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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  November 8, 2023 2:00am-3:01am GMT

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the risk of assessment of the risk of violence . but the violence. but the pro—palestinian coalition are refusing to cancel the march . refusing to cancel the march. police could request it's banned if there's a threat of serious pubuc if there's a threat of serious public disorder. the met chief mark rowley, says the police will do all it to can protect remembrance events . remembrance events. >> the remembrance events will not be disturbed and whatever protest and other events go on, we will do our utmost to protect those because they are so critical. people shouldn't be in fear that those are going to be compromised. we will do everything possible to make sure they're second point they're not. the second point about protests , though, there about protests, though, there will be a protest this weekend . will be a protest this weekend. parliament is very clear about that. parliament is very clear about that . the law provides hides no that. the law provides hides no mechanism to ban a gathering, a static protest, a rally, anything like that. so mark rowley there. >> now, prince harry has delivered a special message of hope to military veterans
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attending an event in new york city. the duke of sussex video message was played at the 79th annual stand up for heroes event at the lincoln centre yesterday. the prince did crack a few jokes, but he also spoke more seriously about what he described as the hugely important closeness of the military community. prince harry, of course, a patron of the invictus games, a sports tournament uniquely for injured servicemen and women . this is gb servicemen and women. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news channel all . news channel all. >> hello and welcome to headliners. your first look at wednesday's newspapers with me, simon evans. tonight i'm joined by pillar of the jewish
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community josh howie and strong independent scottish woman with her pillar still intact, it's leo kearse that seemed a little bit on point there. apologies guys. >> you know, if you feel like you've been. >> thank for respecting my pronouns. simon yeah, that's quite all right of you. yeah so let's a look at these front let's take a look at these front pages. mail we kick pages. is the daily mail we kick off with pray they don't end up with a riot at the cenotaph, which we've just seen the met addressing that concern . express addressing that concern. express sunak accuses starmer of plot to lock uk in eu deal guardian defiant met chief rejects ministers calls to ban propane justinian march the times police resist calls to ban march an and the i news has braverman split with number 10 as tories accuse her of leadership bid . and her of leadership bid. and finally the daily star carrots turned me into oompa loompa .
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turned me into oompa loompa. those were your front pages . so those were your front pages. so we're going to kick off with the daily mail , i we're going to kick off with the daily mail, i think. leo that's right, says the pray. they don't end up with a riot at the cenotaph because scotland yard has given the green light to a pro—palestine rally on armistice day. so the met chief, mark rowley or sir mark rowley, has said the laws created by parliament are absolutely clear. there's no absolute power to ban protests and therefore there there will be a protest this weekend , although i mean, they weekend, although i mean, they don't seem to be don't seem to stick to law when it comes to arresting people for praying silently or sending some sort of retweeting a limerick . retweeting a limerick. >> death to the west is open to interpretation. >> well, apparently, apparently the police who obviously come under the jurisdiction of sadiq khan , a muslim, i'm not saying khan, a muslim, i'm not saying that's had any influence whatsoever. but but, yeah, they say jihad can be interpreted in
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many different ways, but none of them are particularly nice ways, though i suppose, in terms of the law here. no doubt. correct. i'll that. that i'll trust him on that. that there mechanism for there is no mechanism for preventing march. the sense preventing the march. the sense one is he would not be one has is that he would not be inclined prevent if inclined to prevent it even if the mechanism available, the mechanism was available, though, that's fair? >> yeah, get that sense of it. >> yeah, i get that sense of it. but for me, when he's talking about laws, it's like, okay, you know, other laws that we have exactly say , are prevent exactly as you say, are prevent hate speech , which they just hate speech, which they just they've you know, we've seen all they've you know, we've seen all the out these the people hanging out these posters, people you've posters, people chanting, you've got laws, use your laws , please. got laws, use your laws, please. >> and instead, they're arresting anybody with with, you know, a saint george's cross or a union flag because they say that's, oh, no, that's incendiary. that could offend these people who are chanting for genocide. you know , it's for genocide. you know, it's absolute. we're living in opposite world. it's weird. does this because does feel opposite world. it's weird. does thime because does feel opposite world. it's weird. does thime like acause does feel opposite world. it's weird. does thime like thisse does feel opposite world. it's weird. does thime like this is does feel opposite world. it's weird. does thime like this is a does feel opposite world. it's weird. does thime like this is a new feel to me like this is a new innovation , i should just say an innovation, i should just say an innovation, i should just say an innovation rubbish tautology. innovation, i should just say an innov.the1 rubbish tautology. innovation, i should just say an innov.the1 rubithattautology. innovation, i should just say an innov.the1 rubithat you>logy. innovation, i should just say an innov.the1 rubithat you police a well, the idea that you police a large scale event by removing any smaller elements that might inflame the larger the majority ,
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inflame the larger the majority, regardless of the fact that it's the majority who are threatening violence, the majority who are chanting murderous slogans. if somebody appears carrying a cross of saint george, as you say, or , god forbid, you know, say, or, god forbid, you know, the of david, then that is the star of david, then that is considered to be the provocative act. well, this this weekend, they might not be the minority because there have been calls for british patriots to come out and stage a counter protest and shut down or certainly protect the cenotaph. and i can absolutely understand. i won't be down there myself. you know what i mean? no i don't. some people get punched in the face, but yeah, i can totally understand that sentiment and so people are saying , oh, far right people are saying, oh, far right yobs, far right. i was in far right to want to protect the cenotaph on armistice day . i cenotaph on armistice day. i know. i suppose the only danger is that that is in itself a trap which allow certain which will allow certain elements to portray those people as the thugs. yeah, but i mean, i think our authorities, the state has failed us in this
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instance. so i can understand why people are taking the situation into into the whole that footage of also of just police just being endlessly harassed, having fireworks fired at them, and they're just sort of there. of standing there. >> a numbers game, i guess >> it's a numbers game, i guess they they them success is they they for them success is they they for them success is the immediacy of riots not breaking out. i guess , and them breaking out. i guess, and them not getting defeated just by having less of them. but but the fact is that, as you say, it's a state issue here. we need larger numbers of police or the army to come in. so we can ensure that our laws of this land are upheld by a big and their dignity is preserved as well . preserved as well. >> it's very disturbing and unsettling for citizens to watch footage officers being footage of police officers being obviously and spat obviously humiliated and spat out, abused. didn't boris buy a water cannon? i mean, surely of all the times to crack it out , all the times to crack it out, this would be perfect. i think it broken parts. it was broken down for parts. sadly but it could be time to reassemble it swiftly. what has it got? what have you got on the telegraph? >> josh so telegraph one, they have last stand >> josh so telegraph one, they ha hospital last stand >> josh so telegraph one, they ha hospital . last stand >> josh so telegraph one, they ha hospital . now last stand
