'm about to. i'm about to. to tell you the to. i'm about to tell you the enormous pouring of enormous output pouring of generosity from muslims not just in london, from outside as well. who came who came , came into who came who came, came into london, came into notting hill, and the surrounding area, helped the people, the relatives of those had died and also those who had died and also survived grenfell , survived around grenfell, charity is at heart of charity is at the heart of moderate islam and i don't hear you championing that. >> well, of course i can't >> leo well, of course i can't champion can't champion it. i mean, i can't talk about the whole the all encompassing humanity in everything that i do because i'd be here all day talking about it. i mean, i'm highlighting nobody, at trial nobody, nobody is at a trial saying , yeah, but what saying, yeah, but what about this stuff? you this other stuff? what do you want people want to want to the people who want to commit your solution? >> what's your solution? >> what's your solution? >> is >> my solution is multiculturalism has failed. so we need to we need stop we need to we need to stop multiculturalism. we to
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multiculturalism. we need to encourage to integrate. multiculturalism. we need to enc neede to integrate. multiculturalism. we need to enc need to to integrate. multiculturalism. we need to enc need to encourageitegrate. multiculturalism. we need to enc need to encourage people. multiculturalism. we need to enc need to encourage people to we need to encourage people to accept british western liberal values. and i think that's the only way. i mean, peter, what would you say to that? only way. i mean, peter, what wotwell,u say to that? only way. i mean, peter, what wotwell, i say to that? only way. i mean, peter, what wotwell, i don't» that? only way. i mean, peter, what wotwell, i don't disagree with >> well, i don't disagree with that, to honest with you. that, to be honest with you. >> statement, >> well, your last statement, i really ultimately really don't, because ultimately , were go in any of , if we were to go in any of their , it would be their countries, it would be very to by very much we have to obey by their are lots of british muslims. >> are a lot of british >> there are a lot of british muslims britain is muslims and britain is absolutely much the country absolutely as much the country of, , my friend shyster, of, say, my friend shyster, who's a prominent british muslim who's a prominent british muslim who does a lot of work in anti racism in football . it is just racism in football. it is just as her country as it is as much her country as it is mine yours. mine and yours. >> mean , agreed. but like >> i mean, agreed. but like i said , i think there has to be said, i think there has to be there . there has to be a there. there has to be a balance. how do get there ? i balance. how do we get there? i don't and i didn't mean to don't know. and i didn't mean to interrupt we interrupt you, peter. i mean, we can't ghettos. interrupt you, peter. i mean, we canwe ghettos. interrupt you, peter. i mean, we canwe kindihettos. interrupt you, peter. i mean, we canwe kind ofttos. interrupt you, peter. i mean, we canwe kind of ghettos where >> we kind of ghettos where people know, people are openly, you know, fomenting against gay fomenting hatred against gay people or women or anything like that. >> mean, you know, i'm really >> i mean, you know, i'm really glad pointed this out glad that you pointed this out because leaked because this leaked video footage isn't the example footage isn't the first example of extremism that we see. we've seen it numerous times over the
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last few decades and even left wing organisations like channel 4 have revealed this in their investigation. so it's not even a political thing. and there was actually data and research published relatively recently, which show that although the only a very small minority of muslims are extremists, there is a substantial amount of muslims who sympathise with some of the views held by extremists, which is that sexuality should be illegal. that is, in 2023. in this country that is terrifying christians, a lot of christians feel the same thing, but that's whataboutery . whataboutery. >> i mean, matthew, have you done this about christians? have you have you done constantly deflect away ? because also deflect away? because also i disagree in christianity because i'm interested. i also disagree that christianity is intolerant. i mean, that's an absolute nonsense because look, look at the matthew that came from christianity. matthew western christianity. matthew in western europe, the church of england has never weaker it is
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has never been weaker than it is right now, and it will probably get even more woke. >> i am sorry , but no islam or >> i am sorry, but no islam or head of a mosque is going to spout the same stuff that you will hear from the head of the church of england. so please , church of england. so please, please comparison please do not make a comparison and that's a reasonable point. and if you the head of the church, you'll just talk church, if you'll just talk about of about the archbishop of canterbury, reasonable point. >> but will still find i >> but you will still find i have you have it on my lbc show. you still christians still find hardline christians who are a minority who ring up and are a minority as homophobic as as some. no, i don't do it anymore as as absolutely as homophobic as as some muslims are. okay there's no place for homophobia, right? >> well, except from in the mosques, because there's plenty of there. there's of of it there. there's plenty of it there continually . it there continually. >> i just don't understand why the right can't the left and the right can't agree on this. anyway, coming up next pundits, nadine next with the pundits, as nadine dorries from dorries stepped down from parliament and launches a scathing rishi sunak , scathing attack on rishi sunak, should it be easier to recall our mps? i'll see in our mps? i'll see you in a couple of
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news radio. back with me now. >> and joining me throughout the show are former olympic gymnast lisa mason , political lisa mason, political commentator and writer matthew stadlen, and author and journalist peter lloyd, now now former conservative minister nadine dorries has resigned from her mid—bedfordshire seat more than two months after announcing her intention to step down with immediate effect. wasn't that immediate effect. wasn't that immediate in june, the boris johnson loyalist has received criticism in the last few months for her absence from the house of commons. she did not go quietly delivering an onslaught of criticism in her resignation letter, dorries accused the prime minister of demeaning his office by opening the gates to whip up a public frenzy against her, saying he had abused roadand the fundamental principles of conservatism and that history will not judge him kindly. the controversy begs the question should it be easier to recall mps? no i'm going to ask my pundits here. i mean, peter lloyd, it did seem that she, you
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know, she clung on in there. it was al pacino at the end of scarface. >> she did not want to leave . >> she did not want to leave. >> she did not want to leave. >> something i noticed >> and something else i noticed is that she resigned day is that she resigned the day after they changed rules. after they changed the rules. that that they doubled the that meant that they doubled the pay that meant that they doubled the pay when mps stand down or pay off when mps stand down or when they get lose office. right. >> you can say a lot of things about nadine, but she is not dumb and she knew what she was doing . timing that resignation doing. timing that resignation nicely. she knew absolutely what she doing. i mean , i am she was doing. i mean, i am i don't about guys , but i don't know about you guys, but i am stunned and amazed am absolutely stunned and amazed that is discord within the that there is discord within the tory party. i just cannot believe it. i'm really, really stunned here. and i just think it's a true shock . and all i can it's a true shock. and all i can say is, nadine , i guess reality say is, nadine, i guess reality t.v. beckons. yeah >> do you do you think matthew she's going to go on to reality tv? >> well, she i think about reality tv only found she's only found she's only fans. found she's the only fans. i don't plug another found she's the only fans. i don't leo plug another found she's the only fans. i don't leo afterg another found she's the only fans. i don't leo after whatther said station. leo after what you said earlier, her earlier, but she already has her own tv show on which own national tv show on which i went, oh yeah . and pointed out went, oh yeah. and pointed out to that i thought was
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to her that i thought she was doing a disservice in various ways democracy . she, of ways to democracy. she, of course, desperate be course, was desperate to be in the wasn't she? course, was desperate to be in the and wasn't she? course, was desperate to be in the and that wasn't she? course, was desperate to be in the and that fell wasn't she? course, was desperate to be in the and that fell through;he? course, was desperate to be in the and that fell through .|e? course, was desperate to be in the and that fell through . and yeah. and that fell through. and boy, she had hammered that boy, has she had hammered that point home in her resignation letter. so boris made the point she she is full house with rishi sunak and so she is absolutely laid into him. this is bare knuckle fighting now. she says things like , since you took things like, since you took office a year ago, the country is run by a zombie parliament where nothing meaningful has happened, she said. what exactly has he or have you achieved has he done or have you achieved ? i mean, this is extraordinary for zombie for her to call it a zombie parliament. another parliament. yeah, another national station out national station has been out looking for nadine dorries because been seen in because she hasn't been seen in parliament speaking for, i don't know how long, a year or so. this is extraordinary stuff, precisely she's already precisely because she's already doing yeah doing tv stuff. yeah nonetheless, this will hurt the prime minister. and you made the joke discord the joke about discord within the tory party. of things tory party. one of the things that about coming that i find amusing about coming onto is i come on as onto gb news is i come on as a centre left person . despite what centre left person. despite what you was sort of hard you thought i was sort of hard left. actually. the hard left dislike me very much and i was
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not and yet not a fan of corbyn, and yet i attack government or attack the government or criticise the government from the and all you guys or the left and all you guys or some of you guys are some of you guys that are attacking government the attacking the government for the right. they're right. so i think they're going to difficult to have a very, very difficult time together time knitting together a constituent c to win the next election. well, yeah. i mean the tories, i guess they've always been three different been about three different parties, three different cats fighting sack . fighting in a sack. >> and whoever can manage to keep shut can keep that sack shut can can steer them. >> that didn't we, >> but we saw that didn't we, with labour mean with the labour party. i mean the party absolutely with the labour party. i mean the apart party absolutely with the labour party. i mean the apart atarty absolutely with the labour party. i mean the apart at the absolutely with the labour party. i mean the apart at the seams solutely with the labour party. i mean the apart at the seams under.y torn apart at the seams under corbynism , sort of taken over by corbynism, sort of taken over by the sort of trotskyist hard left. it seems to have recovered some of its senses. you still won't approve of it. i'm sure you won't approve of it. i think starmer, for his faults and starmer, for all his faults and lack is doing lack of charisma, is doing a sort basic , sensible, serious sort of basic, sensible, serious job. done a few job. yes, he's done a few u—turns, but what it isn't any more is riven by the same sort of divisions under of divisions it was under corbynism that now, i think is a hallmark of conservative party. >> yeah, certainly >> yeah, it's certainly plausible under starmer, but lisa, i mean, do you think it was an insult to nadine dorries constituency she clung
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constituency that she she clung on there for long without on in there for so long without actually on in there for so long without act|no,r on in there for so long without act|no, what i'm reading this >> no, what i'm reading this letter now i feel like letter right now and i feel like i'm reading script for i'm reading a script for a reality tv show. honestly i mean, this and i don't trust any, any politician , to be any, any politician, to be honest with you. i just feel like they're all out for their own gain anyway, so. right. yeah. this little bit. i think the next move would be to go on to a reality tv show by the reading this. so yeah , i'll reading of this. so yeah, i'll just dancing on ice just be strictly dancing on ice before we it. before we know it. >> anyway, moving on the ex head of claimed that of mi6 has claimed that scientists warnings about the dangers of artificial intelligence can't be trusted because scientist . it's got because the scientist. it's got covid wrong. so richard dearlove said in a podcast this week that the advice of lots of supposedly brilliant scientists about the pandemic and the virus was off piste and wrong. as a result, he's cynical about the extreme information scientists are giving potential giving about the potential dangers of ai. is he right, do you think , lisa? have you had you think, lisa? have you had any experiences with with al? anytime i've used it, i'm scared
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of it. >> i'm scared of it. honestly i just think of irobot and things like that . i kind of can like that. i kind of can understand what the guy is saying, but you know, can we really trust scientists after everything that's happened ? it's everything that's happened? it's a hard one. i think there's benefits to it. but i also i'm a great i love, you know, personal interaction and everything's to going online and i robot of some kind, you know , to deal with kind, you know, to deal with everything i miss talking on the phone to somebody. yeah. although ai is now replacing some those personal some of those personal interactions can get like i, interactions you can get like i, you know, girlfriends and boyfriends chat ai is already already around us. >> we tend as human beings , >> we tend as human beings, perhaps not really to take things seriously we perhaps not really to take thinit. seriously we perhaps not really to take thinit before riously we perhaps not really to take thinit before us. sly we perhaps not really to take thinit before us. and we perhaps not really to take thinit before us. and you we perhaps not really to take thinit before us. and you go to see it before us. and you go to tesco or sainsbury's or another good supermarket near you and you will see ai in work. you'll see robots , they'll check you see robots, they'll check you out, don't they? the automatic checkout. so it's here already. it could replace leo as a host one day. it could replace us as as pundits on the science point
