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tv   Headliners  GB News  October 12, 2023 5:00am-6:01am BST

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president of the behalf of the president of the united states and on behalf of the american people, and that is that the united states has israel's back. >> have back the >> we have the back of the israeli people. we have their back today. we'll have it tomorrow. have every tomorrow. we will have it every day . day. >> and here in the uk, the metropolitan police has appealed for or images of last for footage or images of last weekend's attack on israel. the forces counter terrorism unit is appealing for anyone in the uk who has direct evidence related to the terrorist attacks there. and that's after the foreign secretary who's in israel , was secretary who's in israel, was forced to run for cover when a siren sounded when he was on a visit. today. the video was posted on social media by the israeli foreign ministry . the israeli foreign ministry. the government said. james cleverly's visit to israel is a sign of the uk's unwavering support for the country . let's support for the country. let's show you live pictures of gaza tonight, where the only power station stopped working hours ago. and generators are thought to be the only source of electricity accounting for that pool of light in the centre of your shot. if you're watching on
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television . well, to end, television. well, to that end, un chief antonio guterres has appealed for humanitarian corridor to be forged into gaza , saying crucial life saving supplies, including power supplies, including power supplies, medicines, food and water must be allowed in. and the news reaching us tonight that a 22 year old irish israeli citizen has been confirmed dead after the hamas attacks in israel. kim dante had been attending a music festival near the gaza border when the surprise attack by hamas was carried out on saturday. and earlier, a 26 year old british man who was also at the festival working as a security guard was confirmed dead. jake marlowe, who'd been missing since the raid on the supernova festival, died trying to save his friends. his mother, lisa, wrote on facebook. she and her family were heartbroken after hearing the crushing . news now, in other the crushing. news now, in other news today , the shadow health news today, the shadow health secretary says labour would turn
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the nhs on its head if it got into power . wes streeting argued into power. wes streeting argued that reform is more important than pouring money into a health system that isn't working . he system that isn't working. he warned the nhs faces bankruptcy unless it's overhauled and he set out plans to shift its focus from hospitals to providing more care in the community. >> he, a labour government, will take immediate action to cut waiting lists . we will provide waiting lists. we will provide an extra £1.1 billion to help the nhs beat the backlog with extra clinics at evenings and weekends, providing 2 million more appointments each year. faster treatment for patients, extra pay for staff. the first steps to cut the waiting list and beat the tory backlog . and beat the tory backlog. >> taoiseach wes streeting. speaking there earlier on today. now a dorset councillor has lost a high court fight with the home secretary over the housing of asylum seekers on the bibby stockholm barge in portland. mayor carolyn parks wanted to
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challenge the lawfulness of the use of the barge in portland port, saying the home office should have got planning permission to site it there and use it there. the vessel has been vacant since legionella bacteria were detected on board back in august, but the home office says the barge is now safe for asylum seekers to return . us gb news across the uk return. us gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> thank you, polly. hello and welcome to headliners. your first look at tomorrow's papers with three comedians. i'm one of them. i'm leo kyrees and i'm joined and lewis joined by paul cox and lewis schaffer. cox and schaffer. it sounds like a german film, a bit of a taxi driver in 1997. >> you boys doing all right?
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>> you boys doing all right? >> how are you doing ? don't >> how are you doing? don't mention the germans. oh of course. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i think i got away with it, though. >> anyway, let's have a look at those front pages. the daily mail has. king calls them mail has. the king calls them terrorists. why the bbc? terrorists. why can't the bbc? the telegraph leads with royals condemn hamas attacks as terrorist ism. the times has israel , the coalition ready to israel, the coalition ready to invade. israel, the coalition ready to invade . the israel, the coalition ready to invade. the guardian has israel, the coalition ready to invade . the guardian has israeli invade. the guardian has israeli suspended between fear, grief and foreboding. the express leads with outrage over order not to jail rapists as prisons are full, the daily star has boff reveals something we don't understand, but sounds 100% legit and also a little bit frightening. the matrix may be real. andrew tate was right and those were front pages . those were front pages. anneliese of a closer look at those front pages, starting with the daily mail poll. >> yes , the daily mail. leo so >> yes, the daily mail. leo so excuse me . the king calls them
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excuse me. the king calls them terrorists . why can't the bbc terrorists. why can't the bbc says the daily mail. so. king charles last night condemned the barbaric acts of terrorism whilst his son, prince william, also suggested that they were the horrors inflicted by hamas terror wrists. yet the bbc leo, still continue to call them militants tomorrow, money that makes the bbc cowards absolute cowards. militants lead unions, terrorists slaughter babies . terrorists slaughter babies. yeah.i terrorists slaughter babies. yeah. i mean, i can't say any more than that. >> it seems an open and shut case that they're terrorists. i mean, they're causing terror amongst population amongst the civilian population using the most despicable tactics , murdering children and tactics, murdering children and targeting deliberately targeting children as well. it's not accidental deaths. i mean, why do you think the bbc is doing this? why is it. >> well, don't think the bbc >> well, i don't think the bbc is . the bbc is wrong. the bbc is. >> not that they're making >> it's not that they're making a mistake. >> it's what side the bbc is, is on. >> on. >> the bbc is on the side of is
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on team world and team world supports the destruction of the state of israel and the team world has to has to be in favour of all the i mean you talk about team world all the western nafions team world all the western nations have come out in support of israel condemned of israel and condemned the condemned the attacks and the invasion. >> that's that's because >> yeah, that's that's because the what what the what it is this is there's like two currents running at the same time is the state of israel is the last ethno state. one language, one people, one nation. and it was the last sort of and breadth of european colonialism and it was founded by america in 1920s of the idea of every every language, every people have their own state. and now they don't believe that . but now they don't believe that. but so the vestigial belief system . so the vestigial belief system. >> so now the belief in the west is that we should all be multicultural everywhere should be a melting pot, although we've seen that can backfire . seen that that can backfire. we've had the differences in our cultures, within our borders , cultures, within our borders,
