tv Headliners Replay GB News November 7, 2023 5:00am-6:01am GMT
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human is using civilians as human shields and continues to launch rockets towards israel . here at rockets towards israel. here at home, laws designed to provide a minimum level of cover during strikes have been extended now to ambulance staff, rail workers and border force employees. train staff will be asked to operate 40% of their normal timetable , while border security timetable, while border security staff will have to keep all airports open during strikes. the minimum service level act passed earlier this year, but has faced criticism from trade unions who say it threatens their right to strike. now, in their right to strike. now, in the united states, donald trump has been facing a civil fraud trial that threatens his property empire. the former us president is accused of inflating the value of his properties by over £1.65 billion to secure favourable terms. losing the case could mean significant financial consequence ounces, but it comes as mr trump currently leads in
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the polls, leading in five key swing states . here at home, swing states. here at home, thames water admits 12,000 customers in surrey are still having difficulty with domestic water supplies, a week after blaming storm ciaran for affecting water treatment works. customers say they've been unable to bathe, shower or flush toilets as well as having to wait in long queues for bottled water at nominated pick up points. schools and nurseries in the area closed today , with the area closed today, with students returning to lockdown style. online lessons yesterday. thames water declared a major incident and apologised to customers for the problems, adding that engineers are working to fix what they're calling a technical fault . and calling a technical fault. and lastly, luton town football club has threatened to ban any fans is found to have taken part in chanting about the hillsborough disaster during sunday's1—1 draw with liverpool . the club draw with liverpool. the club has launched an internal investigation after chants,
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which indirectly referenced hillsborough were heard during the match. luton town has apologised to anyone offended by the chants, adding they were extremely disappointed and the club is reviewing cctv and media footage now from the match to identify the individuals concerned . and us gb news across concerned. and us gb news across the uk on tv in your car on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news time now for headliners . time now for headliners. hello and welcome to headliners. >> your first look at tuesday's newspapers . i'm simon evans. newspapers. i'm simon evans. tonight i'm joined by the alt right's answer to the chuckle brothers theo curtis and nik dixon. >> both well, gentlemen . yes, >> both well, gentlemen. yes, the chuckle brothers , because the chuckle brothers, because one of them still alive. that's a chuckle, brother, now, isn't it? and i don't know whether you
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can do that on your own. >> thinking, why give >> i'm just thinking, why give the twitter actual the people on twitter actual names against us? names to use against us? >> mean, why give them that >> i mean, why give them that much ammunition? ian? yeah, i know. on the other hand. all right. kind it's a bit right. is kind of it's a bit faded anyway, isn't it? faded now anyway, isn't it? you're right. you're talking about brothers. about the chuckle brothers. yeah. jordan peterson. >> right. >> alt right. >> alt right. >> that's when you >> yeah. there. that's when you know, jumped shark. know, they've jumped the shark. it's adjacent, wasn't it's very much adjacent, wasn't he. he was in the car park. anyway let's look at the anyway let's have a look at the front pages. the daily mail. they lead poppy seller 78, they lead with poppy seller 78, punched times punched by protesters at times thousands be spared cancer thousands to be spared cancer with fourpence a pill. the with fourpence a day pill. the sun have eco harry flies to katy perry gig on oil tycoons jet the mirror michelle mone shock finally she admits ppe link the eye news have green king forced to announce shredding of eco policy see the metro 300,000 get drugged to avoid breast cancer and those were front pages . so
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and those were front pages. so and those were front pages. so an unusually diverse collection . an unusually diverse collection. then a great consensus on what is the main story of the day. what does the mirror go with? leo so it's the mail. so. poppy cila caught up in a pro—palestine rally, said that he was punched and kicked by a mob of protesters, and he's a 78 year army veteran . so, you year old army veteran. so, you know, he's one of the last people who should be should be being kicked and punched. so he said i was getting shoved backwards. there's a picture on the on the front cover of the throngs. there's 1200 people there, which is just shy of the number of people who are murdered and kidnapped in israel. and a huge throng around him. and he said i was getting shoved backwards in danger of falling. of them stood falling. and one of them stood on my foot and split my toe. so i thought, i've got to get the money out of here because, i mean, he's in scotland, so somebody run off mean, he's in scotland, so som(him/ run off mean, he's in scotland, so som(him by run off mean, he's in scotland, so som(him by by run off mean, he's in scotland, so som(him by by anotherin off mean, he's in scotland, so som(him by by another poppy with him by by another poppy related product. you can say that. yeah. yeah but yeah,
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obviously scotland they obviously in scotland they melt down the poppies to make down the red poppies to make heroin. heroin? it's messy heroin. heroin? yeah. it's messy drone isn't it. the, the, the plastic ones isn't it. i that's right. yeah that's right. so so he went down to pick up the money and somebody punched him in back and then he got in the back and then he got another punch in the side and it's he was saved by it's horrific. he was saved by three station staff in red jackets you can you can see jackets who you can you can see there. but you got you to there. but you got to you got to wonder for the veterans wonder for the for the veterans of the of world war ii who are still who are still, you still alive, who are still, you know, raising money for veterans who support. i mean, who need support. i mean, what did they for? they fought did they fight for? they fought to britain free from to keep britain free from vicious anti semitic mobs. and what have in britain right what do we have in britain right now? got vicious now? we've got these vicious anti—semitic who want to i anti—semitic mobs who want to i mean i'm not saying everybody mean, i'm not saying everybody in these in these wants in these in these marches wants to israel and wipe out to wipe out israel and wipe out jewish people, but they're certainly marching and certainly marching alongside and chanting same as chanting the same words as people who do i saw photograph people who do i saw a photograph that widely shared. nick, that was widely shared. nick, i don't know if you saw the same one on on twitter. so on. an one on on twitter. and so on. an old fella with two women, like surrounded by hostile looking
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protesters. i don't if it's protesters. i don't know if it's the my suspicion the same station. my suspicion is it wasn't my suspicion. is this sort of scene has been playing out around in london. that one. and saw that was another one. and i saw a of some people trying to a video of some people trying to enter the tube poppies and a video of some people trying to e|group e tube poppies and a video of some people trying to e|group was be poppies and a video of some people trying to e|group was stoppingoppies and a video of some people trying to e|group was stopping them. and a video of some people trying to e|group was stopping them. and a group was stopping them. and you sort think, why? it's you sort of think, why? and it's because a hatred of because it's about a hatred of the our entire way of the west and our entire way of life, not just you can be pro—palestine. why would that involve punching an man with involve punching an old man with a poppy? involve punching an old man with a poppy? but there's clearly a hatred and now they to just hatred and now they want to just attack that represents attack anything that represents britain or western ideals, whatever these people. >> and i'm all these people. >> and i'm all these people. >> think the march should be >> i think the march should be cancelled because it's i was thinking about this today. >> about free >> it's like i care about free speech, care about my speech, but i care about my country more. and i think there is when, you know, we is a time when, you know, we don't have in england a sort of a sort of written constitution. >> we don't have some sort of rationalist, like rationalist, top down thing like marxism. >> have generations who >> we just have generations who have an instinct for what is right british. have an instinct for what is rigiand british. have an instinct for what is rigiand i british. have an instinct for what is rigiand i think british. have an instinct for what is rigiand i think the ritish. have an instinct for what is rigiand i think the fact]. have an instinct for what is rigiand i think the fact that >> and i think the fact that people have polled strongly against march just against staging the march just means go means that it shouldn't go ahead, what the ahead, because that's what the people of britain have decided. >> there's point
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>> and there's a subtle point because people have because i know a few people have said in what way is it inappropriate marching for inappropriate to be marching for peace, that's you know, peace, assuming that's you know, you but in what way you take that, but in what way is marching for a is it to be marching for a seaside? how is that inappropriate? on armistice day? and the reason it's inappropriate is armistice day is breaking out. is not about peace breaking out. it's sacrifices that it's about the sacrifices that were the previous four were made in the previous four years the first world war, years in the first world war, 5 or 6 years in the second world war and so the amount of war and so on. the amount of sacrifice, amount that blood sacrifice, the amount that blood that spilt in to that was spilt in order to protect what is you return to protect what it is you return to aftennards, than aftennards, right? rather than just peace at cost. yeah just peace at any cost. yeah absolutely. in favour of the absolutely. i'm in favour of the march ahead, we should march going ahead, but we should certainly a big and certainly dig a big hole and cover leaves and funnel cover it with leaves and funnel everybody it kind of everybody into it. it kind of feels to a way like they feels to me in a way like they are marching into an elephant trap in a way. you know, think trap in a way. you know, i think there's of there's a serious danger of quite of which side it's quite a lot of which side it's going to very interesting. going to be very interesting. the tuesday's nick a the tuesday's mirror nick has a completely different story. yeah, michelle, mo yeah, this is about michelle, mo and it michelle mone shock. >> but the shock has inverted commas as if to say it's not a real shock. >> and headline is, finally, >> and the headline is, finally, she link. so after three she admits link. so after three