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. the science point, i think, is a interesting and a really interesting and difficult during the difficult one. so during the pandemic , i was someone pandemic, i was someone who broadly what the broadly followed what the scientists yeah scientists were saying. yeah because i thought, well, who else going follow ? and else are we going to follow? and the roughly the politicians seemed roughly to do so. although boris johnson did various different did diverge at various different times, we do need and it was a very dangerous time. and we know that and nurses were that doctors and nurses were under unbelievable stress and a lot died. and one and lot of people died. and one and one report just this week came out and said that lockdowns and masks lives . out and said that lockdowns and masks lives. i'm sure masks did save lives. i'm sure you'll disagree very strongly with is, even in with that. the point is, even in the pandemic, i think we probably needed some scepticism and i was critical of scepticism at the time and i think i slightly regret that . well, slightly regret that. well, yeah, and that's the thing. >> were were >> so many people were were slamming questioned slamming anybody who questioned the science pandemic. the science in the pandemic. >> exactly . i the science in the pandemic. >> exactly. i mean, i'm the science in the pandemic. >>glad exactly. i mean, i'm the science in the pandemic. >>glad you:actly. i mean, i'm the science in the pandemic. >>glad you said'. i mean, i'm the science in the pandemic. >>glad you said thatnean, i'm the science in the pandemic. >>glad you said that because| the science in the pandemic. >>glad you said that because on so glad you said that because on my notes here, i've said that, you know, scepticism is such a healthy thing. it's written off as a negative thing. it's actually healthy . and we actually really healthy. and we should in our should have faith in our institutions. that trust has institutions. but that trust has to be earned and, you know, in
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the last few years it's been squandered by the likes of anthony so it has to be anthony fauci. so it has to be returned. now and maybe in time we can trust science we can trust the science a little but it needs little bit further. but it needs to things right before to get a few things right before we're going to it. we're going to trust it. >> anyway, >> right. exactly anyway, quickly, >> right. exactly anyway, qui can. >> right. exactly anyway, qui can fit this one in. we can fit this one in. an employment tribunal has ruled that pleas that not seeing pleas to a colleague in busy is colleague in a busy kitchen is not rude . the ruling comes after not rude. the ruling comes after bridget peters took the restaurant little in london to tribunal after losing her job as tribunal after losing herjob as she ignored requests to do tasks until colleagues said please. i wonder if she thanked the tribunal for their time. they concluded that direct and efficient communication without pleasantries may be matter pleasantries may be a matter of practical equity. a fast practical equity. in a fast paced, environment. paced, working environment. newsrooms are pretty fast paced. can i stop thanking my producers , do you think? i mean , it's , do you think? i mean, it's a really good example of this, perhaps so when i was presenting the show i told you about earlier, i had a producer who produced me for years. >> right? yeah. and i did once or twice in the middle of the night raise my voice at him. i
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do it , but in my defence, do regret it, but in my defence, he was the same size as me. he was six foot three. he was a bloke . he could look after bloke. he could look after himself. yeah he came and he came to , and to my house with my came to, and to my house with my wife and i the other day and actually a meal actually cooked us a meal because parents with very because we're parents with very little words little sleep. so in other words , on very good terms , we're still on very good terms . had someone who was . if it had been someone who was had less power than me in that environment and i had raised my voice, i think that is wrong . voice, i think that is wrong. >> oh, you're such a leftist. having to filter everything through sort of power through some sort of power dynamic anyway , back to the real dynamic anyway, back to the real world where we have to deal with managers and editors and bosses who are awful and often tricky and. >> and we plebs can sympathise with them because sometimes speaking without out niceties is just an efficient way of communicating in a fast paced environment . and generally environment. and generally everybody assumes that is the case. so the odd pleasantry every now and again is appreciated and it's noted, but it doesn't have to be a constant thing. >> but you know what? i had this
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the have a teenage the other day. i have a teenage daughter i literally just daughter and i literally just said, can you go and do said, oh, can you go and do this? and she looked at me and she went , please. i went , you're she went, please. i went, you're talking to. but you know, when it's just like i was rushing and i was just like, i just need you to do this. can you go and do that? yeah. and it was like, well, takes two well, it actually takes two seconds but there seconds to say please, but there certain jobs that certain high intensity jobs that yeah, can, yeah, you know, you can, you know, and does it know, lose yourself and does it it's not hard . it's not hard. >> it's the fire put the fire out please. >> yeah you're in a kitchen or if you're talking to a tv, you very quickly i come into gb news a lot. >> right. i have never heard a member production or member of the production or editorial team raise their voice. that's not polite here. >> anyway, coming up next in the big story, despite the counter offensive being dismissed as a failure ukraine, it still failure in ukraine, it still only needs to get a few more kilometres off russian kilometres to cut off russian supply lines. have we seen the last of this all that and more after weather. in after the weather. see you in a few . few minutes. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of
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weather on gb news is . weather on gb news is. >> hello there. i'm jonathan vautrey. who is your gb news weather forecast provided by the met office. i hope you weren't caught out by some of the showers that we've around showers that we've had around today. certainly some heavy and thundery ones and there's a chance still a few chance still of seeing a few thunderstorms off this thunderstorms to start off this evening. for central evening. but for many central eastern they will be eastern areas, they will be easing way off as head easing their way off as we head into the night, though persisting england , persisting for western england, wales some showers wales and some drizzly showers for of northern scotland for parts of northern scotland where remain where it is going to remain relatively cloudy. slightly cool night towns and cities dropping down to ten 12 c, but into single figures for some rural areas. as we start off sunday morning, the further morning, generally the further east you are the best of the sunshine. you'll have first thing, but the mist fog thing, but the odd mist and fog patch but all patch early doors. but they all readily clear their way off. the showers though, will showers in the west though, will start eastwards as we start to trundle eastwards as we head into afternoon. head into the afternoon. generally persisting across the spine country into the spine of the country into the afternoon. again, of those afternoon. again, some of those could , some more could be heavy, some more persistent rain persistent cloud and rain pushing northern ireland pushing into northern ireland later on and that will hold
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temperatures touch around later on and that will hold ter17eratures touch around later on and that will hold ter17 degrees. touch around later on and that will hold ter17 degrees. so touch around later on and that will hold ter17 degrees. so theseus, around later on and that will hold ter17 degrees. so theseus, as>und 15, 17 degrees. so theseus, as we head into monday, though , we head into monday, though, this area of high pressure in the going the atlantic is going to gradually into to gradually push its way into to the uk and that will help settle things down touch . so there is things down a touch. so there is still going to be a little legacy cloud, particularly legacy of cloud, particularly for england for parts of central england into the day. so be a bit into the day. so might be a bit of one but either of a grey one here, but either side that, some sunny spells side of that, some sunny spells developing showers around developing a few showers around at generally at times, but generally fewer compared to saturday sunday. at times, but generally fewer corgenerally saturday sunday. at times, but generally fewer corgenerally fine rday sunday. at times, but generally fewer corgenerally fine fory sunday. at times, but generally fewer corgenerally fine for those sunday. at times, but generally fewer corgenerally fine for those ofnday. so generally fine for those of us lucky to have the bank houday us lucky to have the bank holiday off further sunny holiday monday off further sunny spells and scattered showers as we throughout of spells and scattered showers as we weekthroughout of spells and scattered showers as we week as)ughout of spells and scattered showers as we week as well»ut of spells and scattered showers as we week as well by of spells and scattered showers as we week as well by that of spells and scattered showers as we week as well by that , of spells and scattered showers as we week as well by that , a of spells and scattered showers as we week as well by that , a warm the week as well by that, a warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on
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in a and slow counter—offensive operation that's been going on for nearly eight weeks. progress has been slower than expected . has been slower than expected. has it been a success? for joining me tonight is dr. alina nitschke, political science scholar and postdoctoral researcher at eth zurich. hi alina. did i pronounce your surname correctly ? surname correctly? >> me too. yes. hello great. thank you. great to have you in the studio. >> how do you think the offensive is going? i think you know , people had this this idea know, people had this this idea that it going to be, you that it was going to be, you know, rush to sea know, a quick rush to the sea of azov be by azov and it would all be over by by july . by july. >> it's very interesting for me how foreign politicians expert troops were convinced that ukraine would collapse in three days when russia attacked . and days when russia attacked. and now everybody is waiting that ukraine will will win this war in in two weeks with russia . and in in two weeks with russia. and so we should remember that russia is still bigger than ukraine. it has more resources,
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it has more soldiers. and for example , today, ukrainian forces example, today, ukrainian forces have broken through the most difficult lines that they reported. and so it will possibly go faster now. and as for russia, russia still stays a black box and also ukrainian officials sometimes say that russia will not have any missiles in 2 or 3 weeks, but that's not happening. and even for western intelligence, russia stays a black box. so it's very hard to predict what they have and what much how much weapons they still have left. and we should not forget that iran and china support russia as well . china support russia as well. >> and it's interesting that it's interesting that you mention , elena, that russia has mention, elena, that russia has , you know, bigger and better resourced country. but i mean , resourced country. but i mean, ukraine is getting weaponry from from all across the west. know absolutely prime kit they're
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getting leopard tanks storm shadow missiles do you think the promise of f—16 means and do you think the some some of the newer weaponry they're getting is going to make a difference? well, we see russia going going to korea to get to get to north korea to get to get artillery shells . artillery shells. >> yeah, it gets enough from iran or china or other countries. it doesn't need north korea. but yes, ukraine gets a lot. but that's still not enough because as i said , russia is because as i said, russia is much stronger, stronger russian military is much stronger. and the country is bigger. they have also more human resources and ukraine needs much more support . but it gets it uses very quickly. and if the west wants quickly. and if the west wants quick victories and they need support much more and need for f—16 . yes, it's super important f—16. yes, it's super important . and normally each offensive is supported from air and ukraine did not have such possibilities . so f—16 can be decisive, but
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ukraine will get it only from netherlands and denmark, and they will come at the end of this year or also most of it. most of them will come in the beginning of the next year. most of them will come in the beginning of the next year . so beginning of the next year. so it will not be so quickly as well . well. >> okay. and you mentioned that ukraine has has broken through the first main line of russian defence. i think that's south of robertino with with that new new movement will they be within range of russian supply lines and be able to cut them off because that would be a game changer this counteroffensive changer in this counteroffensive 7 changer in this counteroffensive ? well well, it was just a few kilometres . kilometres. >> the game changer would be reaching azov sea and that would cut off russia's land bridge to crimea. that would that would be a cut off of russian supply lines. but a few kilometres will not will not cut russia off its supply lines. and ukrainians were trying to attack kerch bridge and that stopped a bit.
