tv Headliners GB News September 8, 2023 5:00am-6:01am BST
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gb news good evening headliners is on the way. >> but first, our news headlines . a manhunt involving more than 150 counter—terror tourism officers is underway for escaped terror suspect daniel khalifa gb news. sources have confirmed that he's accused of spying for iran on met. police say a lack of sightings of khalifa is testament to his ingenuity as a soldier . testament to his ingenuity as a soldier. meanwhile, the force has released an image of the bidfood vehicle he used to escape and security checks have been tightened at ports . despite been tightened at ports. despite the incident, the pm says there's been fewer prison escapes under the tory government . government. >> there are something like 4000
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more prison officers than there were in 2071. and with regard to the labour party who posed a question , again, the facts show question, again, the facts show that during their 13 years in office, there were ten times the number of escaped prisoners than you've seen in the 13 years of conservative led government. but we're doing everything we can to find this person. and as i said, if anyone has any information, please do contact the police . please do contact the police. >> labour leader, sir >> well, the labour leader, sir keir , says the keir starmer, says the government totally fault . government is totally at fault. >> but i think we now know that we're already some pretty reports into wandsworth issues about staffing , issues about about staffing, issues about buildings and that's a pattern of behaviour. now under this government, whether it's this prison or other prisons or other infrastructure across the country. and you know, it certainly hasn't helped that in the last ten years we've had ten justice secretaries . and i know justice secretaries. and i know from my time as director of pubuc from my time as director of public prosecutions just how important stability is when it comes to criminal justice. >> the prime minister is facing
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another by—election following the resignation of his former deputy chief whip, chris pincher . the mp for tamworth made the decision after losing an appeal against an eight week suspension over groping allegations. in a statement , over groping allegations. in a statement, mr over groping allegations. in a statement , mr pincher over groping allegations. in a statement, mr pincher said he didn't want uncertainty for his constituents . he sent his constituents. he sent his resignation letter to the chancellor, jeremy hunt . chancellor, jeremy hunt. >> this was a situation that needed to be resolved and now we know the way forward and we will put forward a very strong candidate from the conservative party who will help attract investment and jobs to staffordshire and to the wider region. and that's what we'll be campaigning on. >> and the prime minister has remembered the late queen's sharp wit as he marked the first anniversary of her death , rishi anniversary of her death, rishi sunak said gratitude for her extraordinary life of duty and dedication continues to grow . a dedication continues to grow. a year on the prime minister also said, our thoughts are with his majesty , king charles iii and majesty, king charles iii and the whole royal family
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meanwhile, the duke of sussex said queen elizabeth ii is looking down on all of us as he spoke at a charity event . this spoke at a charity event. 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 time for those headliners . time for those headliners. >> hello and welcome the headliners. hope you're all well i >> -- >> i'm nik dixon and i'll be taking you through tomorrow's top stories in a light—hearted way. >> and i'm joined tonight by the thinking man's gammon. >> cox. >> it's paul cox. >> it's paul cox. >> he is at. and more >> there he is at. and more prosciutto , our favourite new prosciutto, our favourite new person on headline is it's nicholas de santo. >> i went with prosciutto and nicholas because i believe you're are half italian? you're are you half italian? half iranian roughly. yeah. >> i like prosciutto, right? >> and i like prosciutto, right? i you would probably if i knew you would probably if you're italian, half iranian. >> does that mean one half of
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you and the other half you loves ham and the other half is to eat it? is not allowed to eat it? >> not. i'm not >> no, i'm not. i'm not a practising muslim, okay? >> not a muslim at all, to >> i'm not a muslim at all, to be okay well, that got be honest. okay well, that got weird. thought gonna be weird. i thought it was gonna be a but, i mean, 99% of a good joke, but, i mean, 99% of the is muslim, so you the country is muslim, so you ruined my joke. >> you guys, you look ruined my joke. >> tonight, you guys, you look ruined my joke. >> tonight, byj guys, you look ruined my joke. >> tonight, by the ys, you look ruined my joke. >> tonight, by the way.)u look great tonight, by the way. >> guys, just saying, you >> guys, i was just saying, you look like a young republicans convention. you could both easily for easily be like speechwriters for trump. at that. look at trump. look at that. look at paul trump. look at that. look at paul. that's me. don't paul. come on. that's me. don't go go nicholas. there go to me. go nicholas. there you go. trump's new go. look at that. trump's new speechwriters feeding in alt right ideas acceptable right ideas in an acceptable way. i'm taking it as a compliment. said that. compliment. yeah, i said that. nicholas is like, it's nicholas is like, yeah, it's great. all right, let's have a quick front pages quick look at the front pages then. times baby then. so the times has baby deaths investigated by deaths cover up, investigated by police? we'll be talking about that in a moment. the guardian escape prompts escape of terror suspect prompts pfison escape of terror suspect prompts prison row the eye of prison cuts row the eye of fugitive terror suspects. escape investigated as possible prison inside job. the financial times pensions poised for fresh jump as triple lock matches wage growth. the daily mail warring royal brothers still 100 miles apart. it and the daily star dodi didn't become a ghost, did
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he? which is about the ghost of ken dodd, of course. and those of you from pages . let's start of you from pages. let's start with this fairly horrific story in the times, paul yeah, another one. >> baby deaths cover up investigated by police. so this is up to 1700 families affected by hospitals failing . this is by hospitals failing. this is another harrowing story. like you said, on our horizon, this time in nottingham. and the police are now investigating going into baby deaths and injuries at nottingham university. hospitals trust essentially there are 1700 affected families . they are affected families. they are worried about the poor care that they're their family and their children were having at the time. there there were a number of deaths and the investigations , it would seem that were very, very poor and lacking , which is very poor and lacking, which is becoming a bit of a theme now,
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isn't it? >> i mean, nicholas, am ijust doing this job? so i notice the news, or is our country just collapsing in every regard? well, you from nhs that well, you know, from nhs that some to be the some people repute to be the envy of the world, you know , envy of the world, you know, unless you've seen a hospital in western europe, we had a very similar sad story in mid—august as lucy letby was tried and convicted of having killed seven babies in cheshire . the nhs babies in cheshire. the nhs nurse and the i think the common link between these two stories is again, lack of investigation or top levels of management not taking the signal seriously, trying to either push it under the carpet just think of their own position at and not heeding the signals which were there. yeah. yeah why does that happen? just just bureaucracy . just just bureaucracy. >> it's well i mean, you know, not working in hospitals myself , but there are there are going to be a number of facets in there. multiple facets, nuances, extremely busy places, lots going on. what we'd like to all believe is that there are very well honed systems and controls
