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tv   Neil Oliver - Live  GB News  September 2, 2023 6:00pm-7:01pm BST

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plan to. oh i don't know. how can you describe it? plan to. oh i don't know. how can you describe it.7 get people eating less meat in london and all of the rest of it. i'll be talking to chris morrison from the daily sceptic to get his take on it all. i'll be looking at agenda 21. have you heard of it? it's the at agenda 21. have you heard of it.7 it's the united nations comprehensive plan of action to help achieve sustainable development tonight, is there a darker side to all of it and what does it all mean in terms of control and other things we might give thought to .7 plus, might give thought to.7 plus, we'll be joined live by a real life which to discuss the rare blue moon that's been overhead recently . all of that and more. recently. all of that and more. plus, the thoughts of my panellist, julie cook , a panellist, julie cook, a thoughtful contributor and author. but first, an update on the latest news from around armstrong . armstrong. >> very good evening to you. let's get you up to date with
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all the headlines from the gb newsroom. the condition of some pubuc newsroom. the condition of some public buildings, including hospitals, as hospitals, is being described as jaw dropping as concerns grow over their risk of collapse. the chair of commons public chair of the commons public accounts committee is warning the issue aerated concrete in the issue of aerated concrete in schools is just the tip of the iceberg. writing in the times dame meg hillier says eyewatering of money are eyewatering sums of money are being spent on mitigating the risks . this being spent on mitigating the risks. this labour is demanding an audit , risks. this labour is demanding an audit, while the an urgent audit, while the liberal democrats labelled liberal democrats have labelled it which it a national emergency which warrants an immediate cobra meeting . there's been a huge meeting. there's been a huge surge in small boats crossing the channel. gb news can reveal around 600 asylum seekers made it to the uk waters today . it to the uk waters today. people smuggling gangs have taken advantage of a brief improvement in the weather and a high tide. the number of migrants intercepted so far this year now stands at more than 20,000. the rmt union says it's hopeful fresh talks next week can bring an end to their long running dispute over pay and conditions as up to 20,000 members at 14 operators have
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walked out this weekend, causing severe disruption with 50% of railways closed across the country. meanwhile, members of the train drivers union aslef , the train drivers union aslef, who were on the picket lines yesterday are refusing to work overtime . rmt general secretary overtime. rmt general secretary mick lynch told gb news a fresh proposal is the key to resolving the dispute. we go into those talks with an attitude and a disposition to try and get an agreement, but there are some serious issues. >> as most people know now. we don't want to be on strike. we'd rather much, much rather be earning a living and running the service for the people who need to use it. so hopefully, if we can get a different mindset next week, we can get some progress . week, we can get some progress. >> the home secretary is being told not to use policing as a political football. the police federation of england and wales says the government's constantly moving the goalposts , asking moving the goalposts, asking officers to be more involved , officers to be more involved, then wanting them to act like robots . it comes after suella robots. it comes after suella braverman commissioned a review into activism and impartial
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parity in the force. she says it can damage public confidence and officers should focus on tackling crime in the united states. bodycam footage has been released of a pregnant black woman being shot by police in ohio . a warning, the video we're ohio. a warning, the video we're about to show you includes the moment before and after her death . 21 year old takaya young death. 21 year old takaya young refused to leave her car after being accused of shoplifting and was seen moving her vehicle towards one of the officers . a towards one of the officers. a single shot through the windscreen killed the mother of two and her unborn daughter. her. a family lawyer says her death was avoidable and is demanding the officers are held accountable. both have been placed administrative leave placed on administrative leave while an investigation takes place by bricks have been salvaged from a pub that's at the centre of an arson investigation in himley in the west midlands. organisers of the save the crooked house, which was destroyed by fire last month, they held a ceremony and stored bricks in locked containers. they hope they can be used to rebuild the pub. two
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men have been released on conditional being conditional bail after being arrested on suspicion of arson with intent to endanger life. the conservative mp for dudley north, marco longhi , says the north, marco longhi, says the pub represents the area's industrial heritage . industrial heritage. >> this is a coal mining area like limestone mining area metal smelting. this is the metal bashing industry that all came together a couple of hundred years ago to power the industrial revolution of the country. that's what's being torn away from us in the most brutal of ways . that's what we brutal of ways. that's what we need to put back and that's why they need to be far greater protections for places such as this in dudley, the black country and the rest of the country. india's launched its first space based solar probe to study the sun. >> the aditya l one aims to study solar winds, which can cause disturbances on earth. it comes just days after india became the first country to land a spacecraft on the unexplored south pole of the moon . at the
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south pole of the moon. at the king and the queen are attending the braemar gathering highland games in aberdeenshire . the games in aberdeenshire. the events being held a short distance from the royals summer retreat at balmoral. charles is wearing a kilt in the newly created king charles iii tartan that was created to mark the coronation. the princess royal and her husband, vice admiral sir tim laurence, are also at the event this is gb news. i'll be back with more in just under an hour's time. but now it is over to . neil the ship of over to. neil the ship of state in a hell of a state rudderless might be the word or hold below the waterline. >> ulez is the latest squall, but only a part of something bigger and more sinister looming all around an uncontrolled migration is part of the same manmade weather system, part of making people angry and keeping
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people angry. neither is what it appears to be. ulez is billed as appears to be. ulez is billed as a health measure, but it's just highway robbery and cover for the introduction of more surveillance cameras. spectacularly vulnerable and temporary cameras . as it turns temporary cameras. as it turns out, the migration is the free movement of people. any british government that wanted to stem the flow or stop it would do so in a day . but the puppets in a day. but the puppets pretending to govern aren't allowed to. i said the word to use about the ship of state might be rudderless, but that would to be fall for the carefully curated optical illusion. it's being steered all right. but by officers none of us proles chose and towards a destination none of us wants except , of course, the people except, of course, the people who plotted the course long ago. no one with a brain thinks rishi sunakis no one with a brain thinks rishi sunak is running britain , not sunak is running britain, not even his colleagues. london mayor sadiq khan, another homunculus in a suit from the boys department loathes britain
