tv Neil Oliver - Live GB News September 9, 2023 6:00pm-7:01pm BST
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emissions cuts as a new party led by farmers is getting votes across the netherlands. plus, we'll be looking at why asian hornets are being sighted in the uk and the extent of the threat they pose to humans and to bees . all of that, plus the thoughts of my lovely, thoughtful panellist , of my lovely, thoughtful panellist, kerry dingle. but first, an update on the latest news from an armstrong .
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news from an armstrong. >> it's 6:00. good evening to you. aaron armstrong here in the gb newsroom. new details have emerged of how the escaped terror suspect, daniel califf, was apprehended after four days on the run. the met police say he was pulled from a bicycle by a plainclothes officer on a canal towpath in northolt , west canal towpath in northolt, west london. that's 12 miles from wandsworth prison. the prime minister has praised efforts by the police and the public in finding him and commander dominic murphy, the met's counter—terrorism chief, has echoed those thoughts, praising the for public the information they provided . they provided. >> we've had a significant number of counter—terror detectives working on this and officers and staff from across so15 officers and staff from across $015 here, but also a huge amount of support from the wider metropolitan police who have been utterly dedicated to trying to find daniel and so at the moment, at that moment in time, there were a large number of officers in the south—west london area. all searching for daniel. and i'm pleased say daniel. and i'm pleased to say that's to his capture
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that's what led to his capture this morning. the media and the pubuc this morning. the media and the public paid very, very public have paid a very, very substantial role and that cooperation has been so significant daniel significant in finding daniel and that back and making sure that he's back in custody today. >> shadow justice secretary, though, says the though, shabana mahmood says the conservatives broken the conservatives have broken the prison we've had prison system. well, we've had 13 years of mismanagement of the criminal justice system by the conservative party and the fact that this situation nation was even allowed to happen in the first place is a national embarrassment. >> and so the government does have to urgently get a grip. tell tell us whether the prison estate is secure or and that they can provide reassure lawrence that all other similar suspects who are in our prisons are in the correct category of prison. bearing in mind the offences that are alleged and that that prison estate is secure. >> more than 1000 people have been killed and hundreds more are injured after a powerful earthquake in central morocco. the scale of the damage can be seen in these pictures from amizmiz, a town at the foot of
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the atlas mountains around 40 miles southwest of marrakesh , miles southwest of marrakesh, which was the epicentre of the quake. many of the deaths are understood to have taken place in remote areas . further in these remote areas. further complicating efforts . the complicating rescue efforts. the 6.8 magnitude earthquake is the strongest to hit the north african country in a century. and this resident from casablanca almost 200 miles away, says he couldn't believe what was happening . what was happening. >> the house rocked aggressively. everyone was scared and i was shocked . and i scared and i was shocked. and i didn't understand what was happening . i thought it was only happening. i thought it was only my house that was moving because it's fragile and old. and i heard people screaming . everyone heard people screaming. everyone went out of their homes. the street is full of people and women screaming. that's what's happened. even now , people can't happened. even now, people can't go because they're go back home because they're still of the last still afraid because of the last hit , the first hit. we didn't hit, the first hit. we didn't feel it. people can't go back to their houses they're their houses because they're still because the still afraid because of the second think it's a seven second hit. i think it's a seven magnitude. relatives of ten year old sarah sharif have been detained for questioning by
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police in pakistan . police in pakistan. >> her father, his partner and siblings fled the uk for pakistan after sarah was found dead at her home in woking last month. a post—mortem examination then found she suffered multiple injuries over an extended period of time . rishi sunak says he and of time. rishi sunak says he and india's prime minister narendra modi have a lot of hard work to do before a trade deal can be reached. the prime minister refused to put a deadline on the agreement and has warned that a dealis agreement and has warned that a deal is not a given. during the g20 summit of world leaders in delhi , delegates agreed on delhi, delegates agreed on a joint message with strong language about russia's illegal war in ukraine. on the trade deal war in ukraine. on the trade deal, rishi sunak, though, says the summit can pave the way for opportunities between the countries . countries. >> prime minister modi and i had a very warm and productive discussion on a range of different things with regard to the trade deal. there's a desire on both of our parts to see a successful trade deal concluded . the opportunities are there for countries but there for both countries, but there is a of work that's still
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a lot of hard work that's still to and we need to work to go and we need to work through that as we will do. but i think there's also opportunities to us deepen opportunities for to us deepen our and of our relationship and lots of different and different areas. and he and i talked that as well, talked about that as well, whether in defence whether it's in defence and security , in education research, security, in education research, all sorts of things . all sorts of things. >> and if you've been out and about, you'll no doubt have been enjoying the hot weather. the hottest day of the year so far. it's been 32.7 degrees here in london at heathrow. and it is the sixth day in a row the uk has recorded a temperature of over 30 degrees. so that's what you do. you hit the swimming pool you bring your dogs pool and you bring your dogs with to with you. the heat likely to carry until tomorrow. when? carry on until tomorrow. when? yeah. guessed it. there are yeah. you guessed it. there are thunderstorm warnings in place and that's the case in northern ireland as well. a yellow warning alert there for sunday. agatha christie's grandson has unveiled a life sized statue of the author in oxfordshire . the the author in oxfordshire. the bronze statue of dame agatha is seated on a bench in her home town of wallingford . it's called town of wallingford. it's called a moment. sorry a monument to