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russian supply lines , but that russian supply lines, but that was repaired very quickly . this was repaired very quickly. this damage was not that big, so it's not that decisive as to influence russian supply lines is substantially and with the death of prigozhin, the leader of wagner group, will that affect that russian troops morale ? morale? >> he was he was incredibly popular with some troops on the ground. and he was seen as a true russian patriot, whereas other russian generals aren't, you know, shoygu gerasimov people like that prussia and putin are very able to create new propaganda. >> and the russian eyes have been living with the different kind of propaganda for years. they easily, any other they will easily, by any other story and the putin can easily make a hero from prigozhin that hero or whatever . so i do not hero or whatever. so i do not think that it will be damaging . think that it will be damaging. yeah, it will be damaging for
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wagner group yes. but in general i don't think it will. it will be very decisive . be very decisive. >> and with your knowledge and expertise of the situation, how do you see this playing out over the couple of months ? the next couple of months? >> it will continue like this, ukraine, ukraine is keeping its pace and ukraine is slowly achieving its goals towards victory and the russian frontline forces are getting tired. so getting exhausted as well . so ukraine tired. so getting exhausted as well. so ukraine is moving forward . and as i as said today, forward. and as i as said today, there was this substantial movement . and it depends how movement. and it depends how much weapon ukraine gets. so if ukraine was able to get a 16 planes in the next months and it would be it would be it would be a game changer. but if ukraine get 2 or 3, that would not be a game changer. if you grant gets 50 or 100, would be a game 50 or 100, that would be a game changen 50 or 100, that would be a game changer. depends is if changer. and it depends is if the west continues , support
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the west continues, support ukraine, if the west can support more. so the west should help ukraine to keep this momentum and to prevent russia from rebuilding its military, from regrouping and from prolonging the war, very much dependent on the war, very much dependent on the west . the west. >> and do you think there's any risk from within russia to putin? mean , we saw a couple putin? i mean, we saw a couple of ago prigozhins aborted of months ago prigozhins aborted coup , which i mean, he probably coup, which i mean, he probably when he was coming down on that jet, wished he'd jet, he probably wished he'd continued to moscow. continued all the way to moscow. but think somebody else but do you think somebody else could could step in and try and bnng could could step in and try and bring putin down from within? >> yeah, there are different possibilities . yeah. many in possibilities. yeah. many in russia also are dissatisfied with this war. many oligarchs or some, uh, some people around putin. but many people still support putin. so he has a great ability to unite elite around him. he has great ability to oppress the population and to feed them with propaganda . and feed them with propaganda. and as said, yeah, russia still stays a black box, so no one can predict what is going on and who
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who can organise the next, uh, rebellion against putin. it's hard to say. everything is possible , but putin still has a possible, but putin still has a lot of resource and many russians , many ordinary russians russians, many ordinary russians support him and many in in his surroundings still support him . surroundings still support him. he still has possibilities . he still has possibilities. >> okay, lena, thank you so much for joining us tonight and forjoining us tonight and telling us how the counteroffensive is progressing . progressing. that's elena nick gibb . the honorary research gibb. the honorary research fellow at the politics department of the university of manchester. for now, coming up, i'll be hearing the incredible story from a man who turned from a life of gang crime to campaigning against violence . campaigning against violence. zacharias mcgrath. fantastic name, by the way, joins me in just a moment. see
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let's just pull them up. richard says to those who argue about the rights and wrongs of particular religions , i would particular religions, i would just say this. here are the words of john lennon's song imagine so true. that's a nice altruistic message. there alfred says there are many islamic groups in the home of christianity. jerome muslim, and they seem to get on fine most of they seem to get on fine most of the time . i'm not sure i'd say the time. i'm not sure i'd say the time. i'm not sure i'd say the middle east is an oasis of calm the time there. alfred calm all the time there. alfred but dave says science is scepticism , referring to the scepticism, referring to the comments by the m16 chief who says we should be wary about science scientists on i because they got a lot of things on covid wrong and dave is completely right. science is scepticism, things have to be tested . but now something tested. but now for something a little different. curious mcgrath described as was mcgrath once described as was once described as a monumental risk to the public from a young age, he was involved in gang violence, helped to set up an illegal gun factory and in 2016 was sentenced to eight years in
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prison for conspiracy to blackmail and possession of drugs. but he's turned his life around using his expertise as of the world of crime to stop young people going down a path of crime and antisocial behaviour. sir kyrees, thank you for joining me. are you are you there ? secure cities. you look there? secure cities. you look like you're on your way to commit a crime . you've just commit a crime. you've just finished one. and so you work. you're a reformed criminal. and now you work helping young people to avoid, avoid that life. i mean, what was the moment you decided to help fight the world? you used to be a part of ? of? >> it was when i was in custody . um, it was back in 2017. i was watching a program and seeing the impact that had on the parents, and then it just gave me , you know, i had the time to me, you know, i had the time to reflect and knew life reflect and just knew the life away from me. i never gained nothing from it. it was just it just always negativity that that comes with criminality. you're
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always looking over your shoulder . it's stress. and you shoulder. it's stress. and you know, sooner or later you're living on borrowed time. you go to prison for it , especially to prison for it, especially organised the you an organised crime, but there's no winners in that game. you either end up dead yeah dead or in prison. yeah >> and i mean, you mentioned seeing the impact of the of the crime on the, on the victims and on the on the parents of the victims. do you think that should of criminal should be part of criminal justice to show people the impact they're having ? impact they're having? >> yeah, well, it's already part of it. there's a lot of restorative justice going on in prisons. there's a lot of different programs. i think i was engaging in one called sycamore tree, which was restorative justice. but they're not effective because of how they run and how they deliver them . the people who facilitate them. the people who facilitate these , they're not. these programs, they're not. that's why they're not effective. they're getting the wrong people into run the programs deliver the programs and deliver the programs. no programs. so they're having no effect on on criminals. i do effect on on criminals. but i do believe restorative justice does work. and it definitely worked
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with me, but not on a program. it was what i was setting. michelle and i watched it. i watched televised watched them televised documentary. that's what hits home to me . home to me. >> and when you're working with with young criminals or young people that are in trouble, what can you take us through? what you actually what you actually do, what the process is to sort of turn them around ? of turn them around? >> well, i'm actually battling at the moment to try and continue to work with people because there's professionals and organisations that are trying put block on it trying to put the block on it because don't agree with my because they don't agree with my approach think i approach and they don't think i should be working with young people. i'm hitting loggerheads with probation service and with the probation service and the youth justice service that don't like my approach . so the don't like my approach. so the only, the only people that support me and are victims of crime and also young kids, families who need help, they agree because my approach is robust and it's not it's far from politically correct . a lot from politically correct. a lot of professionals don't like it. and, you know, they've refused
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to have me back. but to the young people and to these kids who run around with the guns and knives, it's highly receptive andifs knives, it's highly receptive and it's highly effective . only and it's highly effective. only recently, a couple of weeks ago, i was speaking to a couple of young kids who were planning on going someone, going to shoot someone, and i took out it got took them out of it and i got criticised for and i got criticised for that and i got told have rang the told i should have rang the police it to the police and left it to the police. point police. but at that point in time not a police matter time it was not a police matter because they committed because they hadn't committed any crime. they were only discussing . it was the discussing it. it was in the early discussion , early stages of discussion, going to shoot someone who'd stole them. i. stole drugs from them. and i. i sat with them for about an hour and a half, two hours and told them the impact of prison, not so much what happened the so much what had happened to the victim , because they wouldn't victim, because they wouldn't that wouldn't got through that wouldn't have got through to told them impact that wouldn't have got through to them told them impact that wouldn't have got through to them and.d them impact that wouldn't have got through to them and their m impact that wouldn't have got through to them and their potentialpact on them and their potential prison sentence to be received and prison was actually and what prison was actually like. all the like. and it's all the alternative to go, you like. and it's all the alterntoye to go, you like. and it's all the alternyto go to go, you like. and it's all the alternyto go about» go, you like. and it's all the alternyto go about thingsyu like. and it's all the alternyto go about things and to know, to go about things and to how differently. it how think differently. and it did through because did get through to them because at conversation , at the end of the conversation, they decided no longer they decided that they no longer wanted person. so wanted to shoot this person. so it was highly effective. it worked . when i raised this with
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worked. when i raised this with professionals , i was criticised professionals, i was criticised for it and said this should the letter police, which letter to the police, which i strongly with. strongly disagree with. >> and i mean you got >> yeah, and i mean you got results . i >> yeah, and i mean you got results. i mean, >> yeah, and i mean you got results . i mean, it's results. i mean, it's interesting hearing that that the other professionals, you know, official professionals approach things in a more politically correct manner. but might not get the same results . might not get the same results. but why do these young people not see the impact that it could have on on their lives? never mind the victim, obviously, you know, the victim is going to, you have have a life you know, have have a life changing impact, possibly life ending impact. but are they unaware of prison? how horrific it can be? >> yeah. well, in the case i was talking about over the people that wants to go and shoot someone, if i were to discuss the impact on the victim , it the impact on the victim, it wouldn't been effective wouldn't have been effective because had and because he had hatred and dislike discontent towards dislike and discontent towards the victim. so i have to change the victim. so i have to change the approach and talk about the impact them the partners, the approach and talk about the impgirlfriendsn the partners, the approach and talk about the impgirlfriends and the partners, the approach and talk about the impgirlfriends and the e partners, the approach and talk about the impgirlfriends and the families's, the girlfriends and the families and actually what it's like in