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and is laying waste to a once great city, and the puppet government is fine with it. khan sows racial hatred and social unrest to accomplish the same destruction the romans inflicted on carthage by ploughing salt into fertile fields so nothing would ever grow there again. keir starmer and the fake labor party await their turn at the tiller . but party await their turn at the tiller. but all party await their turn at the tiller . but all they'll do party await their turn at the tiller. but all they'll do is shovel more coal into the furnaces , more speed towards the furnaces, more speed towards the iceberg . it mystifies me that iceberg. it mystifies me that journalists interview these fraud as though they matter. i'd no more ask a senior politician what was going on in britain than i would a character from a soap opera grant shapps shapps as defence secretary. do me a favour, you might as well make one of my wolfhounds defence secretary. she'd have as much meaningful input to policy. secretary. she'd have as much meaningful input to policy . at meaningful input to policy. at least jesse's a real wolfhound and don't fall for any of it. if i had the resources, i'd have. it's never about what they say. it's never about what they say. it's about plaster onto
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perpetually orbiting airships and projected onto the surface of the moon where everyone might see it. ulez is the flicking tail on the elephant in the room, the monstrous beast that is agenda 21. a plan for one world government misread presented as good news for those thinking. it's about the year 2021 and that we've missed the deadune. 2021 and that we've missed the deadline . agenda 21 is a plan deadline. agenda 21 is a plan for the whole of the 21st century. whatever for the puppet government and the puppet opposite mission say about anything is always and only to distract from the real plan and therefore the real threat to our freedom and way of life. the misdirection and downright lies infect and corrupt every aspect of life. otto von bismarck is credited with saying the less people know about how laws and sausages are made, the better they'll sleep at night. that depends on whether you want to be asleep or awake. however uncomfortably , the sleepiness is
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uncomfortably, the sleepiness is everywhere in a long process of missing education at school and a forced diet of propaganda for the rest of the time has, for instance , seen to the rearing of instance, seen to the rearing of a population that either thinks money and the economy are too complicated for them to understand or has accepted the fuzzy end of the lollipop stick handed to them by the powers that be. inflation. what they would have us believe is to blame for the cost of living crisis, which is really a cost of lockdown crisis is caused always and only by government working hand in glove with the banks to make themselves rich. and everyone else. poor inflation is caused always and only by the printing of money. quantitative easing , as they quantitative easing, as they have called it most recently , have called it most recently, although dodgy types alighted on the tactic thousands of years ago to keep their subjects poor , there is a transparent attempt to disguise a ponzi scheme , the to disguise a ponzi scheme, the ponzi scheme being modern
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currency . rs which is the currency. rs which is the conjuring into existence of money from nothing which only banks are allowed to do every time they magic up more money, put more of the currency into circulation in whatever form what they actually do. in fact, all they do do is devalue any money you had in your pocket or in savings. this is deliberate. this is why excess money is created in the first place. just as a for instance, since the creation of the so called federal reserve in the united states in 1913, which is not federal, being a private company run for profit by secretive bankers and holds a reserve of precisely nothing, the actual value of the dollar has fallen by at least 90. if not actually 98. inflation is the invisible tax . i'll say that 98. inflation is the invisible tax. i'll say that again for
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emphasis , the invisible tax . emphasis, the invisible tax. almost everyone has been tricked into not seeing far less being angry about it. the same trick a trick that would be illegal, if any of us tried it is pooled here in britain by our own central bank, the bank of england and by central banks around the world, all of them in service to the bank for international settlements in splendid isolation in geneva, in switzerland, where none of us can affect its operation in any way, our government but everyone's government, be it nominally democratic , fascist, nominally democratic, fascist, totalitarian , communist or totalitarian, communist or monster raving loony, it makes no difference . it uses banks to no difference. it uses banks to put people into debt and then continuously devalues the currency by creating more money. always out of nowhere . and so always out of nowhere. and so making it harder and harder all but impossible , in fact, for but impossible, in fact, for anyone ever to be free of that debt.
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anyone ever to be free of that debt . if all debt was anyone ever to be free of that debt. if all debt was repaid and all money would vanish . you all money would vanish. you heard me right. if you understand that much , you understand that much, you understand that much, you understand the money flow of the world. this stuff is hiding in plain sight , world. this stuff is hiding in plain sight, but so easy to understand when you bother to look at it. and i say that as someone who got a c in maths. it's easy to understand hand, but only if you don't look over there at the suspicious wildfires in greece and the incomprehensible fires in maui and the wildly lucrative war in ukraine and a new covid variant and the migrants being shepherded ashore every day and used most recently to displace students from their booked and paid for accommodation in to so more fury . if paid for accommodation in to so more fury. if you don't look over there at all that or when you do understand it, for it is for what it is distraction gone awry. but back here instead, we're the pretend government is cooking the books and selling britain down the river. once you
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see it, you can't believe you overlooked it for so long. i said most of the value of the dollar has been wiped out. so to that of the pound, the euro , you that of the pound, the euro, you name it, the national currencies around the world are ponzi schemes teetering on the brink of collapse and held up only by malpractice and lies as the next step . maybe not today and maybe step. maybe not today and maybe not tomorrow . but when the not tomorrow. but when the people think they can't take any more, uncertainty will be central bank digital currencies . and here we get back to the monster, the elephant in the room that most neither acknowledge nor talk about. indeed, that most don't even see, which is agenda 21. you les is part of agenda 21 dec is part of it. digital id is part of it. surveillance cameras and checkpoints are part of it. 15 minute ghettos are part of it. cycle lanes are part of it. the devaluing of money is part of the softening up the ever
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increasing debt is part of that. the stoking of anxiety , of fear, the stoking of anxiety, of fear, of hatred, of other climate crisis and forever war all about destroying the old and ushering in the new. in 1992, in rio de janeiro , 179 countries agreed to janeiro, 179 countries agreed to plans for a sustainable future for planet earth. so sustainable is a weasel word in this context, chosen to seduce, just as everyone would support a project to protect puppies and kittens from cruelty. so no one would say they were opposed to sustaining life on earth . sustaining life on earth. sustainable in the hands of the authors of agenda 21, however, is dread laden and means your way of life. my way of life and the way of life you'd hoped for your children is unsustainable and forbidden. in summary , the and forbidden. in summary, the way of life that has been described as middle class is, according to those pushing agenda 21 unsustainable and must end the usual mouthpieces of the