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years she had years of denying she had anything with the 200 anything to do with the 200 million baroness million covid deal, baroness change so was change his story. so it was always said her lawyer was saying she's not connected in any medpro now, lo any way with ppe. medpro now, lo and she acted as and behold, she acted as an intermediary between and behold, she acted as an interi medpro between and behold, she acted as an interimedpro and between and behold, she acted as an interimedpro and the)etween and behold, she acted as an interimedpro and the cabinet ppe, medpro and the cabinet office and did have office and so on, and did have something to do with it. and no one's and this story something to do with it. and no one'been and this story something to do with it. and no one'been i and this story something to do with it. and no one'been i mean,d this story something to do with it. and no one'been i mean, the s story something to do with it. and no one'been i mean, the guardian has been i mean, the guardian have been obsessed with it particularly. and the mirror are running but realise running it now. but i realise what bothers about it is it's what bothers me about it is it's sold covid sold as a kind of covid corruption story. and, you know, pharmaceuticals etcetera. corruption story. and, you know, pharmace|papers etcetera. corruption story. and, you know, pharmace|papers didn't:etera. corruption story. and, you know, pharmace|papers didn't carea. but these papers didn't care about and they're about pfizer, and they're still not going after pfizer, didn't care about the general cashing of vaccines on. of the vaccines and so on. they're after someone they're just going after someone they an ideological they see as an ideological opponent. me opponent. that's what bothers me about is it's a political about it, is it's a political opponent, certainly, she represents a kind of like sleazy, grade tory sleazy, low grade tory corruption. still think corruption. but i still think she's and i also think she's wrong. and i also think it's the the it's disgraceful the way the upper is being used upper house is being used in the in the few years. i mean, in the last few years. i mean, thatis in the last few years. i mean, that is always really gets my goat, to be honest. politics as a i mean, it was mps as a whole. i mean, it was mps as well as lords that were taking advantage vip lane advantage of these vip lane contracts. and it's to see contracts. and it's great to see
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the some proper the guardian doing some proper investigative the guardian doing some proper investigtrying convince of just trying to convince children to be gender queer communists and destroy western society. huge society. but i mean huge amounts of money. you almost see of money. you can almost see that during it that during during covid, it didn't we going didn't look like we were going to have a hard lockdown. then you see the money just go you see the money signs just go up politician's eyes up in every politician's eyes when many when they realise how many millions out of millions they could juice out of the taxpayer. and i mean, i don't, you know, i don't have any close connection with this, but 1 2 people who did but i know 1 or 2 people who did have pretty schemes have some pretty good schemes and things that and ideas about things that could be supplied to the government and so on, had government and so on, and had a sense just quite how sense of just quite how difficult it was to any kind difficult it was to get any kind of connection, to make any kind of connection, to make any kind of contact with so you're of contact with the. so you're annoyed lack contact annoyed with the lack of contact allowing corrupt? allowing you to be corrupt? i had van load i didn't had a van load of ppe. i didn't have didn't have anyone to number by, couldn't get hancock's whatsapp. but there is i a lot of sort of i mean you hear a lot of sort of you know, just muttering about it.just you know, just muttering about it. just just that that it. just i just feel that that was, know, at least as much was, you know, at least as much of a disgrace. i understand what was, you know, at least as much of a meanrce. i understand what was, you know, at least as much of a mean aboutinderstand what was, you know, at least as much of a mean about them tand what was, you know, at least as much of a mean about them all.i what was, you know, at least as much of amean about them all. inhat was, you know, at least as much of a mean about them all. i just you mean about them all. i just wish go after everyone, wish they go after everyone, that's beautiful that's all. beautiful thing. yeah well, perhaps that's all. beautiful thing. ye due well, perhaps that's all. beautiful thing. ye due course, well, perhaps that's all. beautiful thing. ye due course, we iiell, perhaps that's all. beautiful thing. ye due course, we will perhaps
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that's all. beautiful thing. ye due course, we will see. aps in due course, we will see. i news now, leo and the greene king, which is a slightly annoying pun they've made on a decent is decent brewery. yeah. so this is greene. forster announce greene. king forster announce shredding eco policy and a shredding of eco policy and a genuinely read this, genuinely when i read this, i didn't see the picture prince didn't see the picture of prince king was what was it called? king was what was it called? king charles king charles king charles king charles prince. he's king the country . he's the king of the country. they to just stick with they need to just stick with one. just stick with one. i'm not don't like it when we not like i don't like it when we did for kind of a long time, to be fair. yeah. yeah. mean, be fair. yeah. yeah. i mean, his mum do that. but when mum made him do that. but when celebrities changed their name, like known like prince wanted to be known as and stuff, it's as the symbol and stuff, it's the when they they, the pope's. when they when they, when one minute you're when you like one minute you're ratzinger the minute ratzinger and the next minute you're benedict, have one you're benedict, just have one p°pe you're benedict, just have one pope with that one pope and stick with that one anyway. king forced anyway. greene king forced announced shredding of eco policy. chain . policy. it's not the pub chain. it is prince, king charles king charles who is who is obviously , charles who is who is obviously, you know, notoriously eco friendly , talks to plants , talks friendly, talks to plants, talks to left wing people . and he's to left wing people. and he's being forced to read out the government's anti eco king speech.
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government's anti eco king speech . so i like the speech. so i like the implication that all previous kings and queens like the queen over her 70 year reign was basically on board with the whole raft of legislation on every occasion. it's nonsense, isn't it? yeah, she is it that he has been unusually forthright in his long apprenticeship, i suppose. exactly queen. suppose. exactly the queen. nobody knew what she really supported, apart from britain , supported, apart from britain, as he didn't say round as long as he didn't say round up the corgis . yes. yeah, up all the corgis. yes. yeah, yeah. assume. yeah. yeah. good assume. yeah. you know, probably more know, it's probably more productive to plants productive to talk to plants than left wing person because than a left wing person because at least plants grow. at least the plants grow. whereas lefty tells you whereas lefty just tells you you're violence. you're committing violence. i mean , it would interesting to mean, it would be interesting to know feels the know how he feels about the nation's heritage being besmirched by the just stop oil people, because that seems like that's a those kind of protests are yeah they were edging towards the senate after they weren't this not weren't they but this is not really of nonsense isn't really a bit of a nonsense isn't it he's just saying the it because he's just saying the king won't do anything. we'll just the policies which just read out the policies which he has to. so not really just read out the policies which he isaido. so not really just read out the policies which he isaid through not really just read out the policies which he isaid through gritted ally just read out the policies which he isaid through gritted teeth, it's said through gritted teeth, but how the monarchs but that's how the monarchs always yeah charles always speak. yeah charles speaking sort
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speaking like that, it is sort of enhances your diction. finally sun you, finally the sun that's you, nick, is me. it's nick, isn't it? it is me. it's eco. harry flies to katy perry gig tycoons jet the royal gig in oil tycoons jet the royal hypocrite they're calling him and set up travalyst and he set up this travalyst charity which was not charity which was about not using would charity which was about not using guessed would charity which was about not using guessed that would charity which was about not using guessed that meghan nould charity which was about not usingguessed that meghan andd have guessed that meghan and harry were not just completely straight shooters? mean, the straight shooters? i mean, the gulfstream jet is co—owned by oil heir michael hurd, and it emits two tonnes of co2 an hour, even more than novara media. and it i just thought of that on the spot. sorry guys. aaron seems all right. but anyway and so it's, you know, obviously hypocritical . we know this kind hypocritical. we know this kind of thing. it's just what these people isn't yeah. people do, isn't it? yeah. i mean, it's a it's a kind of boiled, sweet of a story, isn't it? it is still vaguely it? but it is still vaguely grating. mean, this is grating. oh, no. i mean, this is absolutely relevant. i mean, this we've got all these this is we've got all these elites. it's like emma thompson , elites. it's like emma thompson, prince not king prince harry. he's not king harry katy perry. although harry yet. katy perry. although all these people who lecture us, the small people were not allowed to fly lanzarote on allowed to to fly lanzarote on ryanair once a year. and they're just jetting around in these private mean, at least private jets. i mean, at least fill with they could fill it