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in place to prevent anything like this from happening. we all accept that mistakes happen and therefore there will be problems. but again, this is 1700 families which alludes to the fact there's 1700 children that could be that could have been injured or possibly killed in the care of nottingham university trust. yeah, shocking. >> i'm not sure anyone thinks of the phrase well—honed systems when it comes to the nhs anymore, but yeah, point taken. what i? nicholas well, what about the i? nicholas well, this is the gripping story of today and yesterday. fugitive terrorist suspects escape investigated as possible prison inside job. so we know this person daniel khalifa, who escaped wandsworth prison under a food supply truck. apparently he was waiting, awaiting trial on terror charges. some reports say he was passing on information to a hostile government , possibly iran. so government, possibly iran. so now questions have been raised as to how he was allowed to work
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in the so—called weak link of the prison, which is the kitchen , a which was effectively controlled by civilians, not by by by prison personnel. and he was dressed as a chef, told everybody he was downloading or offloading food into the truck or onto the truck. and then that's how he disappeared. now, officials are saying that he might even have left the uk warning anybody who is supporting him outside that they might be coming emitting egregious crimes. and most importantly , investigating what importantly, investigating what sort of help he had, presumably inside the prison , whether it inside the prison, whether it was from fellow prisoners or officials. yeah, exactly. and apparently there's been no sightings. there's been loads of people calling into the police. what think, paul? just what do you think, paul? just another our crumbling another example of our crumbling infrastructure what? infrastructure or what? >> a couple of >> well, there's a couple of things a things going on. it was a category prison, is more category b prison, which is more relaxed. category a, relaxed. it's not category a, which because which is interesting because you'd imagine that suspected terrorist a i don't
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terrorist may be in a i don't i don't quite know how that works . that just be my . that would just be my assumption. like like nick assumption. like like like nick says, you know , working in the says, you know, working in the kitchen is probably considered a privilege prison. and privilege within the prison. and being asked to load the lorry. i mean, this is like something from porridge almost, it? from porridge almost, isn't it? one thing, one thing that one one thing, one thing that is interesting now interesting here is we're now saying his success is being saying that his success is being unked saying that his success is being linked well he was linked to how well he was trained as a british soldier. now that he's now that he appears away and appears to have got away and nobody's been able him nobody's been able to find him so almost so far, we're almost congratulating for congratulating ourselves for training him be so good. i'm training him to be so good. i'm not sure that's quite the case here. um, it's fascinating that he's only been able to get he's not only been able to get out morning , i he's not only been able to get out morning, i think out yesterday morning, i think about 10 to 7 or 10 to 8, something like that early in the morning. not been able morning. he's not only been able to of prison, to get out of the prison, he's been disappear entirely. been able to disappear entirely. and about and now they're talking about him the country. yeah >> yeah. >> yeah. >> if you plan to get out of the country that quickly, you couldn't do right? >> especially if >> right. no, no. especially if you're going into france or somewhere delays. but somewhere with those delays. but yeah, it's ted bundy levels of escapism, isn't it? do you ever watch that ted bundy documentary? and just escaped
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documentary? and he just escaped from like, from two prisons? like, is anyone watching? >> killer just >> the serial killer just wandered all right. what >> madness. all right. what of the paul? the male got, paul? >> the cover are >> well, the male cover are beloved queens . and the year of beloved queens. and the year of her passing. so queen elizabeth ii her passing. so queen elizabeth h passed her passing. so queen elizabeth ii passed a year ago tomorrow. or if you're reading this tomorrow. today or even watching this or watching it, if you're reading it. that's incredible. um, so yeah, and, and, and full of all the sort of splendour and stuff you'd expect the male to, to bring to this particular story . i think interestingly story. i think interestingly whilst this doesn't cover it particularly well, i think king charles has managed the last year fairly well. reason year fairly well. the reason i say that because you've say that is because you've barely him . things barely noticed him. things haven't changed dramatically. he's that continuity he's just kept that continuity going. but what what hasn't changed and what many of us hoped would have changed is that the brothers, the princes are still warring. and the big headune still warring. and the big headline here is warring royal brothers is still a hundred miles apart, which is metaphorical , of course, because metaphorical, of course, because they are thousands of miles
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apart. actually, geographically, however , which is a lot further however, which is a lot further apart, isn't it? >> it's a lot longer than you could emotionally. could have said emotionally. it's maybe it's millions of miles, maybe light years. >> and it's really sad to >> well, and it's really sad to see. i know. families see. i know. i know families have you know, have these problems. you know, lots however lots of families do. however there's you can't help but feel that harry's gone around certain things, particularly badly. it's difficult to see where william has done too much wrong here. >> i think harry hasn't handled him perfectly. it's quite a safe position on gb views. that's how i put it. that's pretty much half hour stories. many fans around here, not really. but how do you feel about this, nicholas? mean, it's a year on nicholas? i mean, it's a year on since beloved queen's death. since our beloved queen's death. as believe since our beloved queen's death. as been believe since our beloved queen's death. as been a believe since our beloved queen's death. as been a year believe since our beloved queen's death. as been a year we believe since our beloved queen's death. as been a year we were eve since our beloved queen's death. as been a year we were all it's been a year we were all here doing about queen here doing talking about queen at black aslef at length, wearing black aslef were at that time? were you here at that time? >> i was. okay. >> yes, i was. yeah. okay. >> yeah. and it is amazing. i suppose you get older. everything moves quicker. everything time moves quicker. one little anecdote. i was watching with chris watching an interview with chris eubank senior. he said something interesting. honour interesting. he said the honour of being of his life was being represented by the given invited of his life was being reptheented by the given invited of his life was being repthe queen/ the given invited of his life was being repthe queen to 1e given invited of his life was being repthe queen to this ven invited of his life was being repthe queen to this venevent.d by the queen to this an event. and was the honour
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and he said that was the honour of his life because he'd always tried the queen. and tried to emulate the queen. and he very he said something very interesting. he said, everyone thinks i'm an oddball, but actually doing what you actually i was doing what you were supposed to do. so for someone him, looked to someone like him, he looked to the as like the way you're the queen as like the way you're supposed to comport yourself. and that was and actually, that is that was that was. and that that was what she was. and that actually like a sort of, actually sounds like a sort of, you eccentric idea now, you know, eccentric idea now, but we're all but that's what we're all supposed anyway. supposed to be doing anyway. a little anecdote. what do you think, nicholas? i think think, nicholas? well i think king shoes to king charles has big shoes to fill, elizabeth fill, obviously. queen elizabeth was breaking queen in was a record breaking queen in terms monarchy. very terms of the monarchy. very popular . people need time popular. people still need time to warm up to the new king. and there are some concerns maybe for people our camp in terms for people in our camp in terms of his views towards aids, the environmental. nicholas, we say our camp, just our camp, we're just simply a neutral channel regulated by ofcom. i what you mean. ofcom. but i know what you mean. you you and paul and your you mean you and paul and your young camp, the young young republican camp, the young republicans, republicans . republicans, republicans. gammons i'm a small c conservative. yeah, yeah, in the uk. but i know what you mean. the climate agenda, wokeness the climate agenda, the wokeness , there is scepticism over that, but him time. but let's give him time. absolutely. well, let's absolutely. okay well, let's have a quick look at the star,