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>> josh so telegraph one, they ha hospital . now this ast stand >> josh so telegraph one, they ha hospital . now this isn'ttand >> josh so telegraph one, they ha hospital . now this isn't the at hospital. now this isn't the main hospital where hamas are holed up , where their leaders holed up, where their leaders are holed but is in a are holed up, but this is in a town of the gaza city . town north of the gaza city. >> at least they wouldn't have to far. >> at least they wouldn't have to yeah, go, yeah, yeah. an >> yeah, they go, yeah, yeah. an and but they've got a telegraph reporter has basically gone in with with the idf troops s and they've sort of whittled down in this one town. it was a thousand strong battalion. they've got it down to about 100 people. now this last and he's this is the last stand and he's been going through the town and he's sort of seen these booby traps set up in kindergartens and whatever. there's nothing that hamas won't resort to the good news is that the civilians seem to be out of that town. so this can be warfare in the traditional sense of two groups of people fighting each other. yeah, but yeah, it's still no, i was to going say it's grim reading, but no, this is actually great reading good. 100,000 or 1000 terrorists here being wiped out. i'm happy about that. >> hamas didn't take off the hamas badges and just, you know, disappear south with with the
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civilians. >> well, no, a third of the people who were on the list of the injured to get out of through egyptian border, it through the egyptian border, it turns out when they did the double list, double checked on the list, they're oh, hamas they're like, oh, they're hamas terrorists. right. so, i mean, you reliable you wonder how reliable that kind checking is . kind of double checking is. >> extraordinarily >> i'm extraordinarily sympathetic to egypt for not really wanting work on those really wanting to work on those people border all. people across the border at all. yeah that's they did yeah well, that's why they did these checks and well, these double checks and well, they interesting they weren't interesting photograph there as well of king charles and queen camilla. and the headline is the headline andrew is driverless not liable driverless car users not liable for fatal crashes. >> well, this is something i know you feel you feel very strongly about. this is your vision the future. vision of the future. >> yeah, but i don't think just because a driverless because you've got a driverless car, because you've got a driverless can have car, i don't think you have to dress like that, do you? think that's. >> well, depends drunk >> well, it depends how drunk you are. >> you can refer to the car as james. >> yeah, he's. >> yeah, he's. >> strike lady on the double >> strike the lady on the double crossing . crossing. >> , yeah, this is one of the >> so, yeah, this is one of the measures. we're going to get to this in a second of the rishi's rishi sunak the king's speech yes. and but yeah, that is, it's an interesting idea that it's
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going to be the vehicle owners , going to be the vehicle owners, the manufacturers . yeah. who the manufacturers. yeah. who exactly. who are liable instead of driving i guess. >> but car ownership will drop drastically when they're driverless cars because ubers will become ubiquitous or uber type services will be ubiquitous and very cheap . it'll be very and very cheap. it'll be very much like the electric scooters are london at the moment, but are in london at the moment, but it'll all over the it'll just be cars all over the pavement. just most pavement. yeah, just in the most awkward place . moving on the awkward place. moving on to the express now. leo so the express has sunak accuses starmer of plot to lock uk in eu deal. he said that keir starmer would reverse progress made what progress? he's talking about laying the groundwork for a general election. the prime minister put law and order at the heart of the king's speech and there's a beautiful moment. they describe king charles as delivering the speech as if he's a hostage delivering ransom demands . it's quite right. but demands. it's quite right. but yeah, i mean, this this i don't know what this is the headline
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the plucked from it because there's not really much evidence to support anything anything accuses he's just said in line at the top . yeah. yeah i do feel at the top. yeah. yeah i do feel sorry for charles because he's very first king speech . it it's very first king speech. it it's almost like they've deliberately chosen it in order to humiliate him and remind him you've had 50 years for your barking mad ecological. you've got a pier for those robes and they said yesterday i did the gag, but i do like it that he would be delivering his speech through gritted teeth. that's that's how they always speak, isn't it? the royal indeed. did my royal indeed. and did my government will be raising taxes on the on the green fuels i don't know i didn't watch it . don't know i didn't watch it. did you watch it at all? >> no, i didn't but there's some of the stuff that i think is really good ban on leasehold really good ban on new leasehold houses wales. this houses in england, wales. this is michael grey is something that michael grey has been trying through is something that michael grey hasaieen trying through is something that michael grey hasa long:rying through is something that michael grey hasa long time. through is something that michael grey hasa long time. ban ough is something that michael grey hasa long time. ban on|h for a long time. tents, ban on tents . well, but, but, but yeah. tents. well, but, but, but yeah. to a link together. low leasehold tents but but that is it. as someone who's got a
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leasehold flat, i'm just getting my local council are just constantly be just just pulling money out of me. it's a nightmare. oh. because they're like, oh we're going to redo the front door and we're going to charge you double what it would cost. anything got cost. anything and we've got like myheritage or whatever it is. yeah, but it's like a little council and council council flat and it's council flat. and then they send in flat. and then like they send in someone hoover, literally flat. and then like they send in somthise hoover, literally flat. and then like they send in somthis spaceover, literally flat. and then like they send in somthis space and, literally flat. and then like they send in somthis space and they'ally flat. and then like they send in somthis space and they charge like this space and they charge £500 a year for them to come in once a week to hoover it . and once a week to hoover it. and they say it's things like that . they say it's things like that. it batty. it drives me batty. >> oh so you're on board >> but oh so you're on board with sunak's government? >> but oh so you're on board witiwell,ak's government? >> but oh so you're on board witiwell,ak's i'mernment? >> but oh so you're on board witiwell,ak's i'mernmenon board >> well, i'm i'm on i'm on board with stuff that michael with this stuff that michael grade's been trying to grow. he's trying to push through he's been trying to push through for a long excellent. and he's been trying to push through forleastig excellent. and he's been trying to push through forleast now excellent. and he's been trying to push through forleast now it's excellent. and he's been trying to push through forleast now it's in:ellent. and he's been trying to push through forleast now it's in:elweaker1d at least now it's in a weaker form he'd intended it, but form that he'd intended it, but it's like it's left to the residents. >> wouldn't you get like floors? you'll walking down the you'll be walking down the stairs. there'll be like a landing that's just totally covered they covered in junk because they can't be bothered. >> goes back into, you know, people own people buying their own properties and whatnot, totally covered board games well .