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fill it with they could fill it with homeless people. it's fill it with they could fill it witito omeless people. it's fill it with they could fill it witito be eless people. it's fill it with they could fill it witito be honestzople. it's fill it with they could fill it witito be honest with. it's fill it with they could fill it witito be honest with you, it's fill it with they could fill it witito be honest with you, i t's got to be honest with you, i have flown on one occasion on a private jet, which to a corporate gig, and it was already used. i think his already being used. i think his name is professor green. rapper, right? so he the right? yeah. and so he was the headuner right? yeah. and so he was the headliner and he allowed the rest of us, you know, to use his his they're his jet. yeah. they're incredibly uncomfortable by comparison yeah comparison with small. yeah you're like, sitting you're like, sort of sitting like, with, like, this comparison with, like, this comparison with, like, class in like, flying first class in a decent and being picked decent airliner and being picked up a limo. there really isn't up by a limo. there really isn't any. it's not like being. any. it's not like you're being. he's being expected take he's being expected to take the tube, only tube, is it? yeah. i've only been on andrew tate's. have you seen. been on andrew tate's. have you seen . spinning. well that's it seen. spinning. well that's it for part one. coming up, boris johnson's greatest cracks . johnson's greatest cracks. donald, just for the crack. we'll see you
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from number 10 and the glory days of covid. yes, our new colleague , it's boris johnson, colleague, it's boris johnson, called treasury. the pro death squad during covid pandemic inquiry told. and of course we've got this ludicrous kangaroo court of inquiry thing going on at the moment. and what's very frustrating about this is they're saying that there was no direct analysis from top scientists on how the eat out to help out scheme could impact infection rates . what's impact infection rates. what's kind of annoying about that is there was no analysis of the actual lockdown and how that could affect anything. so that's all they care about. so it's very sticking with the very much sticking with the narrative. mind narrative. i mean, i don't mind bofis a narrative. i mean, i don't mind boris a bit of gallows boris using a bit of gallows humour maybe you could say humour and maybe you could say it's tasteless to call it treasury pro death squad, but treasury to pro death squad, but eat help out is being eat out to help out is being demonised and there's no actual looking whether looking at lockdown and whether that so that's that was worth it. so that's hypocritical. that was worth it. so that's hypocriiactually for that was worth it. so that's hypocrii actually for the that was worth it. so that's hypocriiactually for the treasury normal actually for the treasury to concerned mainly with to be concerned mainly with money. i think that's like fairly reasonable, know, fairly reasonable, you know, rishi. was concerned with rishi. rishi was concerned with money. the treasury was concerned money. concerned with money. and then you opinion and you you take their opinion and you make a gestalt the whole
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make a gestalt of the whole thing . that's what they're meant thing. that's what they're meant to i don't mind but to do. so i don't mind that. but there's like it's there's saying like it's a terrible thing. and sunak pushed back the or treasury back on the or the treasury urged back on the urged sunak to push back on the circuit lockdown, circuit breaker lockdown, which was probably sensible thing was probably a sensible thing as well. so, mean, totally well. so, i mean, i totally agree is the agree with you that is the treasury's job. i do think eat out to help out was a was a ridiculous scheme. it annoyed me at the time. the one thing i had not missed, to be honest, was like opportunity to go to like the opportunity to go to restaurants in the evening. see, this? the this? this is these are the words someone didn't grow words of someone who didn't grow up restaurant. so my up in a restaurant. so my parents owned restaurant. parents owned a restaurant. that's we that's what we that's all we that's what we did. you don't care about did. so you don't care about hospitality? i think hospitality? i do. and i think it pubs. i cared about it was good pubs. i cared about comedy cared about comedy clubs. i cared about theatres and cinemas. but restaurants live in the restaurants and i live in the heart brighton hove is heart of brighton and hove is absolutely the economy is of that but it would have that kind. but but it would have been just have them been fine to just have them deliver seemed like. no, it deliver it seemed like. no, it didn't any like didn't make any sense. like one moment not to even moment we're not allowed to even like leave our houses. the next moment we're all being paid to, like, ourselves like, jam ourselves in. and that's it took advantage of that's what it took advantage of it. as could. went it. as much as i could. i went
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to kebab places and all the rest of it, they were rammed. and of it, and they were rammed. and i must have got, i don't know, picked up more than covid. i picked up more than covid. i picked up more than covid. i picked up several kinds of picked up like several kinds of mediaeval diseases. i've got typhus. yeah, exactly. what didn't was didn't make any sense was the lockdown. out to help lockdown. the eat out to help out was fine. and you guys just don't you prove you don't don't as you prove you don't care this bit. they keep care about this bit. they keep saying that patrick vallance is belief johnson was obsessed saying that patrick vallance is beliethe johnson was obsessed saying that patrick vallance is beliethe idea 1nson was obsessed saying that patrick vallance is beliethe idea ofion was obsessed saying that patrick vallance is beliethe idea of elderly obsessed saying that patrick vallance is beliethe idea of elderly peopleed with the idea of elderly people accepting with the idea of elderly people acce don't buy that. i with the idea of elderly people accedon't buy that. i don't just don't buy that. i don't think he was obsessed with it. i think he was obsessed with it. i think he was obsessed with it. i think he possibly kind of pushed back little bit the idea back a little bit about the idea that cripple the that we should cripple the economy generations. yeah, economy for generations. yeah, he's libertarian he's got naturally libertarian instincts, people instincts, so he wanted people to free make their own to be free to make their own choices, absolutely . which choices, which absolutely. which would been a much better would have been a much better system. style system system. the swedish style system has to kill fewer has been proven to kill fewer people. i'm sure boris has people. i'm not sure boris has the consistency to be obsessed with know what with anything, you know what i mean? for a day, maybe mean? obsessed for a day, maybe briefly distracted. yeah. yeah. except his own career. and welcome to gb news, by the way . welcome to gb news, by the way. now we move to on i'm not sure which paper, but. oh, the mail and means testing. means means testing. that's right. so
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benefits claimants could have their bank accounts checked weekly to make sure they are being honest about savings. this could include the bank accounts indicating they have more than £16,000 in savings or an account that regularly transfers money overseas . these so this is i overseas. these so this is i mean, this is just as well, i think the guardian always publishes statistics like only 0.4% of benefits. claimants are fraudulent and if only 0.4% of benefits, claimants are fraudulent. i must have known every single one of them growing up. it's like seen as a career in first class country in scotland . anyway. it's, you scotland. anyway. it's, you know, work how to work know, you work out how to work the benefit system and yeah, a lot of people mean it's not as lot of people i mean it's not as bad as it used to be, you know, trainspotting era of signing on in nine different towns well in nine different towns and well this for a long this is the thing for a long time, even when it was vaguely computerised, they didn't join it at all, did it up very much at all, did they? mean, you still find they? i mean, you still find that with certain departments like don't seem to have like the dvla don't seem to have access do access to other departments. do you i mean? like you you know what i mean? like you don't seem to have access to
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oxygen. very, very strange. i remember years remember reading some years ago about had the about how before they had the welfare it used welfare state, it all used to have vaguely various benevolent societies, know, and if you societies, you know, and if you if your in and you if you did your back in and you couldn't few weeks, couldn't work for a few weeks, you the local community you know, the local community and your industry or and perhaps your industry or whatever, church as well. whatever, the church as well. but but point was, if but but the point was, if somebody saw you down the somebody then saw you down the pub you pub standing upright and, you know , thought you had a bad know, i thought you had a bad back, you because you back, you know, because you would connection with would feel some connection with it. i think be it. i think that might be helpful. i'm helpful. i don't know. i'm a little worried about the authoritarianism we've seen how carried governments got carried away governments got dunng carried away governments got during want during covid. you really want them them to them to give them access to check account all them to give them access to chewtime account all them to give them access to chewtime and account all them to give them access to chewtime and i'm account all them to give them access to chewtime and i'm wondering ll them to give them access to chewtime and i'm wondering maybe the time and i'm wondering maybe the time and i'm wondering maybe the should lower, the amount should be lower, maybe 16,000 too much. but i'm not not exactly not they're not exactly oligarchs. not they're oligarchs. i'm not sure they're the people target. and oligarchs. i'm not sure they're the look)eople target. and oligarchs. i'm not sure they're the look atwple target. and oligarchs. i'm not sure they're the look at ite target. and oligarchs. i'm not sure they're the look at it this target. and oligarchs. i'm not sure they're the look at it this way. at. and oligarchs. i'm not sure they're the look at it this way. doesd let's look at it this way. does it benefit society that it actually benefit society that much for people become much for people to become totally on totally destitute, then sign on versus slight buffer versus having a slight buffer because it's really about income. about savings. income. it's not about savings. i do agree with you there. and actually, it's actually, i mean, it's a perverse isn't it? perverse incentive, isn't it? the should be to encourage the idea should be to encourage people to make against people to make savings against having don't having a rainy day. you don't want people to go, well, there's