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which is the best way to look at the quickly. the star is quite quickly. generally, nicholas we've got ken yeah . sir dodd ken dodd yeah. ken sir ken dodd comedy legend. i have to admit i'm not very familiar with his work. mea culpa , but apparently work. mea culpa, but apparently his wife believes that his spirit is haunting their their marital house in liverpool. this is yes, kind of a sweet story, if you like , because she's not if you like, because she's not complaining. lady anne, she says she was his wife for 40 years and she says , yes, everything and she says, yes, everything happensin and she says, yes, everything happens in this house. doors open , closed for no apparent open, closed for no apparent reason. and she wants him actually to yeah. yeah. he actually to stay. yeah. yeah. he was known incredibly long was known for incredibly long shows never leaving the shows and never leaving the stage. wouldn't stage. paul he wouldn't even leave plane. one leave this astral plane. one quick ken dodd . quick anecdote about ken dodd. he used to come in the bookshop where and joke where i worked, and buy joke books, was a bit books, which i thought was a bit odd a comedian. we wouldn't odd for a comedian. we wouldn't do this generation do that now in this generation of then, you do that now in this generation of just then, you do that now in this generation of just read then, you do that now in this generation of just read your then, you do that now in this generation of just read your jokesen, you do that now in this generation of just read your jokes out/ou could just read your jokes out of a book. it was the way you told them. very briefly, paul, any this? told them. very briefly, paul, anywell, this? told them. very briefly, paul, anywell, don't write joke >> well, people don't write joke
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books so books anymore for a start. so there any buy. is there aren't any to buy. this is like nick said, this is kind of a nice story. you know, if she believes is dodi walking believes this is dodi walking round then it round her house, then and it gives her comfort, i don't gives her a comfort, i don't have with that. gives her a comfort, i don't havall with that. gives her a comfort, i don't havall right. with that. gives her a comfort, i don't havall right. notith that. gives her a comfort, i don't havall right. not that|at. >> all right. not that controversial that's controversial there, but that's it one. but coming up, it for part one. but coming up, humza yousaf four fs genius plan for police reform. whatsapp versus of versus the uk government. and of course, kidneys, grown in course, human kidneys, grown in pigs. you in two
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our prisons secure your listening to gb news radio show i >> welcome back to headliners. i'm nick still nick dixon and still here with paul cox and nicholas de santo. the future republican senators. there they are . let's get back into it with are. let's get back into it with the independent and the anti—terror program. prevent will now focus on actual terrorists rather than members of the house of lords . what an of the house of lords. what an interesting idea, paul. incredible idea. >> yeah. so prevent reform will help train people to spot genuine radicalism . so a major genuine radicalism. so a major review found that prevent was
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out of kilter with the rest of the counter—terrorism system and the counter—terrorism system and the uk terrorism threat picture. and i think it's always important to say at this point when we talk about counter terrorism, prevent of course, being on the part of the system thatis being on the part of the system that is of course trying to prevent any any people coming radicalised , but that our radicalised, but that our security services do a flippin good job in is a very valid point to say because sometimes it's very difficult to mix up the political aspect of anti—terrorism and the actual job of anti—terrorist . um, and i job of anti—terrorist. um, and i think they do a very good job. and what happens sometimes is it becomes politicised if things don't go quite right. but there's so much more preventive than, ever takes place . than, than ever takes place. yes. and we all sort of i think , add certain amount. oh , add a certain amount. oh a certain amount of debt to that. >> that's fair. i mean, there's always there's a disturbing amount terrorists always there's a disturbing am(there terrorists always there's a disturbing am(there are terrorists always there's a disturbing am(there are being orists out there that are being thwarted every day without us having to think about it because we'd your we'd never sleep. i see your point. became very point. but then it became very politicised. rees—mogg
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politicised. and jacob rees—mogg was some sort of was cited as some sort of gateway to extremism, was gateway to extremism, as was shakespeare. i believe one of shakespeare. i believe in one of the documents, it's so and the documents, and it's so and douglas who's tweeted or douglas murray, who's tweeted or posted said it's absurd posted on x and said it's absurd that he was linked with extremism when his book strange death was best death of europe was a best seller, best seller, seller, number one best seller, not text. nicholas, not a fringe text. nicholas, what think exactly? i what do you think exactly? i mean, agree with paul . mean, i agree with paul. security forces may have had may have done a good job in terms of foiling plots, catching the terrorists. but the idea behind prevent is, as the name suggests , to prevent them from being radicalised. and in these recommendations that we have seen to the program, the idea behind it, or at least some of these recommendations that the government has now embraced , government has now embraced, most importantly , the rule of most importantly, the rule of ideology or islamist ideology in turning people towards terrorism. in other words, let's call a spade a spade rather than just vaguely talking about, you know, background as poor backgrounds or, you know , backgrounds or, you know, historical wrongs and colonial
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ism and all these popular talking points with the left. do you think this was just a mistake or deliberate? as it says here, there was a failure by those working on prevent to properly understand the nature of islamist of ideology in islamist radicalisation was like, was that or that that a mistake or was that a sort been sort of they've just been infected by leftist ideology, so they wanted to focus the they wanted to focus on the right. you know, rather than the tncky right. you know, rather than the tricky issue of islamic terrorism. that's what it seemed tricky issue of islamic terrcto m. that's what it seemed tricky issue of islamic terrcto me. hat's what it seemed tricky issue of islamic terrcto me. well what it seemed tricky issue of islamic terrcto me. well thist it seemed tricky issue of islamic terrcto me. well this ist seemed tricky issue of islamic terrcto me. well this is whatned like to me. well this is what i talk about. >> what is what i was >> this is what is what i was talking the talking about, the politicisation of it. and the opfics politicisation of it. and the optics because we optics of it. because what we end about for some end up hearing about for some for reason, that's for some balance reason, that's never correctly never really been correctly explained me we will hear explained to me is we will hear about the far right more than we'll hear about radical islamists because it's politically easier to say. and the trouble with that is it just masks the fact that this is real world stuff and you can't just pussyfoot around with this stuff. you have to hit it straight on. call a spade a spade and do exactly that. >> absolutely. the only other thing i'd add, though, is just lastly , this is suella braverman