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covered in board games as well. it's no comment. >> finally, the daily star carrots turned me into an oompa—loompa . oompa—loompa. >> yeah, that's pretty much what it is . it's somewhat a veggies it is. it's somewhat a veggies ten a day habit, supposedly . ten a day habit, supposedly. i've actually i've heard of this before. it's a genuine phenomenon if you if you eat lots of carrots you do go orange beta carotene. >> is it is it a bad colour. orange. i don't know. >> this is the whole thing >> well this is the whole thing is actually no one to is actually no one wants to be orange. you've orange. if you've got if you've come you've done come out orange, you've done your tanning wrong. your tan self tanning wrong. yeah >> you blend right in this woman blend glasgow. let blend right in in glasgow. let me , let tell you that. but me, let me tell you that. but they haven't. this is terrible journalism they haven't. this is terrible joursamen they haven't. this is terrible joursame height. she's not the same height. she's not she's not doesn't live in not little. she doesn't live in a chocolate factory. she doesn't tapen a chocolate factory. she doesn't taper. that would be a taper. oh no, that would be a carrot. just carrot. sorry. i was just thinking. yeah, the only thinking. yeah, yeah, the only one know about is flamingos one i know about is flamingos are pink because they too are pink because they eat too many prawns, i yeah, many prawns, i think. yeah, yeah. you give them a yeah. if you give them a different just go yeah. if you give them a differelike just go yeah. if you give them a differelike a just go yeah. if you give them a differelike a regular.ust go yeah. if you give them a differelike a regular. they) yeah. if you give them a differelike a regular. they have white like a regular. they have to put colouring the food to put colouring in the food that they give them in the zoo. that's like. like that's right. yeah like. like birthday icing colour. birthday cake, icing colour. yeah, it's the same yeah, right. yeah it's the same
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stuff. maybe i'll try that. that's it for part one. coming up, boris gets the jab. the uk is feeling sad. germany is getting rat. we'll see you in a
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radio. >> and welcome back to headliners . so, leo, we kick off headliners. so, leo, we kick off now with the indian pendant reality tv show format during lockdown that would surely have lifted the spirits. yes. so this is some of the some of the more entertaining things that are coming out of the covid inquiry. bofis coming out of the covid inquiry. boris johnson to be boris johnson wanted to be injected with covid live on tv inquiry told. they also heard how boris johnson would rather let the bodies pile high than order a second lockdown. that bit's a bit less fun and frivolous . so we've heard that frivolous. so we've heard that before, that was at before, haven't we, that was at the but i think been the time, but i think it's been confirmed now. >> that's difference. >> that's the difference. >> that's the difference. >> yeah. although i mean >> yeah. yeah. although i mean a lot of the, the talk over whatsapp is, as you'd imagine in whatsapp is, as you'd imagine in whatsapp groups it's quite sort of humour and all the
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of gallows humour and all the rest of but idea of rest of it. but this idea of being injected live, injected with live tv, i don't with covid, live on tv, i don't know if it'd be like with mr blobby and noel edmonds, somebody a wheel to see somebody spinning a wheel to see if it seems like a sort of alan partridge. >> yeah, one of his sort of prime ministers injecting diseases or, you know, be like the who was selwyn the guy who was it, selwyn gummer, got his kids to eat gummer, who got his kids to eat the burgers? >> did? that's right. cjd >> he did? that's right. the cjd burger yeah. >> he did? that's right. the cjd burtheresa|. could do >> theresa may she could do chlamydia. >> theresa may she could do chliyesdia. >> theresa may she could do chliyes .ia. >> yes. >> yes. >> i just think it's a scope . >> i just think it's a scope. channel 4. >> mean, boris nearly died >> i mean, boris nearly died from covid. so, i mean, this this backfired this would have backfired terribly. what would terribly. something what would you do ? something quite you do? something quite mediaeval. neil kinnock , mediaeval. neil kinnock, scrofula. scabies yeah. sorry. carry on. yeah, well, boris. bofis carry on. yeah, well, boris. boris nearly died . it wasn't boris nearly died. it wasn't like trump who came out, came out of hospital healthier than when he went in, came out doing press stops, being all press stops, being like, all right, to party? he right, who wants to party? he did. had incredible kind did. he had some incredible kind of didn't he? trump of shot, didn't he? trump i can't remember what was that can't remember what it was that it was controversial at it was. it was controversial at the but it was obviously the time, but it was obviously very powerful. it bleach and what's the light? some
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what's what's the light? some horse he didn't horse tranquilliser. he didn't have ivermectin. did he have the ivermectin. oh did he not? else that was not? something else that it was like kind massive steroid like a kind of massive steroid boost. i think it's high risk, but celebrities but hollywood celebrities all have cures all have this stuff that cures all the diseases we get, and they won't to us because then won't give it to us because then it won't ten years. but it won't work in ten years. but it won't work in ten years. but it was extraordinary how close to death he was because he wasn't that old. he was a little bit you know, wasn't that old. he was a little biwas you know, wasn't that old. he was a little biwas quite you know, wasn't that old. he was a little biwas quite i you know, wasn't that old. he was a little biwas quite i still you know, wasn't that old. he was a little biwas quite i still findu know, wasn't that old. he was a little biwas quite i still find that)w, it was quite i still find that slightly suspicious . i think slightly suspicious. i think they him was ill and they told him he was ill and kicked of action. oh, kicked him out of action. oh, really? yeah. the death rates elsewhere went down a very poorly. boris, you need you need this pipe down your neck. boris >> that's a good that's a good conspiracy theory, though. i haven't heard that. >> anyway, apart from that, it was it quite a busy day was. it was quite a busy day though, it? at the, the, though, wasn't it? at the, the, the witch trials? yeah. yeah. anything you wanted to anything else you wanted to mention? was there the. i can't remember what the. >> oh yeah. the bit there is actually something really big here about they basically actually something really big here ab�*concerned,sically actually something really big here ab�*concerned, the .ly weren't concerned, the government at government wasn't concerned at all for months about putting elderly discharging them elderly people discharging them from hospitals into and from hospitals back into and that was some of the largest