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no saving because then want people to go, well, there's nwill saving because then want people to go, well, there's nwill just saving because then want people to go, well, there's nwill just have ng because then want people to go, well, there's nwill just have to because then want people to go, well, there's nwill just have to useause then want people to go, well, there's nwill just have to use those hen i will just have to use those savings and othennise the government help me out. government will help me out. yeah hand, i'd yeah but on the other hand, i'd say of benefits say the amount of benefits claimants has soared in recent years. 2.7. we're years. so we're at 2.7. we're not 2.7 million now, but not at 2.7 million now, but 275,000 more than in 2019 before the should are the issue should be are you capable of working rather than have 16 grand in? yes have you got 16 grand in? yes and think may be housing and i think it may be housing benefit things that benefit and things like that where there's more wastage. i'm just wondering savings where there's more wastage. i'm justthe ndering savings where there's more wastage. i'm justthe nderinto savings where there's more wastage. i'm justthenderinto reallyiavings are the thing to really hammer people on. i'm sure there are other areas that's probably what i should have i was say. also, you should have a of years, especially if a couple of years, especially if you don't to university. you you don't go to university. you should a couple years should have a couple of years when band, right? so when you're in a band, right? so everyone have crack at everyone should have a crack at that. i would have thought. 2324 that's when you knuckle down. but a couple of but there should be a couple of years welfare benefit years of welfare benefit and just living large kind of just living in a large kind of in you know, a, a squat of in a, you know, a, a squat of some kind, ideally with high ceilings. great ceilings. yeah that's a great point. how danish are we? we have had oasis without benefits. none of the great culture of the last 30 years. you ub40, the obvious away from obvious one now away from political theatre for a bit. nick the guardian explained,
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nick as the guardian explained, the legal the intensely serious legal proceedings undennay in manhattan. true. so proceedings undennay in ma|trumpi. true. so proceedings undennay in ma|trump claims true. so proceedings undennay in ma|trump claims financialso it's trump claims financial statements of 250 statements at heart of 250 million trial are million fraud trial are worthless . and he took the stand worthless. and he took the stand in federal court case in manhattan federal court case and angrily claimed the financial statements were worthless and a witch worthless and it was a witch hunt. and of course, that is correct. i mean, the attorney general, james, has been general, letitia james, has been tweeting about tweeting angry things about trump, obviously hates him. and as pointed earlier as someone pointed out earlier on, are no actual fraud on, there are no actual fraud victims in this alleged fraud case. there's the question case. and there's the question of the value of the properties . of the value of the properties. the accusation trump the accusation is trump overvalued them. but but the counter is that the judge is radically undervaluing them, claiming that mar—a—lago is worth between 18 and 27 million. farage earlier estimated it's more 500 million, more like 500 million, maybe more like 500 million, maybe more so. yeah, it's ridiculous. it'll also people perhaps it'll also put people perhaps off in general. they'll off new york in general. they'll think they can do this. trump they do it to anyone. they can do it to anyone. it's an absurd which we all know. they had a string they certainly have had a string of cases, haven't in of cases, haven't they, in america last couple of america the last couple of years? of with the years? a lot of them with the soros attorneys and so on. which do seem to be extraordinary, far more it just seems
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more i don't know. itjust seems to far more to me that there's far more stories coming out of america about motivated about politically motivated within justice system. the within the justice system. the criminal justice system should be political be free from political influence. but george soros is paying, influence. but george soros is paying, these paying, you know, funding these these so in this case, these days. so in this case, they're political these days. so in this case, they're of political these days. so in this case, they're of the political these days. so in this case, they're of the democrats. tical these days. so in this case, they're of the democrats. but in enemy of the democrats. but in a lot of cases, they actually lot of cases, they they actually are lenient on the friends are very lenient on the friends of the democrats. people are seen as democrat voters. i personally think as well, if you're to going lend somebody money based on you know, money based on the you know, their assessment of how much their own assessment of how much their own assessment of how much their property is worth, then you know, a mug you know, you're a mug basically. if you basically. you know, if you can't be bothered to do your own basically. you know, if you can' diligencezred to do your own basically. you know, if you can' diligence before do your own basically. you know, if you can' diligence before do ystartwn basically. you know, if you can' diligoute before do ystartwn basically. you know, if you can' diligout andfore do ystartwn basically. you know, if you can' diligout and asz do ystartwn basically. you know, if you can' diligout and asz do say,rtwn basically. you know, if you can' diligout and asz do say, you| handing out and as you say, you didn't default on these loans. yeah. so you know, it. they obviously trusted him. so but it's be again, they're obviously trusted him. so but it's to be again, they're obviously trusted him. so but it's to i:themselvesey're obviously trusted him. so but it's to i:themselves in'e obviously trusted him. so but it's to i:themselves in the going to shut themselves in the foot, think, because all this foot, i think, because all this is doing is creating a deeper foot, i think, because all this is d(deeper:reating a deeper foot, i think, because all this is d(deeper divide. a deeper foot, i think, because all this is d(deeper divide. if deeper foot, i think, because all this is d(deeper divide. if you'rer and deeper divide. if you're pro trump, believe now that trump, you just believe now that trump, you just believe now that trump is a martyr. and know, trump is a martyr. and you know, as a witch and if you as you say, a witch and if you and if you hate him, you can. oh, my god, i can't believe half the country has voted for this recidivist criminal, very unhealthy state of affairs. guardian. the greatest
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guardian. now, leo, the greatest danger in a leeds hospital since the of jimmy savile so. so the days of jimmy savile so. so shouldn't is a shouldn't laugh this is a terrible story. but. but a patient talk to leeds hospital worker out of detonating a bomb. a court has been told. so mahmoud farouk intended to kill as many nurses as possible in a terror attack, according to the prosecution. i mean , the correct prosecution. i mean, the correct term should be decolonise nurses, i believe, since the what's happened in the last month . yeah, but this guy, this month. yeah, but this guy, this patient in the hospital, mahmoud farouk, brought this pressure cooker bomb, the same kind of bomb that was used in the boston marathon. it's incredibly deadly, incredibly effective . deadly, incredibly effective. and this patient saw him, saw him looking unhappy. and thank god, you know, we live in a country where people sometimes reach out to other people. so i'm looking unhappy and went to lift his and he asked lift his spirits. and he asked farouk what was in his bag. and farouk what was in his bag. and farouk said, it's just a bomb . farouk said, it's just a bomb. so i don't think i don't think isis are sending us their best people, to be honest. but, i
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mean, you're judging, of course. but it is worth saying this apparently wasn't terrorism at all. specifically hated all. he just specifically hated the hospital. he he felt he had actually been thwarted, treated badly. i he had possibly badly. i think he had possibly been his overtime or been given his overtime or something. he's been pleaded he's two he's pleaded guilty to two terror offences . so. well, no, i terror offences. so. well, no, i thought he said he was he claimed it wasn't terror. he didn't he. yeah exactly. he says it's anger and it's a sense of anger and grievance work grievance towards work colleagues not motivated colleagues but was not motivated by extremism. you know, by islamist extremism. you know, but on the other hand, you know, he made another other offences. yeah. possessing a pressure cooker bomb was the big one. yeah. he denies preparing acts of but yeah, i mean of terrorism, but yeah, i mean look, said wanted kill look, he said he wanted to kill as many as possible. can as many nurses as possible. can you less popular you imagine a less popular attack? we're not even attack? i mean, we're not even allowed to criticise nurses. i mean, it's horrific. it's horrific. nathan guy, horrific. this nathan guy, though, hero he though, is a hero because he talked of it was talked him out of it. it was amazing and walked him away while was talking well. while he was talking as well. i think sort of get him his way. but extraordinary , ali. but it is extraordinary, ali. i don't know what he was ill with. it's get he'll get done it's he'll get he'll get done for swinging the leg now. and he