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shown by by conflicts between pro—israeli protesters and pro palestinian protesters. >> you're always going to have i mean , obviously, this is the mean, obviously, this is the most contentious issue of my of my life right now . and, you my life right now. and, you know, you're arguing two different points, which is maybe i brought the point up, which is multicultural ism. but the fact is, is the bbc is a tool of the of team world. it's a tool of open borders. it's a tool of multiculturalism . it's a tool of multiculturalism. it's a tool of you should not have a nation state and israel, even if israel wasn't wasn't a jewish state, the arab population which surrounds israel would want to get rid of the state of israel if it was all filled with engush if it was all filled with english people or germans or any other group of people, they would still be furious would still be just as furious and just as angry. >> paul, do you agree with louis? do you think it's the bbc is just mouthpiece of the sort is just a mouthpiece of the sort of ideology, blob that of woke ideology, the blob that runs everything and forces its ideology on us or excuse me,
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this this is an ongoing thing. the bbc has repeatedly come out this this is an ongoing thing. the said has repeatedly come out this this is an ongoing thing. the said that, epeatedly come out this this is an ongoing thing. the said that, you tedly come out this this is an ongoing thing. the said that, you know, :ome out this this is an ongoing thing. the said that, you know, takinth and said that, you know, taking taking the side of the palestine liens and attacked israel sometimes. i mean, just recently a bbc reporter said, you know, accused israel of being happy to kill children , which is a very kill children, which is a very loaded phrase to use an inflammatory phrase, to use . inflammatory phrase, to use. >> i think the bbc have got this incredibly wrong . there's i incredibly wrong. there's i mean, there's no nuance to this. you have to take this situation in isolation. i said this yesterday, not you have to take the weekend's actions by hamas who are terrorists in isolation for what it is at this time , for what it is at this time, irrespective of the context we have to if that had been israel, i would have done exactly the same thing. but palestine or same thing. but the palestine or hamas, who maybe, maybe we shouldn't paint all the palestinians with a hamas brush. however, they are terrorists. i mean, they did vote for them . mean, they did vote for them. they did vote. they did vote for them. but you know, not everyone
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would call themselves a tory in this thing this country. but one thing i would the bbc have got it would say is the bbc have got it terribly , terribly wrong. and at terribly, terribly wrong. and at some point they're going to have to own up to that mistake. can i reiterate thought? reiterate my thought? >> haven't gotten it >> they haven't gotten it terribly is what terribly wrong. this is what they believe. they they actually believe. they actually believe that it doesn't matter what you know, what they do for the sake of. >> so from their point of view, they've got it right and we should fall into line behind should all fall into line behind the let's see if we the bbc. well, let's see if we will or we won't. the bbc. well, let's see if we will or we won't . lewis what's will or we won't. lewis what's on the front cover daily express? >> well, paul king condemns barbaric terrorism and lights go out gaza . so this is the main out in gaza. so this is the main issue of time in the issue of our time in the background that background of everything that we're the we're going to discuss is the fact that at the end of the world coming and it's going world is coming and it's going to be a full blown war. >> more >> but there must be some more cheerful than that. cheerful news than that. >> there is the cheerful >> i guess there is the cheerful news this outrage over news is, is this outrage over order to not jail rapists as pnsons order to not jail rapists as prisons are full. and this is and this is judges are told by the presiding judge for england and wales has ordered the
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sentencing of convicted criminals who are currently on bail be delayed because there bail to be delayed because there aren't enough spaces. there are 88,000 it seems 88,000 spaces, but it seems ridiculous if prisons are full. >> i mean, maybe start with shoplifters or people who led, you know , and people who fly tip you know, and people who fly tip rather than rapists . this is rather than rapists. this is the, you know, one of the most heinous and heinous crimes. and >> well, i wouldn't grab the headunes >> well, i wouldn't grab the headlines then, would it? i mean, taken look mean, i've taken a look at twitter evening as this as twitter this evening as this as this has come out and as this story has come out and as most people know, i'm a centrist. i like to look at both sides story. and most sides of the story. and most people, particularly on the left, should say, are saying left, i should say, are saying this problem this is a huge tory problem because what they're doing is looking term, looking at in the short term, this population problem. this is a population problem. let's just say for argument's sake , this country can only take sake, this country can only take 100 beans. the ratio of crime to the amount of beans has never changed and is unlikely to changed and is unlikely to change too much. but there are now loads of beans, so of those beans, the ratio of criminals has grown and we don't have the space in prisons. now you could argue that we should increase our prison size . well, maybe,
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our prison size. well, maybe, just maybe, we could control our population size by eating some of the beans. >> yeah , i. you take a look at >> yeah, i. you take a look at america, mara's got 2 million people in prison or more. yeah. and and it's maybe three times the size of this country. or maybe four. i don't know what it is, but. and so the fact is , is is, but. and so the fact is, is that british people are not punishing enough. a lovely punishing enough. it's a lovely country criminal . it's country to be a criminal. it's he's speaking from experience. >> i am . >> i am. >> i am. >> i'm walking free. they don't they don't put enough people in prison. they don't have enough pnsons. prison. they don't have enough prisons . and i think it comes prisons. and i think it comes back from the day when there was, you know, people got along better was, you know, people got along bet i er was, you know, people got along beti mean, i would this >> i mean, i would say at this point, we should probably bring back the back capital punishment. but the way probably way we're going, i'll probably be tweet. be hung for a tweet. >> but yeah . and what are >> but yeah, yeah. and what are the leading paul? >> but yeah, yeah. and what are the well,eading paul? >> but yeah, yeah. and what are the well, ead pocketed ’aul? >> but yeah, yeah. and what are the well,ead pocketed captain >> well, we pocketed captain tom's 800,000, so this is captain tom's daughter , and she captain tom's daughter, and she has been in the news quite a bit lately. and our names, hannah ingram—moore . so. and there are ingram—moore. so. and there are obviously millions and millions
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of pounds raised during the pandemic because of captain tom. and she's saying that the £800,000, which is attributed to three books, which he wrote and sold he wanted her to keep. so she's not actually saying, oh, we kept money. she's saying we're kept money that he wanted us to keep. i mean, this is the woman in the book's woman is said in the book's prologue that it raising prologue that it was raising money charity. prologue that it was raising mo and charity. prologue that it was raising mo and i charity. prologue that it was raising mo and i think ty. prologue that it was raising mo and i think when think of >> and i think when you think of charity, think the charity, you don't think the rich captain tom rich daughter of captain tom who's year on who's making 85 grand a year on a salary in the charity anyway, i mean, this like she's i mean, this seems like she's really the pips to get really squeezing the pips to get as she can. as much money as she can. >> know what? i know the i >> you know what? i know the i know the feeling. you know, you see, he's been a see, your grandpa, he's been a drain a long drain on you for a very long time. house, time. he living in your house, whatever. doing whatever. he's not doing anything. he's in anything. and he's bringing in some cash . some cash. >> managed write three books. >> amazed somebody that old >> i'm amazed somebody that old could write three books in that short period time. short period of time. >> she wheeled him round the garden fruit garden like a charity fruit machine for about two years. it was just this cash cow. >> no, it wasn't for two years. well, i mean , he survived. well, i mean, he survived. >> he survived till. till