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imagination . and it shows the imagination. and it shows the author glancing up from the pages of her book. perhaps finding inspiration for her next novel. this is gb news on tv, on digital radio, and on your smart speaker to just say play gb news. that's it from me. now it's over to . neil it's over to. neil >> thanks, aaron. there's a war on. a war on humanity. a war against the people waged by predators and philanthropists aided by poodles in government and the establishment. the declared aim of the war is to force all of us to accept less. at what point did we abandon the nofion at what point did we abandon the notion of hopes and dreams ? the notion of hopes and dreams? the desirability of abundance of plenty? the message from on high used to be about going forth, being fruitful and multiplying. the more the merrier. we were told the desire was for abundance aukus, including an abundance aukus, including an abundance of people. but not
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anymore . for if you don't hate anymore. for if you don't hate people , then you might see that people, then you might see that more people in the world means more people in the world means more good ideas, more problem solving, potential . and if you solving, potential. and if you combine copper and tin just two elements, you get bronze and a harder edge. if you combine four elements or ten, the potential comes in numbers with more zeros than a person might count. limitless potential . well, it's limitless potential. well, it's the same with people and good ideas, but for a long time the message from above has been that humanity is a mistake by mother earth , that we are a plague. she earth, that we are a plague. she would better without. would do better without. transhumanism is more of the same. the notion that humans is not good enough and hopeless without an upgrade made of merging flesh with technology technology to make more trillions of dollars for the technocrats and philanthropists . transhumanism is eugenics. the conviction that some clever people must take responsibility for ridding the species of perceived flaws and inadequacy as playing god. the original eugenicists spoke and wrote
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about useless mouths. the transhumanists speak and write about useless eaters. what goes around comes around, eh? the anti—human agenda is everywhere, infecting every walk of life. it baffles me that we're supposed to accept those preaching that we should have less, less of everything except cold hunger and poverty demonstrably can't get enough for themselves. of everything. software salesmen . everything. software salesmen. bill gates is one of many who talks about how the future will be a better place if fewer people are alive on the planet. in a world in which infertility is everywhere, in which nation after nation, especially in the west, is failing to produce enough even to maintain enough babies even to maintain populations where children are mutilated into barren sterility gates and co preach the religion of managed extinction. he's hardly alone . in an article in hardly alone. in an article in the guardian in 2009, the late duke of edinburgh, a father of four himself, was quoted saying that in the event that i am reincarnated, i would like to return as a deadly virus to contribute something to solving
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overpopulation. stanley johnson, father of baby daddy boris and of four children in total , of four children in total, predicts a future britain doing splendidly if the island is home to just 10 to 15 million people. bill gates is all about limited aspirations for everyone else. everyone but him and his. and yet he has a fortune and a haul of possessions so great it's impossible to unearth and list the extent of it all. he certainly has a financial worth to be counted in the hundreds of billions of dollars. he's the largest landowner in the united states with holdings in excess of 270,000 acres, while the agenda 21, the humanity hating blueprint for sustainability a world that's shorthand for you, can't have any of that anymore, promotes an end to private home ownership and single occupancy. gates has multiple homes. his principle address is a 66,000 square foot mansion in medina, washington , valued in 2021 at washington, valued in 2021 at $130 million. it's nicknamed
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xanadu, 2.0 and has among a mind boggung xanadu, 2.0 and has among a mind boggling range and opulence a dining room for 200 people. he's no fan of cattle. old bill and has said all the people of the developed nations should switch to meat grown in laboratories for sale by companies he owns. obviously having invested heavily in franken's stine fodden heavily in franken's stine fodder. it's not about saving the planet because the production of this ultra processed material has a heftier carbon footprint , pound for carbon footprint, pound for pound than cattle themselves . as pound than cattle themselves. as bill gates is very upset about how much carbon you and i make while living our little lives . while living our little lives. and yet, as of february this yean and yet, as of february this year, his collection of aircraft numbered six four private jets, a helicopter and a sea plane. he has described private jets as his guilty pleasure for gates and his ilk. we are the problem . while he, in his own mind at least , . while he, in his own mind at least, is . while he, in his own mind at least , is the . while he, in his own mind at least, is the solution . the least, is the solution. the so—called elites of the world economic forum pontificate about how all the control in the world