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high security prisons and day to day and, you know, it was effective. but what's not effective? some of these kids were under were were engaging with professionals at the time , with professionals at the time, youth workers and so on. and they weren't having no positive effect . and i they weren't having no positive effect .and i speak effect whatsoever. and i speak to droves and droves of parents who were at the wit's end because the children are going off the rails to carrying knives, to getting involved with gangs. youth gangs. and they've got youth workers, yacht workers, they've got yacht workers, they've got yacht workers, them are under workers, they've got yacht worprobation them are under workers, they've got yacht worprobation service.n are under workers, they've got yacht worprobation service. and under workers, they've got yacht worprobation service. and noneer the probation service. and none of them are getting any better. they're worse . and they're getting worse. and that's professionals that's my point. professionals make situation much make such a bad situation much worse, right? but when i go on when i go in with my approach, which has proven to be effective, i'm criticise for it because the language you use, because the language you use, because speak to the kids, because how i speak to the kids, how engage them, and how we engage with them, and because i'm not politically correct it and don't use the correct it and i don't use the politically language, politically correct language, then i'm criticised it. >> amazing. well, thank you so much for joining >> amazing. well, thank you so much forjoining us. zacharias mcgrath . is that a real name, by mcgrath. is that a real name, by the way? securities mcgrath because it's fantastic. it sounds wrestler. yeah, sounds like a wrestler. yeah,
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yeah. >> i don't think i'm a wrestler, but it's got a little that's me i >> -- >> okay. well, thanks so much for joining us and for your brilliant work in the community. anyway, coming up next in my take at ten, what does conspiracy even conspiracy theorist even mean anymore? you in three anymore? see you in three minutes. looks like things are heating up . heating up. >> boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. hello there. >> jonathan vautrey. who is your gb news? weather forecast provided by the met office. i hope you weren't caught out by some of the showers that we've had today. certainly some had around today. certainly some heavy and thundery ones and there's still of seeing there's a chance still of seeing a thunderstorms off a few thunderstorms to start off this many this evening. but for many central eastern areas, they will be way off as we be easing their way off as we head night, though, head into the night, though, persisting head into the night, though, persistand some drizzly showers wales and some drizzly showers for parts of northern scotland where is to remain where it is going to remain relatively cloudy . slightly cool relatively cloudy. slightly cool night dropping night towns and cities dropping down to ten 12 c, but into single figures for some rural areas. as start off sunday areas. as we start off sunday morning, generally the further east you are best of the
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east you are the best of the sunshine. first east you are the best of the sunshibut first east you are the best of the sunshibut odd first east you are the best of the sunshibut odd mist'st east you are the best of the sunshibut odd mist and fog thing, but the odd mist and fog patch early doors , but they'll patch early doors, but they'll all readily clear their way off. the showers in the west though, will trundle eastwards will start to trundle eastwards as the afternoon, as we head into the afternoon, generally the generally persisting across the spine of the country into the afternoon , some of those afternoon again, some of those could heavy, more could be heavy, some more persistent and persistent cloud and rain pushing into northern ireland later and that hold later on and that will hold temperatures back around temperatures back a touch around 15, 17 c as we temperatures back a touch around 15,17 c as we head into monday , though, this area of high pressure in the atlantic is going to gradually way going to gradually push its way into to the uk and that will help settle things down a touch. there still going to be there is still going to be a little legacy of cloud , little legacy of cloud, particularly for parts of central the day, central england, into the day, so might a bit of a grey one so might be a bit of a grey one here, but either side of that, some developing here, but either side of that, som showers developing here, but either side of that, som showers aroundieveloping here, but either side of that, som showers around at eloping here, but either side of that, som showers around at times,] few showers around at times, but generally to generally fewer compared to saturday sunday. so saturday and sunday. so generally fine for those of us lucky have the bank holiday lucky to have the bank holiday monday further sunny spells monday off further sunny spells and as head and scattered showers as we head throughout the rest of the week as by looks like things are as well by looks like things are heating up boxt boilers are proud sponsors of weather on gb
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>> it's 10:00 news >> it's10:00 on news >> it's 10:00 on television on >> it's10:00 on television on radio and online in the united kingdom and across the world. i'm leo kearse, in for kingdom and across the world. i'm iconiczarse, in for kingdom and across the world. i'm iconiczars mark in for kingdom and across the world. i'm iconiczarsmark iilnor the iconic mr mark dolan. in my take ten, react to sadiq take at ten, i react to sadiq khan who khan suggesting anyone who criticises khan suggesting anyone who criticiexpansion is a covid ulez expansion is a covid denying conspiracy theorists. tonight's queen denying conspiracy theorists. to royal s queen denying conspiracy theorists. to royal s showbiz queen denying conspiracy theorists. to royals showbiz reporting.3en of royal and showbiz reporting. kinsey is of royal and showbiz reporting. kinrhome is of royal and showbiz reporting. kinrhome the is of royal and showbiz reporting. kinrhome the papers is of royal and showbiz reporting. kinrhome the papers with is the home of the papers with tomorrow's front pages from exactly sharp. so exactly 10:30 pm. sharp. so it's to come. so put it's a busy era to come. so put something the something cold and fizzy in the fridge kettle and fridge or fire up the kettle and let's it. first, let's make a night of it. first, though, headlines though, the headlines with tatiana leo. thank you very much. >> the leo. thank you very much. this the this is the latest from the newsroom. tory mp nadine dorries has commons seat, has resigned her commons seat, accusing the prime minister of demeaning by opening accusing the prime minister of dengatesg by opening accusing the prime minister of dengatesg up by opening accusing the prime minister of dengatesg up b public ng the gates to whip up a public frenzy against her. in her resignation letter, ms dorries accused resignation letter, ms dorries acc|fundamental principle the fundamental principle of conservatism and she also said history she declared june kindly. she declared in june that she would leave her mid—bedfordshire seat with immediate effect. but despite this, went on to to this, she went on to try to find out seat this, she went on to try to find outhe seat this, she went on to try to find outhe lords. seat this, she went on to try to find outhe lords. it seat in the house of lords. it was thought a peerage thought she would get a peerage in boris johnson's resignation thought she would get a peerage in boris list.son's resignation thought she would get a peerage in boris list. she'designation thought she would get a peerage in boris list. she'design.coming honours list. she'd been coming under increased pressure to step down since june. most of spain's coaching the conduct luis following the conduct of luis rubiales at last weekend's women's final. women's world cup final. rubiales currently suspended rubiales is currently suspended by fifa from all football related activities as he's accused of grabbing star player jenny hermoso's head and kissing
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her on the lips following spain's victory over england. he said it was a spontaneous and consensual little peck and said false feminists were trying to kill him. a statement from the coaches said he offered a story that does not reflect in any way the feelings of jenny, who stated she felt the victim of aggression . the rmt union says aggression. the rmt union says a roadmap to a negotiated settlement could bring an end to the ongoing pay dispute. today's train strikes continuing for a second year come as many people head off on their summer holidays or travel to events such as the notting hill carnival police investigating the disappearance of a 54 year old woman in kent have now found a body. clare knights was last seen in a village near canterbury on august 23rd. it's believed she was walking her white and brown spaniel to the area of minnis bay in birchington , where she was birchington, where she was reportedly that afternoon. reportedly seen that afternoon. a man in his 20s remains in custody on suspicion of her
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murder . the custody on suspicion of her murder. the deputy head of the british museum is stepping aside while a police investigate into stolen artefacts is underway , stolen artefacts is underway, say the museum's head. hartwig fisher resigned yesterday and an unnamed member of staff has been sacked . it's understood that the sacked. it's understood that the items which include gold jewellery and semi—precious stones, were taken over a significant period of time. former chancellor george osborne, who's now the museum's chairman , says some of the items chairman, says some of the items have already been recovered. he's promised an independent review to look into how the museum warning signs. museum missed warning signs. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. now it's back to leah . back to leah. >> thanks, tatiana , and welcome >> thanks, tatiana, and welcome back to mark dolan tonight with me, leo kyrees. tonight's newsmaker is the queen of royal and show business reporting. kinsey schofield we've got the papers at 10:30 pm. sharp with
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the full pundit reaction. and we've an and plus, we'll we've got an and plus, we'll have tonight's headline , heroes have tonight's headline, heroes and back page zeroes. big stories, big guests, and always big opinions. here is my take. at ten. just what is a conspiracy theory? nobody in the left seems to know . this week, left seems to know. this week, sadiq khan suggested that anyone like me who criticises his money grubbing, ulez expansion is a covid denying conspiracy theorist. all i can say to that is sadiq is lucky guess ulez critics obviously aren't conspiracy theorists. they have the science on their side and are resisting unfair tax on are resisting an unfair tax on the poor. conspiracy theories are supposed to be paranoid are supposed to be a paranoid fantasy cooked up by people who spend bit too long on the spend a bit too long on the internet patterns internet noticing more patterns than somebody shopping for a carpet while they're on mushrooms. the guardian, the mouthpiece of progressive leftists, did exactly this a few days ago when they bizarrely implied that it's a conspiracy theory that jeffrey epstein was
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a paedophilic sexual predator who hosted powerful men on his island full of traffic , teenage island full of traffic, teenage girls. they did this in articles disparaging the protests wrong. rich men north of richmond by oliver anthony. this song has clearly struck a nerve as oliver laments being taxed to the hilt and politicians who don't care about the working man. but the guardian denounced it because as a protest song , it doesn't kick a protest song, it doesn't kick at the approved leftist targets. instead of attacking systemic racism, christiana or brexit, oliver criticises his taxes being spent on welfare for fat people to buy fudge. how dare he believe in personal responsibility ? protest singers responsibility? protest singers are supposed to be socially lists. that's what the guardian thinks . they criticised the line thinks. they criticised the line . i wish politicians would look out for miners and not just miners on an island somewhere. this is a clear reference in the song to epstein's jail. this is a clear reference in the song to epstein'sjail. bait song to epstein's jail. bait island and in two separate articles . the guardian implies articles. the guardian implies that this is a conspiracy theory, but it's not. it's an indisputable truth that jeffrey