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taking time off. if you're well enough to track down terrorists, you could have been well enough to work that day anyway, to go to work that day anyway, that's two coming that's it for part two coming up, tommy robinson, katie hopkins, anne hopkins, matt hancock and anne frank. guess which frank. you'll never guess which one banned. i'll see
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divisions? earlier on gb news radio . radio. >> and welcome back to headliners . we are into the headliners. we are into the third of four nick the garden now and two old bruisers back in the ring . yeah, it's katie the ring. yeah, it's katie hopkins and tommy robinson . hopkins and tommy robinson. thank elon musk for reinstating them on x and so they're back. obviously this will be controversial but i think they should be on there. i mean, i think we should have the maximum free possible, especially free speech possible, especially in onune free speech possible, especially in online space. there's a in the online space. there's a question about protests. is that a free speech issue? but be there? it's shouldn't they be on there? it's not for tech in not up for some tech dweeb in silicon prior to the musk silicon valley prior to the musk era stop them there. era to stop them being on there. i see any justification. i can't see any justification. and robinson, if we're and tommy robinson, if we're going to be really honest, it has been right on quite a
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has been proved right on quite a lot of things. mean, he's a lot of things. i mean, he's a far less respected, sort of respectable than 55215511] the murray, who basically says the same posh accent. murray, who basically says the same enough, posh accent. murray, who basically says the same enough, douglash accent. murray, who basically says the same enough, douglas murrayt. funny enough, douglas murray just to interrupt, you briefly defended quite at defended him quite stoutly at one point, one point. he did. at one point, the charges him, the the charges against him, the fraud of he's always fraud of which he's always convicted was convicted fraudster, was essentially up in order essentially cooked up in order to state, had given rough to state, had given him a rough time. he yeah, and pretty time. he said, yeah, and pretty much funny much so, yeah. i mean, funny enough, treated differently enough, he's treated differently in like gad in america. people like gad saad, jordan peterson saad, like him, jordan peterson repost something. whereas in this he's seen toxic. this country he's seen as toxic. but i think there be but i think there should be on there. be up to there. why should it be up to twitter to decide? and interestingly as i'm interestingly as well, i'm sorry, i keep interrupting. i have thing. never made have one more thing. never made it he'd been banned it clear what he'd been banned for or hopkins and whenever the newspapers the guardian say newspapers like the guardian say far activists know and far right activists you know and hopkins who said that compared refugees to cockroaches. that was the newspaper. that was in the sun newspaper. that wasn't a tweet that was wasn't in a tweet that was published like five years before. subeditors and everything. only thing was everything. the only thing i was going was, i know josh is going to add was, i know josh is not the biggest fan of him, but funnily enough, they have the same on israel. so i just same views on israel. so i just i to back on twitter
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i want to be back on twitter just so i can see josh retweet, if that's i'm waiting if that's all i'm waiting for that one moment. think, that one moment. do you think, though, mean, do either though, i mean, do either of you do you think it's to do with the timing? do think it's to do timing? do you think it's to do with do think it's to with gaza? do you think it's to do with the armistice march coming up? if it's not that, it's a huge coincidence, because when there's it's a huge coincidence, because whenfor there's it's a huge coincidence, because when for british there's it's a huge coincidence, because whenfor british people there's it's a huge coincidence, because whenfor british people to here's it's a huge coincidence, because whenfor british people to come calls for british people to come out and defend the cenotaph and defend remembrance sunday, defend armistice day, the weekend pro hamas weekend when the pro hamas pro—palestinian could pro—palestinian marches could be, know, creating huge be, you know, creating huge disruption as disruption there. and i think as a a country, we've been we've a as a country, we've been we've had a couple decades now have had a couple of decades now have been beaten down and been absolutely beaten down and told racist terrible told we're racist and terrible and horrible and in place of any sort of national pride, we've seen horrible ideology is allowed to flourish in and amongst us. and tommy robinson's first tweet when he came back should have told you so. should have been i told you so. yeah, pretty was. yeah, it pretty much was. and he's had that. remember he was he's had that. i remember he was up there during the look up there during the don't look back that marches after back in anger that marches after after the ariana grande and there was bad mishandling of that by the manchester police some time soon. i don't know whether the met will be like
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this if it does go ahead on saturday. the police sometimes seem to quite like to create the maximum friction they again maximum friction they can again in possibly. in order to discredit possibly. well, that's the question. i mean, it's a bit of a conspiracy to say, is this why they're back now? so. i think now? i don't think so. i think it just takes mosque quite a while with some of these people. but yeah, definitely but yeah, there's definitely a danger for to come. danger call for them to come. i had noticed that lot of people had noticed that a lot of people request it as as you said, but there a danger these there is a danger in these marches framed marches of people getting framed basically look as bad basically or made to look as bad as possible, almost like that old far side cartoon of the insects emerging from the insects slowly emerging from the chrysalis frames. and chrysalis over seven frames. and in away and in the eighth flying away and immediately eaten by frog. immediately eaten by a frog. yeah, just go yeah, it's going to just go straight the next trap. straight into the next trap. obviously, don't the obviously, people don't like the way tommy robinson does things, but i there element but i think there is an element sometimes class hatred, which sometimes of class hatred, which i was implying you i was implying before. you say the things with posh the same things with the posh education. the same things with the posh education i when the same things with the posh educationi when he first different. i think when he first started, he definitely did cross lines far as was concerned, lines as far as i was concerned, but he was becoming slightly more know, more nuanced towards, you know, and you say, i and has become, as you say, i think he's probably addressed situation it's emerging
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situation as it's emerging and evolving and he's better evolving and he's become better informed the context informed and in the context of some situations one some of the situations like one of of the things he's of the one of the things he's always chastised standing always chastised for is standing on the pavement, interviewing people trial, which on the pavement, interviewing peoplnhave trial, which on the pavement, interviewing peoplnhave jeopardised., which on the pavement, interviewing peoplnhave jeopardised thelich could have jeopardised the trial, trial at risk . trial, put the trial at risk. but was slamming him but everybody was slamming him for outside this for standing outside this grooming gang trial and completely ignoring the fact that men were convicted of that these men were convicted of the most horrible crimes like the most horrible crimes like the systematic rape of young, young girls. but the argument there was that if he jeopardised that , then they there was that if he jeopardised that, then they wouldn't get punished. so they'd hate him even more. still, at least maybe you see it. and also the grooming gang. yeah you know, i'm i believe i'm not entirely sure. i believe those anyway. he those claims anyway. i mean, he was jeopardising it, still, was jeopardising it, but still, daily mail leo, the sas have daily mail now leo, the sas have extracted the truth from or at least about matt hancock . so least about matt hancock. so matt has been told he's matt hancock has been told he's really good at lying by, by sas officers during the celebrity who dares wins finale . that's who dares wins finale. that's possibly how he got the job as as health minister for yeah i mean they do this he's in this
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reality tv show i think this is the nether stages of his career . the nether stages of his career. i know i'm saying that as somebody talking at 11 pm. no it's also at 5 am. don't worry. 5 pm. and on radio, mixed media. yeah, yeah, yeah. but i mean, it's just interesting to see. so he's in this thing, they go through all this sas training and now has this sort of waterboarding and interrogation putting stress positions and stuff. i wish they'd done this dunng stuff. i wish they'd done this during pandemic. stuff. i wish they'd done this during pandemic . and gareth during the pandemic. and gareth gates is one of the other people really . i mean, if these are the really. i mean, if these are the people in the sas, this is the standard of recruit. yeah. i've got to tell them, isn't it? imagine sorry, i don't want to go into it. i'm a massive fan of the show and gareth gates is brilliant on it. he's he's incredibly tough and like just handles it all mentally and physically . it's extraordinary. physically. it's extraordinary. yeah. as well has yeah. and hancock as well has showed incredible grit that was yeah. and hancock as well has showereallyzdible grit that was yeah. and hancock as well has showe really his le grit that was yeah. and hancock as well has showe really his faultt that was yeah. and hancock as well has showe really his fault wast was yeah. and hancock as well has showe really his fault was it? as never really his fault was it? it was. it was the other stuff. well, no, fair enough. if he's got he's got it. the one got it, he's got it. the one clip i saw there was quite a short quite scary woman,