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death rates. and obviously the elderly were the most affected. and i never the statistic here, if you went into a home care residents or 20 times more at risk of dying than people living by themselves. same age and by themselves. yeah same age and that's same age . so that's yeah same same age. so and to think that that how i mean they must have realised quite early on that looking, just looking at very basic graphs, oh the elderly are dying just looking at very basic g|lot|s, oh the elderly are dying just looking at very basic g|lot more.the elderly are dying just looking at very basic g|lot more. waitlderly are dying just looking at very basic g|lot more. waitldyminute, dying just looking at very basic g|lot more. waitldyminute, let'si a lot more. wait a minute, let's not them all out of not kick them all out of hospital and put them in without testing these in these homes. >> somebody compared it to launching diseased over launching diseased bodies over a castle wall during a siege. that's what that's how the churchill described it. lenin being sent into russia in 1917. right a plague bacillus josh howie unrelated with being denied a chance to watch boris johnson being given a lethal injection. national happiness levels in the uk are down. >> yeah, people are sad. people in uk are overall less happy than even before the pandemic. only oh fine. so it's sort of it's less about recovering.
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people thought , you know, hey, people thought, you know, hey, we're free again. we can get outside and whatnot. but actually , is this the new actually, is this the new normal? is this we've gone back to 2016 or lower than to sort of 2016 or lower than that, which is not great. it doesn't really get into why , doesn't really get into why, which is one of those annoying things we ask loads of people and they're basically not happy, but it doesn't really get into the it . the why of it. >> i mean, convalescence is not that we've all been ill, of course, but convalescence is usually quite feeling. usually quite a nice feeling. i always register that with forever and even a hangover when it starts to wear off. you get a bounce, don't you? there hasn't been bounce, don't you? there hasn't beethere hasn't been. yeah >> there hasn't been. yeah i think there little bit. think there was a little bit. and that's the thing and then that's the thing now it's of downward trend . it's a sort of downward trend. and things that and but the two things that really out of is really do come out of it is number one health is the most number one is health is the most important. i think everybody number one is health is the most importthat. think everybody number one is health is the most importthat. yeah; everybody number one is health is the most importthat. yeah; evehaver number one is health is the most importthat. yeah; evehave much knows that. yeah you have much higher life satisfaction . and higher life satisfaction. and the other one is don't move to three rivers rushmore or worthing, are they? >> oh my god, worthing . that's >> oh my god, worthing. that's only down the road from us. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> oh, actually quotes you specifically outer hebrides
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apparently is bucking the trend though. >> is that right? was it outer hebrides? yeah, exactly. >> moved. moved to where no one is. you're to be is. and you're going to be really happy write really happy and write a dystopian novel. >> in the times. now >> german news in the times. now leo and as bob once said, you're going have to appease going to have to appease somebody. german ins agree somebody. so german ins agree tough migration rules to keep the afd at bay. the afd is as a right wing anti—immigration party that has become hugely popular in germany as there's a huge amounts of immigration in and it hasn't led to the frictionless utopia that angela merkel promised . it's led to, merkel promised. it's led to, you know, huge , huge problems you know, huge, huge problems with with crime . um, and also with with crime. um, and also just the social disharmony. and we've seen you know, in german, german cities , people throwing german cities, people throwing hitler salutes for the first time and not not german born people throwing, throwing hitler salutes . and this is people are salutes. and this is people are anti—semitic from a from a different culture. so some different culture. so some different point of view. yeah some some germans are even leaving and moving to paraguay. there was a bbc documentary about it, which is i mean,
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that's actually the plot for the boys from brazil almost. isn't that a traditional sort of hangout anyway? but because because the afd, which were this , you know, seen as quite a fringe political party, because they're becoming so popular , they're becoming so popular, the, you the centrist the, you know, the centrist parties usually try and keep some sort of cordon sanitaire around they're around them, but they're becoming so popular, they're pulling the highest, particularly in the in the east, in the in the sort of former soviet german states . the soviet german states. the centrist parties are having to be a bit more right wing. they've introduced some measures. they're fairly sort of like technical and sort of procedural, are they? yeah, the germans . so they're going to be germans. so they're going to be like that. so they're going to cut for migrants. cut benefits for migrants. they're going to process asylum applications faster to allow swifter deportations. and they're going to do offshore processing of asylum claims. and i think they're talking about deportations . it's all a bit of deportations. it's all a bit of a nothing burger, though, to appease anybody who might be thinking afd. thinking of voting for the afd. you know, the centrist parties,
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they're going continue with they're going to continue with their their open borders their with their open borders policy . see. well, think, policy. see. well, do you think, josh, is this likely josh, is this is this likely to come britain, this . come to britain, this. >> mean, arguably, it's >> well, i mean, arguably, it's already maybe already here. this is maybe it's the other around. the idea i the other way around. the idea i mean, we're always talking about the other way around. the idea i mea exactly always talking about the other way around. the idea i mea exactly do nays talking about the other way around. the idea i mea exactly do you talking about the other way around. the idea i mea exactly do you getting about the other way around. the idea i mea exactly do you get to; about the other way around. the idea i mea exactly do you get to griszt how exactly do you get to grips on this stuff? and they're basically following the playbook that and the tories that both labour and the tories are pushing, which is process this stuff quicker. yeah. make sure that application has sure that the application has come from abroad. this is the other is essentially other thing which is essentially the or sending the rwanda scheme or sending people there whilst they process their ions their applications. ions and, but there's still no evidence that this stuff works . but what that this stuff works. but what you do have i disagree with leo in sense that think that in the sense that i think that the central parties actually the central all parties actually are recognising that is an are recognising that this is an issue and trying their best to get to grips with it. the question is, is it ever really an issue that can be fully gnpped? >> no, they'll they'll talk tough and they'll nothing. tough and they'll do nothing. and europe plc, the and also i mean, europe plc, the businesses, they want more workers. and we don't seem to be growing well. >> do have a to bring >> they do have a plan to bring in workers here, but that's