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mainstream will dismiss this as conspiracy theory . but what is conspiracy theory. but what is undeniable is that it's out there in plain sight. there's even a 344 page book available on amazon called agenda 21 earth summit. the united nations programme of action on from rio pnced programme of action on from rio priced £11.04 in paperback . what priced £11.04 in paperback. what someone somewhere has decided is sustainable is to be made possible to by quote american campaigner rosa corrie, the late great sarah in warning of all things agenda 21 control of all land , all water, all minerals, land, all water, all minerals, all plants . all animals, all all plants. all animals, all construction, all means of production, all food , all production, all food, all information and all human beings information and all human beings in the world. corrie pointed out how an unholy union of corporation and non—governmental organisations and governments is pushing ever more desperately towards a world in which the entire population is concentrated in densely populated cities. what's
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intended is a world of public private partnerships. what the wef cloud schwab calls stakeholder capitalism . um, that stakeholder capitalism. um, that takes all power and decision making away from the people and places it in the hands of entities over which we, the voting public, have zero influence, far less control. a person can easily sense the impotent wrath of khan. we siddiq as he receives the daily reports of the popular dismantling of his ulez infrastructure , as well as infrastructure, as well as a vast majority of his surveillance cameras being put out of action by citizens soldiers. god bless you all are the legal basis of his efforts is being challenged to worth observing that sadiq khan is being embarrassed not just in front of londoners and the wider british public, but also in front of his pals in the c40 cities climate leadership group , of which he has been chairman since 2021. i don't know if you know, but c40 is , according to know, but c40 is, according to its wikipedia page , focussed on
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its wikipedia page, focussed on fighting the climate crisis and driving urban action that reduces greenhouse gas emissions and climate risks. it's also in bed with proposals to end flying and shipping by 2050, cutting home heating, banning beef and lamb and ending building with bricks, cement, glass and steel in favour of rammed earth , what in favour of rammed earth, what you might call the building of mud huts. here's the thing . the mud huts. here's the thing. the future being discussed might permit existence for the likes of you and me, but will be no life. i recognise as honourable or worth living altogether. now i tell them they can stick the whole joyless, totalitarian , whole joyless, totalitarian, hypocritical, anti —human whole joyless, totalitarian, hypocritical, anti—human lot of it where the sun don't shine . it where the sun don't shine. in juue it where the sun don't shine. in julie i've had a bit of a frank disclosure of thought there. what do you make of the very
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concept of things like agenda 21 and c40 .7 and c40.7 >> first of all, i think your your speech was very rousing and i think if you spoke like that on the street corner everywhere, we might have a revolution soon. so you know, but it's terrifies me. it terrifies me because it's worse than the elimination of what we call the middle class, the destruction of middle class of any kind of ownership or aspiration or hope of success, all the things that were drummed into us as kids, you know, work hard, you'll do well, try and buy a house, you'll do well. all those things are lies. and we know that now because all that will be away from will be taken away from us. but i i wouldn't mind so much i mean, i wouldn't mind so much if wasn't being by elites if it wasn't being led by elites who are complete who then are complete hypocrites. so, you know, sadiq khan all need go on khan say we all need to go on bikes in a bikes and he's in a in a bullet—proof land rover, i think driving around london, emma thompson, famous actress who thompson, a famous actress who talks sustainability and talks about sustainability and environmental issues, and she's on think , a mega yacht this on a, i think, a mega yacht this week. yeah, leonardo dicaprio, he around world flying he goes around the world flying around i believe. around to see models, i believe. but even sadiq khan apparently
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racked 12,000 air miles in racked up 12,000 air miles in one year something or less one year or something or less than less than a year. so our elites are telling us all this, but they're behaving completely differently. but they're behaving completely diffe myly. but they're behaving completely diffe my goat. gets my goat. >> you think that's what >> do you think that's what means that doesn't actually means that it doesn't actually come a place where they come from a place where they genuinely anything genuinely believe in anything that to be done for the that needs to be done for the sake planet? just sake of the planet? they're just on something that on board with something that crushes people below them. crushes the people below them. further food chain . further down the food chain. >> yes, exactly. and i say i don't deny climate change and that we need to do something about the world. i believe we need to live sustainably. i believe i believe everyone wants that. they want to live in an environment enjoy environment that they can enjoy and children in and they raise children in without doubt. but it's the without a doubt. but it's the fact certain are fact that certain people are jumping on this in a kind of disaster, capitalistic way to use that to, as you say, create fear. becoming going fear. we're becoming it's going to feudalism . um, you know, to be feudalism. um, you know, it's going to be feudalism as it's, neo colonialism that it's, it's neo colonialism that they push elsewhere in the world and neofeudalism at home. and it's neofeudalism at home. >> got to for >> but i've got to go for a break at the moment. after which. well, mayor khan is
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coming your car. we know coming for your car. we know that will take a cleaver that. but will he take a cleaver to your meat supply, a personal allowance of 44g of meat is being advocated by some of mayor khan's c40 global network of mayors . but will he meet mayors. but will he meet resistance to his plans? don't go anywhere
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picture taken when i speed past a camera, i tell the kids to smile . all welcome back to neil smile. all welcome back to neil oliver live >> there's a gaping hole in popular understanding of the state of the nation. you could walk an elephant through. and the elephant is officially named agenda out in plain agenda 21. out there in plain sight proposals to steal sight are proposals to steal from our way life and from us our way of life and replace with something replace it with something poorer, and hungrier. poorer, colder and hungrier. joining to contemplate the joining me to contemplate the part of all that championed by london mayor sadiq khan and his little is chris little wizards is chris morrison, environment editor for the daily sceptic . thanks for the daily sceptic. thanks for coming in, chris. thanks for you've written recently about c40. would you like to just