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ought to be in their hands, the hands of a technocracy. i prefer the ocracy being ruled by the very worst of people while we, on the other hand, should have nothing and be happy when i talk about these stated aims of the wef, i'm dismissed by the main stream and are paid shills as a conspiracy theorist. and yet the avowed intention to increase the elite control of everything is there to be read in their own policy documents. my point remains we are lectured and hectored about the necessity to live smaller, hungrier, colder , live smaller, hungrier, colder, limited lives by those whose lifestyles are an exercise in excess . joe biden's climate tsar excess. joe biden's climate tsar john kerry, who preaches the end of the world, is nigh, has a fortune of hundreds of millions of dollars and owns multiple homes. the family private jet was only sold last year after news broke it had pumped out 325 metric tonnes of carbon during just the first 18 months of his boss's presidency, when democrat al gore ran for us president in
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the year 2000, his worth was listed at $1.7 million. a two decade cause of climate alarmism. later, and he's worth $300 million. his investment firm is valued at $36 billion and pays him $2 million a month in salary alone . the father of in salary alone. the father of four has multiple homes, including a waterfront mansion including a waterfront mansion in montecito , valued at $13 in montecito, valued at $13 million, which seems like quite a punt for a man who predicts the world's oceans are set to rise by ten feet. or perhaps much more all around us are high profile billionaires and multi—millionaires preaching the need for crushing restraint for the proles from the comfort of sunloungers on the decks of super yachts among much else. we need a new, bigger word to replace hypocrisy, which is just not cutting it anymore . this not cutting it anymore. this week, a vast majority of british mps nodded through an energy bill which grants the power of forced entry to private homes to install smart metres kill
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switches, enabling the remote disconnection of homes at the will of the state wastes of skin in westminster waved through legislation . that means that legislation. that means that while the maximum sentence for common assault is six months in jail , failure to install a heat jail, failure to install a heat pump might see you behind bars for a whole year attack and beat a woman in the street and do six months late. a wood burning stove on a cold winter's night and do twice that much porridge in the context of agenda 21, this claim of right to enter private homes smells a lot like letting people know their homes are not their own, just as they'd like us to accept our children are not ours either. that the country has not risen in open revolt at this pernicious evil is frankly beyond me . some commentators beyond me. some commentators refuse to condone the how should i say it? retirement of ulez cameras by citizen soldiers . to cameras by citizen soldiers. to hell with such spinelessness as icheer hell with such spinelessness as i cheer every time i see another one fall, but set all that aside
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in the final analysis , it comes in the final analysis, it comes down to the sanctity of human life. i talk about the attack on humanity as a whole, but it matters more to remember every human life he who saves one life as the talmud has, it saves the world entire war. and so consider the nhs hospital in this country of great britain, joining forces with the court of protection to authorise denial of life saving treatment to a 19 year old girl as the independent catholic news reported , this catholic news reported, this decision, enforced by the court , is condemning her to death with the judge in the case. mrs. justice roberts has set in place reporting restrictions that make it illegal to identify the girl, her family or the hospital. she is known only as st. she's conscious, able to speak and has instructed her own lawyers to argue she should be kept alive and allowed to go to canada for experimental treatment. that would give her a chance of survival. well, at present she's dependent on dialysis and other
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intensive care, functioning intensive care, the functioning of her brain is unaffected, however, and two psychiatrists instructed by the hospital have concluded she's perfectly fit to make decisions about her own treatment. despite this , the treatment. despite this, the hospital has argued that st is actively dying . instead of actively dying. instead of keeping her alive, they want to put st on a palliative care plan denying her dialysis is so she dies of kidney failure within days. the independent catholic news reported. st has told the psychiatrists she disagrees with the doctors and wants them to continue to sustain her life. she wants to be given a chance to participate in clinical trials of nucleoside therapy , trials of nucleoside therapy, she said. she realised that the experimental treatment might fail to save her, but in that case she said she wanted to die trying the nhs . doctors, trying to live the nhs. doctors, however, say sps refusal to trust their judgement and accept her imminent death is delusional . justice roberts agrees with them , dismissing the them, dismissing the psychiatrists opinions and concluding that st is incapable of making decisions for herself
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in relation to her treatment . so in relation to her treatment. so here we are now in a world in which the elite, the political establishment, the judiciary , establishment, the judiciary, the whole lot of them have declared open war on the people of this country and the people as a whole. and one at a time, the girl wants to live. they want her to die. and together, doctors and a judge have made plain they think we are theirs to do with as they please. if we stand by while this wickedness unfolds , i say we are unfolds, i say we are accomplices. before, during and after the fact. there are stains on our souls that won't wash out . i say again, and i'll keep saying while i have breath, this is the era of techno predators and philanthropists. philanthro empaths who cloak evil intent in empty claims of sustainability, diversity , communitarianism, and diversity, communitarianism, and the greater good. i say we are good enough, and even if we weren't, we won't be improved by nana sophistic, myopic elderly ghouls with chronic misanthropy