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short i mean, quite scary woman, but a short. not like but quite a short. not like a physically threatening woman shouts at him and she using shouts at him and she was using very abusive language it was very abusive language and it was pretty direct into his pretty like direct into his face. yeah, still did think face. yeah, i still i did think i know it's kind of pantomime. anyway did think you've anyway but i did think you've got the implicit threat got to have the implicit threat of violence . haven't of physical violence. haven't you kind of thing? you been that kind of thing? later, and later, there's a big bloke and he water on him. but he poured water on him. but i haven't watched that one yet, but seen the clip, there but i've seen the clip, so there is that as well. but just briefly there's the briefly though, there's the funniest they show funniest bit to me was they show a, they let you talk to your family. and this the idea is it's are break you and see it's men are break you and see if break you. he talked to if it'll break you. he talked to that woman who he cheated with and like, of course, didn't and like, of course, he didn't break and they were break at all. and they were watching oh, he's watching going, oh, he's completely course completely fine. of course he is. he's basically psycho. he is. he's basically a psycho. he had two tiny fake tears. of course, him. so course, it didn't break him. so his been his his problem has been his attitude and talking back. but he's weirdly at the he's weirdly good at the sticking in there, talking sticking in there, me talking to my minutes my family and after two minutes of being, you know, being beaten about tumble it about the tumble dryer, shut it down, back into the down, come back into the torture. yeah. anyway, torture. yeah, yeah. anyway, just back. nick just stop oil back. nick and they obviously irritated
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they were obviously irritated having eclipsed a having been eclipsed by a potential military armageddon having been eclipsed by a pote could nilitary armageddon having been eclipsed by a potecould pre—emptnageddon having been eclipsed by a pote could pre—empt thezddon that could pre—empt the environmental they've environmental one they've been banking on. oh, yeah, good point. just up oil banking on. oh, yeah, good poin smash just up oil banking on. oh, yeah, good poinsmash famoust up oil banking on. oh, yeah, good poin smash famous painting banking on. oh, yeah, good poinsmash famous painting in geo smash famous painting in national gallery begin national gallery and begin shouting at public doesn't sound like was the rokeby like them and it was the rokeby venus by velazquez which they defaced and they did this as a homage to mary richardson who did the same thing, who was a suffragette, but she was also head of the women's section of the british union of fascists , the british union of fascists, which is so perfect because just stop oil eco fascists. and so they're doing a tribute to a fascist. and obviously the suffragettes are terrorists as well . that's a less popular well. that's a less popular view, though, so i won't say that on national tv, but this is what they're doing, their art. they're vandalising art. again, it's ridiculous. it's completely ridiculous. and it's completely ridiculous. and it's sort of it's absurd that they're sort of doing a tribute to a fascist. it's ridiculous it's just hilarious, ridiculous peak never gets peak as well. that never gets picked up. is the suffragettes is understood, had almost is widely understood, had almost no on on women's no impact at all on on women's voting rights, very voting rights, which were very much to demographic much just due to demographic changes, especially after the first world war and on. and first world war and so on. and men, course, got the vote men, of course, got the vote because of the first world war
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men the third who didn't own men on the third who didn't own property. exactly. it all property. exactly. so it all changed. developed pen changed. they developed a pen that could operate to do that women could operate to do the yeah yeah. 1928 it the big for. yeah yeah. 1928 it was, the absolute was, by the way, absolute universal suffrage. quite universal suffrage. so quite a long after they're talking long time after they're talking about the anniversary about it will be the anniversary soon. been wondering soon. i've been wondering whether country will survive whether the country will survive long 100th long enough to commemorate 100th anniversary women. voting anniversary of women. voting would be interesting experiment. another thing regarding this regarding this attack on the painting, because they've previously sprayed things that can be wiped off. this is an actual physical attack on the on the painting. they smashed the glass. they used plastic hammers. these polypropylene glass. they used plastic hammers. yes. ie polypropylene glass. they used plastic hammers. yes. they'reropylene glass. they used plastic hammers. yes. they're made 1e glass. they used plastic hammers. yes. they're made from oil like if anything, oil. it's like if anything, they're demonstrating. exactly how vital oil and many how vital oil is and how many uses it in society in case uses it has in society in case of emergency. yeah yeah. it's like an advert for oil . my like an advert for oil. my hammers made from oil. oil too small a word for it. it's liquid vandalism . leo, we have news vandalism. leo, we have news from germany now in the telegraph. i'm sure this will be reassuring to the nations remaining jews. >> so the anne frank
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kindergarten will be renamed and they're saying it's to be more diverse . diverse. >> it's probably because they don't want it to be burnt down and we've got rising anti semitism across across europe , semitism across across europe, obviously over the over the past month. all those pesky. the trouble is that they change the name of the anne frank kindergarten. how are people going and but yeah going to find it and but yeah they're going to change it to they're going to change it to the world explorer for kindergarten in order to be more inclusive. i mean, irony is, i guess that, you know, we've seen this growth of anti—semitism across across europe, the echoes, you know, a lot of what was germany , was happening in 1930, germany, which lineker, funnily which gary lineker, funnily enough, calling enough, despite calling everything isn't 1930, everything that isn't like 1930, germany , 1930 germany, has germany, 1930 germany, has refused to do that about this. it's funny, isn't it? there's i mean, people talk a lot about horse shoe politics, but there's some extraordinary examples of it germany now. it going on in germany now. they're it's more like a they're like, it's more like a sort chinese puzzle sort of chinese puzzle of interlocking about sort of chinese puzzle of interiscking about sort of chinese puzzle of interis and] about sort of chinese puzzle of interis and isn't about sort of chinese puzzle of interis and isn't on about sort of chinese puzzle of interis and isn't on the about sort of chinese puzzle of interis and isn't on the sidejt sort of chinese puzzle of interis and isn't on the side of who is and isn't on the side of the jews, i guess. yeah i mean, this is shocking, isn't it? world explorer kindergarten.
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another more another peak woke to be more exclusive. how excluding exclusive. how does excluding anne you more anne frank make you more inclusive ? pathetic. and it is inclusive? pathetic. and it is quite it was quite worrying. i mean, why do want to get mean, why do they want to get rid memory? it rid of this memory? it is worrying rise in worrying with the rise in anti—semitism around world, worrying with the rise in a definemitism around world, worrying with the rise in adefine it..ism around world, worrying with the rise in adefine it. ism around world, worrying with the rise in adefine it. i agree.|nd world, worrying with the rise in adefine it. i agree. it's world, worrying with the rise in adefine it. i agree. it's notworld, i define it. i agree. it's not a massive example, but it's just another well, they go another example. well, they go immigrant families had often never her. well, never heard of her. well, there's opportunity there's a learning opportunity then. that much then. it wouldn't take that much time to explain. time and effort to explain. that's kind where you need that's kind of where you need things after her. yeah. things named after her. yeah. it's like they might not have heard gladstone, so you go, heard of gladstone, so you go, oh, gladstone. was the prime oh, gladstone. he was the prime minister. know, people minister. you know, people are thick haven't heard of thick now. they haven't heard of anything. that can't be anything. i mean, that can't be the metric. oh, god. >> now, nick. >> daily mail now, nick. football has been slammed by a charity that claims to be worried about brain injuries . worried about brain injuries. >> so slamming would seem to be a slightly counterintuitive. good football good point. this is a football stubborn to put players stubborn refusal to put players health above all else is blasted andindeed health above all else is blasted and indeed slammed, as you say, by brain charity by brain injury, charity headway, sorts of puns after headway, all sorts of puns after harry maguire played on against fulham. suffering a blow fulham. despite suffering a blow to head and appearing dizzy. to the head and appearing dizzy. but the win. and
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but we did get the win. and that's important thing. that's the most important thing. one man united fan of one nil. so man united fan of course. but mean look course. but yeah i mean look this a problem with football this is a problem with football if can't heading out of if you can't take heading out of the game because it destroy the game because it will destroy the game because it will destroy the completely. then again, the game completely. then again, it's damage, it's giving people brain damage, especially well, especially those that played in like those people that played in like 1966. and balls were 1966. and when the balls were just giant orange medicine balls. still balls. and but it's still an issue. and the issue is issue. and i think the issue is a little bit well that you a little bit as well that you don't sign up for it. you don't really sign up for it. you know, in boxing, you get battered get brain battered and you get brain damage but you damage and you can die, but you 9°! damage and you can die, but you go, what we've signed up go, that's what we've signed up for and they accept it. you know? so football is really more of game, which has of a gentleman's game, which has this aspect of heading which will your brain. so it's will destroy your brain. so it's tricky. american football. they give test give them all a cognitive test before careers before they start their careers and then they another and then they use another one at the whether they've the end to see whether they've been significantly. you know been significantly. but you know what they what else? they give them a helmet, of course, just fake it, couldn't the other way couldn't you the other way round? needs to be sort of in round? it needs to be sort of in reverse. you what reverse. do you know what i mean? need to be you need to mean? you need to be you need to be incentivised do well. the be incentivised to do well. the second time, i find a bit odd second time, i find it a bit odd that unless the players are just