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>> no, he survived till. till till they took him to the bahamas. >> till 2020, i think. he died in 2021. >> rest his soul. >> god rest his soul. >> god rest his soul. >> he took him to the bahamas and they murdered him. >> basically, they. i'm sorry. i shouldn't murdered. shouldn't say murdered. yeah, you probably shouldn't say murdered. they murdered. probably. they. they effectively. him . made effectively. they made him. made his life hard to live by, by dragging him around the world so that they could have a holiday . that they could have a holiday. i can. i just. i should probably i can. ijust. i should probably push back on that in case they want to sue you. i feel for this. i feel i'm. i'll say i'm just saying they actually murdered the guy. please stop seeing it. no, i'm saying i don't think that they murdered him, but. but they pushed they pushed their luck by taking him away . away. >> i think that they loved him. ijust >> i think that they loved him. i just think that thought i just think that they thought there's millions here. yeah, we'll have 800 k, but also we'll just have 800 k, but also , want my daughter , i mean, i'd want my daughter to have money. >> i probably want my >> yeah, i probably want my daughter have money than daughter to have money more than i'd to have money i'd want a charity to have money or to have money. be or the nhs to have money. to be honest, being. it's honest, if i'm being. it's a good point. >> and for we know within >> and for all we know within his 800 k was written his will, this 800 k was written , therefore wouldn't have , so therefore she wouldn't have
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anything about. okay. and finally , what's on the >> and finally, what's on the front cover of the daily star? louis oh, the daily star says boff revealed something don't boff revealed something we don't understand, 100% legit. >> that the matrix may be real and it says it says that , you and it says it says that, you know, we may be i didn't read it because know you thought you could just bluff your way through by reading the headline that i didn't think that i saw the this proves we're not in the matrix . m atrix. >> i matrix. >> i think a computer simulation would organised than you. louis schaefer no , you know >> louis schaefer no, you know what think about physics, what i think about physics, professor myers so this is a melvin? anybody melvin? melvin anybody named melvin? melvin anybody named melvin ? i can't trust vopson melvin? i can't trust vopson he's an associate professor of physics at the university of portsmouth. oh, wow . portsmouth. oh, wow. >> she went there. they've got their i'm a product. they've got a university in portsmouth. it's mainly sort of, you know, how to steal cars, etcetera . but it's university. >> they've got cars in portsmouth . portsmouth. >> the least legitimate science list, if you can call them scientists, is a is a physics professor from the university of
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portsmouth. >> but yeah, the matrix, maybe i've heard this before, i think elon musk is has also said, you know, in a 99% know, there's in fact a 99% chance we are living in a simulation, which would explain classical religion. you know, the idea of god watching you because they can watch you anyway. the front pages anyway. that's the front pages covered. join us in for covered. join us in part two for black lives matter supporting hamas. rowling not supporting labour and an asteroid that could support life. see you in a
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radio. >> welcome back to headliners . >> welcome back to headliners. i'm leo kirsten. i'm still here with paul cox and lewis schaefer . and let's kick off with the guardian with reports from sheffield where israel and hamas are apparently battling for control of sheffield. lewis yes. >> well, this is more in this and the biggest story of our time. i'm sorry to say, it's the end of the world. i shouldn't be so pessimistic, but i'm a a anyway, i'm going to say that i'm nobody needs to i'm jewish, but nobody needs to know . protests scale know that anyway. protests scale sheffield remove
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sheffield town hall to remove israeli pro—palestine israeli flag. a pro—palestine rally in the city. and according to according to sheffield city council, the flag was not destroyed. they got the flag back. >> so they just took the flag down, neatly folded it up and didn't burn it and maybe maybe set a prayer over it. >> like we say a prayer . a >> like we say a prayer. a prayer over it. the fact is , do prayer over it. the fact is, do you think do you think sheffield council just grabbed council might have just grabbed another to so they another israeli flag to so they could to avoid inflaming the tensions? >> they could was >> they could say no. it was handedin >> they could say no. it was handed in fine. >> wouldn't past them . >> i wouldn't put it past them. at the day, it isn't at the end of the day, it isn't sheffield like sheffield one of these like asylum seeking city. >> sanctuary city. and >> it's a sanctuary city. and here we've got footage of the israeli being taken down by israeli flag being taken down by one of the protesters. >> that's not 200ft >> well, that's not 200ft up. it's articles 260ft. it's set in the articles 260ft. >> says oh >> i think it says oh six. >> i think it says oh six. >> say 60ft? >> did they say 60ft? >> did they say 60ft? >> and then they are >> yeah. yeah. and then they are . did they get the palestinian. yeah, palestinian yeah, they got the palestinian flag mean, that's flag up there. i mean, that's shocking . that's to be, you shocking. that's to be, you know, so when there's still know, so soon when there's still blood drying in israel, a case could be made that israel's made a proper hash of it by by doing
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what they did. >> you know, unfortunately , by >> you know, unfortunately, by doing what? by by, by revenge, by acting out of revenge. which is which is totally human on their part. but but it doesn't it's not to going it's not going to. >> they're taking revenge against hamas. they're taking revenge against militants revenge against the militants who who it. who who who did it. >> and going make >> and it's not going to make them going to >> and it's not going to make therrthe going to >> and it's not going to make therrthe sympathy going to >> and it's not going to make therrthe sympathy of going to >> and it's not going to make therrthe sympathy of anybody win. the sympathy of anybody really . they just they think really. they just they i think they expect the jews just to sort of sit down and cry and just be done with it. they don't expect of an act of expect an act of an act of violence. i don't know if it was the to do. the right thing to do. >> paul . i mean, have you been >> paul. i mean, have you been surprised by the protests, the pro—palestinian protests? pro — palestinian protests? because i pro—palestinian protests? because i thought they'd at least until you know, least wait out until you know, perhaps until israel had struck back in a meaningful way and, you know, entered gaza in a ground ground invasion instead, you know , as soon as soon as it you know, as soon as soon as it was as soon as it was broadcast, as soon as the invasion was broadcast, they weren't so much palestinian protests as palestinian protests as palestinian pro—palestinian celebrations it looked like. >> i'm not surprised, actually .