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. here's the thing in the end , . here's the thing in the end, it's about the life of the one every one of us. what the stakes , what the state seeks to do to the one can happen to any and all of us unless we say no. i grew up in a world that revered resistance to tyranny. the french resistance, the dutch resistance, those and more stood in the face of tyranny in war time. do you resist the tyranny now, or do you wait ? and if so, now, or do you wait? and if so, what are you waiting for. welcome katie. thank you for joining me this evening. welcome katie. thank you for joining me this evening . where joining me this evening. where does the line need to be drawn between what the state can do and who we are ? and who we are? >> i think i'd abolish the line myself because i think who we are and what matters in its entirety. but i think the
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problem we've got i think a lot of you make some really important points, especially about how far modern misanthropy or the neo—malthusian concerns of the overpopulation freaks are, although that's kind of what gone down a little bit since they've had to recognise falling birth rates. but there's no doubt this level of contempt for every man, for all of us as citizens and desire to consequently control us because we're so problematic all the time . and i think you see that time. and i think you see that in the case of this girl, because who does it harm to let her try and live? who does it harm? it doesn't it doesn't harm them. but it's questioning their authority and that they see as problematic . but the problem problematic. but the problem i've got with this is i talk to young people all the time in the film projects and the charity. i run an and the green thinking , run an and the green thinking,
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the misanthropy is so now in the water part of their dna that not so long ago i had a group of 40 or 50 young people. one of them put their hand up and said to me, carrie, why are you so concerned about human beings? and like, i didn't know. and i was like, i didn't know. >> what did you see? >> what did you see? >> i didn't know to where look. i mean, i just said as opposed to what fish, you know, and we then had a big a big discussion and an argument. then had a big a big discussion and an argument . and i said, and an argument. and i said, well, you know , this is what do well, you know, this is what do you make though, you know, the ulez i think the opposition to ulez i think the opposition to ulez let's couch it there is the first sign of people saying enough. >> and if we are backed into a corner from which we have no escape, but direct action, then direct action is no. >> i think, direct action. and i believe in direct democracy is absolutely the way we've got to go. i don't think we've got any choice in the matter, and we
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need much more direct democracy to have more control, actually to have more control, actually to even survive the cold, the poverty, the cost of living crisis and all the things and the austerity that's being thrown at us. we don't have any choice in that matter. but the problem is, if we accept the underlying premise and if a younger generation who think we're just winging diesel drivers, yeah , then we have drivers, yeah, then we have a problem . problem. >> i have to say, i have to say ispeak >> i have to say, i have to say i speak to, you know, my kids are of that age and i speak to them and i speak to their cohort. and in my experience , cohort. and in my experience, their cohort sees this the way i see it. and they see the green agenda and they see the trans agenda and they see the trans agenda and they see the trans agenda and they see so much of it as nonsense of which they want no part, which which gives me some reassurance. i'm going to have to go to a break at the moment, but we'll pick this up after the break. i'll be talking to dr. john campbell on human trafficking in the wake of sound of freedom.
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radio . welcome back to radio. welcome back to neil oliver live >> i spoke at the top of the show about the war on humanity on the individual, among the uncounted casualties of the war are children, unknown numbers of them. as it turns out, the new movie sound of freedom tells the story of one man's efforts to save children from being trafficked for sex and other purposes dismissed and ridiculed in the us when it opened in cinemas as more conspiracy crankery it undeniably and irrefutably depicts reality. my first guest tonight is dr. john campbell , familiar to millions campbell, familiar to millions on the internet who has this week turned his attention to statistics that should horrify and shame every last one of us. hi john. how are you ? hi john. how are you? >> good, neil. thank you. good to be back on again. and i'm really sorry we have to be discussing this in the 21st century. it really is an indictment on everyone and on
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humanity that this needs to be discussed and needs to be brought to the surface. >> can you give a sense of the scale? john, that's really when i listened to your 20 minutes or so of commentary. it was the cold reading of statistics . it's cold reading of statistics. it's undeniable from from official world bodies . can you give us world bodies. can you give us the scale ? the scale? >> yeah. it's the only way i can get through it, neal. just keeping it as cognitive as possible. so this is from the united nations data at the moment, 50 million human beings are in slavery and forced marriage as we speak. 50 million people. that's one in every 150 people. that's one in every 150 people in the world is currently in some form of modern day slavery . over 12 million of slavery. over 12 million of these, neil, are children are these, neil, are children are the most common purpose for this imprisonment. incarceration is sexual exploitation . not the sexual exploitation. not the only purpose. there's also forced labour and there's also organ harvesting . but sexual organ harvesting. but sexual exploitation is the main one.