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elaborate a little bit on what thatis elaborate a little bit on what that is and what it means? >> c40 is a group of 100 mayors around the world and it's been chaired since 2021 by sadiq khan . and if you look at what they write, you will see very clearly the agenda that they're following . and it's an agenda following. and it's an agenda that you know, you were talking about before . it's an agenda to about before. it's an agenda to remove growth from human society. it's an agenda to control us. it's an agenda to take away our cars, our gas, boilers, everything that is worthwhile in society. i've been on this planet a few decades and up until recently it was all about alt left and right debated how you got progress, whether you use the state, whether more private enterprise. this is all gone now the khan lab green blog has focussed on this imaginary climate crisis which they've invented, which is not backed by by by actual anything that you would call a theory. it's unproven hypothesis . and what
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unproven hypothesis. and what they're doing is they're looking to reduce consumption and they provide the background for that. and so the headline things that they do, of course, are 44g of meat by 2030 a day, a day, which equates to next to nothing . it equates to next to nothing. it equates to next to nothing. it equates to next to nothing. it equates to two small meatballs. i measured it out in the interests of research. 202,500 calories a day as a ration, which is actually less than a working man would have got in the second world war 9 or 8. clothing items. they talk about that in a year, in a year , two that in a year, in a year, two flights every three years, short haul flights every three years, short haul, no long haul. so if you have relatives in america or in australia , we're back to the australia, we're back to the 19505 australia, we're back to the 1950s where you waved them goodbye and you never saw them again. and this is a dystopian world. this is a world that is hiding in plain sight because, as i say, it's a world where they talk about international, national, national and local,
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andifs national, national and local, and it's all connected. and who funds c40? all the usual suspects, all of the green billionaire funders who obviously are doing very well out of this subsidy. rich green technology revolution . you have technology revolution. you have george soros is behind it. you have christopher holm, who runs the children's fund investment foundation. big, big financial supporter of extinction rebellion. and you have all the usual suspects, cr ikea , the all usual suspects, cr ikea, the all of the big funds are all pumping huge amounts of money into this operation. it's big. and of course, it's not really discussed in the mainstream media because it would frighten the horses, because if you read the horses, because if you read the report, which i've done, you will see all this laid out in plain sight. >> khan and his sponsors and the rest would say that it's for the common good. is there any grounding in accepting that common good, greater good . you common good, greater good. you know, obviously you can tell by
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my tone very opposed to it. but other grounds for saying that they are justified in any way in proposing what they're proposing. >> well, they use the example of ulez. he says it's all about health. if you look at the c60 , health. if you look at the c60, the ulez london scheme is actually singled out for praise andifs actually singled out for praise and it's singled out under the heading carbon carbon pricing. it is all about removing cars from the road. it's all about punching down on the poor. it's taking away the easy option to take away. they aim to take away most cars by 2030, 2040. they talk about . 25,000km of cycle talk about. 25,000km of cycle lanes. they talk about removing parking spaces , they talk about parking spaces, they talk about all of this and they're doing it. we know that. we know that under covid they use the pandemic to close all the streets , put in lots and lots of streets, put in lots and lots of cycle lanes. it's happening now andifs cycle lanes. it's happening now and it's a very odd thing. cycle lanes. it's happening now and it's a very odd thing . as and it's a very odd thing. as i said earlier, i didn't think i
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would live to see the day when political parties would actually sort of are they going to go to the electorate in the next election and say, we want to make you poorer, not just poorer, but considerably poorer? >> how do you feel, julie? you know, we're know, you and i are both we're just regular people , reasonable just regular people, reasonable people. when you listen to this , what is your instinctive reaction to the very idea that rather than being invited to look for a better life, you're being told to accept something less ? less? >> it's terrifying and it terrifies me as a parent as well. it makes me feel there's no hope for the for the children that i've brought into this world. but also my husband is from romania. he was under ceausescu's communism. and i was talking about your article with him the grams of meat and him and the grams of meat and all rest of it, and he just all the rest of it, and he just sat there and said, that's like my childhood. that's my childhood. that's, that's communism. like communism. that's exactly like my know, you my childhood. you know, you couldn't from one to couldn't go from one area to another of city without another area of the city without your the police would your id, or the police would arrest you. 15 minute cities, the people would arrest you. 15 minute cities, the for people would
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arrest you. 15 minute cities, the for hours people would arrest you. 15 minute cities, the for hours foryple would arrest you. 15 minute cities, the for hours for their/ould arrest you. 15 minute cities, the for hours for their gram queue for hours for their gram of meat. was speaking to his of meat. i was speaking to his mother about it. you had, i think, 500g of meat per month for your family. and just for your family. and it just when that that's when he said that that's communism, just thought that's communism, i just thought that's exactly it. but plain exactly it. but it's in plain sight, in plain sight, as you say. it's in plain sight. we do about sight. but what can we do about it? that's what worries me. >> when you see that, what can we about think the we do about it? i think the bladerunners and the rest that are that are actively taking bladerunners and the rest that are ththese actively taking bladerunners and the rest that are ththese ulezely taking bladerunners and the rest that are ththese ulez cameras] bladerunners and the rest that are ththese ulez cameras seems to down these ulez cameras seems to me an unofficial referendum on the ulez scheme. and furthermore , it has popular support. it even has outspoken support from i won't name them, but people who are prominent in the public eye saying good luck to these people or are we seeing their that that can is pushing against something that he cannot actually overcome. >> i think it's a tragedy this is happening because we're in a tv studio, so we can't say you know well done you know go ahead. it is criminal damage and it shouldn't happen. but if you
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push people far enough, they will rise and if you suddenly say to people, no more steak, no more cars, stay in your home, covid lockdown all over again, they're not going to sit there and take it. now you know, the next election will be interesting to see how they how they fudge this, because is they fudge this, because this is all in all of the all written in all of the meetings they davos , the meetings they have at davos, the un. all written into what un. it's all written into what they're planning. now. you know, you can get rid of khan. he's just a puppet, you know, here today, gone tomorrow puppet. and you'll get job, you know, you'll get some job, you know, in foundation or whatever. in some foundation or whatever. and money. you and huge amounts of money. you can of him. but i mean, can get rid of him. but i mean, you what are you going to you know, what are you going to do? put someone in his place? if you you two parties in you if you have two parties in this country, conservatives this country, the conservatives and party, you and the labour party, where you can't separate economic can't separate their economic policy their green policies policy or their green policies with cigarette paper. policy or their green policies with cigarette paper . so policy or their green policies with cigarette paper. so you with a cigarette paper. so you will see you will see a rise of popular discontent . and this is popular discontent. and this is what's happening now . what's happening now. >> can you think of a way, would