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>> i'm not surprised, actually. and i don't i don't think any of us are. i think what we're seeing is just a continuation of the type thing we've seen the type of thing we've seen around country for years around the country for years now. whenever there's been terrorist , terrorist attacks in the uk, there's been parts of the there's been small parts of the population , often from the population, often from the muslim community, that have just been outrageously supporting whatever it is that they think they're trying to defend. >> the shocking thing now >> what the shocking thing now is not it's not i mean is that it's not it's not i mean , you'd expect, know, , you'd expect, you know, perhaps from some muslim perhaps from some of the muslim community to support it. but it's been plenty of non—muslims, plenty of woke people who see it as, you know, part of some decolonisation. they've been programmed with all the, you know, black matter and all know, black lives matter and all this woke ideology about, you know, oppression and all these terms that justify the most horrific, barbaric crimes . well, horrific, barbaric crimes. well, it's the act of people involved in a cult, unfortunately . in a cult, unfortunately. >> and that's the cult of let's call it wokeism. but it's just modernity , progression, whatever modernity, progression, whatever you want to call it, this super
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ridiculous illness where they have decided these things are in and these things are out and it doesn't matter if babies are being killed or what, they're going support anyway. just ridiculous. >> we see progressive, progressive ness or progression, but siding with but they're siding with mediaeval mean, it mediaeval barbarians. i mean, it seems care they don't understand. >> not educated in that >> they're not educated in that way. they're educated go way. they're educated to go along crowd. right. and along with the crowd. right. and what is the crowd? >> crowd? sorry, >> what is the crowd? sorry, i don't do. no, no, absolutely. >> think great >> i think it's a great question. people are afraid to go against crowd if go against the crowd because if they , too, they up they do, too, then they end up getting poorly . they're getting treated poorly. they're they're in in some way. >> there is truth to that. but i think there's an underlying core belief system which which embodies this thing, which is like, you know, we don't really care if this happens to israelis or jews because they don't think that israel has a right to exist because we're one world where you call it wokeism. it's not wokeism. it's just sort of it's like a one world attitude. there's no borders. we're all alike . there's no culture.
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alike. there's no culture. >> but that doesn't explain why you'd say, well, yes, it's to okay kill these people because we're all one world. don't understand. >> their mind that >> because in their mind that these people inherently have done something wrong by by kicking the palestinians off of their country. i'm so they're anti woke people or anti immigration an i thought i'd never see the day anyway moving on we've got the express now and black lives matter have come out in terrorist in support of terrorist murdering children and not everyone likes it. murdering children and not eve paule likes it. murdering children and not eve paul no es it. murdering children and not evepaul no premier league urged >> paul no premier league urged to stop taking the knee for black lives matter over its support for hamas terrorists. so this has come from conservative mps who have criticised the marxist group. this is the expresses language, not mine marxist group , black lives matter. >> well, there's also black lives matter language. they describe themselves as a marxist group. they do. >> that's a very good point. they do. actually they actually do. you actually write literature? write within their literature? they do. i would say this blm is the biggest con trick of my life. they have managed to convince large swathes of this planet that it's a force for
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good. yeah. do you know the premier league? and it's still probably is rumbling around in the background used to have an anti racism campaign called kick it out and it was it was an awareness campaign players would wear the t shirts we don't want i'm a football fan i don't want to see racism on the on the terrorists like i did in the 19805 terrorists like i did in the 1980s when my dad used to first take me down to park to take me down to fratton park to watch pompey play. this watch pompey play. but this has got from that got so far away from it that i think that it's like the emperor's clothes now, the premier league, players, premier league, the players, they doing they all think they're doing a good don't good thing, but they don't know what for. what they're kneeling for. now, what they're kneeling for. now, what they're saying is they're kneeling else , but kneeling for something else, but at the end of the day, they're doing name blm and doing it in the name of blm and they're the wrong reasons. >> how support show >> and how did blm support show their hamas ? sorry. their support for hamas? sorry. yeah well, they they've been tweeting it out. in fact, we've got pictures of the tweets here. so this is black lives matter uk saying solidarity with those resisting israeli war crimes and military occupation . when we say military occupation. when we say free palestine and support the practical solidarity of
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palestinian action and another tweet, this is from blm, chicago says, that is all that is it. and it shows. i mean, this is the most shocking one. it actually shows one of the militants who travelled in a sort of a hang glider with a fan at the back like a parachute with a fan at the back, sort of like wile e coyote and flew into to massacre the people, the youths at the music festival . youths at the music festival. well, so that's a clear that's that's not standing in solidarity with the palestinian people. that's a clear reference to hamas. had i had i or you tweeted that image, it would be considered hate speech and would have a knock on the door from a police officer in modern britain. >> no two ways about it. i know that took place in the states and they they luckily, they're lucky have free speech lucky to have free speech written their constitution. written into their constitution. well, . that is inflammatory. >> oh, absolutely. >> oh, absolutely. >> that some of >> and it's bizarre that some of the some of the protests, the pro—palestinian protests have been chanting horrific things
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like gassed the jews, which is something that, you know, if anybody, if any of us said it, we'd be i mean, count dankula when he said it in a joke was was convicted of a crime, said it well, he said it to his pug, but it was clearly part of a joke and it was obviously, obviously not actually celebrating hitler. the joke wrestling and the dichotomy between the absolute hitler, absolute evil of hitler and the cuteness of the pug . whereas cuteness of the pug. whereas when guardian readers see it for real in a protest, when guardian readers see it for real in a protest , they when guardian readers see it for real in a protest, they get a pass. real in a protest, they get a pass . i real in a protest, they get a pass. i really real in a protest, they get a pass . i really don't understand pass. i really don't understand how that works. >> well, like jemmy carter, the great american president, said, life is fair . life's not life is not fair. life's not fair. there's a lot of hypocrisy going on. i mean, it's just you have to know that there's a war going on. i say it every single time. the people who are in favour of this of this act of terrorism against the jews are fighting for an overall one world government . yeah, of world government. yeah, of course. they're thinking in their head, well that that world