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not do they money they've not do they get money if they've if thicker. yeah, if they've got thicker. yeah, that the implication, that would be the implication, you know, because then they could compensation. but could get compensation. but i again just sniff glue again you could just sniff glue your american football your entire american football career. could just career. well you could just deliberately questions deliberately get some questions wrong, it wrong, but maybe they do it subtly. they just subtly. i don't. they just scan their to see how much their brains to see how much damage. oh, maybe that's how they it. yeah, that's they do it. yeah, that's possible. but no, apparently they 40 minute they give them like a 40 minute iq test, that's they do iq test, and that's how they do it. smart enough by it. probably not smart enough by that point to find it wrong. >> kind of like bit >> kind of like i played a bit of sunday about 4 or 5 of sunday league about 4 or 5 years ago and i actually literally stopped because of the heading, you're not heading, because if you're not willing heading, you willing to do the heading, you can't take part. can't really take part. >> five a side. me >> we play five a side. give me a headache a neck ache for a headache and a neck ache for like the rest of the day. you know, it's quite if you're trying to give it some we trying to give it some welly. we play trying to give it some welly. we play side once a week. play five a side once a week. i keep it the like brian keep it on the deck. like brian clough played keep it on the deck. like brian clothe played keep it on the deck. like brian clothe grass, played keep it on the deck. like brian clothe grass, not played keep it on the deck. like brian clothe grass, not in played keep it on the deck. like brian clothe grass, not in the jlayed keep it on the deck. like brian clothe grass, not in the skyed keep it on the deck. like brian clothe grass, not in the sky for on the grass, not in the sky for three. done. coming up in the final
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and welcome back to headliners for the final quarter daily mail. now, leo, and in answer to the eternal question, what do women want? >> so british women want one more child, but the cost of having them affordability of care and anxiety about overpopulation puts them off, according to this study. >> so they looked at women aged between 18 and 35 years, key years, and they wished their ideal number of children to have would be 2.35 overall. nobody wants like nought point three five of a child, but in reality the average is 1.5. so. so just they're a child short . and it's they're a child short. and it's interesting that the cost obviously there's a lot of cost associated with having a child. i've got a child myself . you've i've got a child myself. you've got to feed it and look after it and stuff. but i think the thing that affects people that really affects people is how is so expensive in how housing is so expensive in this country . and also, if you this country. and also, if you put your child in a nursery, my kid goes to nursery, it's brilliant but it's brilliant for the kid, but it's huge. it's hugely expensive. and it's not tax deductible. and you
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pay it's not tax deductible. and you pay vat on of it. it's pay vat on top of it. it's insane. and the overpopulation thing is interesting because on one hand, people are worried about the impact on the environment having kids. but environment of having kids. but on other hand, we're being on the other hand, we're being oh , told, we have enough on the other hand, we're being oh , in d, we have enough on the other hand, we're being oh , in d, wcountry,|ave enough on the other hand, we're being oh , in d, wcountry, soe enough on the other hand, we're being oh , in d, wcountry, so we've gh kids in this country, so we've got import everybody from the got to import everybody from the middle east and wherever else. i mean, encouraging mean, it's very encouraging that women even theoretically still want children because want to have children because you could get the impression that losing that women were just losing interest whole interest entirely in the whole business i business of motherhood. but i still think it is quite a powerful instinct that is encouraging. is encouraging. but what's sad is look, 88% of women aged 18 look, yeah, 88% of women aged 18 to 24 and between 25 and 35. to 24 and 49% between 25 and 35. childless which seems quite high, but a tiny fraction high, but only a tiny fraction of 13% and 14% respectively, said that they'd ideally have no babies. so as you say, they want to they're not. to have them, but they're not. and well, it's probably the and why? well, it's probably the lie feminism the lie lie of feminism and it's the lie of the that you can wait of the culture that you can wait forever, which biologically you can't. and it's the malthusianism of the overpopulation argument, which we now know to be exactly wrong. and looks birth rates and it looks as if birth rates are actually too low. just are actually too low. so just very that societal very tragic that these societal influences women influences have given women completely idea . and completely the wrong idea. and there people there's
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there are still people there's a whole people whole generation of people who think it's an think that we are it's an overpopulated planet. think that we are it's an ovebutiulated planet. think that we are it's an ove but the:ed planet. think that we are it's an ove but the reality 1et. think that we are it's an ove but the reality is:. think that we are it's an ove but the reality is the best >> but the reality is the best chance we have of solving the problems confront problems that we confront ecologically and so on is by having genius child that having some genius child that will, you know, that will work it us. it out for us. >> that's our best guess. you know, this point. but it's know, at this point. but it's also supporting own also supporting your own economic and theory economic systems. and the theory is have enough is that we don't have enough birth rate to do that. and supporting yourself. i mean, i see amongst you see amongst my friends, you know, their 30s, so, know, women in their 30s, so, so many them are are, you know, many of them are are, you know, basically alcoholics. they're taken they're taken antidepressants. they're unhappy be they're having they're indulging in, you know, you know , you know, on on you know, you know, on on inadvisable sexual contact all the time. that's how i meet most of them. and that's not true. if my wife's watching . but that my wife's watching. but that when you have a kid the thing that you're not told you get told all this stuff in the media, that's you know, oh, be single, spend your money on other things, blah, blah, blah. live life. having a kid live your own life. having a kid is enriching is the most incredibly enriching thing and wonderful thing. the one that would one thing that i think would help as well is it gathers
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momentum have momentum if your mates all have kids the same time, then it kids at the same time, then it enriches further, enriches it even further, doesn't whereas you're doesn't it? whereas if you're isolated mates, isolated by your mates, by having a child, that's, you know, an issue as well. so it is just question turning that just a question of turning that into again. yeah. into the majority again. yeah. anyway, nick, staying the anyway, nick, staying with the mail, many mail, we have one of the many catastrophic knock on effects downstream . yeah, downstream of lockdown. yeah, soaring truancy rates at schools are to parents are partly down to parents working from home are working from home who are ignonng obugafions ignoring their obligations to get school. this get kids to go to school. this comes from a charity. what is it? the sutton this it? the sutton trust. and this is shocking, 22.3% estimated to be persistently absent in 2022 and 23. and you go , what is and 23. and you go, what is going on here? and partly they're saying it's because mum and dad are home. so what if and dad are at home. so what if my mum was at home? she would still school. still cart me off to school. so there's a strange something has gone wrong. i guess what they're saying is if were to saying is if you were going to work yourself, work in the morning yourself, yeah, i not yeah, they might. i mean, not for there could be for everyone, but there could be just bit of a if just like a little bit of a if you're going to work in the morning yourself, you make sure the kids are into school and then go on to work. yeah. then you go on to work. yeah. whereas if you're working from
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home, you might yourself start to getting 9 to slip into getting up at 9 am. and know what i mean? am. and you know what i mean? and . doing a zoom call. they're and. doing a zoom call. they're talking as if school is a crash, which may be now it is. but the idea is not just that they're there because you're out and they have somewhere. it's they have to be somewhere. it's to some stuff. think to learn some stuff. but i think there be a few. yeah, there might be just a few. yeah, yeah. that's why happening. there might be just a few. yeah, yeaiit's1at's why happening. there might be just a few. yeah, yeaiit's not; why happening. there might be just a few. yeah, yeaiit's not acceptable. ppening. there might be just a few. yeah, yeaiit's not acceptable. no,1ing. there might be just a few. yeah, yeaiit's not acceptable. no, the. but it's not acceptable. no, the lockdown society and this lockdown broke society and this is have. yeah. yeah is what we have. yeah. yeah well, just well, i think there's just reveals all reveals the truth that we all knew teachers are glorified knew that teachers are glorified babysitters. is some babysitters. well, there is some truth that, isn't there? and babysitters. well, there is some t|suppose1at, isn't there? and babysitters. well, there is some t|suppose if:, isn't there? and babysitters. well, there is some t|suppose if you |'t there? and babysitters. well, there is some t|suppose if youl't tfully�* and babysitters. well, there is some t|suppose if youl't tfully down i suppose if you go fully down that you might say that route, you might say it's not disaster not necessarily a disaster depending of depending on what sort of quality watching quality of tv they're watching at but homeschooling at home. but yeah, homeschooling actually so there is at home. but yeah, homeschooling actualfr so there is at home. but yeah, homeschooling actuaif they're so there is at home. but yeah, homeschooling actuaif they're actually ere is at home. but yeah, homeschooling actuaif they're actually doing that. if they're actually doing that, i don't suppose will that, i don't suppose they will be they? no, it be though, will they? no, it doesn't it. also, doesn't sound like it. also, sir peter that's what doesn't sound like it. also, sir pete of that's what doesn't sound like it. also, sir peteof word that's what doesn't sound like it. also, sir peteof word is1at's what doesn't sound like it. also, sir peteof word is that? what doesn't sound like it. also, sir peteof word is that? lamplt doesn't sound like it. also, sir peteof word is that? lampl this sort of word is that? lampl this sounds like an apt anyway, in dependent leo british men dependent now. leo british men are no longer going dutch , so uk are no longer going dutch, so uk tourists to the netherlands are down 22% after an amsterdam charm campaign urging brits to stay away. so it's down 22%