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lastly, this is suella braverman saying and feel like saying this and i feel like virtually every day we do a story suella story about suella. suella braverman out and says my braverman speaks out and says my department x or prevent department must do x or prevent must do y and nothing ever happens. so i hope it actually happens. so i hope it actually happens. that's i'm going happens. that's what i'm going to times to say. let's do the times and humza new plan to humza yousaf has a new plan to help police just stop help the police just stop investigating crimes. nicholas. yeah. oversee from yeah. can't oversee from scotland. so scottish first minister is basically piloting this this plan for northeast scotland where certain kinds of crimes will not be investigated if they deem that there is no continuing risk or threat or harm and no proportionate lines of inquiry to investigate. of course, the conservatives of scotland are are decrying this as you know, open season for criminals . and it is outrageous, criminals. and it is outrageous, in their opinion that, you know, certain kinds of crimes won't be investigated. they will just be recorded maybe for statistical purposes and simultaneously you're asking people to come forward and report them while knowing that this will probably
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not be investigated . yeah, i not be investigated. yeah, i mean, obvious take is if mean, the obvious take is if they want to save resources, why not stop the non—crime hate incidents ? that's an obvious, incidents? that's an obvious, especially scotland where especially in scotland where they sort of spy your they want to sort of spy on your dinner parties. i mean, if they stopped all that kind of nonsense, think, paul? >> well, i a paul? >> well, i paul? » wetu >> well, i think a lot more of them. they did is them. if they did this is classic stuff. i mean, classic snp stuff. i mean, they're optics are all over the place need to place here. why do they need to say it in the first place? this doesn't help the police any doesn't help the police in any way. basically saying way. you're basically saying in this in scotland not area in scotland we're not really going to do much investigation, carry on investigation, just carry on nicking people's nicking things out of people's gardens if gardens and damaging cars. if there's evidence, we're there's no cctv evidence, we're probably going leave probably just going to leave it. but in in but essentially in in in reality, that's not what's going to happen . we all understand to happen. we all understand that probably aren't that there probably aren't enough there . and enough police out there. and what's what's really what's what's what's really interesting here is hamza goes out of his way to say there are more police per capita in scotland there are scotland than there are in scotland than there are in scotland and the scotland and wales. and in the same phrase in england. and what did scotland and wales. did i say? scotland and wales. yeah. yeah. england did i say? scotland and wales. yeaiwales. yeah. england did i say? scotland and wales. yeaiwales. and h. england did i say? scotland and wales. yeaiwales. and therefore and did i say? scotland and wales. yeaiwales. and therefore ind did i say? scotland and wales. yeaiwales. and therefore in the and wales. and therefore in the same breath completely contradicting by saying
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contradicting himself by saying we're not going to do this because we think we don't have enough. got enough enough. we haven't got enough time spend on it. it to just time to spend on it. it to just me, i know who he thinks me, i don't know who he thinks he's trying to over. i mean, he's trying to win over. i mean, who thinks this is a good who who thinks this is a good idea to say this stuff? >> well, he has the >> i know. well, he has the incredibly only incredibly easy task of only being better than nicola sturgeon, but he's still failing, quite failing, which is quite impressive. things me failing, which is quite imprthate. things me failing, which is quite imprthat he things me failing, which is quite imprthat he says1ings me failing, which is quite imprthat he says that me failing, which is quite imprthat he says that recorded1e here that he says that recorded crime one of the crime remains at one of the lowest in years. lowest levels in 42 years. because going stop because you're going to stop recording said recording it. you've just said it's brilliant, brilliant system. let's the system. all right, let's do the guardian and tensions between whatsapp and the government continue it continue to escalate. it basically down to this. basically comes down to this. would you want ofcom reading your whatsapp messages? >> of >> paul definitely seen some of them that's direct question. them. that's a direct question. you k ministers to assist you k ministers seek to assist in as you say, uk in the guardian as you say, uk ministers seek to lie whatsapp and signal concern in encryption ministers seek to lie whatsapp and so nal concern in encryption ministers seek to lie whatsapp and so this oncern in encryption ministers seek to lie whatsapp and so this is cern in encryption ministers seek to lie whatsapp and so this is they in encryption ministers seek to lie whatsapp and so this is the government n rail. so this is the government say text scanning, online safety bill would only occur if technically feasible after apps threaten to leave the country. so i would say technically feasible is not necessarily a good on a good excuse. i should
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finish that. but on the surface i understand it's very challenging because, you know, if you think you can prevent crime or if you think you can solve crime by looking at people's data, then the people's data, then on the surface it looks like a very people's data, then on the surfa> my understanding i could be wrong were saying wrong is that they were saying that don't actually have that they don't actually have the technology anyway, the relevant technology anyway, so won't and they so it won't come up and they won't clause 122. won't be subject to clause 122. but the argument was the but then the argument was the clause updated in clause hasn't been updated in its wording though, so they can potentially introduce an accredited notice at accredited technology notice at any then give the any time and then give the government itself government giving itself essentially on essentially permission to spy on your and whatsapp have your messages. and whatsapp have come very strongly said come out very strongly and said that destroy privacy as that it will destroy privacy as we but the argument, we know it. but the argument, i suppose, about suppose, nicholas, is about safety, whether the safety, whether you want the
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online ofcom in online safety bill and ofcom in charge question but charge of that, i. question but what you think? i think this what do you think? i think this is classic case of good is a classic case of good intentions leading to the proverbial or heck, i don't proverbial hell or heck, i don't want to say hell and alienate my american christian fans who will be watching this on youtube, but it's bizarre. as you said, because the government has now said, yeah, when and if the technology will be available to only go after and detect, for example , child, then it will be example, child, then it will be used. okay. but questions have been raised as to how this technology is going to materialise in the first place. and secondly, that controversial clause has not been updated anyway . yeah. okay. well, let's anyway. yeah. okay. well, let's have a look at the times and scientists have grown humanised kidneys in pigs , life saving kidneys in pigs, life saving breakthrough or hideous dystopia. nicholas well, i would go with the former. let's put a positive spin on the on the news in china, in guangzhou institutes of biomedicine and health, they have managed to go
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through this breakthrough for the first time. they are developing kidneys inside . developing kidneys inside. surrogate pigs used being human kidneys, which will potentially in a decade. they have estimated it'd resolve the problem of transplant kidneys, which is one of the most sought after organs. we know in uk, for example, we have over 5000 people in the waiting list. so they've had they have had encouraging results . after four weeks, these results. after four weeks, these kidneys are considering these four weeks are are manned testing, you know, the functions and the shape of the human kidneys . they are 60% made of kidneys. they are 60% made of human cells . and it's good news human cells. and it's good news with that. the only reason i threw that in about the dystopia is this stuff can go too far with they're developing synthetic embryo like structures now. and you think quite disturbing if i was disturbing then again, if i was waiting kidney which waiting for a kidney which apparently 5564 people are in the uk, probably including lewis schaefer, i might be. that's probably a bit over the line.