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is going to be run by us. them right. but that's where it comes from . so there's so what i would from. so there's so what i would say by the way, that i would support that person's right to tweet that i absolutely would do because i believe in free speech, but i should be able to. >> so the same rule should be appued >> so the same rule should be applied to you and i. not that i would ever want to do anything of want to be of that nature, want to be racist. that we racist. so i think that we should to see everything should be able to see everything and anything for is. okay >> so but you're seeing this as a speech issue, is a free speech issue, and this is a free speech issue, and this is a free speech issue, and this is a free speech. a great station for free speech. but at the of the day, it's but at the end of the day, it's like these people. it's like it's it's like you it's like it's like when you talk you say talk about joe biden and you say joe is incompetent joe biden is incompetent and everyone knows he's incompetent. but you're democrat that but if you're a democrat that you can't it. it's like you you can't see it. it's like you can't see. but also this. >> i mean, tweets this >> i mean, tweets like this could encourage and inflame tensions middle and tensions in the middle east and lead violence and lead to genuine violence and bloodshed or excuse people, embolden people to commit it. so, yeah, it's obviously horrific . anyway, we've got the horrific. anyway, we've got the times now and j.k. rowling says that labour's stance on trans
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issuesis that labour's stance on trans issues is stupid. wait till she hears their tax policies. louis yeah, well, j.k. rowling attacks labour's lisa nandy over stance on trans rights. >> lisa nandy is the she is the shadow international development secretary. i don't i don't know if that's even is that even a real position ? real position? >> i think it is, yeah. >> i think it is, yeah. >> anyway, she made a speech. she made a speech saying women's rights, women's rights, women's rights, women's rights, women's rights , and sounded almost rights, and it sounded almost believable until until j.k. rowling said, hey, you know, we've you've come down on it being against women's place uk, which is which is trying to stop biological men in from going into women's spaces. so you're not in favour of women. yeah. and although lisa nandy would say, well those, those males that want to go into prison, they are women because look at their pronouns in their twitter bio and look at their badly appued bio and look at their badly applied lipstick. >> so she would say the real women, as soon as somebody says they're a woman, that's that's it. there are women. the self id
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law promotes that says law that she promotes that says that. and in the past, she says , i think trans women are women. and trans men are men. and i think they should be in the pnson think they should be in the prison of their choosing. yeah. i mean, do we a trial first i mean, do we need a trial first orjustit i mean, do we need a trial first or just it just seems it seems quite hard core to have two weeks in a women's prison in bedfordshire . bedfordshire. >> please. i mean , do you know what? >> cheaper than a hotel probably would be, trust me. >> but lisa nandy. i remember when she ran for labour leader when she ran for labour leader when keir starmer won and was when keir starmer won and i was quite impressed nandy . i quite impressed by lisa nandy. i always came across always thought she came across very well. however, she took totally caught in this trans debate web. she can't get herself out of it now. and jk rowling's a legend. i've always said this. yeah she'll go down in history in much the same way as suffragettes did, and it's a shame because nandy had an shame because lisa nandy had an opportunity same thing opportunity to do the same thing being politics. being a woman in politics. but right completely and right now she is completely and utterly caught a in the utterly caught like a fly in the trans debate web. yeah, well, we've got the meal. >> no, with an asteroid that could wipe out humanity in 150
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years, it would be years, although it would be amazed made it to end amazed if we made it to the end of the week. poll nasa today shared long awaited analysis of the week. poll nasa today sh samples ong awaited analysis of the week. poll nasa today sh samples collected ed analysis of samples collected from an ancient could crash ancient rock, which could crash into earth in 150 years. >> the space agency sent a probe to the 150 foot asteroid bennu in 2020 as part of a landmark mission to collect samples, which is being studied at a top lab in texas. >> right. this is where the next covid is going to come from. >> oh, it's unbelievable. do you know i'd like to why know what i'd like to say? why did in particular like to did nasa in particular like to tell every weeks the tell us every two weeks when the world's we world's going to end? the we have one. have spent have spent one. they have spent i any money on i have not spent any money on this, taxpayers, this, but us taxpayers, i assume, spent billion, assume, have spent $1 billion, $1 billion when the bennu mission on the bennu mission to tell us something or anyone could have told them, well , could have told them, well, there's a picture of it. >> there's quite cool. and also it could apparently it contains a lot of carbon an which is essential for life on earth and clear that holds water. so it could it could explain how life formed in the solar system. it's
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a snapshot of the solar system a long time ago . long time ago. >> well, anything that nasa says you can't believe one word, as always , is velikovsky. is that always, is velikovsky. is that is that this little rock , right. is that this little rock, right. has water, oxygen and hydrogen . has water, oxygen and hydrogen. so what does that make? hydrocarbon right. so we're calling hydrocarbons in this country fossil fuels, as if they only came from dinosaurs. were there any dinosaurs on this little rock? the answer is no. there were no dinosaurs in this rock . the whole planet, the rock. the whole planet, the whole world is loaded with water, oxygen , carbon and water, oxygen, carbon and hydrogen and carbon . sorry. and hydrogen and carbon. sorry. and carbon. carbon. right so at the end of the day, at the end of the day, the second most important thing is, is no, none of these rocks actually hit earth. they will never hit earth and they don't hit earth. well, they reckon this is going to happen because because of the force of the. what do you call the stuff that's surrounding speaking oxygen, you speaking of oxygen, are you getting oxygen ? getting enough oxygen? >> anyway, that's it for >> this is anyway, that's it for part two. coming up next, we've got frogs avoiding sex, racist
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robots and trans inclusive morris dancers. don't go away . morris dancers. don't go away. >> this is my worst show
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>> you're not listening to gb news radio. >> welcome back to headliners. we've got the guardian now and female frogs lie motionless to stop male frogs having sex with them. but won't the male frogs just think that they're english? lewis well , british it's not. lewis well, british it's not. >> it's not just english. >> it's not just english. >> it's not just english. >> it's what you see in about northern irish women. well no, i'm familiar with british women, which are some of them were engush which are some of them were english anyway. >> female frogs appear to fake death to avoid unwanted advance advances. study shows this is some out of germany. they've been watching the european common frog . and i mean, i don't common frog. and i mean, i don't know why. >> common as well they're really laying on the slurs radius and so this is published in the royal society open science journal that says that that
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women frogs, if they're not happy with somebody, will just basically spread out like this and just pretend that they're dead. and just pretend that they're dead . i mean, that sounds like dead. i mean, that sounds like something that would make you go faster. >> louis no, it doesn't. it's like, you know, it's just bad lovers, basically. and i think it tends to work . that's what it tends to work. that's what they say. it tends to work, right? >> of course it does. >> of course it does. >> yeah, of course it does. >> yeah, of course it does. >> if you think you've killed her. best leave her. yeah. and you best to leave it alone. >> nowadays . maybe >> especially nowadays. maybe back day, you could back in the day, you could get away paul , going away with it. you, paul, going to destroy your career with a comment ? comment on this? >> don't it just reminds >> i don't know. itjust reminds me. , i love it's me. i mean, i love it. it's brilliant. okay, good on them. good the frogs. it good on the female frogs. it reminds me of a, you know, lying like of a time like this reminds me of a time when about i threw when i was about five. i threw a load wet weetabix on my load of wet weetabix on my bedroom mum bedroom floor and told my mum i'd sick so i couldn't i'd been sick so i couldn't go so have to go to so i didn't have to go to school. oh, and that's clever. yeah it also drawn on me yeah and it also drawn on me some red spots well. felt some red spots as well. i felt it pen . so i'm basically it pen. so i'm basically a female frog , right? female frog, right? >> and the scientists who scientists say that renting is