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compared with 2019 before the pandemic. but basically this this online campaign is triggered when people in britain enter keywords such as stag party, amsterdam , pub crawl, party, amsterdam, pub crawl, amsterdam and cheap hotel amsterdam. and yeah, you can imagine these aren't going to be the people, not your high wealth , high value visitor shop . , high value visitor shop. that's the old euphemism. yeah art gallery. that's the ones you want. so yeah. a warning videos want. so yeah. a warning videos pop up want. so yeah. a warning videos pop up featuring young men staggering staggering in the street, being handcuffed and fingerprinted and having their mug taken and describing fingerprinted and having their mugrisks taken and describing fingerprinted and having their mugrisks and ken and describing fingerprinted and having their mugrisks and consequencesbing fingerprinted and having their mugrisks and consequences ofg the risks and consequences of drug and alcohol consumption . drug and alcohol consumption. which to be honest, i don't think we'd put any of these people off. it always people off. it was always a weird mix. i've been to amsterdam on a couple of stag dos, like men in their 30s dos, but like men in their 30s and disgraceful. and we weren't disgraceful. but it interesting it was. it was interesting because really fine because there's some really fine high kind you know, high artistic kind of, you know, offers and then there is high artistic kind of, you know, offe absolute and then there is high artistic kind of, you know, offe absolute dregs. en there is high artistic kind of, you know, offe absolute dregs. en is. ere is the absolute dregs. it is. i mean, that's part of mean, it's that's part of amsterdam's i think it'd amsterdam's charm. i think it'd be they clean up be a shame if they clean up entirely. it's bizarre. entirely. yeah, it's bizarre. we've this before we've covered this before when they this campaign. they introduced this campaign. it's it's it's such a weird campaign. it's been we're not
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been successful. so we're not going they're kind going anymore. they're kind of like ultimate libs. they like the ultimate libs. they sound remainers steroids sound like remainers on steroids . oh, can't have . the dutch. oh, we can't have you with your stag dos. and you here with your stag dos. and so going. i'm so now i'm never going. i'm boycotting the country because i'm but i'm i'm very high brow, but i'm boycotting been boycotting it. i've never been never because if never will because of this. if they don't want it will they don't want us, it will make no difference. you've no difference. but also, you've got to watch out as a right wing person, because think dominic person, because i think dominic samuels did samuels went there, did mushrooms had mushrooms and then had a had a great yeah, i don't great awakening. yeah, i don't want that. >> there's now a wing guru. >> there's now a left wing guru. >> there's now a left wing guru. >> i want stay stay >> now i want to stay stay conservative not conservative and square and not take daily mail nick take drugs. yeah daily mail nick and talking of things like not going to amsterdam anymore, other folks no other things, old folks no longer do as well. yeah. this is adult reveal they're adult reveal the things they're too deal with anymore too old to deal with anymore and being is a no being out past 9 pm. is a no no. when i get started. no. that's when i get started. ludicrous. but some the other ludicrous. but some of the other things are hangovers and drinking. that. get drinking. i do get that. you get the hangover that is the three day hangover that is very work as much as very tough to work as much as i do. can't drink any do. i basically can't drink any more. saying events more. and they're saying events starting past nine, as we said, concerts without assigned seating. yes yeah, with seating. yes yeah, i agree with that sleep, social that one. lack of sleep, social media of them are just that one. lack of sleep, social media we of them are just that one. lack of sleep, social media we can't of them are just that one. lack of sleep, social media we can't botherem are just that one. lack of sleep, social
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media we can't bother having ust saying we can't bother having arguments anymore. like not like saying we can't bother having argumtdebates,1ore. like not like saying we can't bother having argumtdebates,1orejust5 not like saying we can't bother having argumtdebates,1orejust stupid ke proper debates, but just stupid argument. that they're argument. i do get that they're saying that, you know, keanu reeves apparently just if someone says to him, two plus two five, just goes, two is five, he just goes, you're correct. have a nice day. leo a of that, leo could try a bit of that, but it's his twitter it's his twitter. his twitter wouldn't growing and wouldn't be growing as much. and i've even dropped grudges. i used to more grudges than used to have more grudges than morrissey, now morrissey, but i've now just. i have now. yeah. i can't be bothered. to i've an extent, i've grudges i've still got more grudges than anyone ever yeah. yeah anyone i've ever met. yeah. yeah and this goes for debates or argument well and for music, argument as well and for music, but do no longer i can no but i do no longer i can no longer stand venues where the where the background where the music, the background music that's music is too loud. yeah, that's a and that is an ageing a definite and that is an ageing thing. and i think it's i think when younger think when you're younger you think it's a choice, it's not. you it's a choice, but it's not. you just function that just cannot function in that environment anymore. have a conversation. anyway we've conversation. yeah. anyway we've just 30s to fit in the last just got 30s to fit in the last one, is a good reason for one, which is a good reason for invading for change. invading poland for a change. yeah. is brilliant. so, yeah. this is brilliant. so, lads, poland a little lads, fly to poland for a little food shop prove it's cheaper food shop to prove it's cheaper than uk, with the than the uk, even with the flights. they went to the flights. so they went to the clapham little. it cost £165. so they got flights to poznan in poland and saved 67.72 on the
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food shopping. and even with even with everything they had to pay even with everything they had to pay for, they still saved £11. amazing and probably a good deal less chance getting mugged on less chance of getting mugged on the out. well, would the way out. well, i would imagine i've never been opponent. i'm starting to fancy it a bit. what do you think? yeah, the good news is by yeah, well, the good news is by 2030, to 2030, poland's going to be ficher 2030, poland's going to be richer us. so know this richer than us. so know this won't case anymore to won't be the case anymore to level yeah, and the level out anyway. yeah, and the price astronomical. all price will be astronomical. all the show is nearly over. so let's quick look at let's take another quick look at tuesday's we have tuesday's front pages. we have the 78, the daily mail, poppy seller 78, punched . others the punched by protester. others the times, thousands to be spared cancer with fourpence a day pill. we have the sun eco harry flies to katy perry gig in oil tycoon's jet the mirror michelle mone shock finally she admits ppe link the i news greene king for to announce shredding of eco policy that's charles not the brewery metro 300,000 get drug to avoid breast cancer and those
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were your front pages. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, leo kearse and nick dixon . dixon. >> i'm back tomorrow at 11 pm. with leo kearse again and josh howie. if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. a.m, stay tuned for breakfast. if you've been staying up with us tonight, thank you very much for your company. >> i do wish you the very merriest of dreams. >> good night
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welcome to breakfast with him and isabel. >> very good morning to you. here's what's leading the news this morning. king charles will today outline the government's law making plans in a speech dunng law making plans in a speech during the state opening of parliament with a general election drawing nearer. >> the prime minister is quickly running out of time to deliver
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new ideas. but what are they? we'll have a full analysis of the speech here on breakfast. >> enough is enough. that's the heading of a letter signed by un leaders calling for a humanitarian ceasefire in gaza . humanitarian ceasefire in gaza. but israeli airstrikes are intensifying . mark white has the intensifying. mark white has the latest from tel aviv. >> a month on from the 7th of october attacks, israel is tightening the noose around gaza city . despite the death and city. despite the death and destruction , an already the real destruction, an already the real battle has. still to come . battle has. still to come. >> and is it a court case or a campaign rally? a judge warns donald trump to end his political rants during a fraud trial into his business affairs because it's a scam . because it's a scam. >> and this is a case that should have never been brought. and it's a case that now should be dismissed and paul coyte is here. >> he'll have all the latest in the sport for us. >> joe, what a night it was. five goals given, haven't got my breath back. i haven't either. elizabeth throat is still bad.
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