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you challenge what chris is saying? julie you know you're listening, as am i. you know, is there is there a you know, an alternative point of view that this is somehow for the greater good? can you think of a way in which to phrase it? >> i'd like to a journalist, >> i'd like to as a journalist, i could challenge it, i'm i could challenge it, but i'm frightened can't really i frightened that i can't really i think, you know , if climate think, you know, if climate change is a thing , as the young change is a thing, as the young people say, then yeah, that perhaps is a greater good thing. but let's face it, it's about taking away our freedoms. it's ultimately about taking away our freedoms. and as you said, labour to labour and conservative used to be different parties. be two very different parties. now the first time in my now it's the first time in my life in election where life in an election where i don't know to vote for. if don't know who to vote for. if you your eyes, you don't you close your eyes, you don't know who saying what. so who know who is saying what. so who do vote for? how do you make do you vote for? how do you make a there no way to a change? there is no way to change by voting for those change it by voting for those two. yes. two. certainly yes. >> i, i, i feel that i'm in exactly the same situation that i am, that i am contemplating what basically amounts to little more than a spoilt ballot. you know, because i will vote because i feel obliged in terms
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of my social responsibility to, you know, to make use of my vote. but i will have to vote for somebody that i know by definition is going to be well, is not going to be put into a position of power. and i do wonder the divide that's wonder at the divide that's forming, that's that's undeniable between the leaders and the and the lead. >> i always say that if i felt there was an existential threat and that we were heading for a climate fireball, i'd be the first person to sign up to c60. you know, we have we would have to remove fossil fuel from from from mix if that's so. but from the mix if that's so. but it's an unproven hypothesis. there is not a single science paper that proves conclusively that humans cause all or most global warming. in fact, it's scientifically impossible to prove it because you cannot tell the difference with our current knowledge of the atmosphere, which a chaotic place, you which is a chaotic place, you cannot difference cannot tell the difference between caused co2 between what is caused by c02 and very amount that and the very small amount that we into the atmosphere and we put into the atmosphere and natural variation and what they've done is they have confused weather and climate.
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climate is a long term trend which they cannot . they spent 50 which they cannot. they spent 50 years trying to prove this hypothesis and they cannot prove it. so they have demonised weather and this is what they do constantly every summer. we've seen last summer. you seen it in the last summer. you know, mainstream media is know, the mainstream media is full things . so, so, so full of these things. so, so, so therefore a sceptic. i write a lot about science because it's important because if there is a problem, we have to do something. but i'm personally not convinced because i cannot see evidence that they see any evidence that they produce. computer models don't count. >> hold that thought, chris, you're stay with us. you're going to stay with us. we're go a break we're going to go into a break and will stay with and chris will stay with us. after we will look at after the break, we will look at the of the un's agenda. 21 the aims of the un's agenda. 21 action it's a what sort of action plan. it's a what sort of action plan. it's a what sort of a plan it and is there a dark a plan is it and is there a dark side to it? jacob reynolds from mcc, brussels will join us to discuss shortly. take mcc, brussels will join us to dilook. shortly. take a look. >> looks like things are heating up. boxed boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. of weather on. gb news. >> hello there. good evening. i'm jonathan vautrey . who is i'm jonathan vautrey. who is your gb news weather forecast
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provided by the met office have you managed to enjoy saturday? it will be ending on a relatively fine note for many of us. some late sunny spells to be had and generally a lot of dry clear weather into the night as well. we'll allow mist well. we'll allow for some mist and patches develop into and fog patches to develop into the early hours of sunday morning, though most extensively for central eastern areas of england towards the england and further towards the north, band of rain north, we've got band of rain pushing into northern scotland. could be at for the could be heavy at times for the isle and the northern isle of lewis and the northern isles, us will see isles, but most of us will see our temperatures holding up around start off around 13, 14 c as we start off sunday so fairly mild sunday morning. so fairly mild start. we'll take a little bit of for that mist fog to of time for that mist and fog to clear. but eventually it will clear. but eventually it will clear way off and many of us clear its way off and many of us will a good of will see a good amount of sunshine throughout day, sunshine throughout the day, feeling really pleasantly warm in 26 c. possible in that high of 26 c. possible across southeastern areas of england . and further to the england. and further to the north, though, rain will be north, though, that rain will be lingering the highlands north, though, that rain will be linginto g the highlands north, though, that rain will be linginto the the highlands north, though, that rain will be linginto the northern1ighlands north, though, that rain will be linginto the northern isles.nds north, though, that rain will be linginto the northern isles. so up into the northern isles. so being fresher and being a much fresher here and gales coastal for gales around coastal areas for a time as high pressure will time as well, high pressure will be hanging into the start of be hanging on into the start of the working week. still, the new working week. still, though, lingering though, with that lingering front the far north and front across the far north and
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also isobars squeezing also the isobars squeezing together west together across the west country. so monday, generally a bit parts bit of a breezier day for parts of cornwall, definitely of devon, cornwall, definitely some coastal gusts, but elsewhere, be elsewhere, winds will be relatively light inland and there'll be a decent of there'll be a decent amount of sunshine much of the sunshine throughout much of the day. early day. again, once that early mist and does its way off, and fog does clear its way off, we on to of that we hold on to some of that sunshine throughout the rest of the perhaps a little bit the week, perhaps a little bit more cloud developing more towards thursday, but that's also will also where our temperatures will be the highest by by be climbing the highest by by looks like things are heating up by boilers. >> proud sponsors of weather on