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more stress than being unemployed . everything's more unemployed. everything's more stressful than being unemployed . i've been unemployed. it's dead easy. you don't have to do anything. paul. >> stress stress, stress >> yeah. stress stress, stress of renting ages you twice as quick as being unemployed. claims science artist. i mean, scientists also claim that the vaccine would stop if the virus spread ing. ijust vaccine would stop if the virus spread ing. i just want to add, which literacy theorist doesn't stop the virus spreading. i've got a load of vaccine running through my veins and i have had it loads of times. >> you shouldn't. you deny that, leo? don't you have. no, because i think that's fact. >> i think this is well and truly factual. >> now can catch, you can >> now you can catch, you can catch covid if you've had the vaccine. catch covid. vaccine. so you can catch covid. if had if you if you haven't had the vaccine. had vaccine. i haven't had the vaccine. i haven't had the vaccine and i've caught covid. >> i've really >> so, i mean, i've really derailed is not about derailed this. this is not about the at all. this is the vaccine at all. this is about scientists doing ridiculous work. so they're saying that renting in the private sector leads to quicker biological ageing than owning your home being or your own home or being social or being in social housing, the study i think what they
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study finds. i think what they found people who pay found is that people who pay £2,000 a month to live in a hell hole are largely depressed and will probably be better off being unemployed because at least somebody would help them out and just put them in a cheaper hell hole. so i mean, i don't know what we're learning from stuff. i think from this sort of stuff. i think personally my own philosophy is that a waste of time personally my own philosophy is tiilt a waste of time personally my own philosophy is tiilt it's a waste of time personally my own philosophy is tiilt it's a a waste of time personally my own philosophy is tiilt it's a veryiste of time personally my own philosophy is tiilt it's a very british :ime . i think it's a very british way looking at life. but way of looking at life. but i had my mortgage when i was had my first mortgage when i was 20, i know very young, 20, which i know is very young, but much believe in the but i very much believe in the idea ownership. yeah well, but i very much believe in the idea done,nership. yeah well, but i very much believe in the idea done, you. ip. yeah well, well done, you. >> that's amazing . and on the >> that's amazing. and on the continent, lot of continent, i mean, a lot of countries , they rent instead of countries, they rent instead of owning homes. always owning their homes. it's always been conservative owning their homes. it's always been to conservative owning their homes. it's always been to property. tive dream to own property. >> just as >> and they could be just as rich if you if you invest your money. unfortunately people don't when don't invest their money when they're renting they're when they're renting this guy. they don't know what it's have your to have it's like to have your to have your. mortgage double in a month and then double again in two months and then double again in three months. i know that's what's happening right now. >> i don't think that happened. they think it
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they don't know how i think it went they don't know how i think it werlet's play monopoly. they don't know how i think it wer£600.wlay monopoly. they don't know how i think it wer£600. no, monopoly. they don't know how i think it wer£600. no, that)poly. they don't know how i think it wer£600. no, that isn't. >> £600. no, that isn't. >> £600. no, that isn't. >> no, it doubled. it doubled in a went from 1 to 2 and a month. we went from 1 to 2 and then which is the i'm not going to go into . yeah, exactly . but to go into. yeah, exactly. but take my word, it doubled financial low level. but >> schieffer there anyway, we've got the sun now and scientists have worked out to how get pig kidneys into humans . is it by kidneys into humans. is it by putting them in a pie? lewis yeah, it's by putting them in a pie. >> it's by it's by cutting them, cutting them open and putting this is this is the biggest non news story ever. scientists know this is this is interesting. >> they found a way to make the body not reject because obviously it's a it's a foreign protein. >> they haven't done it. they just said they one person, just said they said one person, 111 pig's kidney lasted for two years. but the rest of them that they tested, 20, 21 macaque monkeys , one of them, the rest monkeys, one of them, the rest of them lasted only 2 to 3 weeks. so they didn't really do a good job. well, not for the
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other macaques. and they've been putting they've been putting animals , body parts in humans animals, body parts in humans for decades. but they take the frame, don't they? >> they take the frame of a of a heart or something. so it's not the it's not the actual, the meaty bit that will stimulate an immune response and get it rejected. >> so they they've taken the kidneys and the liver and stuff like that they it in like that and they put it in human this is like a human bodies. this is like a scottish delicacy . scottish delicacy. >> put it in a sheep's >> you just put it in a sheep's stomach and mash up. stomach and mash it up. >> it sounds that's >> it sounds delicious. that's what mean, the what it sounds like. i mean, the good they've good news is they've been able to a human a pig to grow a human kidney in a pig . and bad news is they've . and the bad news is they've been pygmy been able to grow a human pygmy kidney in a pig. it doesn't kidney in a pig. but it doesn't work particularly well. all right. i mean, yeah, good on right. so i mean, yeah, good on him and keep going for, you know, people who have got kidney failure and other sorts of kidney this is is kidney disease. this is this is good steps , good good news. small steps, good news. yeah. >> no, glad working >> no, i'm glad they're working on it. as person who has stage on it. as a person who has stage three, chronic disease three, a chronic kidney disease , which is bad not horrific, , which is bad but not horrific, but still people but it's still bad. people people who need dialysis is not
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a cure and typically lasts for five years. so it's horrific. so speaking , maybe i should speak speaking, maybe i should speak up for the kidney people out there. but yeah , it's a bit of there. but yeah, it's a bit of gratitude to the kidney people, to the people with bad kidneys. it's major, major it's really a major, major problem . problem. >> um, yeah, well, fingers crossed. we're going to get it solved science . anyway, solved using science. anyway, we've telegraph with we've got the telegraph now with trans morris dancers , trans inclusive morris dancers, are we generating these headunes are we generating these headlines using dartboard? headlines using a dartboard? >> might well be. we do >> paul we might well be. we do love this subject for sure. morris dropped from morris dancers dropped men from the name to be trans inclusive, but still exclude women. oh really? the troupe is changing its name from brighton morris men to brighton morris. in order to attract anyone who presents as male, including biological females. now confusing stuff and i think trans people have got enough problems with our identifying as morris dancers as well . yeah, i mean i mean , i well. yeah, i mean i mean, i don't know what i don't know who they're trying to appeal to here. morris dancing is kind of an exclusive group anyway because wants to do it.