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i'd quite worried. probably a bit over the line. i'd do quite worried. probably a bit over the line. i'd do think, :e worried. probably a bit over the line. i'd do think, paul?'ied. what do you think, paul? >> difficult to argue >> no, he's difficult to argue that is a bad news story that this is a bad news story because i read this full story and the first thing want to be and the first thing i want to be is about say, is contrarian about it and say, well, know, human. well, you know, 60% is human. i don't if i want a 40% pig don't know if i want a 40% pig kidney inside but you know kidney inside me. but you know what? take it. if was what? i'll take it. if it was all that available and it all that was available and it was going to save my life, well, you're already gammon. you're already 100% gammon. yeah, i am 100, to be honest. i read this and thought more. gammon yes, please. you gammon yes, please. do you remember we used to say terms like, we shouldn't play god? no one ever says that term anymore, do we? >> this is playing it at home. >> this is playing it at home. >> you no one listens. >> you know, no one listens. perhaps our viewers do. perhaps some of our viewers do. but just thought very but i just thought it was very interesting. more no interesting. no more we no more do talk of this term of do we talk of this term of playing god. do we talk of this term of pla yeah.iod. do we talk of this term of pla yeah. so there is concern >> yeah. so there is a concern about that, but it's a bit like neuralink. it's kind neuralink. it's like kind of terrifying way. but terrifying in a way. but it could someone's could also solve someone's blindness. go. all blindness. so there you go. all right, let's do the ai. and a nuclear chief claims the pm is investing in order investing in fusion in order to undo damage brexit. undo the damage from brexit. wouldn't time i've wouldn't be the first time i've seen over brexit. >> paul well, yes, exactly . >> paul well, yes, exactly. >> paul well, yes, exactly. >> laughed at that. >> nicholas laughed at that.
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that's good link i've that's the only good link i've written tonight. he it. written tonight. he got it. >> sorry. thinking of it. >> you're thinking about what you're you'll get you're going to say. you'll get it it at 5 it tonight. you'll get it at 5 am. the repeat. am. on the repeat. >> will be a better than >> it will be a lot better than so uk's £650 million fusion investment and attempt to undo damage nuclear damage from brexit, says nuclear chief, assume voted remain chief, who i assume voted remain because there's other reason because there's no other reason for him to say it. yes, we did leave, i think it was called and i did make a note of it. yes, euratom, euratom, which was essentially the group of the european nations working on this stuff. automatically left stuff. we automatically left that via brexit and now what we're doing is going on our own . now that is a good thing. it's the ukraine and russia war has taught us anything that power and energy sovereignty is very important to survive all there is a you can look i mean, just look at germany, look at france. look, we've actually we've actually escaped a large amount of but this for me of this stuff. but this for me is way of positively taking is a way of positively taking back control . and that's what back control. and that's what brexit aimed to do. yeah >> very briefly, nicholas, what do you think is it a good news
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story that's turned into a bad story that's turned into a bad story because of brexit? what do you it's a good you think? i think it's a good story. can always rejoice in story. we can always rejoice in euratom because euratom is something parallel to the eu. it's eu, although it it's not exactly eu, although it has the eu. but here has links to the eu. but here the investment as even the chief of atomic energy authority of uk atomic energy authority mentions and acknowledges, it will be more efficiently spent because it remains inside the uk rather than being distributed through the euratom mechanism. okay that's it for part two. but coming up, why young people hate work. why diabetes causes depression and why carol vorderman should stop tweeting . vorderman should stop tweeting. see you in a minute. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on gb news is hello . weather on gb news is hello. >> it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office with the gb news forecast. another warm night to come overnight with elevated temperatures for time of temperatures for the time of yean temperatures for the time of year, more hot to come year, more hot sunshine to come then friday. for then into friday. not for everyone. is a fair amount everyone. there is a fair amount of medium and high level cloud around and there are some
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showers drifting north across scotland and northern ireland overnight. most of the rain not reaching the ground. these are relatively high based showers, but could see some flashes of lightning as that clears away. then for most places it's dry with spells, some low with clear spells, some low cloud into the east cloud creeping into the east coast. but wherever you are, it's a warm night, a muggy feel. 18, 19, 20 celsius in the south, mid to high teens in the north. and that sets us off for a warm start to friday. still some of that low cloud and mist around the east coast, but it tends to retreat during the morning to the immediate beaches and there'll be some low cloud creeping around the south western coast as well with the potential for some showers to turn up later here. otherwise, for many, it's bright skies and another hot day mid to high 20s, widely 30 or 31 celsius in the south and south—east. then into saturday, it's another warm start to the day. plenty of sunshine from the word go, especially towards the east and
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the south. a change on the way, though, for the north and northwest, northern and western scotland sees some showers and some cooler air later that spreads the northern half spreads across the northern half of the country on sunday, clearing elsewhere on monday . clearing elsewhere on monday. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> welcome back to headliners. let's get straight into it with the telegraph and young people are less likely to value work compared to older generations. that headline written by my dad, nicholas younger people less likely to value work than older generations. and this is something where british people in general have been have come after basically most nations involved in this survey.
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after basically most nations involved in this survey . only involved in this survey. only only ahead of russia and canada . i must say personally, as a right wing comic, i value work a lot because i don't get a lot of it. so it comes, you know, sporan ically. but the idea is , sporan ically. but the idea is, yes, people were asked, you know , how would you rate work against free time against other values in your life? and the millennials have a new outlook compared to the boomers and the pre war generation . yeah, i was pre war generation. yeah, i was disturbed by this. the uk was the least likely country to say work was very or rather important in life, with important in their life, with 73% saying so just behind russia and canada, as you say. what's up to this? have got up to this? paul have we got complacent? because we're up to this? paul have we got comp advanced because we're up to this? paul have we got comp advanced bewe're we're up to this? paul have we got comp advanced bewe're nowe more advanced and we're now obsessed work life balance obsessed with work life balance ? the cost living? is ? is it the cost of living? is it the economy? people lacking hope? jobs boring? hope? are their jobs boring? what's we're sold a dream >> well, we're sold a dream often social well. often on social media as well. you'll often people. you'll often hear people. what's interesting, you'll often hear, let me the sentence let me finish the sentence again. sake, paul, let me finish the sentence aga argument sake, paul, let me finish the sentence aga argument s nick,'aul, let me finish the sentence aga argument s nick, the the argument myself, nick, the you'll often hear sort of people say that, you know, you can