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epstein was a paedophilic sexual predator who hosted powerful men at his island. predator who hosted powerful men at his island . there are dozens at his island. there are dozens of witnesses on record. he was convicted of procuring underage girls for prostitution. he was on the sex offenders register. he out of court to settle he paid out of court to settle many civil cases , and he died in many civil cases, and he died in strange circumstance cases awaiting trial for further charges of sex trafficking. flight logs from epstein's private jet, tellingly, nicknamed the lalit express, show that men such as bill clinton, donald trump and bill gates flew on it . it's clinton, donald trump and bill gates flew on it. it's a clinton, donald trump and bill gates flew on it . it's a matter gates flew on it. it's a matter of public record , and it's in no of public record, and it's in no way controversial to say so. so why is the guardian saying that it's a conspiracy theory? it's incredibly hurtful to the victims of jeffrey epstein. what happened to believe all women, never mind that what i'm to believe court records and believe in court records and flight logs and dozens of witnesses in civil lawsuits? well if you look at the guardian's funding, we might see the answer. guardian claimed the answer. the guardian claimed that with no shareholders or billionaire owner, we can invest gate and challenge without fear
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or favour and amplify stories that to be told. but the that need to be told. but the guardian receives tens of millions of dollars in funding from none other bill gates from none other than bill gates . now, they insist that this is independently administered, but we're supposed believe that we're supposed to believe that such sums money don't such huge sums of money don't buy any editorial influence . buy any editorial influence. come on. and now we have the guardian in trying to rewrite history. bill gates favour history. and bill gates favour with bizarre claim that's with this bizarre claim that's repeated in two articles. the epstein's island is a conspiracy theory. well, enjoy the money, guardian. i hope it makes you very happy . dear lord, what a very happy. dear lord, what a sad little life. so the next time somebody calls me a far right conspiracy theorist , i'm right conspiracy theorist, i'm going to wear it like a badge of honour. going to wear it like a badge of honour . if it going to wear it like a badge of honour. if it makes me a far right conspiracy theorist to oppose , corruption oppose paedophilia, corruption and authoritarianism , then dress and authoritarianism, then dress me in lederhosen and pass me a tinfoil hat . anyway, what do you tinfoil hat. anyway, what do you think? do you agree ? do you think? do you agree? do you disagree? send your views into gbviews@gbnews.com and i'll get
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to your emails after the break. reacting to my take at ten tonight are former olympic gymnast lisa mason , political gymnast lisa mason, political commentator and writer matthew stadlen and author and journalist peter lloyd . now, journalist peter lloyd. now, peter, i'll start with you. i mean, what did you make of that? are you are you a fan of the songin are you are you a fan of the song in the first place? rich men, north of richmond ? men, north of richmond? >> no, particularly. but >> no, not particularly. but i thought it was interesting that you were talking before about siddique and his ulez expansion zone, and he was calling everyone far right deniers. he actually missed out a couple of interesting words there. sex racist, racist, jingoes , racist, racist, jingoes, islamophobic and ableist were also things he could have thrown at anybody who maybe questioned the tax on poor people , which is the tax on poor people, which is astonishing from a london mayor but there you go, sadiq. there's some extra words for you to throw into your next insult. >> well, it's interesting you bnng >> well, it's interesting you bring words because >> well, it's interesting you bring seen words because >> well, it's interesting you bring seen other)rds because >> well, it's interesting you bring seen other leftistecause we've seen other leftist leaders, justin trudeau , for leaders, justin trudeau, for example, he he smeared anybody who questioned covid as as
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exactly that. he said there are racist, transphobic misogyny, all these all these words that had nothing at all to do with the questioning, the science around covid. matthew i mean, what do you make of this? know what do you make of this? i know you're a leftist. you see the guardian as your as your bible. well you're calling me leftist. >> we've just signed up, leo, to being on the far right. i don't think i am a lefties . being on the far right. i don't think i am a lefties. i being on the far right. i don't think i am a lefties . i don't know. >> i didn't. i said i said the accusation of right accusation of being far right are completely meaningless. are now completely meaningless. i if hitler if hitler came i think if hitler if hitler came back today and saw the state of the people who are called, he'd be very disappointed in what had happened right. happened to the far right. >> i'm not how you've >> i'm not sure how you've managed hitler managed to shoehorn hitler in there, but i'm not a leftist. if by leftist, you mean one of these cranks on the on these sort of cranks on the on these sort of cranks on the on the so i'm going to the hard left. so i'm going to i'm going to you're slightly left . i'm left. yeah. left of centre. i'm left. yeah. you want to tar us all with the same brush. listen on the specifics, the people specifics, i think the people who don't understand what a conspiracy theory are, are the conspiracy theory are, are the conspiracy theorists themselves , of rational people , as most of us rational people in room well what
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in this room know very well what a theory is. i'll give a conspira theory is. i'll give you an example. 911 it's a very famous example , the idea that famous example, the idea that the american state was somehow involved . in killing 3000 plus involved. in killing 3000 plus people who actually were american citizens , the vast american citizens, the vast majority of them. that is a concern . mirasi theory. another concern. mirasi theory. another conspiracy theory that you might concoct is the idea that somehow the government and i'm no fan of this conservative government, as most people who follow me on social media know , but the idea social media know, but the idea that the government that somehow the government might in cahoots might have been in cahoots with big to force vaccines big pharma to force vaccines upon us, that would be a conspiracy theory. you could disagree with lockdowns, you disagree with lockdowns, but you could . could could disagree. you could disagree of disagree with all sorts of elements of the that we elements of the way that we handled covid. but regarding the specific example that way is a conspiracy theory regarding the specific example, i mean, for the guardian to in two separate articles, they they they pretty much straight out said that this idea of miners on an island , idea of miners on an island, which is a clear reference to epstein's island, is a conspiracy theory. >> and they've also criticised
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the, you know, the right for having a strange obsession with paedophilia when i think it's fairly normal to be really vehemently opposed to paedophilia . i mean, do you paedophilia. i mean, do you think that jeffrey epstein's island was a was a conspiracy theory? >> i haven't read into jeffrey epstein's island, but i know that he was a sex offender, a child sex offender. so but come on, you must get me to defend a tiny it's not a tiny news item. >> you must have heard of jeffrey epstein's island. you're not. seriously suggesting it could have been a conspiracy theory that he had a private island powerful men island and rich and powerful men visited, there teenage visited, and there were teenage girls i. >> i honestly haven't read up about island. don't want about his island. i don't want to deep into that to look too deep into that because sorts of because i find those sorts of stories very distressing for obvious i will say obvious reasons. what i will say quite is that epstein quite clearly is that epstein was a very man on the other was a very bad man on the other conspiracy theory that you're being accused of as someone who opposes actually opposes ulez, i'm actually on your on that, leo, because your side on that, leo, because your side on that, leo, because you be able to criticise you should be able to criticise the ulez charge without being called a conspiracy theorist. if
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that's what you are being called. i read quite an important piece. i thought in the times today it seemed quite balanced and it was challenging some of the science that seems to be used by mayor and his to be used by the mayor and his office to defend ulez and of course, on the on the face of the mayor's office funded science. >> it's also tried to >> and it's also tried to they've they've fudged reports and they've rewritten scientific reports. lisa. i mean , what do reports. lisa. i mean, what do you make of this? do you think terms like conspiracy theorists are around too easily? are thrown around too easily? >> i honestly i feel like whenever you question anyone in power or anyone, you know , up power or anyone, you know, up there, you're you're called a conspiracy theorist. i mean, i've been called a conspiracy theorist on many occasions, especially through covid in fact, i was i was banned shadow banned on instagram for speaking up about my views . banned on instagram for speaking up about my views. i mean, i think it's a bit extreme for calling people conspiracy theorists about the whole ulez thing. i just, you know, i think that's a bit wild, i think
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that's a bit wild, but i think people just throw that out really too freely and it's not needed. >> and what do you what do you think of the expansion ? think of the ulez expansion? because, i mean, this isn't a london centric thing. this is something that's happening in cities the uk. and cities across the uk. and eventually i think it's going to be rolled out across to the countryside . you won't be able countryside. you won't be able to your anywhere to drive to your barn anywhere or nowhere. to drive to your barn anywhere or rlywhere. i was i read up >> i mean, i was i read up a little bit on it today and i think the figures were coming up over 50% of people that actually live in those areas , their cars live in those areas, their cars are not, you know, compliant with it. so it was very much like your forcing people that can't afford, you know, to we can't afford, you know, to we can barely afford to live at this rate. and you want us to then get newer cars or electric cars that are very, very expensive. and i think this is just going to hit the poor people even more or the lower income people even more than it is going to affect, you know, these politicians that are out here claiming, you know, five houses and everything else.
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>> yeah , i totally agree. and >> yeah, i totally agree. and it's interesting. it's brought so different people so many different people together to agree that the ulez expansion is a load of bunkum. anyway, coming up, we've got the queen of us and royal reporting . it's kinsey schofield. see you in
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> welcome back to mark dolan tonight with me, leo kyrees . tonight with me, leo kyrees. i've got a couple of your emails here. sharon says, just wanted here. sharon says, i just wanted to i just wanted to say that i think kearse has been think leo kearse has been brilliant tonight covering for mark grown mark dolan. he has really grown into presenter role. i love mark dolan. he has really grown intcenergy.zsenter role. i love mark dolan. he has really grown intcenergy. he1ter role. i love mark dolan. he has really grown intcenergy. he hasrole. i love mark dolan. he has really grown intcenergy. he has handledve his energy. he has handled matthew stadlen with aplomb. thank you, sharon. the fiver is in the post. gilbert says loathe her or love her. she is absolutely on the money in what she says about this government and pm. obviously referring and its pm. obviously referring to dorries. there and to nadine dorries. there and yeah, i mean a lot of people are going to agreeing you going to be agreeing with you there . gilbert anyway, there. gilbert anyway, it's time now for us news with the queen of american showbiz royal and
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political reporting, kinsey scope field, kinsey , great to scope field, kinsey, great to see you again . see you again. >> i've had a red bull and i'm ready to go. >> you've got wings us anyway , i >> you've got wings us anyway, i understand that they've done a poll and under 20 fours aren't interested in joe biden . interested in joe biden. >> are you shocked, leo i know you probably i know it probably took you back a little bit, right? yeah, that's right. young people impressed with sleepy people not impressed with sleepy joe today in a new york times siena poll, 18 to 29 year old voters, they overwhelmingly express dissatisfaction with president biden. only 4% said that they had a very favourable opinion of him versus the 17% of the general populace ocean. and then there was another 4% that said that that they thought he was doing a good job, not overwhelmed hinckley, but he was doing okay nearly two thirds of young voters voted for biden in 2020, but a lot has changed since then , as you can imagine.