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because no one wants to do it. >> yeah. and if you're, if >> yeah. and also if you're, if you've transitioned being you've transitioned to being male to pass as male and you want to pass as male, put bells on your ankles and prancing with and prancing around with handkerchiefs, isn't handkerchiefs, probably isn't your stereotypical male behaviour, are letting behaviour, but they are letting they women they are letting women participate . participate. >> i think trans men are >> mate. i think trans men are were born women, right? yeah. okay so they are letting women participate. so it's not that they're they're men because well, they're trans men. right. but they . yes, but to some but they. yes, but to some people, according to lisa nandy. but to some people, did i just get into trouble unnecessarily ? get into trouble unnecessarily? >> no, you can get into trouble. so proving is the so all you're proving is the three cover, least for three of us cover, at least for trans day. and after trans stories a day. and after 18 months of it, we still ain't got what's on. got a clue what's going on. >> it's trans all the time. >> that's what uses. >> that's what she uses. >> that's what she uses. >> telegraph now >> we've got the telegraph now warning machines could warning that machines could learn to be racist and sexist by noticing patterns in data. lewis yes, exactly . yes, exactly. >> racist and sexist. and this is a telegram , racist and is a telegram, racist and sexist. ai bots are at risk to the financial system more than
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the financial system more than the bank of england and what they're saying is, is that given enough chance , the artificial enough chance, the artificial intelligence will figure out it's not a good bet to loan money to women . and that's and money to women. and that's and that's what they are. >> you speaking from experience here? i'm not saying here? lewis well, i'm not saying all women. >> my girlfriend's quite i shouldn't have mentioned that. i have , but my have a girlfriend, but my girlfriend on the girlfriend sleeping on the beatles is quite is quite good at money. i am not. but i'm making a generalisation for the sake of comedy. but but they're saying it's not what was happening . yeah. what. saying it's not what was happening . yeah. what . a joke. happening. yeah. what. a joke. i'm making a joke. >> i don't need to try to identify it. >> hold on. she's calling me. >> hold on. she's calling me. >> i didn't mean it. that way. i'm no , no. i've i'm sorry. no, no, no. i've apologised already. >> yeah, but doesn't this lend some credibility to perhaps some prejudiced attitudes that machines can just, you know, machines can just, you know, machines surely aren't biased. they're not brought up and told to be. you know, these people are bad or anything like that. but just by looking at the data
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and looking patterns of and looking at patterns of behaviour, be behaviour, they learn to be racist and sexist. >> machines aren't born racist. yeah it's basically nobody's programming them to be racist. what's mental about this is you only give them a little bit of data and then a couple of months they're racist and sexist. so i mean, it was to blame here. they're the ones interpreting the data sexist . yeah. >> so then you've got to go in and deprogram them, like reprogramme them not to be racist. >> well, that's why that's why this article that's this is an article and that's why england is why the bank of england is against guarantee you, if against it. i guarantee you, if the of england said don't against it. i guarantee you, if the money england said don't against it. i guarantee you, if the money englandthere'dnn't against it. i guarantee you, if the money englandthere'd be no give money to men, there'd be no article, be no report, article, there'd be no report, everything fine. article, there'd be no report, evewell, g fine. article, there'd be no report, evewell, yeah fine. article, there'd be no report, evewell, yeah , fine. article, there'd be no report, evewell, yeah , becausee. article, there'd be no report, evewell, yeah , because the issue >> well, yeah, because the issue is these machines is that these these machines could a diversity and could breach a diversity and inclusion regulations. right. >> so they can't discriminate. >> so they can't discriminate. >> yeah, but they're machines . >> yeah, but they're machines. yeah, they are machines. >> well, we've got one more section we've got plus size models. bad bug news and models. bad, bad bug news and time blindness . find out how time blindness. find out how that can get you fired in just a couple of minutes
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welcome back to headliners. we've got the express now. and nine out of ten young people are totally deluded about the pyramids and think they were built by humans. >> paul yeah , yes. this is 1 in >> paul yeah, yes. this is 1 in 10 young adults believe the pyramids of giza were built by aliens. that's because they were. leo massive giant racist auens were. leo massive giant racist aliens that made the jewish people build the pyramids. i don't know if that's true or not. express don't know either. but i'll tell you what they express. don't know is because no one actually really knows exactly pyramids exactly how the pyramids are built. beyond the scope built. it's way beyond the scope of technology at of the technology available at the time. mean, i know they the time. i mean, i know they say, a lots of people say, you know, a lots of people drag logs or drag things up on logs or whatever. the whatever. have you seen the things they are? it's incredible. mean , the incredible. so, i mean, the point story really is point of this story really is that know, children and that, you know, children and young have access young adults have got access to the therefore , the internet and therefore, they're getting see all sorts they're getting to see all sorts of theories of conspiracy theories and different the news. different versions of the news. and you know what? they can
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figure out themselves. figure it out for themselves. >> louis, what do you >> i mean, louis, what do you think? i mean, this a this is think? i mean, this is a this is a slur on your people who did a fantastic job. a slur on your people who did a fan'well,job. a slur on your people who did a fan'well, supposedly, i've just >> well, supposedly, i've just been the been told we didn't build the pyramids. we built some storehouses whatever but storehouses nearby. whatever but but haven't gotten but but we still haven't gotten paid it. so you know, they paid for it. so you know, they say the jews are good business people, but we still haven't gotten paid for it. but this story one of those story basically is one of those stories nobody stories that says nobody knows anything about anything. nobody knows pyramids . i'm knows about the pyramids. i'm surprised that even this many people certainly that people know certainly get that impression watching this show. >> it this study was >> and it says this study was commissioned . and by by the commissioned. and by who? by the sega europe limited, which is a computer games company. they're promoting their you've got to read closely . this is this is read closely. this is this is just a press release to promote some pyramid games to promote some pyramid games to promote some computer. >> you know what it is it's a pyramid scheme we've pyramid scheme. anyway, we've got now with a woman got the mayor now with a woman unaware invention of the unaware of the invention of the alarm lewis yeah . alarm clock. lewis yeah. >> this is woman blast boss >> this is a woman blast boss for accepting quote for not accepting, quote unquote, as unquote, time blindness as a reason for her tardiness and she's on twitter. she's not
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twitter excuse me, on tiktok. and she makes a video and saying her boss, she complained to her boss can't get to boss because she can't get to work her boss said, work on time. and her boss said, get time. othennise work on time. and her boss said, get firing time. othennise work on time. and her boss said, get firing you. me. othennise work on time. and her boss said, get firing you. and othennise work on time. and her boss said, get firing you. and shemnise work on time. and her boss said, get firing you. and she saide we're firing you. and she said that that was that was bad , that that was that was bad, discriminatory against her because she's got time blindness. >> i mean, this is why we've all got time blindness. so you buy a watch or you buy an alarm clock and then the machine does it for you and you make an effort. >> and was good about this you and you make an effort. >>isnd was good about this you and you make an effort. >>is that was good about this you and you make an effort. >>is that shewas good about this you and you make an effort. >>is that she complained out this you and you make an effort. >>is that she complained thathis is, is that she complained that the boss complained about her saying, you young kids today, you don't know hard work. you don't know about being on time. and i love when i hear that because i'm reminded of what a loser bad employee i was all those years. and i feel like it's always a good when you're older to go, oh, these kids today, they're worthless compared to me. but i was i was very bad, horrible , horrible, very bad, horrible, horrible, horrible, horrible . horrible, horrible. >> i mean, the context of this is that she was being interviewed. yeah, i mean, this was in a job interview. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> so you're like about gen x,