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radio. >> welcome back to neil oliver live. we've been talking about how the powers that be seem determined to have as persuaders that are poor or cold or hungry or life is all we deserve and for the greater good to continue with that line of chat , for the greater good to continue with that line of chat, i'm joined now by jacob reynolds
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from mcc, brussels. a body dedicated to understanding the issues of our time. thanks for coming in, jacob. no agenda 21. i've been reading about it. we've aware of it . what is it we've aware of it. what is it and how would you present it to the general populace ? the general populace? >> yeah, well, i mean, you discussed it kind of quite, in some ways quite nicely in your introduction and focussed on the ways in which it's a kind of a vision, if you like, of what the future might look like if we were to kind of subscribe to the environmental and kind of sustainable goals that our elites are kind of so enamoured with, i think i'd make one slight distinction though, which is that think people are is that i think people are against of agenda 21 against kind of agenda 21 and the proponents kind of make a mistake in assuming that these kind of documents are really what set the wheels in motion of things actually, do things. actually, what they do is reflect much broader is they reflect much broader assumptions our elites assumptions of all of our elites . think about whether . so if you think about whether it's kind or sunak or it's kind of khan or sunak or anyone, they all sign up implicitly or explicitly to this
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idea that human beings are a problem, that human beings are kind of a plague planet kind of a plague on the planet and way, all these and in a way, all these documents, or agenda documents, all the way or agenda 21 or the kind of group of mayors that discussing mayors that we were discussing earlier, reflect these earlier, they reflect these broad assumptions that elites have human beings. and so have about human beings. and so it's that we see it's no surprise that we see what people would sound what many people would sound like of shocking things like kind of shocking things about our are going to about how our lives are going to be poorer, less interesting, colder of holidays and colder kind of no holidays and all rest of it because those all the rest of it because those those assumptions are really deeply elites. deeply embedded in our elites. and as you were talking about earlier, the fact that people are beginning to challenge these, important these, what's really important are that. are the grounds for that. >> you know, chris talked earlier you know, the earlier about how, you know, the whole idea that we are responsible for what's happening with a is theory with climate is a is a theory without any without any scientific consensus that means anything . is there anything. is there a justification for these so—called elites like khan and the rest of them and like sunak and klaus schwab? do they have any kind of justification for saying that we are a blight on
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the planet that has to be in some way wound back ? some way wound back? >> yeah. well, the interesting thing i think about this is that it doesn't actually matter in a way what the science would or wouldn't say about kind of humans impact on planet, humans impact on the planet, because that's not drives because that's not what drives these they don't care if these people. they don't care if these people. they don't care if the science came back in a different way, it wouldn't matter to their worldview. >> a reason. >> they have to have a reason. surely >> well, and their reason is these have these assumptions that they have this the ever kind this ideology that the ever kind of a turn against the things that make human beings great. and kind of informs and that's what kind of informs all and so all of their thinking. and so they research the they commission research on the bafis they commission research on the basis if it doesn't come basis that if it doesn't come back with right result, that back with the right result, that human beings are causing human beings are kind of causing this or that problem or are responsible x, and z, responsible for x, y, and z, that's worldview. and so that's their worldview. and so they stuff to that's their worldview. and so theythat stuff to that's their worldview. and so theythat result. stuff to get that result. >> something i find particularly i i suppose i find i mean, i suppose what i find most is this idea most troubling is this idea of, well, you call it stakeholder capitalism or public private partnership. this this discernible that there is discernible move that there is to take the decision making, the direction , setting away from us, direction, setting away from us, away from people who can vote ,
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away from people who can vote, people people like us who have to live with the consequences. you know, they want they want to elevate it to a where it's elevate it to a point where it's handed down from on high. am i am i interpreting that properly ? >> well, 7- >> well, i ? >> well, i mean, some 7 >> well, i mean, some people call this kind of nicely, i think, the kind of ngo industrial complex, this sense that there is this web of organisations governments organisations and governments that don't necessarily kind of collude in an obvious sense of the term, but they share all of the term, but they share all of the same politics, basically, and the governments go out and there's of examples. there's millions of examples. your think some your article is i think got some of in and we saw it with of them in and we saw it with regards to the so—called evidence ulez on the evidence supporting ulez on the effect would have on people's effect it would have on people's health governments health is that governments commissioned research that gives them the results looking them the results they're looking for. they have for. they go out, they have their scientists. they for. they go out, they have their that scientists. they for. they go out, they have their that if scientists. they for. they go out, they have their that if they entists. they for. they go out, they have their that if they chuck. they for. they go out, they have their that if they chuck them know that if they chuck them a few thousand pounds for know that if they chuck them a feresearch thousand pounds for know that if they chuck them a feresearch project,and pounds for know that if they chuck them a fe research project, theyyounds for know that if they chuck them a fe research project, they willjs for a research project, they will come back with favourable come back with a favourable result. so we kind of we can result. and so we kind of we can easily make a mistake in saying, oh that oh yeah, it's these ngos that are but really we are the problem. but really we have look at politicians. have to look at our politicians. juue have to look at our politicians. julie we talk, don't we, about the people rise there the people will rise and there will point that the
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will come a point that the people take this any people won't take this any longer. >> emma em- longer. >> do you think they >> do you, do you think they will do you think there is a foreseeable breaking where will do you think there is a forepeople�* breaking where will do you think there is a fore people willaking where will do you think there is a fore people will say,| where will do you think there is a fore people will say, you where will do you think there is a fore people will say, you have ere the people will say, you have got to joking ? got to be joking? >> i think it's it reminds me of les mis, miserables. i don't les mis, les miserables. i don't think we're hungry enough yet. i don't think we're starving enough when we enough yet. i think when we really had is you really had enough is when you can't eat, when you aren't allowed your home, when allowed to heat your home, when you're visit your you're not allowed to visit your very sick, dying child in that awful, crumbling concrete very sick, dying child in that awful, crthat'sng concrete very sick, dying child in that awful, crthat's falling rete very sick, dying child in that awful, crthat's falling apart. hospital that's falling apart. that's that's when it that's i think that's when it will break. but i think , again, will break. but i think, again, when that be and how will when will that be and how will it happen? i see you. >> i see you nodding. >> i see you nodding. >> not enough blackouts yet. you see, i mean, i always say that if you have a really cold winter and we get high pressure that sits sits in january and it's freezing cold for a month and the wind stops and everything and blackouts and quite and there's blackouts and quite frankly, thousands of old people will will probably will die. people will probably then sort of wake then start to sort of wake up that everything that's been proposed disaster and proposed is a disaster and insane disaster. >> you think do you think we >> do you think do you think we are to that point that