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since then, as you can imagine. according to a turning point, usa 2022 saw the most suicides everin usa 2022 saw the most suicides ever in a year in the united states . wow. shockingly, that states. wow. shockingly, that number is 52,000. in 2021 saw the most drug overdose deaths in the most drug overdose deaths in the united states, 106,000 in june of 2022. of course , we june of 2022. of course, we experienced the highest inflation in 40 years, 8.9% recently. last year, we witnessed the most illegal immigrants in a year over two point, i think it was 2.76 million. and in 2022 we saw the highest us average gas price jumped up to $5 a gallon gallon. leo i'm like kitchen rides around town. i can't afford that kind of gas. and then this year we've managed to achieve the most credit card debt most consumer credit card debt on record $1 trillion with a t so young people are looking at each other going, ah , i want each other going, ah, i want out. how do i escape this ? out. how do i escape this? >> well, it's interesting because , i mean, joe biden is , because, i mean, joe biden is, on the face of it, a lot of his policies are super woke. he's
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got , you know, a transgender got, you know, a transgender health minister. he's he's open. he's openly hired on on diversity tickbox schemes. he's he's just openly said, you know, we're definitely going to get a black woman for this which you'd think well with young think would play well with young people you into people who are who are you into that stuff. and lot that kind of stuff. and a lot more trump. more than trump. >> forget, was going to >> don't forget, he was going to forget everybody. >> don't forget, he was going to forget loan everybody. >> don't forget, he was going to forget loan debterybody. >> don't forget, he was going to forget loan debt .ybody. >> don't forget, he was going to forget loan debt . ioody. >> don't forget, he was going to forget loan debt . i mean, student loan debt. i mean, that's really what he ran on in 2020. remember like everybody gets say goodbye to all gets to just say goodbye to all of their debt, open up more credit buy bmw . i credit cards, go buy that bmw. i mean, that was really what 2020 was. all about. >> did that student >> and then did that student loan debt, was it ever forgiven or did did there government stymie that plan ? stymie that plan? >> i think i think that it's still in the process, he found a bit of a loophole, but but no, it's not been forgiven the way that he promised it would be forgiven . no. forgiven. no. >> leo wow. so it looks like we could see even young people voting for trump next time around and looking at meghan , around and looking at meghan, she's making a return to acting
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. i believe . . i believe. >> speaking of things, terrible things happening in the united states that we should blame joe biden for right? right. according to life and style magazine, meghan markle thinks there's an oscar in her future. leo and i'm not talking. i'm i'm actually talking about the statue. i'm not talking about the sesame street character , the sesame street character, which is far more realistic here in the state of california because trash cans do talk because our trash cans do talk to us. thanks to gavin newsom's homeless , we get what we homeless plague, we get what we vote for here in california, guys. but according to a source, suits is such a hit . these suits is such a hit. these reruns you're seeing on on netflix and they're like forcing it your right now . it down your throat right now. the been told that the meghan's been told that there's for there's a demand from her for fans she should act again. fans and she should act again. they she's excited. she they say she's excited. she really to sink her teeth really wants to sink her teeth into film role. and into a dramatic film role. and she thinks an oscar would be in her future. the magazine claims magazine meghan is being flooded with offers, and i'm sure her part in 902 one zero has nothing to do with that. they also say that she's talking to some big
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producers and directors about projects . but i would say i'm producers and directors about projects. but i would say i'm a little hesitant about this particular report because at the time of signing with william morris endeavour, they said that she had no desire to return to acting. so we'll see. maybe somebody should cast her as the president so that all of these wild royal rumours can, like collide. yeah well, the thing she didn't want to return to acting when things were going well with all her other plans, but you know, she's got a mortgage to pay, so she wants she needs to pay those bills somehow . somehow. >> so, yeah. >> so, yeah. >> leo 16 bathrooms, toilet papers. expensive. >> yeah. well it's either going to be acting or onlyfans is staying with the royal family we've got the crown diana controversy. what's this all about ? about? >> leo? i'm really surprised that they're going in this direction , but people are pretty direction, but people are pretty irate over the idea of the crown recreating the death of princess diana . and you can google it. diana. and you can google it. you can see all of the images
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that photographers have taken of their setups around town. they are really going the extra mile to recreate the death of princess diana. but producers are promising to handle her death delicately in season six. that's coming this november for an ep named suzanne mackie recently said, we're thoughtful people and we're sensitive people. however i people and we're sensitive people. howeveri don't people and we're sensitive people. however i don't know if you remember how horrific and kind of dishonest they made the prince philip losing his family storyline. and according to the sun at the time, prince philip even considered suing the crown . i don't think that revisiting diana's death does her legacy any favours. i love diana my whole brand is to die for daily. my whole brand is to die for daily. my whole brand is about diana , my whole brand is about diana, but the facts aren't favourable to her memory. you know, it's been so long. she's become this martyr, this saint like character. but the, you know, the truth is she was running around with nepo baby who had around with a nepo baby who had an drug problem trying an alleged drug problem trying to make ex—boyfriend jealous to make an ex—boyfriend jealous . they've they've painted diana as a head case in previous seasons. and you wonder , how
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seasons. and you wonder, how does prince harry justify working with the same media company that has not been very nice to his family. wow >> i hadn't even thought of that. but yes , it is the same. that. but yes, it is the same. he's going to be walking into the same building with the producers of this show. and as you say , you know, they you say, you know, they might not so not be handling it. so delicately previous delicately because in previous previous episodes, the contrary essentially, as you say, portrayed . there is a bit of portrayed. there is a bit of a bit of a headcase . yes. so bit of a headcase. yes. so that's, that's yeah, that's crazy . crazy. >> i mean, just the idea they she was wrapped around a toilet. i think for the entire season. four and everybody that i talked to that knew her said, you know, that was a teeny tiny aspect of her. but she was joy and she was confident and she, you know, found she was a fighter and she found she was a fighter and she found solution when she had found a solution when she had a problem. always been problem. so i've always been disappointed by portrayal disappointed by their portrayal of , and i'm looking of diana, and i'm not looking forward six, if i'm forward to season six, if i'm being honest with you. well kinsey, thank so much for kinsey, thank you so much for joining tonight, all way joining us tonight, all the way from looks from hollywood, where it looks like is much better. like the weather is much better. >> to speak there.
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>> great to speak to you there. coming got the papers coming up, we've got the papers at 10:30 sharp with full at 10:30 pm. sharp with full panel . plus, tonight's panel reaction. plus, tonight's headline, back page headline, heroes and back page zeroes. and i want to know yours .send zeroes. and i want to know yours . send the and send in any . send the men and send in any of to views gb . send the men and send in any of dot to views gb . send the men and send in any of dot com. to views gb . send the men and send in any of dot com. and views gb . send the men and send in any of dot com. and i'lli/iews gb . send the men and send in any of dot com. and i'll see s gb . send the men and send in any of dot com. and i'll see your news dot com. and i'll see you in a few minutes. news dot com. and i'll see you in a few minutes . a brighter in a few minutes. a brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hello there jonathan vautrey here with your gb news weather forecast provided by the met office. >> i hope you weren't caught out by some of the showers that we've had around today. certainly some and certainly some heavy and thundery and there's thundery ones and there's a chance still of seeing a few thunderstorms off this thunderstorms to start off this evening. many central evening. but for many central eastern be eastern areas, they will be easing their way we head easing their way off as we head into night though, into the night, though, persisting for western england, wales and some drizzly showers for scotland for parts of northern scotland where it going remain where it is going to remain relatively . slightly cool relatively cloudy. slightly cool night cities dropping night towns and cities dropping down to ten 12 c, but into single figures for some rural areas. as we start off sunday morning, generally the further east you best of the
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east you are the best of the sunshine. have first sunshine. you'll have first thing, mist and fog thing, but the odd mist and fog patch doors , but they'll patch early doors, but they'll all clear their way off. all readily clear their way off. the showers west though, the showers in the west though, will trundle will start to trundle eastwards as into the afternoon, as we head into the afternoon, generally persisting across the spine of the country into the afternoon again, those afternoon. again, some of those could heavy, some more could be heavy, some more persistent and rain persistent cloud and rain pushing northern ireland pushing into northern ireland later on and that will hold temperatures around temperatures back a touch around 15, 17 c. as we head into monday, though, this area of high pressure in the atlantic is going gradually push way going to gradually push its way into and that will help into the uk and that will help settle things down a touch. so there going to be a there is still going to be a little legacy of cloud, particularly for parts of central the day. so central england into the day. so might be a bit of a one might be a bit of a grey one here, side of that, here, but either side of that, some developing some sunny spells developing a few showers around times, but few showers around at times, but generally compared to generally fewer compared to saturday sunday. and saturday and sunday. and so generally for those generally fine for those of us lucky bank holiday lucky to have the bank holiday monday further sunny spells monday off further sunny spells and scattered showers as head and scattered showers as we head throughout of the week throughout the rest of the week as by a brighter outlook as well by a brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> it's 10:30 radio. >> it's10:30 p.m. so it's time for a look at tomorrow morning's newspapers hot off the press. let's have a look. we've got the independent here. they have fifa suspending the spanish fa chief and the staff walking out. is he still refuses to quit over the kiss and doctors turn on nhs managers over culture of cover up. more than 50% of hospital staff don't trust bosses to act on reports by whistleblowers . so on reports by whistleblowers. so the independent is asking how many more scandals are they hiding the mirror has let the bosses get out of jail free card. the family's anger at the executive's cushy retirement . executive's cushy retirement. they're apparently getting a £1.8 they're apparently getting a £18 million pension, which
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£1.8 million pension, which sounds a lot for a public sector worker anyway, regardless of one who's apparently made some catastrophic errors. although we'll wait for the inquiry to see if that's true. they also have phil's comeback. so schofield is meeting with a tv channel. i don't know if it's gb news. i don't know who it is. and he holds talks for a tell all book and holly gives her evidence to inquiry over her phone messages which the sun, if we move on to the next one, apparently holly's texts are in the clear over schofield probe. that's that's yeah. if somebody's going through your whatsapp and seeing all whatsapp messages and seeing all the jokes you send your friends, that's be terrifying that's got to be a terrifying prospect . and also been prospect. and there's also been another data breach met another massive data breach met cops hit by hackers, all 47,000 staff have been told that their id details are at risk. so that's another one. following a recent data breach for another police force in northern ireland, the sunday express . ireland, the sunday express. this leads with prime minister
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life to mean life for the vilest killers. there's a crime crackdown to make people feel safe , and rishi says this is safe, and rishi says this is personal. i have two young daughters. you also have an election coming up, which might be you're seeing that and be why you're seeing that and the daily star finally , he says, the daily star finally, he says, put little johns away. put your little johns away. robin hood's in the nod as birdwatchers warned of sherwood forest naturists . so, yeah, if forest naturists. so, yeah, if you're out there twitching , you're out there twitching, watch out for people who might also be twitching. little bird watching reference. they're now looking at this. i mean, i think i'll start with this. the nhs managers being accused of a culture of cover up and apparently 50% of all hospital staff don't trust their bosses to act on whistleblowing . and to act on whistleblowing. and there are concerns over how many more scandals they're hiding . i more scandals they're hiding. i mean, peter, do you think because i mean, the nhs, i know it's almost like a national religion and we all love it and revere it and worship it, but having such monolithic having such a monolithic organisation that's impenetrable , it lacks some accountable
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entity and oversight that you'd maybe get in a smaller, more nimble organisation . nimble organisation. >> kwasi does. and it's just asking for this culture of self—preservation and cover up. i actually think a solution to this might be having hospital managers made kind of like almost answerable to a regulatory body like doctors or nurses . yeah, maybe that would nurses. yeah, maybe that would help usher in a greater sense of accountability and transparency. who knows ? i mean, it's who knows? i mean, it's definitely worth trying because right now we don't have anything. and as we've seen with right now we don't have any letby and as we've seen with right now we don't have any letby and eit'se've seen with right now we don't have any letby and {it's beeneen with right now we don't have any letby and {it's been reallyith the letby case, it's been really tragic. i mean, the consequences is that young children have died. and think doesn't died. and you think it doesn't get that . so, get much worse than that. so, um, certainly if hospital managers are on nearly £2 million pensions, then they should be accountable. and if that means regulating them and making them sign up to a body, then fine, let's do it. >> mean, matthew, i've >> yeah, i mean, matthew, i've never nhs, but never worked in the nhs, but i've in large public i've worked in large public sector have i've worked in large public secto appalled have i've worked in large public secto appalled at have i've worked in large public secto appalled at the have i've worked in large public secto appalled at the waste le i've worked in large public secto appalled at the waste and been appalled at the waste and profligacy goes on. i mean, profligacy that goes on. i mean, do you do you think the nhs could streamlined broken could be streamlined or broken up ? up? >> i don't know about
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streamlined or broken up, but something needs to change, it seems, and if you have an enormous organisation , as you enormous organisation, as you guys have already said, that there attached to that there are risks attached to that as well, there's something very attractive about being a nimble, organised, although there are disadvantages and risks that come with certainly come with that too. certainly whistleblowers need to be given protection because without whistleblowers, how do we find out what's going on inside these enormous organisations? hospital itself is big. yes we need journalists. we need journalists to do public interest journalism and to do digging. that's very important . it and to do digging. that's very important. it of and to do digging. that's very important . it of course it and to do digging. that's very important. it of course it is. but we also need to make sure that whistleblowers are protected. this is a shocking survey. more than half of nhs staff believe managers would ignore whistleblowers . and this ignore whistleblowers. and this is amid these concerns . is amid these concerns. hospitals could be covering up scandals so that lucy letby case, this tragic, tragic series of events of murders is goes
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even wider, if that's possible, than the tragedy and the horror experienced by these families , experienced by these families, because it is forcing all of us to ask important questions of the nhs. and i'm a supporter of health care that is free at the point of delivery. i think that's a good thing. but i'm also someone who thinks that also not someone who thinks that the nhs is some sort of sacred cow that we have to talk in hallowed language when we refer to it. yes there are huge numbers of incredibly hardworking, caring doctors and nurses who are stretched to the bone. nurses who are stretched to the bone . um, but at the same time, bone. um, but at the same time, where there are problems when the service isn't up to scratch, whether that's management or indeed doctors or nurses, if they ever fail, we as the public should be able to hold our nhs to account. yeah i mean, lisa, one of the criticisms, criticism of the nhs is that it's top heavy and it's got too much management and would you like to see doctors taking more of a role in the actual decision making at a higher level?