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6.3 million people in situations of forced commercial exploitation on any given day . exploitation on any given day. so today, 6.3 million men, women and children, often even babies, have been subject to forced commercial exploitation . um, and commercial exploitation. um, and the numbers are even higher than that because that data is a little out of date. and this number definitely includes 1.7 million children in commercial sexual exploitation from the united nations. now i've checked with statistics, neil and the encyclop pedia botanica, the transatlantic slave trade went on from 1501 to 1866, and this despicable evil trade trafficked 12.5 million human beings to the barbary slave trade, where people were kidnapped and taken to the barbary states from european countries, from 1500 to 1750 , at 1.25 million people. so 1750, at 1.25 million people. so this previous problems with with
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slavery over 50 million people now. and it's growing exponentially. this is one of the world's biggest problems in terms of organised crime. this is second only to drug trafficking and drug exploitation and drug use. >> katie , when you listen to >> katie, when you listen to this , when you listen to figures this, when you listen to figures like that , what what's your gut like that, what what's your gut feel ? ang? feel? ang? >> well , two things. >> well, two things. >> well, two things. >> first of all, i really appreciate what doctor has done in terms of going through all the authoritative reports , and i the authoritative reports, and i really respect that. but i am also i have a scepticism and i don't know that it's just about the figures because there are these lurid horrors. there is no question about it in terms of trafficking , sexploitation . we trafficking, sexploitation. we know that in terms of ification of children, but but there is something about relativising slavery . i something about relativising slavery. i have something about relativising slavery . i have a something about relativising slavery. i have a problem. something about relativising slavery . i have a problem. there slavery. i have a problem. there is already , i think, 99.9% of
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is already, i think, 99.9% of people will find this disgusting. so i don't think there is a mass, but that doesn't stop it. no, that doesn't. sitting back and saying i'm disgusted by it does not obviate the fact that more people are enslaved now than were during the 18th and 19th centuries to it . and the only centuries to it. and the only way these figures can then be promoted or added up so huge is by saying that it's largely invisible because otherwise we'd see it. and i think we would do something and we do do something. and there is a swathe of laws making it all criminal, but an actual slavery. let's not forget that the atlantic slave trade was legal ownership of other people as animals. >> yes, chattel slaves, not legal chattel slavery is a is a separate entity . separate entity. >> it is. john. this the there that kerry is sounding is to me is part of what troubles me as though because it's not about
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ownership . it's not as bad. and ownership. it's not as bad. and yet and yet you're talking about millions of people . and children millions of people. and children and babies being used on a or not. and this distinction between chattel slavery and the sexual and commercial exploitation of people, i find that i think that's the problem is that is that why it falls into a void of being ignored ? into a void of being ignored? >> i think whether these people are legally owned or not illegally owned doesn't change their status. we have adults and children, men and women who are being forced to work in unsafe situations in mines , in farms situations in mines, in farms that are exposed to toxins. they're exposed to heat. they're exposed to cold. we have people who are exploited for their organs. they're moved across borders . there's organised organ borders. there's organised organ removal , all borders. there's organised organ removal, all organised by criminal networks and some state actors along the way. and
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they're also in situations of daily rape. it's estimated that for children that are in sexual exploitation and sexual slavery, they're expected to or they on average there have been estimated to service 1500 clients per year. and we're talking about brutal rape here. now, if you talk to a child who's been brutally raped, neil, i don't think he really cares whether he's owned or not. the point is he's being brutally raped and there's nothing he can do about it. it's completely subjugated. it's completely incarcerated. it's completely imprisoned. there's some imprisoned. whether there's some legal not to know. >> but i'm not nobody would dispute that. the horror of it and the reality of people living degraded exploit , covid degraded exploit, covid dominated cruel lives that that's indisputable. the reason i'm saying why do we need to call it slavery? and let's be careful about the numbers is because i don't think we are facing a great human
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deprivation, a depraved humanity . the numbers are being bestial , the numbers are huge. >> the numbers are . >> the numbers are. >> the numbers are. >> that's why i'm saying let's think about this. is it really the case s that in britain, for example , we have this great example, we have this great depraved humanity doing bestial criminal acts to children ? in criminal acts to children? in the main, no, i don't think we are. they are isolate , rare and are. they are isolate, rare and appalling and that's why tim ballard and his film is good because he doesn't he does sometimes in interviews, kind of go off on one about the figures. but he got off his bum and dealt with real cases. >> but john, why why don't we hear about this ? you know, i'm hear about this? you know, i'm heanng hear about this? you know, i'm hearing what kerry's saying, but why is this not across the news papers, across the television channels as however you want to characterise it, whether you want to call it slavery or not. this abuse, i mean, the fact that i mean, you can't just rip out a heart or a kidney or a liver implicates professional
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medics in the in the removal of these organs . you know, the these organs. you know, the industrialised specialised scale of this. why isn't it everywhere ? why are we not talking about it? it's a it's a really good question. >> and it really makes you wonder about vested interests, the state actors. there's organised crime people are intimidated by organised crime . intimidated by organised crime. but these numbers, neal, are real. i've been digging into them in quite some detail. the united nations statistic , united nations statistic, encyclopaedia britannica , world encyclopaedia britannica, world council for health department of homeland security. american bar association. national centre for exploited and missing children . exploited and missing children. canadian centre for child protection . national institutes protection. national institutes of justice . united nations of justice. united nations office in vienna . european. office in vienna. european. european parliament. these are not magicked up numbers. these are genuine statistics that have been done by international agencies that are that are supervising these things. i