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are getting to that point that so far it's been just words, but when it becomes something that people experience and feel. yeah. their homes. yeah. well. and in their homes. >> seeing this >> well, yeah, we're seeing this with people are with you. those people are seeing the effect that these kind net zero assumptions are kind of net zero assumptions are having lives. we having on their lives. also, we at brussels are off at mcc, brussels are kicking off at mcc, brussels are kicking off a big project looking at the effect this is having on farming. you've talked a lot farming. so you've talked a lot on show. about the on your show. i know about the kind of influence of what's happening to farmers right across been going across europe. we've been going out and my colleagues have been going farmers going out speaking to farmers across and that's that's across europe. and that's that's one it really is one place where it really is having impact. and you having an impact. and you see very that people very quickly that people push back. our job kind of back. and it's ourjob kind of people with the platform, especially on show, to especially like on this show, to highlight instances where highlight those instances where people because people are pushing back because that's ultimately the only way that's ultimately the only way that overturn that you can kind of overturn these assumptions. >> well, you've had that's all right. i was going to right. go on. i was going to say, you've had years of this say, you've had 25 years of this virtue signalling people. it's an virtue oh, an easy virtue signal. oh, yes, we're of saving an easy virtue signal. oh, yes, we'iplanet. of saving an easy virtue signal. oh, yes, we'iplanet. and of saving an easy virtue signal. oh, yes, we'iplanet. and youf saving an easy virtue signal. oh, yes, we'iplanet. and you were ng an easy virtue signal. oh, yes, we'iplanet. and you were right the planet. and you were right in your monologue. you talked about they frame about the way they sort of frame it, sustainability. you know, nobody drown kittens. nobody wants to drown kittens. and been years of and so there's been 25 years of this virtue signalling and
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everybody sort of in everybody is sort of in environmental everybody everybody is sort of in e|environmentalist. everybody everybody is sort of in e|environmentalist. inerybody a environmentalist. in fact, nobody air and nobody wants dirty air and whatever. you to whatever. but when you start to say people, when they start to realise, mean steak. realise, oh, you mean my steak. oh, mean my motor car? oh, oh, you mean my motor car? oh, you mean my gas boiler? they'll start to think, oh, i didn't actually sign this actually sign up for this malarkey. mean, this is this malarkey. i mean, this is this is on. and is where you is not on. and this is where you will start, i think, see will start, i think, to see a pushback. and already ulez is a small pushback. you know, they say, 1 in 6 cars are say, is it 1 in 6 old cars are being pushed off the road and people just with this people are angry just with this one wait till they one measure. wait till they really so it's i suppose really start. so it's i suppose what saying is it is what you're saying is it is getting now. getting real now. >> and whether people believe that justification in that there's justification in winding back our way of life or not is about to be revealed when it actually touches people's dinner plates and their and their pantries and their and their pantries and their and their cars. yes >> and this is in a way where you see the kind of ideology that drives it because it would be that you could imagine a transition to a kind of less polluting fuels was all polluting fuels that was all about power , kind of about nuclear power, kind of massive electrification . you massive electrification. you could a kind of positive
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could imagine a kind of positive alternative . but the fact that alternative. but the fact that they're interested in they're not interested in nuclear they won't nuclear power, that they won't kind major investments in kind of put major investments in in these of things tells in these kind of things tells you drives this you that really what drives this is of, oh, we just is not a kind of, oh, we just want to in a slightly more want to live in a slightly more sustainable way. really. they have a very, very different view about live one about human beings. you live one that say, when that i think, as you say, when people realise what this means that i think, as you say, when pecthemealise what this means that i think, as you say, when pecthem inise what this means that i think, as you say, when pecthem in practise, this means that i think, as you say, when pecthem in practise, theyneans that i think, as you say, when pecthem in practise, they won't for them in practise, they won't accept jacob reynolds, chris morris excellent conversation. >> thank you so much. good to go to another break. thank you for all insight. after the all that insight. after the break, joined real break, i'll be joined by a real life which, it
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on mark dolan tonight in my big opinion, the royal society for the protection of birds make a highly personalised attack on the government . the government. >> why can't charities stay out of politics? in my take at ten, i'll be calling out millionaire, socialist and eco hypocrite emma thompson, who tells us to live
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diminished lives whilst cavorting on a £200 million super yacht plus my top pundits and tomorrow's papers . we're and tomorrow's papers. we're live . at live. at nine. >> there you are. where have you been? julie aspinall and moon. anyone we're looking from the day to day concerns of an evening we may have noticed something different about the moon. astronomers call it the blue moon, but they're not for the reasons you might think. and my last guest tonight is the aforementioned julie aspinall, a self—described . and she self—described witch. and she can us about what's can tell us more about what's going on. julie, are you there ? going on. julie, are you there? yeah >> yes, i'm here. hello. nice to. hello, julie. >> thank you so much forjoining me. first of all, what is all the fuss about the way the moon is appearing to us this week ? so
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is appearing to us this week? so this week we've got a super blue moon. >> so we've got a double whammy. so a blue moon is when we have two moons in one month. so one calendar month because normally we have one new moon and one full moon each month. but blue moon is 2 in 1 month. so we had a full moon at the beginning of august and the other day we had another one. so that boosts our powers, that boosts the energies, if you like, that we can use this and to go with that, we had a super moon, which means that the moon is closer to the earth. so it appears a lot larger and brighter than normal. so for us it's an excellent opportunity as witches to boost energy in our spellwork . and energy in our spellwork. and obviously the moon is highly important to us because , um, the important to us because, um, the super blue moon so rare , so