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achieve all these things work life balance, don't work. you know earn £1 million by the time you're take of you're 28 and take the rest of your life off easy peasy you know you do if you've know you can do that if you've got but my got an onlyfans account. but my onlyfans account doesn't make a lot nick so, and what lot of money. nick so, and what is interesting it's is interesting good though it's high is very high quality content. it is very good i mean , you need good stuff. i mean, you need a little mug like louis, but we're just pointing us to the address. only fans , so. but this is up only fans, so. but this is up until 40. so x , which until early 40. so gen x, which is my generation, was born. i'm 43, myself in 43, so i'm i consider myself in my early 40s. i was born in 79, and now i think people my age, i don't know how old you are, nicholas. >> same age. he looks young and. >> same age. he looks young and. >> and your. you're younger, but too not much younger. nick very young. i don't think that. i think all of us are extremely hard hard work hard working. i value hard work above almost anything else because what rewards it because i know what rewards it bnngs because i know what rewards it brings. yes. and you know, you can't have those rewards without the work. >> you know ridiculous >> do you know what's ridiculous , though, paul? anything that becomes become chore. becomes work can become a chore. like, got podcast now like, i've got my podcast now and i love sometimes i'm like, oh, to come in and host
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oh, i've got to come in and host a tv show. it's like one of the most ever. most privileged positions ever. but i but sometimes i can dread. i shouldn't that shouldn't really announce that on show that on the actual tv show that i'm doing. an doing. no, but it's an interesting insight because we're all doing we enjoy we're all doing things we enjoy to make money, and that is a privilege privilege. to make money, and that is a privibute privilege. to make money, and that is a privibut the privilege. to make money, and that is a privibut the fact privilege. to make money, and that is a privibut the fact that vilege. to make money, and that is a privibut the fact that the je. and but the fact that the philippines, and but the fact that the philippi said work was nigeria said 97% said work was very important shows why they're going crush the future. going to crush us in the future. that's my concern in the macro picture. anyway. let's look at the depression is the male and depression is a direct diabetes . so the male and depression is a direct listening diabetes . so the male and depression is a direct listening tonbetes . so the male and depression is a direct listening to thezs . so the male and depression is a direct listening to the smiths could listening to the smiths actually mess up insulin? actually mess up your insulin? paul question . paul is my question. >> yeah, i like the smiths, actually. humour actually. there's some humour within depression . within that depression. depression direct cause of depression is a direct cause of type 2 diabetes. his research suggests. i mean, i love this research . it's always this. it's research. it's always this. it's always this type of research and studied. i'm not sure it helps anyone, really. this to be fair, i'm a bit worried. i'm going to sort of sail into lewis schaffer waters here because if he was here now, we would have at least a 15 minute diatribe about how this is true. >> it'd be the end of the show. >> it'd be the end of the show. >> it'd be the end of the show. >> it would be the end of the
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show. >> i'm so glad he's not here for so many reasons. so many reasons. >> so many reasons. >> however, is it seems obvious to me. i mean, we know that. we know that. know that being know that. we know that being overweight is inextricably unked overweight is inextricably linked to having type two, type 2 diabetes, and also , if you're 2 diabetes, and also, if you're overweight, you're much more likely to be depressed. it's overweight, you're much more likepart» be depressed. it's overweight, you're much more likepart of; depressed. it's overweight, you're much more likepart of the pressed. it's overweight, you're much more likepart of the same�*d. it's overweight, you're much more likepart of the same venn it's all part of the same venn diagram. really need diagram. and all you really need to to try to prevent some of to do to try to prevent some of it because all about it because it's all about probabilities is eat better and move more . move more. >> yeah, some of it's explained by obesity, which comes from emotional eating, which is like, yeah, vicious circle, but yeah, it's a vicious circle, but also the other argument that the people are depressed because they are dealing with diabetes. and i have a bit more sympathy for it's that way round, and i have a bit more sympathy for have 1at way round, and i have a bit more sympathy for have sympathand, and i have a bit more sympathy for have sympathy either way we'll have sympathy either way round. do you think, round. what do you think, nicholas? was already round. what do you think, nicholtthat was already round. what do you think, nicholtthat depressionlready round. what do you think, nicholtthat depression often' known that depression often leads to obesity , and also leads to obesity, and also people who have obesity are very likely to show depression. but this time they have found some genetic factors which lead to both of them. so hopefully that will maybe give them a better understanding and then it will help them with with finding the
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cure. but also worth remembering that, as andrew tate says, depression doesn't exist. so i just wanted to get myself in trouble right end there. trouble right at the end there. multiple reasons. let's move on then do the guardian with then and do the guardian with the story about eyewatering vet bills i found this one eye bills now i found this one eye wateringly dull, but it's because i don't have a pet. nicholas. i don't either. i have two kids. my wife. two kids. don't tell my wife. i compare them to pets. but she doesn't watch. i didn't. yeah she's watching . the thing is she's not watching. the thing is there is this alarming trend of fewer and fewer private vet practises being available. they have basically shrunk to 45% of all practises in 2021, as opposed to 89% in 2013. almost halved. and this means when you have a lot of chain practises as opposed to independent practises, the prices would be presumably the same. people have fewer options to shop around to get the and of course, it's a very distressing time when your
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pet is ill, you have to rush your pet to the closest practise that you have people. so i have people change attitudes people change their attitudes towards because when i was towards pets because when i was youngen towards pets because when i was younger, paul, was just if younger, paul, it was just if your pet had a medical problem, your pet had a medical problem, you of let it die. i'm you just sort of let it die. i'm sorry just sorry to be bleak. that's just how in north at that how it was in north at that time. but now everyone loves their pets like their children, and a amount and they spend a huge amount of money on them. >> yeah, i'm to pet >> yeah, i'm new to the pet game. really have pets game. really we never have pets growing adopted a cat growing up. we adopted a cat about two years ago a about two years ago from a neighbour away and. about two years ago from a neigibour away and. about two years ago from a neigi can away and. about two years ago from a neigi can understand away and. about two years ago from a neigi can understand every and. about two years ago from a neigi can understand ever since. and i can understand ever since that moment, ever since wilson came nick, i can came into my life, nick, i can understand why people feel so strongly about their pets and perhaps it's time for a pet nhs. nick i mean, they say this is the most socialist thing. i think we're going to hear on the show tonight, but perhaps, perhaps there is time for a pet nhs because pets help a lot nhs because pets do help a lot of a of of people overcome a lot of problems that go back into the human nhs . so perhaps we need to human nhs. so perhaps we need to find a way of. but you're absolutely right. let's just hope it's better run than the actual be actual nhs. that would be depressing if we all turned up