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immigration. >> no, no, not. it's >> no, no, it's not. it's literally immigration. >> permanent literally immigration. >> is permanent literally immigration. >> is the permanent literally immigration. >> is the idea. anent literally immigration. >> is the idea. soent literally immigration. >> is the idea. so that's workers, is the idea. so that's the policy going back to that stage. >> over to america now with the telegraph and disturbing casualty of protest in los angeles . angeles. >> yeah, exactly. jewish man dies after altercation in israel—palestine. protest the way this has been reported in certainly some of the american newspapers is unbelievable in terms of you wouldn't know what's happened, but essentially , see, this was a pro palestinian protest that i'm pro—palestinian, by the way. but these people are is a different level. yeah, i'm on a two state solution at and this man was hit in the head by with a megaphone on by one of the pro—palestinian deliberately deliberately hit in the head fell on the floor hit his head again and died and then the pro—palestinian protests kept on chanting all the way through it, through the ambulance. even when he'd been taken off, kept on doing what they're doing. the today we also
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had a montreal a synagogue was firebombed . i mean, the idea firebombed. i mean, the idea that there's not some correlation, i mean, you're seeing very clearly here what these peaceful marches are. and there is i think there is a homicide investigation ongoing. yeah yeah. so it's being taken seriously as absolutely. there's lots of video footage of it and it's but yeah, it's just it's incredible that. >> josh, you're pro—immigration , >> josh, you're pro—immigration, so i'm not i'm not i just read a story where they were talking about it. >> but previously you've argued with me, you've said, you know, london's you know, i'm london's always, you know, i'm pro controlling amounts, pro controlling huge amounts, controlled immigration. there's a difference the two. a difference between the two. >> think i mean, without >> do you think i mean, without like i'd to control it like now i'd like to control it a bit more. >> yeah, but without holding your feet personally to the fire on this, do you think that some people are changing their i mean, this is slight side mean, this is a slight side issue. a massive issue. there's been a massive shift. yeah. no, no, no question. interesting . >> and it's interesting. organisations such as the adl, which, advocates on which, you know, advocates on behalf jewish people for the behalf of jewish people for the last decade, you'd think the
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only risk to the west is white supremacy , which it seems to be supremacy, which it seems to be very find. think very hard to find. but i think we're now failed. we're seeing now they failed. >> they didn't do their job because they're moving on these progressive values. and that has been of problem. been a big part of the problem. i've that for i've certainly argued that for a long very interested long time. it's very interested seeing bad human seeing how bad human beings generally are updating their generally are at updating their prejudices . prejudices. >> to them for >> they hold on to them for decades sometimes. >> well, the good news is i've got of new got a whole load of new prejudices whole prejudices and the whole new. >> a whole >> exactly. well a whole new season . i'm >> exactly. well a whole new season. i'm having a lot of mine confirmed. that's great. that's it. two. coming up, it. for part two. coming up, disinformation, disinfo , russian disinformation, disinfo, russian disinformation, disinfo, russian disinformation . same old, same disinformation. same old, same old. see you in a
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radio. done well , come back to done well, come back to headliners. >> so our first story in this section is refugee news. leo and i suspect this story in the times will read differently to many people than it might have done a few weeks ago. yeah, so thousands afghan refugees thousands of afghan refugees have from pakistan . have been evicted from pakistan. it's more than thousands. it's
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1.7 in september, 1.7 million. so in september, the pakistani government ordered all undocumented foreigners in the country . mainly all undocumented foreigners in the country. mainly this is mainly targeted at the 1.7 million afghans to leave of due to their blaming them for crime , to their blaming them for crime, huge crime rates and also suicide bombs that are happening in pakistan. and they've already they've already got thousands to leave the country. 120,000 afghans have have left pakistan. i mean, i guess it's easier to just go over the border. but if the uk, this will be sort of literally marched along the road presumably. yeah, yeah, yeah. i mean , if the uk tried that, it mean, if the uk tried that, it would take about 600 years and would take about 600 years and would never happen. would never actually happen. it would never actually happen. it would the courts , would be stopped by the courts, the ngos, the government itself. i going to say, presumably i was going to say, presumably pakistan signed up to pakistan haven't signed up to any the sort of international any of the sort of international treaties us treaties that would prevent us from not suggesting from doing that, not suggesting that should it. that we should do it. but i think if they have if they have, then not by then they're just not abiding by that, which of countries that, which a lot of countries don't we maybe don't do. we should maybe speak to and find out of to pakistan and find out of people what are the secrets that