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super blue moon so rare, so rare. so it's really good for everybody around because you can use it for lots of different things . use it for lots of different things. people tend to get into deep conversations with family members or partners and, and be able to express themselves better than normal. >> julie we were talking here in the studio with another julie, the studio with anotherjulie, juue the studio with anotherjulie, julie cook and, and one of my previous guests we had and i know too that people are sometimes very strongly affected by different phases of the moon andifs by different phases of the moon and it's not just i'm not making it up. we're not making it up. we've all got anecdotes that we can recount about people close to us or known to us whose behaviour is altered given the phases of the moon. and it does make for a fascinating subject , make for a fascinating subject, doesn't it? so in the 18th century, if you murdered somebody on a full moon, you could apply for a more lenient sentence in the court because you'd you killed them on the
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full moon . full moon. >> so they accepted that the full moon made people behave stranger than normal. and depending on what phase of the moon you were born will also affect how you react in that type of moon phase. so i was born on a full moon, so i struggled with bear with me, julie, otherjulie. julie, other julie. >> julie cook. it's i like the idea of opening up to the to the possibility that we are affected by, by the moon. you know, we're mostly made of water. you know, we are affected by, by the elements and everything else. i find that an intriguing thought to be open to. >> oh, me too. and i think i think i hate to say it. i think women in particular are particularly more, you know, our cycles. they're called monthly menses, aren't they? menstruation from word menstruation comes from the word for so i think, you for the month. so i think, you know, very connected to know, we are very connected to it. particular. it. women in particular. i think. >> w- think. >> it's fascinating and >> yeah, it's a fascinating and there's folklore around it. you know, you describe yourself as a
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witch. julie and what does it mean for witches like yourself? >> well, the super full moon, it means that the energies we use in spellwork , we get to boost in spellwork, we get to boost them. so it'd be like a super spell. so if we want to do something quite strong, then that's the time we would do it. so we, we had our coven , we so we, we had our coven, we released lots of negative emotions through the moon and we could feel the energies were so more powerful than normal. they really were . i mean, it was such really were. i mean, it was such a calming atmosphere . brazier a calming atmosphere. brazier wonderful , a calming atmosphere. brazier wonderful, wonderful a calming atmosphere. brazier wonderful , wonderful stuff. we wonderful, wonderful stuff. we were between the worlds . were between the worlds. >> wonderful stuff. julie i love the idea, i love and i'm completely open to the concept. it's all we have time for this evening. thank you, julie. thank you, all of you, for watching. thank you, julie cook, for being with me and sharing your thoughts. we'll back the thoughts. we'll be back at the same next, same time next week. up next, though, is the wonderful father, calvin robinson, that warm feeling inside made from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news.
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weather on. gb news. >> hello there. good evening. i'm jonathan vautrey. who is your gb news? weather forecast provided by the met office have you managed to enjoy saturday? it will be ending on a relatively fine note for many of us. some late sunny spells to be had and generally a lot of dry clear weather into the night as well. allow for some well. we'll allow for some mist and to develop into and fog patches to develop into the hours of sunday the early hours of sunday morning, though most extensively for central eastern of for central eastern areas of england. further the england. further towards the north, of rain north, we've got band of rain pushing into northern scotland. could be heavy at times the could be heavy at times for the isle the northern isle of lewis and the northern isles, but us see isles, but most of us will see our temperatures holding up around as we start off around 1314 c as we start off sunday morning. fairly mild sunday morning. so fairly mild start. we'll a little bit start. we'll take a little bit of for that and fog to of time for that mist and fog to clear. but eventually it will clear. but eventually it will clear and many of us clear its way off and many of us will see a good amount of sunshine throughout the day, feeling warm feeling really pleasantly warm in of possible in that high of 26 c possible across of across southeastern areas of england. further to the north, though, be though, that rain will be lingering the highlands though, that rain will be linginto g the highlands though, that rain will be linginto the the highlands though, that rain will be linginto the northern1ighlands though, that rain will be linginto the northern isles.nds though, that rain will be linginto the northern isles. so up into the northern isles. so being a fresher here and being a much fresher here and gales around coastal areas for a time as high pressure will
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time as well, high pressure will be hanging on into the start of the working week. still, the new working week. still, though, lingering the new working week. still, thougacross lingering the new working week. still, thougacross the lingering the new working week. still, thougacross the far ngering the new working week. still, thougacross the far north|g the new working week. still, thougacross the far north and front across the far north and also isobars squeezing also the isobars squeezing together across the west country. monday, generally country. so monday, generally a bit breezier day for parts bit of a breezier day for parts of devon and cornwall. definitely some coastal gusts, but elsewhere, be but elsewhere, winds will be relatively inland and relatively light inland and there'll be a decent amount of sunshine throughout the sunshine throughout much of the day. that early mist day. again, once that early mist and does clear way off, and fog does clear its way off, we hold on to some that we hold on to some of that sunshine rest of sunshine throughout the rest of the perhaps a little the week, perhaps a little bit more cloud developing more towards thursday, but that's also temperatures will also where our temperatures will be highest by by be climbing. the highest by by that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers >> proud sponsors of weather on gb news this
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>> hello and welcome. this is calvin's sense crusade. with me , the reverend calvin robinson on your online and on your wireless back for series two. i want to give a quick shout out and a thank you to emma webb, who kept my seat warm whilst i was on holiday. she did an excellent job. thank you, emma. now, today we will discussing now, today we will be discussing womb transplants is undoubtedly a major scientific advance, but are there ethical concerns also 7 are there ethical concerns also ? so should workplace discrimination against christians be investigated by parliament? and we'll hear about the devastating humanitarian crisis unfolding in artsakh , an crisis unfolding in artsakh, an enclave within azerbaijan and in the duel. my panellists will be discussing a times survey which says church of england priests think britain is no longer a christian country . see? what do christian country. see? what do you think? connor tomlinson i think as the venerable fulton sheen once said, the church , sheen once said, the church, which weds itself to this age, withdrew itself in the next.

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