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>> i think ultimately as great as the nhs is, it's a broken system and i think, you know , system and i think, you know, you have so many nurses coming in from agencies now and they don't want to work within the nhs because you've got four receptionists more money receptionists earning more money than nurses anyway, right? you know, and i just think there is this middle ground that's not being covered and there's this, this broken community nation and you've got, you know , people you've got, you know, people that are on top making all their money the workers money and you've got the workers that treated . let's be that are being treated. let's be honest, of the time honest, a lot of the time they're terribly, they're treated terribly, you know, and who do you go to? because there's no man there and you're going straight to you're just going straight to the that's the the top. and that's the dismissed . and it's very much dismissed. and it's very much like, i don't care. like, okay, well, i don't care. yeah. know, and it's like, yeah. you know, and it's like, well, what do you do? >> mean some will >> i mean some, some people will use use horror stories within the nhs to hammer out the principle of free health care at the point of delivery. we know that some people on the right would like a privatised system for whatever reason. i'm very
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much against that and i'll give you one quick example of that. i interviewed sir chris bryant. some people like him , some some people like him, some people won't. he's a high profile labour mp. he's sort profile labour mp. he's a sort of the chairman of the privileges and standards committees. i think i interviewed him for my podcast and he said that he skin and he said that he got skin cancer serious skin cancer cancer very serious skin cancer about three ago, about three years ago, a melanoma . he was given a 40% melanoma. he was given a 40% chance, i think, in 2020 that he would survive . right? blame me. chance, i think, in 2020 that he w0|has;urvive . right? blame me. chance, i think, in 2020 that he w0|has survive right? blame me. chance, i think, in 2020 that he w0|has survive had1t? blame me. chance, i think, in 2020 that he w0|has survive had a? blame me. chance, i think, in 2020 that he w0|has survive had a drugne me. chance, i think, in 2020 that he w0|has survive had a drug camee. he has survive had a drug came in and he was given that drug on the nhs not because he was a labour mp but because he was lucky despite and it cost stop. and it is not something to joke about. £110,000 his person treatment cost . now people need treatment cost. now people need to understand that because there are very few people in britain , are very few people in britain, oh, never mind the cost of living crisis . who could pay living crisis. who could pay £110,000 out of their own money in to order survive. so we need to how much health care to know how much health care costs in order to appreciate what we've got . what we've got. >> i'm a hard bitten, you know, for free market capitalist, but i actually agree with you. and i
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think nhs in most cases think the nhs in most cases provides the best value for money and provides a better service than having you know, a patchwork of private provider hours because, well , i just hours because, well, i just i just think something like health care should be provided with the incentive is to make the person better rather than to make money off that person. my cousin's a palliative doctor. she's working as a locum in harley street, so people were coming in, you know, with with terminal diseases and they really just needed to be given something to ease the pain and make the final months tolerable so they could spend time with their family and instead they were being upsold really expect give, you know, unsuhed really expect give, you know, unsuited , awful treatments unsuited, awful treatments purely because they were desperate and they jump at anything. yeah. so yeah , i mean anything. yeah. so yeah, i mean i do think the nhs makes sense andifs i do think the nhs makes sense and it's not the sort of thing where we're actually the profit incentive a great one, incentive is such a great one, but are some mistakes and but there are some mistakes and also i'd love to be just treated like a customer sometimes, like booking a nhs appointment, you
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got phone between 8 am. got to phone up between 8 am. and 8:01 am. can i just. can we just have five minutes? yeah >> is that too much? i'll just say one very quick thing. someone we know very well as a family is nearing end of life . family is nearing end of life. so i've very close at hand , so i've very close at hand, experienced the care that this person has received. yeah and a lot of it is coming through the nhs. it might. lot of it is coming through the nhs. it might . the people who nhs. it might. the people who care for this person may not be themselves employed by the nhs. the nhs may pay for it. yeah. so various providers orders. what these people are doing is quite extraordinary how they have dedicated their lives to physical care of, of, of this human being at such an important part of life as you near death. yeah. for everything that you can't imagine. right. the sorts of things that most of us could not imagine doing for a job, they will be almost inevitably hugely underpaid. there are so many human beings who give their professional lives . professional lives. >> nobody's underpaid if they're
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willing to do the job. i mean, that's they're willing. it's not like they're being held at gunpoint do gunpoint and forced to do it. looking story on looking at the other story on this the spanish chief has this page, the spanish chief has been suspended . and i mean, what been suspended. and i mean, what have you all seen this case? and also, i mean, elisa, as a as a former sports star, i mean, did did you have a former woman then this show me you're she was a woman just an hour ago. >> now she's a woman. >> now she's a woman. >> what's going on here? >> what's going on here? >> i mean, what what did you make of this? um well, being part of , you know, the gymnasts part of, you know, the gymnasts that started the gymnastics alliance with all the abuse that came out of that right. >> it's not to great see. um . >> it's not to great see. um. it's hard. one. honestly, i think he's just what she said, really using . my god. i think really using. my god. i think he's using his power a lot. i'm listening to what, you know, the football player had said and i'm
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going based on on her feeling uncomfortable and i think he should be held accountable. but. yeah, but he seems very resistant to stand down. >> peter, i mean, do you have any sympathy for him? because it looked the clinch looked like in the in the clinch , know, she put her hands on , you know, she put her hands on his waist . you know, there's his waist. you know, there's high spirits. men, men do the same kind of thing in football all the time. >> football managers have been kissing , kissing in a fraternal, non—sexual way. there male players for decades . and nobody players for decades. and nobody no pearl clutching journalist, no sjw has ever questioned the consent of the male players because it's never been an issue. suddenly women's football has been under the spotlight for five minutes and it's now a metoo thing. give me an break like you've been begging to be part of this so—called patriarchy . you're now part of patriarchy. you're now part of it. you want to be treated like the men. you're being treated like the men, and now you don't like the men, and now you don't
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like it . i like the men, and now you don't like it. i think you should just. there's also form your own form, own fifa , sort your form, your own fifa, sort your own system out . could you play own system out. could you play with own system out. could you play witicould say that could >> could i just say that i could not you more not disagree with you more strongly ? strongly? >> shocker. >> shocker. >> the word guy doesn't agree with me. >> i'm stunned. >> i'm stunned. >> you could throw away throw around as many words like woke as you can. i'll tell the as you can. i'll tell you the reason why i disagree with you. right. say that right. first of all, to say that women have been begging to be part is part of the patriarchy is incredibly offensive and patronising . secondly, the patronising. secondly, the women's football that we've just seen was in extremely high quality. it was , of course, it's quality. it was, of course, it's not as good as the men. i'd like to like see you. do i to i'd like to see you. do i play to i'd like to see you. do i play every week? play football every week? i'm pretty but pretty good at football, but those guys you these those guys are you seeing these guys? seeing women >> are you seeing these women were as good man? were as good as you, man? >> i am. >> much better than i am. >> much better than i am. >> the way, the way >> and by the way, the way i test a relatively test it and i'm a relatively late, shamefully late convert to women's football, in women's football, i felt it in my gut when australia equalised, but the i did. but the idea look, you may live in a parallel universe, but allow us who actually about women's actually care about women's sport our views . sport to have our views. >> if you just cared about since
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it became this sort of subject about nothing about wokery the idea, by the way, that male footballers kissing each other when around , which when they roll around, which they haven't seen they have done, i haven't seen coaches male coaches do it, but when male footballers, that's thing. footballers, that's one thing. >> history of men >> we have a history of men dominating, being misogynistic, being sexually aggressive , doing being sexually aggressive, doing all sorts of terrible things to women. comes with a different women. it comes with a different back story . so a women. it comes with a different back story. so a man getting a woman and going like that just ask yourself if you would do, you'd probably say yes. i would not a woman any not do that to a woman in any circumstance had circumstance unless i had absolutely consent. the absolutely explicit consent. the fact that he's the head of the fa in spain is disgraceful . spanish. >> he wasn't english. it makes it makes a difference. >> anyway , coming up, we've got >> anyway, coming up, we've got more papers next. we've more from the papers next. we've got times the got the sunday times and the mail tonight's mail on sunday. plus tonight's headline, and back page headline, heroes and back page zeros. i want to know yours zeros. and i want to know yours .send zeros. and i want to know yours . send into views. . send them into gb views. gbnews.com and we'll see you in a couple
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welcome back. and we've got two more newspapers here. we've got the mail on sunday which leads with secret labour plan to charge drivers by the mile. oh my god . as if sadiq khan's ulez my god. as if sadiq khan's ulez war on motorists wasn't enough . war on motorists wasn't enough. these are official documents , these are official documents, apparently, and an exclusive in the mail on sunday. there they also have the other exclusive. nadine the most no nadine dorries, the most no holds barred political resignation letter you've ever read . but yeah, this this plan read. but yeah, this this plan to charge drivers by the mile. we're to going talk about that in a second. the sunday we're to going talk about that in a sehasd. the sunday we're to going talk about that in a sehas emailthe sunday we're to going talk about that in a sehas email told sunday we're to going talk about that in a sehas email told of1day we're to going talk about that in a sehas email told of chaos on times has email told of chaos on letby ward. the lawyers for victims families fear the killer took advantage of overstretched baby unit. they also have tories resigning. they have the kiss and the spanish mutiny in the world of football. there to force him to stand down. although he's been suspended and also sadiq khan says, i love driving and if ulez didn't work, i would have scrapped it,
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according to sadiq khan. but lisa, you were saying he gets he gets cars everywhere. >> everywhere. i love driving . >> everywhere. i love driving. if someone was driving me everywhere too . everywhere too. >> and is it a brand new, nice shiny the shiny car as well? because the taxpayer has deep pockets for it. >> exactly . i'm sure that £12.50 >> exactly. i'm sure that £12.50 a day doesn't even touch him. so i mean, do you believe that he enjoys driving, matthew? >> because i thought driving the way talks driving, it's way he talks about driving, it's the polluting thing in the most evil polluting thing in the most evil polluting thing in the world. >> how am i supposed to look into the mind of sadiq khan ? into the mind of sadiq khan? what i will say, well, you're looking looking for a while. >> were talking earlier, >> we were talking earlier, weren't science and weren't we, about science and the scepticism. the importance of scepticism. >> i think that the >> yeah. and i think that the science the ulez, it's science around the ulez, it's absolutely right that journalists probe it and make sure that the science is as sound as it can be. the thing about climate change and there are two issues, aren't there, with pollution. one is the effect it has the climate and effect it has on the climate and one effect it has our one is the effect it has on our lungs. my lungs. i lived in london all my life it is very polluted and life and it is very polluted and one polluters i drive one of the polluters i drive a relatively less polluting vehicle that is ulez compliant,