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think, you know, neal, a big point, a big part of the answer to your question is people just can't believe of how horrendous this is. now, i've i've seen on the edge of this in various asian countries in various african countries , it is real. i african countries, it is real. i have seen it in the united kingdom. it's not always obvious, but it's certainly there . the fact that this is so there. the fact that this is so horrendous , so disgusting, so, horrendous, so disgusting, so, so vile, so depraved is ordinary people like you and me and your guests and most of your viewers can't can't imagine the level of depravity that's involved here. but it is real ordinary , decent but it is real ordinary, decent people just can't imagine that people just can't imagine that people could be so vile to children and enslaved people in the modern era. it's just beyond common dimension. >> so that does mean, though, when we do see it and when we do hear about it, we act. and that's what sound of freedom is about. people who did something . and i watched the film last night and but so i see the thing is, i don't think it's that we
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can't imagine it. we watch gruesome movies all the time and we see all sorts of horror . we see all sorts of horror. sandra freedom is good because it doesn't do all that. it's not voyeuristic. it just says, here's the horror of it. it's real. it's happening. so when you do see it like he did, it's yeah , i know what you're saying. yeah, i know what you're saying. >> i've got to get to a break and i have to thank forjohn and i have to thank for john bringing this, you know, for bringing this, you know, for bringing these cold facts to light. but to me, it's the fact that when that film that you're praising launched in the us, it was crankery. the was treated as crankery. the first response of the of the of the critics was to say this is crankery this is conspiracy theory. and there's something pernicious about the fact that thatis pernicious about the fact that that is the automatic response to this kind of horror. but but, john, thank you so much. thank you so much for bringing that to light. >> ofsted you may choose to look the other way, but you can never again say that you did not know anyone listening to this program now knows i have presented the
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facts. them . facts. act on them. >> thank you. >> exactly. john, thank you. we'll speak again. have to get to a break. after that, we'll be looking at a new party, amongst other things, led by farmers getting votes across the netherlands. whole wide scheme netherlands. a whole wide scheme of pushback against the state. but first, it's the weather . but first, it's the weather. >> looks like things are heating up , up boxt boilers proud up, up boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on gb news is good evening. >> my name is rachel ayers and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast brought to you by the met office. so it's been another very warm or hot day, especially across the southeast today. and that's because we've still got a bit of a southerly component to our winds bringing in that warm to hot air across us from the continent. showers as we've seen through today, will slowly ease as we go through tonight . but another through tonight. but another area of heavy showers and thunderstorms will start to push northeastwards from the southwest. so if you are in the
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southwest. so if you are in the southwest tonight, you might be woken up by the odd thunderstorm. and this is all dunng thunderstorm. and this is all during another warm and humid night. so as we go into the start of sunday, those showers will slowly make their way northeast outwards into wales. the midlands , northern england, the midlands, northern england, northern ireland and later into southern scotland. and these showers could band together, bringing some heavy rain and thunderstorms as well as the risk of some hail and some strong, gusty winds . but it will strong, gusty winds. but it will be another very warm day, especially in the southeast with highs of 30 to now to start the new working week. plenty of low cloud mist and fog in the north and west to start with, some showers breaking out later, but this rain erratically making its way south eastwards , marking a way south eastwards, marking a change to something slightly cooler as we go into next week where it will feel quite changeable and autumnal with those temperatures closer to average . looks like things are average. looks like things are heating up .
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radio. >> welcome back. once more to neil oliver live. our rights and freedom are being stolen from under our noses by an unholy alliance of corrupt mps and transnational corporations. this week , an overwhelming and week, an overwhelming and utterly, utterly sickening majority of mps in the uk nodded through legislation that gives the state the right to kick down your doors in pursuit of fulfilment of the suicide note. thatis fulfilment of the suicide note. that is zero. they are in that is net zero. they are in plain type is the determination to jail those who would light a stove to warm their children for twice as long as a thug who attacks a woman in the street. are you not into attained? joining me to discuss the emergent situation here and elsewhere is academic and thinker ralph schollhammer. ralph thank you for joining me. >> great to be back.
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>> great to be back. >> great to see you there . you >> great to see you there. you know, we're talking about the moves that people are making the farmers party in the netherlands to push back against authoritarianism and the land grab. i'm particularly interested, though, what i consider an abomination by british mps this week. i understand something similar has been unfolding for example, in germany when it comes to this application of control over people's lives . people's lives. >> would you allow me to connect our conversation a little bit to the conversation that you had with john before? because i think this is such an important point. everything he was saying and should look at this more and we should look at this more happens poor happens mostly in energy poor societies . we tend to forget societies. we tend to forget this. energy is the great liberator. it's often forgotten, but the steam engine was the thing that drove the final nail through slavery. and if we pursue a path, as we do in europe , from great britain to europe, from great britain to continental europe, that will lead to energy poverty , it will lead to energy poverty, it will be followed by a reduction in
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liberty . and as you just said, liberty. and as you just said, they will use fancy terms. they will not call it rationing. they will not call it rationing. they will call it de—man land management. they will call it , management. they will call it, you know, shifting it to the peak. they will all be these fancy terms. but ultimately, we have ventured onto a path of energy, poverty and at the end of this path can only be in the worst case, misery or revolution . and i think politicians need to become aware of this. qatar d thatis to become aware of this. qatar d that is that is fascinating , that is that is fascinating, isn't it? >> that it's energy that has elevated the human species to where we have been for a relatively brief moment in time. and if we lose that access to energy, we'll be back where we were , which opens the door to were, which opens the door to abuse. >> i think i think that's absolutely true. and i think a lot of ralph's writing on the absolute horrific way in which modernity and civilisation and industrialisation all the things that have made life good and