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they've got for making things happen with government. they've got for making things happjustrith government. they've got for making things happjust saygovernment. they've got for making things happjust say that �*nment. they've got for making things happjust say that 'n|lot |t. they've got for making things happjust say that 'n|lot of >> i just say that a lot of these people are people who they grew who've grew up there, people who've been for generations, born been there for generations, born there. yeah, absolutely. people have been there. their family for 30 years more, you know, coming escape the soviet coming over to escape the soviet or the good news is she's going to love england so well, as soon as they get to calais and get over the ones they're being sent back to, they're being sent back to a taliban run country. yeah. where she will be allowed to where she will not be allowed to go and will not. but go to school and will not. but the about the story the thing for me about the story is, from tragedy of is, apart from the tragedy of it, is utter hypocrisy it, is the utter hypocrisy of all suspects online. all the usual suspects online. you're not seeing gary lineker or anybody talking about these nearly people being nearly 2 million people being deported from their home, the ethnic cleansing of pakistan or whatever, people like guz whatever, and people like guz khan, a comic tweeting khan, who's a comic tweeting every or constantly tweeting every day or constantly tweeting about what's going on gaza . about what's going on in gaza. yet he's himself is from pakistani background. his family . and you would think that that might have an impact or maybe he might have an impact or maybe he might know people who his his profile might might be able to
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influence or he might just feel some shame or or whatever. but just utterly, again, it's just for me, it just shows massive hypocrisy that's going on here with so many of these people involved in this. yeah, absolutely . absolutely. >> they'll jump all over the british government for this slightest thing they slightest little thing if they don't make a sandwich, don't make somebody a sandwich, they're crying about it. josh the daily mail have news of a huge censorship program on earth at stanford university to tackle, what else? disinformation of course. >> yeah, well, this is it. dhs officials, this is the department of homeland security. america created a disinformation group at stanford university to help censor american speech on social media ahead of 2020. election bombshell emails reveal . well, so this is a house judiciary committee is investigating this. and of course, it's who exactly is saying something is disinformation like what they might say is disinformation . so might say is disinformation. so they might be even going into it with a morally pure like idea .
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with a morally pure like idea. oh, we're just trying to make sure that people aren't getting the information . but of the wrong information. but of course, who's deciding exactly what wrong information? what is the wrong information? and it's and also, it turns out here it's mostly people they're saying and also, it turns out here it's mozthe people they're saying and also, it turns out here it's mozthe conservatives re saying and also, it turns out here it's mozthe conservatives who iying and also, it turns out here it's mozthe conservatives who have it's the conservatives who have who are promoting this disinformation. >> and you can tell if it's wrong information by by finding out or not. and out if it's true or not. and they they were censoring true information, which isn't regardless of if it's bad for the democrats, it doesn't make it decent information just just because helps they presumably because it helps they presumably have some is it like it's decontextualise or it's misleading? well the they do see, you know, jokes. we've seen memes. i mean , obviously the memes. i mean, obviously the babylon bee were taken down for a meme . so we've seen, you know a meme. so we've seen, you know memes jokes and all the rest of it being being taken down. but this also also true information . this also also true information. so you know, things are legitimate like the hunter biden laptop scandal that was they don't mention anything specifically in this article. it's very hard to find out exactly of thing was. exactly what sort of thing was. yeah, good yeah, exactly. it'd be good if they'd concrete they'd had some concrete
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examples here of what these emails actually pertain to. i do certainly recognise some of the names that they went after. sean hannity hemingway and hannity mollie hemingway and charlie i mean sean charlie kirk. i mean sean hannity is well known as a host on fox. the other two i mainly know twitter, are know through twitter, those are big million plus subscribers. >> and as leo says, babylon bee. once start going after once you start going after satirical websites and something like satirical websites and something uke bee satirical websites and something like bee and there's satirical websites and something like this bee and there's satirical websites and something like this constantee and there's satirical websites and something like this constant sort1d there's satirical websites and something like this constant sort of there's satirical websites and something like this constant sort of theme been this constant sort of theme on their side. been this constant sort of theme on their side . well, yeah, but on their side. well, yeah, but there's been a theme, a right wing people can't do humour. i'm sorry if you're going to compare babylon and what onion's babylon bee and what the onion's coming nowadays. babylon coming up with nowadays. babylon bee absolutely is bee are absolutely smashing is overtaking for overtaking the simpsons for degrading formerly great degrading a formerly great account, it? account, isn't it? >> point? i think is so >> at this point? i think is so disappointing. meta news now in the independent leo and indeed you need of goggles you might need a pair of goggles to understand i'm a bit to understand this. i'm a bit confused. a former meta confused. so a former meta engineer leader is to testify before congress on instagram's harms to teens . so he says he's harms to teens. so he says he's outlined a critical gap between how the company approaches harm, how the company approaches harm,
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how the company treats harm, so they won't have incitement to violence, for example, and how the people who use its products , the people who use its products, especially young expose especially young people, expose audience that harm. so the example he gives is two weeks ago, my daughter 16 and an expose cementing creator on instagram . i mean straight away instagram. i mean straight away like he's she's an experiment and creator and man, she's just taking selfies and putting them on instagram. get over yourself . on instagram. get over yourself. so she made a post about cars and someone commented, get back to the kitchen, which is not funny. straight up hilarious. and that's wonderful . and if and that's wonderful. and if your daughter comes to you in tears, you should explain why it's funny and tell her to get back in the kitchen. so he says it was deeply upsetting to her. the the comment the same time, the comment is far being violating far from being policy violating and of blocking are and our tools of blocking are deleting. this person will go to other and continue other profiles and continue to spread misogyny. i was spread misogyny. so what i was unclear on, does he that unclear on, does he feel that they should actually be banning people say things like that? people who say things like that? he like if somebody he thinks like if somebody suggests go to suggests that somebody go to a certain a house that's certain room in a house that's some crime and that some sort of hate crime and that