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which is essentially you and i. leo. at least we know how to leo. but at least we know how to lie interview. you've lie in an interview. you've you've best you've got to give the best possible yourself possible impression of yourself and employer find possible impression of yourself and at employer find possible impression of yourself and at some employer find possible impression of yourself and at some point�*mployer find possible impression of yourself and at some point thatyyer find possible impression of yourself and at some point that you find possible impression of yourself and at some point that you were out at some point that you were totally leg. yeah. totally pulling their leg. yeah. i is madness. and then i mean this is madness. and then she only she then i mean this is madness. and then she to jnly she then i mean this is madness. and then she to social she then i mean this is madness. and then she to social media then i mean this is madness. and then she to social media and1 i mean this is madness. and then she to social media and said , taken to social media and said, i this. you're i can't believe this. you're like, man, are getting like, man, you are getting this all yeah it's outrageous, all wrong. yeah it's outrageous, really. , she's stupid. really. i mean, she's stupid. >> that is some level of entitled we've the entitled ness. we've got the telegraph now with news for telegraph now with bad news for anyone bedbugs . paul yeah. anyone with bedbugs. paul yeah. >> pay out >> insurers will not pay out over bedbug infestations as major providers of home cover confirm the cost of removing bedbugs or repairing any damage is not included in most policies. neither is anything else. by the way, i don't know if anyone home insurance, home i don't know out there. i mean, you're honestly, it's a right scam. i once had a load of cladding fall off the side of my house because of a hurricane level winds. and they said we don't really cover for weather. why have i got it? is it why else is it going to fall off? so i'm not surprised. i mean, this
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is obviously following on from the bad bedbug infestation of france . it seems people seem to france. it seems people seem to be worried about coming over here. yeah, i think we've got slightly problems. slightly bigger problems. >> seems private medical >> it seems like private medical care granddad had care because my granddad had private had private medical care and he had something his something go wrong with his intestines fixed it. intestines and they fixed it. and they're right, and then they're like, right, your intestines aren't covered anymore because they were fixed? no, because there's something wrong were wrong with them. so they were going go again. so going to go wrong again. so they're don't they're like, well, we don't want that mental they're like, well, we don't want should|at mental they're like, well, we don't want should they ental they're like, well, we don't want should they payl they're like, well, we don't want should they pay for it? >> so he was given them because he giving them money every >> so he was given them because he not1g them money every >> so he was given them because he not probablynoney every >> so he was given them because he not probably anyway, yery >> so he was given them because he not probably anyway, but month. not probably anyway, but this is this is bed bunk bed bug infestation. i mean , they're infestation. i mean, they're talking like like there's some new disease or something. it's been forever . been bedbugs forever. >> yeah, it'll probably be lockdown. >> they just. it's a slur on the french people. okay we've got the star now. >> angry that only >> and women are angry that only 1% are plus size . but 1% of models are plus size. but when you account for the space, they advert, they take up on the advert, surely rises to about 5. surely that rises to about 5. >> boo boo. i don't >> louis boo boo. i don't support that at all. as a person who used to be fat , support that at all. as a person who used to be fat, i know at the end of the. yeah, it just says , according to vogue, this
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says, according to vogue, this is vogue business that they do is a vogue business that they do an inclusive inclusivity in inclusivity. yeah or a new study shows that less than 1% of models can pronounce it. can pronounce. yeah. you know what the truth is? the truth is fat is bad. i mean, i look fat on fat. now, there's something about the tv that makes me look fat. i look amazing. paul is really fat, but i, i, i mean , i really fat, but i, i, i mean, i don't know if you can tell how slender and beautiful i am, but i used to be fat . i slender and beautiful i am, but i used to be fat. i used slender and beautiful i am, but i used to be fat . i used to be i used to be fat. i used to be fat. and i'm telling everybody out yourself out there, don't blame yourself for being fat. food is delicious . it is. food is moreish and plants make you fat. stop eating carbs that are in plants. yeah >> paul, what do you what do you make of this? i mean, less than 1% of models are plus size. i mean, actually , considering the mean, actually, considering the amount of adverts i've seen where they have fat women. yeah, i'm surprised it's just 1. >> the same things have always sold. sex sells and attractive
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people sell and white people watch this show. exactly why they watch this show. and more likely than not, people will find slimmer people all attractive. one thing that's and you know, i say that being a plus size model myself . it says plus size model myself. it says it says it it says in here, although the world is becoming more diverse, the world is not becoming more diverse. the world has always been diverse. yeah, it's madness to say something like that. that's upset me more than anything else in this. what the world is becoming more fat? slightly, . slightly, i'd imagine. >> incredibly american in >> 60 incredibly american in america. how the america. it's insane how the levels just over quite a short penod levels just over quite a short period time, we're talking period of time, we're talking like 20, 20 years. they've become so much fatter. anyway, the show is nearly over. so let's take another quick look at thursday's pages . the thursday's front pages. the daily leads with the king, daily mail leads with the king, calls them terrorists. why can't the bbc, the telegraph , has the bbc, the telegraph, has royals condemn hamas attacks as terrorism? the times has is really coalition ready to invade? the guardian leads with
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israelis suspended between fear, grief and forebode king. the express has outrage over order not to jail rapists as prisons are full, the daily star leads with boff reveals something we don't understand, but sounds 100% legit. and also a little bit frightening. the matrix may be real, and those rear front pages. and that's all we have time for. thank you to my guests, paul cox and lewis shaffer, nick dixon is in the hot seat tomorrow, joined by steve n, allen and josh howie. and you're watching a.m, and if you're watching at 5 am, stay for breakfast
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campaign continues overnight as palestinians appeal to be allowed safe passage out of gaza. an israeli troops are preparing for a ground
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offensive. this is the scene live in gaza this morning . it's live in gaza this morning. it's 6:00 here in the uk on thursday , the 12th of october. today israel cuts off water, food and power to the gaza strip and continues its bombardment. >> hospitals there say they are crumbling and ovennhelmed. the united nations secretary—general warns the humanitari in crisis and has appealed to israel to allow aid into gaza. >> the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu, has promised to wipe hamas off the face of the earth as he joins forces with political opponents to create an emergency. wartime cabinet. our reporter charlie peters is in tel aviv . peters is in tel aviv. >> good morning from tel aviv, where details of the latest idf strikes on hamas assets in gaza have just been released . have just been released. >> in other news, labour leader sir keir starmer tells gb news he will cut taxes for people on
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