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that have made life good and that have made life good and that have keep now keep us alive longer than ever, have been vilified. and it is quite terrifying. but i wonder on what you've some of your theses ralph and i'm excited by the pushback back in holland with the citizens is it called the citizens farmers movement right. led by farmers and citizens movement. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> yeah , yeah. farmer citizen >> yeah, yeah. farmer citizen movement, yeah . and i'm saddened movement, yeah. and i'm saddened by the lack of a kind of pushback in ireland, but i'm wondering, do we actually need to go further in the sense that arguing for a pushback against this kind of green austerity and impoverishment that we face and anti—humanism that we face, this is one thing that the eu green new deal ulez the bill this week and kicking people's doors in to turn off a boiler and lunatic stuff . but do we need to go stuff. but do we need to go further in questioning the
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underlying premise that climate change is a massive problem? now i'm not a climate change denier. i'm not a climate change denier. i do think there's an anthropogenic effect, a manmade effect, very likely real, not a problem with that. but how big is it really a problem? aren't we better off developing thing and going ahead with adaptation and going ahead with adaptation and modernity and question izing the very underlying problem that all this crap is being over to you, ralph, over to you, ralph. >> don't we need more energy regardless of what's happening and who's to blame? we need more energy and not less. >> the thing with is the climate crisis will be solved by ingenuity, by technology , by, ingenuity, by technology, by, you know, by the human spirit, if you want. but in order for that to unfold, we need energy. i think this idea and this is where the quasi religious component comes in, we think if we get poor here, then the climate problem will solve itself. but why? first of all, there if europe poor,
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there is if europe gets poor, nobody in the world is better off. it only means that africa will have nobody trade with will have nobody to trade with and will remain which and they will remain poor, which is something that they most likely want to be and likely won't want to be so and the second is it's so the second part is it's not so much the pushback against the agenda. also think need agenda. we also think need a positive message and we know we have technology for have the technology means, for example, guarantee to every example, to guarantee to every british citizens that their energy bill per month might be slightly higher than their phone bill or the internet bill. and still we reduce co2 still we could reduce co2 emissions if we do nuclear in some other of these of these very promising things. >> is this the reality , >> ralph, is this the reality, though, attitude , as though, this this attitude, as evidenced by the mps in the british parliament, is this the reality of the public private partnership . stakeholder partnership. stakeholder capitalism, where the decision making is taken out of our hands and becomes an unholy alliance between politicians and their corporate masters ? corporate masters? >> oh, absolutely . i mean, i >> oh, absolutely. i mean, i think that the corporate masters i always think that corporations simply go where they think the
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market is, right? we saw this a little bit in different area little bit in a different area with budweiser and dylan mulvaney when all of a sudden the white class beer the white working class beer brand thinks they brand thinks that they need a transgender in order to transgender person in order to promote their brand, and it completely backfire. but think completely backfire. but i think we need kind free we need to kind of free ourselves the grip of these ourselves from the grip of these anti—humanist pessimistic neo—malthusians who think that ultimately the only solution is fewer and fewer people . my big fewer and fewer people. my big thing is, and this is why i love so much, to talk to the two of you and to your audience. when push came to shove, the british people usually stood on the right side of history. and i expect them to do this again and kind of do this was, i think, what many people were hoping for from that it will be a from brexit, that it will be a real alignment reality. we real alignment with reality. we do not to be poor to solve do not have to be poor to solve the crisis. we do not the energy crisis. we do not have to get poor to solve the climate crisis. yes, can do climate crisis. yes, we can do all it at once. it takes some all of it at once. it takes some optimism, but i can tell you if you talk from people with people from the industry, they will tell same thing. but tell you the same thing. but then do other things just
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then we do other things just real permitting real quick, we make permitting processes, take forever, right? we they choke processes, take forever, right? we the they choke processes, take forever, right? we the that they choke processes, take forever, right? we the that could :hoke processes, take forever, right? we the that could do. e off the things that we could do. so we kind of shoot ourselves in our then we complain our foot and then we complain about limp. and this is not about a limp. and this is not running of i'm running out running out of i'm running out of but i'm absolutely of time, but i'm absolutely loving will the loving and will take away the idea realignment with idea of a realignment with reality and i will hope that you will stand alongside us as we realign with reality. will stand alongside us as we reaithankth reality. will stand alongside us as we reaithankth refory. me this >> thank you for joining me this evening . break again after evening. break again after which. asian hornets who which. well, asian hornets who knew they are cited in the uk and they pose a threat to humans and they pose a threat to humans and to honeybees. and i do like and to honeybees. and i do like a honeybee and
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we welcome back once again. goodness me. it goes quickly this hour between six and seven. now as if i were bee population didn't have enough to worry about, what with pesticides and the rest. now there's a new sheriff in town apparently asian hornets out of the east have spread across europe and now
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into britain. beehives are being wiped out in their entirety and there is too, a threat to human life. joining me now to assess the threat is mark white, dorset, asian hornet coordinator. that's a job title to contemplate . to contemplate. >> it is indeed. to contemplate. >> it is indeed . it's a bit of >> it is indeed. it's a bit of a bit of a mouthful as well. >> what exactly are we dealing with? what is an asian hornet? what does it look like? how big is it ? is it? >> it's roughly me, a little bit smaller than a £2 coin. it's actually smaller than our nato european hornet . um, but it's european hornet. um, but it's tendencies to predator are nafive tendencies to predator are native insects, not just bees , native insects, not just bees, but any native flying species is the most concern to us at the moment . moment. >> why is it if it's if it's not as big and maybe not as not as ferocious, why is it why is it penetrating bee defences in ways that existing problems don't based ?