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at trying get our work done. >> yeah, you have go into the >> yeah, you have to go into the vet a&e to get seen. let's just quickly the sun and britain's quickly do the sun and britain's most embarrassing political activist, is activist, carol vorderman, is forced claims against forced to retract claims against greg paul it's incredible greg hands. paul it's incredible this who would have thought carol vorderman forced to retract corruption claims against hands against tory chairman greg hands she had accused him of illegal corruption by supposedly doling out £26 million covid contracts to his mate, in inverted commas i >> -- >> oh, now he's taking legal action and it's forced to her retract 22 tweets just today, i believe. and this story alone is why i've always believed or been a huge advocate for free speech, because we should let people talk.i because we should let people talk. i want to hear what absolutely everybody has to say. and then it can be measured on its own merit as this has been. she's obviously quite she's been she's been pandered and validated for months and months on end. carol vorderman , she's on end. carol vorderman, she's been told, keep going, keep going. you're on the right side
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of history. you're doing the right thing. and all a right thing. and all of a sudden, she's come cropper. sudden, she's come a cropper. yeah. is why we need yeah. and this is why we need free you see free speech, because you can see the what it is. the bigotry for what it is. >> there's a line between >> well, there's a line between free speech and defamation. so she's obviously she's been obviously had a letter solicitor. one letter from a solicitor. one assumes tweeted a assumes she's tweeted a semi—apology a.m, then semi—apology at 5:40 am, then piled tweets piled loads of other tweets after. it. that after. so no one sees it. that was what were saying was what people were saying on twitter, now called. twitter, as it's now called. but nicholas just briefly, i've always carol vorderman nicholas just briefly, i've al'the; carol vorderman nicholas just briefly, i've al'the; cringe'ol vorderman nicholas just briefly, i've al'the; cringe easy rderman is the most cringe easy position. oh, you're against the tories. oh, do you mean like the vast the country vast majority of the country are collapsing tory government? if she out and saying, she was coming out and saying, hey, happened hey, i'm not sure what happened on might be like, on 911, you might be like, that's edgy, edgy that's a bit edgy, edgy from vaudeville. taking the vaudeville. she's taking the easiest political what vaudeville. she's taking the easyou political what vaudeville. she's taking the easyou think? al what vaudeville. she's taking the easyou think? yeah, what vaudeville. she's taking the easyou think? yeah, exactly. ll vaudeville. she's taking the easyou think? yeah, exactly. i do you think? yeah, exactly. i mean, credit to you, greg hands, who gave her a chance to , uh, to who gave her a chance to, uh, to apologise, which she did not take because she didn't apologise . but this take because she didn't apologise. but this is the problem with twitter . you're problem with twitter. you're free to say whatever you want, but risk a fool but you also risk making a fool of yourself . absolutely. as she of yourself. absolutely. as she did there. that it for part did there. that is it for part three. but coming up in the final killing final section, the mass killing that be something that turned out to be something very different. and the world's
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welcome back to headliners. let's do the telegraph and spain is under pressure to remove anti—semitic terms from its dictionary. sounds like the woke pc police gone mad. nicolas >> i'm going to be careful with this one. >> spain under pressure to remove greedy from its definition of jews. we are all going to be careful because we don't to our comedy don't want to burn our comedy careers or any other kind of career. but spanish language authority, which has this spanish royal academy dictionary , it is called spanish royal academy , and they have this academy, and they have this dictionary, which is very important. of course, they have a definition for jew, which important. of course, they have a definition forjew, which is a definition for jew, which is essentially greedy or usurer . essentially greedy or usurer. that's that's a definition. now i don't think that that that that's the only it is not the only definition they have
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different definitions obviously. they mentioned jew means person of jewish faith or a native of judea. of jewish faith or a native of judea . but one of those four judea. but one of those four definitions is greedy or usurer. now this has of course caused an uproar. now i want to draw on my degree in humanities to make good use of it. for once , it got good use of it. for once, it got me to gb news, so i'm not ungrateful, but linguistics. some people say it must be descriptive or prescriptive here. i think a dictionary is essentially describing what this word in one of those four meanings is perceived or used by the spanish speakers. it's not saying, it's not advocating it or it's not advocating it. it's just saying how it might be derogatorily used. exactly the idea, though, is it came from mediaeval renaissance mediaeval and renaissance terminology and that it's obviously has no place. now, what do you think, paul? i don't agree with nicholas on this, on the sense that it just seems so unnecessary . unnecessary. >> we yes , technically, the use >> we yes, technically, the use of the language is as described.
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you can't argue that. but there are things that we there are words that we've used to describe other groups or other people before. i'm glad we don't any more. so it's difficult for me to accept that this needs to be in there. there may be a cultural aspect or nuance that is passing me by, but i'm quite uncomfortable with it. >> by the way, you can mark the words archaic or offensive, words as archaic or offensive, and dictionaries do , and even and dictionaries do, and even this dictionary does, and even if you go to oxford university dictionary, when i was learning english, lot of words were english, a lot of words were marked offensive . marked as archaic or offensive. of course, there are there are disparaging of what paul disparaging most of what paul says. yes but then the question is, okay, version of the is, okay, which version of the dictionary is dictionary we are talking? is it the version? is it for the abridged version? is it for students? is it for speakers of a second language who want to learn spanish? it depends on the kind of dictionary we are talking about. okay, well, that was a sensible discussion was a very sensible discussion of on and do of that. let's move on and do the times. and is it dangerous to dreams? i mean, to manifest your dreams? i mean, i dream here i manifested my dream to be here doing this, but also doing this, but i also accidentally manifested louis schaefer. be
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schaefer. paul, i need to be very your manifest very thorough with your manifest . mean, i obviously >> i mean, i obviously manifested schaefer manifested louis schaefer as well unsuspecting well as my unsuspecting television husband, manifesting your dreams is more likely to leave you bankrupt . now, of leave you bankrupt. now, of course , if you just believe that course, if you just believe that manifesting, dreaming, imagining , asking the for universe something is going to get it for you, nothing at all will come without hard work , absolutely without hard work, absolutely nothing. it's all about application . you must have a application. you must have a positive mindset . you must have positive mindset. you must have a goal. you must have a vision. you must. you must pursue something. and you know, there's nothing wrong with asking the universe for help. universe for a bit of help. however, unless you apply that in some way, if you just sit still, you'll never move forward. you can sit still and dream much as you like, but dream as much as you like, but you won't achieve anything. and perhaps a don't you won't achieve anything. and perhawe've a don't you won't achieve anything. and perhawe've got a don't you won't achieve anything. and perhawe've got a a don't you won't achieve anything. and perhawe've got a generation of think we've got a generation of people. we've got people people. i think we've got people that success very that have seen success come very quickly and easy some and quickly and easy to some and they think that could be me too. yeah.