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person should be publicly flogged from the flogged and banned from the internet forever, an internet forever, it's an absolute they've blown absolute nonsense. they've blown absolute nonsense. they've blown a content. a raspberry at her content. but if online, you're going if you go online, you're going to a few raspberries. to get a few raspberries. exactly dad's fault. exactly this is the dad's fault. you tell the dad because he you can tell the dad because he refers to his daughter as an expert content creator. refers to his daughter as an expeithinktent creator. refers to his daughter as an expeithinktent cryou're dealing refers to his daughter as an expeithink you're/ou're dealing refers to his daughter as an expeithink you're dealingzaling refers to his daughter as an expeithink you're dealing with] dad, when you're dealing with kids it says here, kids here, like it says here, she's 16, 13% of kids here, like it says here, she's16, 13% of instagram users aged 13 15 receiving aged 13 to 15 are receiving unwanted sexual advances. >> but that's not sexual advance i >> -- >> no, you're giving one example, but there this is like example, but there this is like example he gave. that's one example. but when actually example. but when we actually look at what the actual stuff that's here, there is that's going on here, there is sexual advances. >> are illegal. sexual advances. >> and are illegal. sexual advances. >> and i'm are illegal. sexual advances. >> and i'm artollegal. sexual advances. >> and i'm artollegthe one josh and i'm sorry to be the one to tell that. okay well, to tell you that. okay well, they are illegal except for 13% of olds are still of 13 to 15 year olds are still getting sexual advances. >> their rules. >> but so that's their rules. >> but so that's their rules. >> don't rules about that. >> well, they do have rules, but the point is they're not implementing properly or implementing them properly or implementing them fully. >> the other >> but he's saying the other thing point. thing that's a different point. i accept you i mean, i accept your point. you shouldn't making sexual shouldn't be making sexual suggestions olds. on suggestions to 13 year olds. on the hand, i'm not 13 the other hand, i'm not sure 13 year instagram year olds should have instagram accounts. was accounts. i thought that was a
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child. instagram. i don't know where you get these parents who describe their kids as experimental creators . experimental creators. >> that example is one >> i look, that example is one example know that's an example i know that's an example. example, an example. >> talking >> you're talking about a different issue. talking different issue. you're talking about things. >> this is what this whole story is and about this. is about and it's about this. >> the gulf. >> it's about the gulf. >> it's about the gulf. >> about between policy. >> we trust them with our >> we can't trust them with our children. and i agree with that. and be doing more and and they could be doing more and they more, could they should be doing more, could be on tiktok and be worse, could be on tiktok and have an instagram account with putting own face on 13. putting his own face on that 13. >> i remember he one just >> i remember he had one just for posting photographs woods >> i remember he had one just for [stuffy photographs woods >> i remember he had one just for jstuff. you otographs woods >> i remember he had one just for jstuff. you shouldn't woods >> i remember he had one just for jstuff. you shouldn't you�*oods and stuff. you shouldn't you shouldn't post selfies online shouldn't post selfies on online at no i agree with you. at 13. no i agree with you. >> but unfortunately, people are guardian >> but unfortunately, people are guejosh| >> but unfortunately, people are guejosh hughes numbers worldwide >> josh hughes numbers worldwide are worried about disinformation and the effect it has on their idiot neighbours . idiot neighbours. >> 85% of people worry about onune >> 85% of people worry about online disinformation. in a global survey finds this is the un they're trying to tackle the phenomenon of this disinformation . yeah. the disinformation. yeah. the majority far majority surprise surprise are are worried about
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it . and the interesting stuff is it. and the interesting stuff is that social media has overtaken has become the primary news source for most people nowadays , source for most people nowadays, but it's less trusted than tv. obviously people don't watch the bbc and really, what they talk here about, they're trying to sort of implement these seven rules or key principles that would affect that. they don't really actually then say what it is. but i feels like what they're saying is there should be some like some independent network everywhere. yeah, that's slightly me. yeah. that's not an that platforms must moderate their content effectively and at scale which they also don't seem to be doing no . and part of it to be doing no. and part of it like a much longer trend that people talk about social media having undermined trust and my wife in pr and she said wife works in pr and she said for people think for years you know people think it's now that there's all it's great now that there's all these citizen journalists, but nobody responsibility . nobody has responsibility. >> editorial board >> there's no editorial board you . but truth is you can trust. but the truth is this been happening this has been happening throughout you throughout my lifetime. you know, from quite know, we have slid from quite bonng know, we have slid from quite boring newspapers, you know, with with lots of copy and a few
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little black and white photographs into news entertainment. i mean, this is you're literally on the show that's doing exactly that. that's right. so you can't tell , that's right. so you can't tell, can you, exactly whether we're cracking or meaning it. cracking a joke or meaning it. this is not this is not a social media is point. this this is not this is not a social m aiia is point. this this is not this is not a social m a general is point. this this is not this is not a social m a general sort point. this this is not this is not a social m a general sort of point. this this is not this is not a social m a general sort of slide. this this is not this is not a social m a general sort of slide inhis is a general sort of slide in the television age, the screen age. we've just covered a story about disinformation gets, about how disinformation gets, you know, valid things get categorised as disinformation. i feel safer . i categorised as disinformation. i feel safer. i think most categorised as disinformation. i feel are safer. i think most categorised as disinformation. i feel are smart i think most categorised as disinformation. i feel are smart enough�*nost categorised as disinformation. i feel are smart enough to st people are smart enough to filter what they're what they're reading that if reading and understand that if it's, know, it's some wacky it's, you know, it's some wacky facebook not to facebook page, it's not going to be gospel truth . it's be absolute gospel truth. it's still be better than still going to be better than wikipedia, well, no. wikipedia, though. well, no. also, 30, also, to be fair, you know, 30, 40 people were 40 years ago, people were concerned that the sun newspaper, the murdoch had direct to people's kind direct access to people's kind of or whatever. you of dopamine or whatever. you know, different. know, it's not that different. >> well, looking at >> i mean, well, looking at what's going on, i'm sorry to bnng what's going on, i'm sorry to bring israel, but bring it back to israel, but that's just i'm at that's just where i'm at spending my days. but you see the actually, the disinformation actually, even , you'd even with the transition, you'd see and then you'd see stuff online and then you'd see stuff online and then you'd see reported the guardian , see it reported in the guardian, like about it. so it is an