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but it is really bad for you, right? it's one of the reasons i would consider leaving london. and i'm london born and bred. i've got little month i've got a little 11 month old and walk him around and there and i walk him around and there are lot of fumes and i hold my are a lot of fumes and i hold my hands up as one people hands up as one of the people who's responsible that . i who's responsible for that. i don't the ulez thing is as don't think the ulez thing is as cut dried on the effect it cut and dried on the effect it will have. it will will will have. it will it will almost certainly reduce pollution. not perhaps as pollution. but not perhaps as much as we're being to led believe the expansion. mean, believe the expansion. i mean, just quickly the the just quickly on the on the pricing really pricing of it, it's really important. i absolutely think that khan has to get it right. if he is going to force people to upgrade and change vehicles that he has to properly support them . i'm not clear as to them. i'm not clear as to whether or not that financial support there yet , but if it support is there yet, but if it isn't, he shouldn't support me. >> he should just not introduce this taxpayer >> he should just not introduce this should taxpayer >> he should just not introduce this should spent)ayer >> he should just not introduce this should spent on er >> he should just not introduce this should spent on either money should be spent on either putting these ridiculous putting up these ridiculous cameras, people with cameras, supporting people with getting new cars, the whole thing crock . it's thing is a complete crock. it's a nonsense. ulez makes sense in the centre of town where there's
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congestion . right, peter on the congestion. right, peter on the on the suburbs where people actually need their cars. there isn't public transport isn't a public transport infrastructure to support them and isn't congestion. and there isn't the congestion. and we're all to and also we're all moving to electric ten years time electric cars. ten years time we'll be driving so we'll all be driving teslas. so what's in outlawing what's the point in outlawing and trying to tax people for driving petrol ? driving petrol? >> exactly. and the writing is so on the wall with this you can just see where this is headed. the future definitely ulez the future is definitely ulez expansion across the uk. it's going to be a national endeavoun going to be a national endeavour. we're all going to be tracked and targeted and priced by the mile and it's just going to be intolerable . to be intolerable. >> and peter, i mean, this secret labour plan to charge drivers by the mile, i mean , i drivers by the mile, i mean, i can from from the can understand from from the point of view the chancellor point of view of the chancellor of the exchequer, because you're not going be making the not to going be making all the money duty when money on fuel duty when everybody goes to electric cars. so they've got i think it's about £26 billion that need about £26 billion that they need to somehow, or they to recover somehow, or they could maybe cut that £26 could maybe just cut that £26 billion. this this billion. but yeah, so this this is their plan. instead of fuel duty , you're going have duty, you're going to have to pay duty, you're going to have to pay yeah pay by the mile. yeah >> you look at the
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>> i mean, if you look at the initial trial of ulez that that alone generated and it was only alone generated and it was only a very small area of london. it generated something like £230 million in profit in a relative short period of time. >> so this is a huge cash cow. >> so this is a huge cash cow. >> it's going to generate a lot of money. and politicians like khan and they just become dizzy with excitement when they see that much money. they just think, oh , for a labour think, oh, for a labour politician, suddenly love politician, i suddenly love relieving these plebs of their money. do nationally to money. let's do it nationally to all of them while i get driven around in my chauffeur driven car off the states to car and fly to off the states to pose international pose as an international politician yeah, know, politician. yeah, you know, the reality is really sinister. but the one good thing about ulez because i am trying to be balanced, is that it has generated a little bit of a revolt among people on both the left and the right who are seeing khan for what he is. but hang on just a sec. >> look, jokes about his posh car aside, right. where does money go that is raised either by the london mayor or by central government ? you hope and central government? you hope and expect that that money goes into
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making our lives better at efl, at a national level. it goes into things like the health service that we were talking about. service that we were talking about . and you you're saying about. and you you're saying this, you're saying that this is wasted, but it is really important that we have a functioning nhs. >> this money isn't >> but this, this money isn't going to the nhs. >> i'm talking about a national, the national level fill a hole in the budget. >> this money covid where you >> this money covid where do you think >> this money. >> this money. >> money, money >> this money, this money is going to tfl it's going back to tfl fill the the tfl to fill the budget. the budgetary was left by budgetary hole that was left by sadiq supports sadiq khan and he supports lockdown. he wanted lockdown in london and then nobody was buying tickets to travel. and the those people still the all those people still needed. let's say your assumption is right about the fact is the cause of fact that there is the cause of the whole. >> what do you think should how do you think that hole should be filled just be left filled or should it just be left as ? as a hole? >> i think it should be filled through cutbacks. this government's never seem to understand can understand that they can actually money actually spend less money instead of taxing. >> cutting what, though >> cutting back on what, though ? to cut ? what would you like to cut back on? >> em- back on? >> the drivers with >> replace the drivers with robots . they'll probably a robots. they'll probably do a better time now
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betterjob anyway. it's time now for headline back for headline heroes and back page zeroes. lisa, who is your headune page zeroes. lisa, who is your headline hero? oh my gosh, this is so hard . is so hard. >> but you know what? the one thing that made me happy is what i will say and such i will say is and it's such a girly thing , but the fact that girly thing, but the fact that stormzy and maya are back together, stormzy and maya, i've got what means . got no idea what that means. >> but, matthew, you got >> but, matthew, have you got some that are middle aged? man might heard ? might have heard? >> are you asking for my zero or my hero? my hero? this i've chosen this specifically on the way to the rugby today just to wind up your audience. guess who it ? who would be most apart it is? who would be most apart from sadiq khan? who would most keir starmer almost. >> it's going to be who is it? jeremy corbyn. >> now, people used to say i looked a little bit like him or he me because he's younger. >> is it prince harry? >> is it prince harry? >> could be prince is >> is it prince harry? >:princejld be prince is >> is it prince harry? >:prince harry?3rince is it prince harry? >> why is why is it prince >> why is it? why is it prince harry anyway? >> because >> prince harry? because although i don't think he should have the have spilled the beans in the way family, way he did about his family, that's thing that's not a cool thing to do, i don't not he hasn't don't think. not that he hasn't been of a lot don't think. not that he hasn't be stuff. of a lot don't think. not that he hasn't be stuff. actually of a lot don't think. not that he hasn't be stuff. actually has)f a lot don't think. not that he hasn't be stuff. actually has done )t don't think. not that he hasn't be stuff. actually has done a of stuff. he actually has done a load things. right.
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load of good things. right. right. so does a of right. so he does a lot of charity and reason charity work. and the reason he's. can google charity work. and the reason he'that. can google all that. >> hey, peter, >> hey, hey, peter, who's coming back country to, do a back to this country to, to do a children's charity ? children's charity? >> we don't him having >> we don't want him having those suffered enough. those children suffered enough. >> your who's your hero? >> well, i'm going to see your prince harry and i'm going to raise it by saying trump . holly, raise it by saying trump. holly, just to annoy matthew. but also because i love that he owns that mugshot and turned it into like a p0p mugshot and turned it into like a pop culture reference. you know what i mean? it was a bit of fun. >> yeah. yeah. >> yeah. yeah. >> i loved his mugshot and i also loved that he made some money off lisa your zero? >> probably guy got >> probably the guy that got murdered for his doggy. >> oh, yeah . well, yeah, i mean, >> oh, yeah. well, yeah, i mean, it's a tragic , tragic case. the it's a tragic, tragic case. the murderer we'd to be. murderer there. we'd have to be. >> we've already talked >> matthew, we've already talked about who about this chap, but the guy who kissed a woman at a moment of great celebration for women's football kiss someone without her consent . football kiss someone without her consent. he's called rubiales. and i think it's not a good thing. >> he's being suspended >> yeah, so he's being suspended . so he's a zero for you. and who's. who's your zero? . so he's a zero for you. and wh(peter?o's your zero? . so he's a zero for you. and wh(peter? myyour zero? . so he's a zero for you. and wh(peter? my zeros ero?
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. so he's a zero for you. and wh(peter? my zeros are’ . so he's a zero for you. and wh(peter? my zeros are the >> peter? my zeros are the lionesses. are , a, lionesses. who are, a, completely overrated and b, we should be ashamed of themselves for bringing their feminist politics into men's football. >> and they didn't say no autographs, was autographs, which i thought was shameful , though all the fans shameful, though all the fans were at airport . were waiting at the airport. >> so overrated the so overrated. >> thanks for watching tonight . >> thanks for watching tonight. you've got a headline. that's coming up next the break. you've got a headline. that's corpleasey next the break. you've got a headline. that's corplease stayt the break. you've got a headline. that's corplease stay tuned the break. you've got a headline. that's corplease stay tuned for break. you've got a headline. that's corplease stay tuned for that. (. so please stay tuned for that. comedians going through the next day's i'll be back day's papers and i'll be back here tomorrow filling for here tomorrow filling in for mark for the last time. so see you bye mark for the last time. so see youthe bye mark for the last time. so see youthe temperatures rising, boxt >> the temperatures rising, boxt solar. proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hello there . i'm jonathan >> hello there. i'm jonathan vautrey with your gb news weather forecast provided by the met office. i hope you weren't caught out by some of the showers that we've had around today. certainly some heavy and thundery and there's thundery ones and there's a chance of seeing a few chance still of seeing a few thunderstorms start off this thunderstorms to start off this evening central evening. but for many central eastern will be eastern areas, they will be easing way off as we easing their way off as we head into the though into the night, though persisting england , persisting for western england, wales showers
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wales and some drizzly showers for parts of northern scotland where remain where it is going to remain relatively cloudy, slightly cool night cities dropping night towns and cities dropping to 12 c. but into to down ten 12 c. but into single figures for some rural areas . as we start off sunday areas. as we start off sunday morning, generally the further east the best of east you are the best of the sunshine you'll have first thing, the odd mist and fog thing, but the odd mist and fog patch early doors . but they all patch early doors. but they all readily their way off. the readily clear their way off. the showers west though, will readily clear their way off. the show to west though, will readily clear their way off. the show to trundle nest though, will readily clear their way off. the showto trundle eastwards h, will readily clear their way off. the showto trundle eastwards aswill readily clear their way off. the showto trundle eastwards as we start to trundle eastwards as we head afternoon , head into the afternoon, generally persisting across the spine the country the spine of the country into the afternoon. some of those afternoon. again, some of those could some more could be heavy, some more persistent and rain persistent cloud and rain pushing northern ireland pushing into northern ireland later on and that will hold temperatures around temperatures back a touch around 15, 17 c. as we head into monday, though, this area of high pressure in the atlantic is going to gradually way going to gradually push its way into the uk and that will help settle things down touch. settle things down a touch. there is still going to be a little legacy of cloud, particularly for parts of central england into the day. so might be a bit of a grey one here, but either side of that, some spells developing here, but either side of that, som showers spells developing here, but either side of that, som showers aroundieveloping here, but either side of that, som showers aroundievtimes,] here, but either side of that, somshowers aroundievtimes, but few showers around at times, but generally fewer compared to saturday and sunday. and so generally those of us
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generally fine for those of us lucky to have the bank holiday monday lucky to have the bank holiday mon scattered showers as we head and scattered showers as we head throughout the the week throughout the rest of the week as by the temperatures as well by by the temperatures rising boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on
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