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>> you've got the secret. yeah. not me too. you like the me too movement, but yeah, you've got like these like the secret. and these people the people appealing to the universe. should be universe. they should be appealing to god. whatever. appealing to god. but whatever. but they. they're so optimistic. they mounting they have things like mounting debt likely to debt and they're more likely to experience sc one point experience bankrupt sc one point higher the manifestation higher on the manifestation scale, one percentage point higher. there more higher. there were 40% more likely experience bankruptcy likely to experience bankruptcy . it's people . see? so it's about people being deluded and silly, being a bit deluded and silly, but give the side , it but to give the other side, it is to visualise, is important to visualise, especially asportspeople. especially if a sportspeople. i was eubank june the 2nd was watching eubank june the 2nd eubank mentioned different eubank mentioned different eubank eubank junior versus eubank mentioned different euba|smith eubank junior versus eubank mentioned different euba|smith the )ank junior versus eubank mentioned different euba|smith the otherunior versus eubank mentioned different euba|smith the otherunior �*andis liam smith the other night and he fight he lost the first fight unexpectedly got destroyed and he said, you what? i was so he said, you know what? i was so complacent fight. complacent in that fight. i didn't the didn't even visualise the victory. people always victory. so sports people always visualise well, not visualise the victory. well, not always, a good idea. so always, but it's a good idea. so he when he he won the second one when he took seriously and visualised took it seriously and visualised what think, nicholas? what do you think, nicholas? well, test well, i didn't manage test or visualise but i had visualise josh howie, but i had him twice in a row next to me. so, know , let's none of us so, you know, let's none of us did that. but the thing is, manifestation or visualisation visualisation has been all the rage since the 80s 90s nlp books
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self coaches. one of the huge books of reference is think and grow rich by napoleon hill and others . tony robbins see it to others. tony robbins see it to believe it. they said believe it to see it. okay, so the idea is and there is some sense to it because the idea is your subconscious cannot tell between the difference and reality. if you think you will win and if you think you will win and if you think you will win and if you think you will lose, you are right. in both cases, we've all heard these slogans and makes heard these slogans and it makes you resilient and gives you you more resilient and gives you more self confidence. it's all very good. the downside very well and good. the downside is when underestimate is when you underestimate underestimate the risks or the timeframe for your money end up in debt and make a dangerous investment . take all your money investment. take all your money investment. take all your money in a dodgy crypto. yeah. all right. we haven't got much more time one. move on time on that one. let's move on and the guardian and police and do. the guardian and police were called out to a mass killing turned out to be killing that turned out to be just class. easy mistake just a yoga class. easy mistake to this is to make. nicholas. this is a funny funny, funny story. funny class, funny, funny story. and this this happened and ad well, this this happened in are you laughing at mass killing in lincolnshire in are you laughing at mass killcarry in lincolnshire in are you laughing at mass killcarry on in lincolnshire in are you laughing at mass killcarry on carryn lincolnshire in are you laughing at mass killcarry on carry on. 1colnshire in are you laughing at mass killcarry on carry on. it)lnshire in are you laughing at mass killcarry on carry on. it was|ire
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for carry on carry on. it was not killing. that's the not a mass killing. that's the key yeah. so key point. the point? yeah. so basically there was this there's this a periodic yoga class called full moon because it happens at night and it is in this premise , i think it this premise, i think it suggested one north sea observatory with big windows and some by well intentioned one has seen a big number of people lying on the ground motionless , lying on the ground motionless, possibly a testament to to the the yoga master or guru , if the yoga master or guru, if that's the word them. a good workout has called the police and for once, the uk police have shown up. they showed for shown up. they showed up for no reason mean mass killing reason. i mean paul mass killing in skegness. it always sounded unlikely. >> it did sound unlikely. just like you say, it didn't happen in north—east scotland. otherwise they definitely wouldn't what's wouldn't have turned up. what's remarkable me is remarkable about this to me is that they didn't take any of the bafic that they didn't take any of the basic steps that 99% of the population would have taken in this situation, like a knocking on the window to see if everyone was okay or, you know, making some inquiry of some kind. and what was the chances, by the way, of everybody getting killed
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and in exactly the and being found in exactly the same in. yeah. that same position in. yeah. that they were holding for three minutes. should minutes. all right. should we very quickly star and the very quickly do the star and the karaoke song that got 12 people killed it? karaoke song that got 12 people killis it? karaoke song that got 12 people killis called it? karaoke song that got 12 people killis called hitler or something? >> paul it's not called i love hitler. we don't get to hitler. we don't we don't get to sing that very often, though, do we? deadliest karaoke we? world's deadliest karaoke song has been seen. 12 people killed for performing it. now i'm going to cut to the chase here. you're all wondering what it is. it's my way . by it's here. you're all wondering what it is. it's my way. by it's a. yeah.i it is. it's my way. by it's a. yeah. i was going. i was going to say sid vicious. try and be funny, right? >> but regrets. i've had a few, including getting shot for singing this song. >> exactly. i mean, the idea that gets that it's the song that gets people is of it's people killed is kind of it's the guns. okay, largely. nicholas, seconds, nicholas, in five seconds, anything b, five seconds. >> sinatra has been or his >> frank sinatra has been or his lyrics accused of lyrics have been accused of toxic masculinity. i did it my way. it's positive way. i think it's a positive message. okay i literally had five mate. five seconds. sorry, mate. that's a . that's the show. let's have a. quick look at friday's front pages. so the times baby deaths cover up investigated by the
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police. the guardian escape police. the guardian have escape of prompts of terror suspects prompts prison cuts row. the eye has fugitive escape fugitive terror suspects escape investigated as possible prison inside job the financial times pensions poised for fresh jump as lock matches wage as triple lock matches wage growth. daily mail warring growth. the daily mail warring brothers still 100 miles apart. the daily star dodi didn't become a ghost, did he? and those very fast front those were your very fast front pages. those were your very fast front pages . that those were your very fast front pages. that is it for tonight's show. thanks to paul and nicholas. tomorrow nicholas. we're back tomorrow at 11. 5 11. and if you're watching at 5 am, tuned for a.m, then stay tuned for breakfast. but now, it's breakfast. but for now, it's good morning. and good night. good morning. and god bless . god bless. >> like things are heating >> looks like things are heating up. boxed boilers are proud sponsors of weather on gb news . sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hello, it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office. with the gb news forecast , another the gb news forecast, another warm night to come. overnight with elevated temperatures for the time of year, more hot sunshine to come then into friday. not for everyone . there friday. not for everyone. there is a fair amount of medium and high level cloud around and there are some showers drifting north across scotland and northern ireland overnight. most
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of the rain not reaching the ground. these are relatively high based showers, but could see flashes of lightning as see some flashes of lightning as that clears away. then for most places it's with clear places it's dry with clear spells. some low cloud creeping into the east coast. but wherever you are , it's a warm wherever you are, it's a warm night, a muggy feel. 18,19, 20 celsius in the south, mid to high teens in the north. and that sets us off for a warm start to friday. still, some of that low cloud and mist around the east coast, but it tends to retreat during the morning to the immediate beaches and there'll be some low cloud creeping around the south western coast as well with the potential for some showers to turn up later here. otherwise for many, it's bright skies and another hot day. mid to high 20 s widely 30 or 31 celsius in the south and south—east. then into saturday it's another warm start to the day. plenty of sunshine from the word go, especially towards the east and the south. a change on the way though , for a change on the way though, for the north and northwest, northern and western scotland.
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see some showers and some cooler northern and western scotland. seelatere showers and some cooler northern and western scotland. seelater that )wers and some cooler northern and western scotland. seelater that spreadsd some cooler northern and western scotland. seelater that spreads across; cooler air later that spreads across the northern half of the country on sunday, clearing on on sunday, clearing elsewhere on monday . monday. >> looks like things are heating up. boxed boilers , proud up. boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on
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has released a personal message , as well as a new photo of his mother to mark the occasion . mother to mark the occasion. >> the manhunt continues. an independent inquiry has been launched into the escape of daniel karloff from wandsworth pnson daniel karloff from wandsworth prison on wednesday. he is still at large. >> the rugby world cup kicks off today as host france face new zealand with england playing
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