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based? >> basically it's got no known predators here in the uk and in mainland europe, so it's progress across europe since 2004 has just been basically unstopped by any , any local or unstopped by any, any local or any insects that come across it. they just simply have not come across this type of insect before and they don't know how to tackle it. >> does it predate does the hornet predate upon bees because what do they eat bees do they eat honey? what are they going after? the bees for ? after? the bees for? >> mainly after the proteins that the bees have. so bees are only about 35% of the asian hornets diet, but it is easy pickings for the bees . so the pickings for the bees. so the hornets will basically hawk outside, as you can see now outside, as you can see now outside of a beehive. and they'll wait for any returning bees or bees departing from the nest. and basically they'll catch the bees mid—flight , catch the bees mid—flight, decapitate its body. cut its head off. scroll up the remains
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of the body, and basically take that back. the proteins they're getting back to its heartbeat . getting back to its heartbeat. >> wow. and i see as well that there's a threat to human life. is being stung by an asian hornet . a problem for children, hornet. a problem for children, perhaps ? perhaps? >> potentially it all depends on the individual being stung. we all have different tendencies to react to. venoms so a hornet venom is actually different to a wasp or a bee venom. it's different, different chemical makeup. so . it does very much makeup. so. it does very much depend on the individual and their ability to cope with with venom, basically . but a nest venom, basically. but a nest located these nests can be located these nests can be located anywhere at and we can see in jersey where they're now located, their nests in bramble , which is a bit of a concern when we have people who are going bramble picking, they're going bramble picking, they're going to pick the blackberries and they don't know that a nest is in amongst the bramble. they
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accidentally disturb it and then next minute they're confronted with several angry warnings. >> kerry it seems we never have to wait too long before there's the of another migrant the arrival of another migrant species as to be, you know , to species as to be, you know, to be alarmed about are you are you frightened? >> no, i'm not frightened. i'd just like to know why and what your man thinks about why can't we wipe them out? i mean , i see. we wipe them out? i mean, i see. i don't i don't have a problem with pesticides. i think stopping ddt was a huge mistake back in the millions who've subsequently died from malaria unnecessarily . unnecessarily. >> do you think plants have a place ? place? >> you'll be asking me what matters more humanity or fish next? and i know what you think . i know hornets might have a place where they come from and maybe they're useful in some bio diverse ecosystem , but in diverse ecosystem, but in general, if they're invading , general, if they're invading, stinging, killing bees, being a pain, why not destroy them ? pain, why not destroy them? >> mark, what is the plan? you know, what is being done in the face of this pressure in our ecosystem of something strange?
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so we've tried to learn from how they've been introduced in france accidentally in 2004, see how they've suddenly i've got i've got to have you go, mark, i've got to have you go, mark, i've run out of time this evening. thank you for watching. thank you, kerry. back same time next up, father next week. next up, father calvin robinson. that's all calvin robinson. and that's all there to it. that warm there is to it. that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> good evening. my name is rachel ayers and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast brought to you by the met office. so it's been another very warm or hot day, especially across the southeast today. and that's because we've still got a bit of a southerly component to our winds bringing that warm to hot air across us from the continent. showers we've seen through today will slowly ease as we go through tonight . but as we go through tonight. but another area of heavy showers and thunderstorms will start to push northeastwards from the
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southwest. so if you are in the southwest. so if you are in the southwest tonight, you might be woken up by the odd thunderstorm and this is all during another warm and humid night. so as we go into the start of sunday, those showers will slowly make their way north eastwards into wales , the midlands, northern wales, the midlands, northern england , northern ireland and england, northern ireland and later into to southern scotland. and these showers could band together, bringing some heavy rain and thunderstorms as well as the risk of some hail and some strong gusty winds. but it will be another very warm day, especially in the southeast with highs of 32 now to start the new working week. plenty of low cloud mist and fog in the north and west to start with, some showers breaking out later, but this rain erratically making its way south eastwards, marking a change to something slightly cooler as we go into next week where it will feel quite changeable and autumnal with those temperatures closer to average . average. >> so that warm feeling inside
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gb news. >> hello and welcome . >> hello and welcome. >> hello and welcome. >> this is calvin's sense crusade . with me, the reverend crusade. with me, the reverend kelvin robinson on your tv onune kelvin robinson on your tv online and on your wireless today. we will be talking to laura dodsworth about her must read book, free your mind . read book, free your mind. should churches be used as community hubs or should it be kept as a religious place? and we'll be getting our panellists to take that on later. also, the co—director of march for life will join us to tell us about the importance of freedom of life and defending those who don't have a voice. and in the duel don't have a voice. and in the duel, panellists will duel, my panellists will be discussing the future of the critically teenagerfighting critically ill teenager fighting the in court over plans to the nhs in court over plans to stop more treatment at and proceed instead with end of life care. emma, what do you make of that? in short, i think this is
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