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like lying about it. so it is an incredible disjoint now between how you can prove this stuff straight away. you can see what the guardian says about a different story. you can see you can see what some of the papers are about this jewish guy are saying about this jewish guy who died and the that they who died and the way that they presenting and you actually presenting it. and you actually then guy at then see this guy at the protest. so is incredible protest. so it is an incredible tool to be do but tool to be able to do that. but you also have to be able to validate sources go to validate your sources and go to multiple sources don't multiple sources and i don't know people are know if a lot of people are doing that. just put my twitter. >> i always truth. the >> i always tell the truth. the guardian huge numbers. well, guardian now huge numbers. well, no, that one. i do no, i've done that one. i do apologise. we've got a glitch. the is fact, the next straw is in fact, that we doesn't. yeah so we we work doesn't. yeah so we work, is the sort of you work, which is the sort of you rent little spaces instead of, you know, paying for an office. all year you can. you can all year round. you can. you can just little spaces and go just rent little spaces and go and work for a couple of and work there for a couple of days whatever. days a week or whatever. they filed for bankruptcy. and what caused demise of the former caused the demise of the former $50 billion company? so yeah, well, the real reason it failed is, is it a debt of $19 billion,
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which obviously when interest rates go up, that debt, you know, previously was almost free to service, then it becomes incredibly expensive to service. and also there's been a to change there's been a shift to working home. so even working from home. so even though people aren't, you know, companies of companies are getting rid of their not their offices as they're not moving staff to these moving their staff to these little , you know, by the little, you know, rent by the hour people are just hour offices, people are just staying, staying at home, staying, staying at home, staying home or going staying at home or going to their in their gentleman's club in mayfair bit . mayfair a bit. >> what's about this >> what's interesting about this is filing for is you think that filing for bankruptcy that they're bankruptcy means that they're closing not. closing down. they're not. they've paused it they've just sort of paused it and they're continuing to and they're still continuing to function . function. >> the bankruptcy is quite a nice trick. pull it nice trick. if you can pull it off. i believe in american business. i don't know off. i believe in american blit'sass. i don't know off. i believe in american blit's quite i don't know off. i believe in american blit's quite the i don't know off. i believe in american blit's quite the same)n't know off. i believe in american blit's quite the same here.1ow if it's quite the same here. american bankruptcy is very different british different from british bankruptcy. like bankruptcy. you see, people like 50 cent declared himself bankrupt. super bankrupt. are you still super rich? didn't to pay rich? he just didn't want to pay somebody money. somebody some money. well, i still don't quite understand how alex jones is walking around with $1 owed, but never with $1 billion owed, but never mind one more story before the break. we'll squeeze this in the telegraph. leo and it seems bosses at the guardian are all sticking carrot. yeah
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sticking. no carrot. yeah. yeah yeah. so uproar at the guardian as bosses shut the canteen down in an email to staff anna boden, the nuj mother of chapel at the guardian. oh my god. there's such a bunch of commies. they've got a mother of chapel, the nuj, the national union of journalists. my dad used to be used to work in a printing firm . used to work in a printing firm. he always referred to the union leader as the father of the chapel. i quite like that in a slightly of genteel, slightly kind of genteel, sort of . i'm slightly kind of genteel, sort of. i'm surprised slightly kind of genteel, sort of . i'm surprised they're not of. i'm surprised they're not transgender now , the trans of transgender now, the trans of the chapel or whatever. but yeah, so the union had not been consulted about the changes despite the huge impact it's going she it's going to have. she says if it's enacted, announcement would enacted, the announcement would see food provider, see the only hot food provider, the , being soup jacket, the guardian, being soup jacket, potatoes microwave meals. potatoes and microwave meals. oh, hoo hoo! nobody at the oh, boo hoo hoo! nobody at the guardian go and buy a sandwich. oh, my god. we don't have a canteen. i go at marks and spencer buy food, it in spencer buy some food, put it in my mouth. i eat i come my mouth. i eat it. then i come and this. we survive. i've and do this. we survive. i've survived two years here on survived for two years here on yellow yeah. yellow labels. yeah, yeah, yeah. i've times. hot i've a dysentery 15 times. hot >> they're in king's cross. they have 1000
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have literally got 1000 restaurants to the eagle restaurants nearby to the eagle on farringdon road. >> the birth of the gastropub disgraceful. support the local economy. that's part three. dan and hopefully the guardian in the final session. binge drinking and electric shuffle and their sensitive understanding bouncer sounds like a great night out. see you in a
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and welcome back to the headliners for our final quarter. we have some good news. finally two british women have picked up another record in the times not a trans woman in times and not a trans woman in sight either. well we don't know. so british. british women are the world's biggest binge drinkers. i don't know if that refers to the size of the women or the amount they're drinking. probably both to honest. probably both to be honest. related uk , apparently related in the uk, apparently 45% of men and 26% of women are binge drinkers , which sounds binge drinkers, which sounds like a lot. and italy , like quite a lot. and italy, just for context, italy, just for context, in italy, you'd think they drink wine, they they wine they got wine, they grow wine there only they've
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there and stuff. only they've got lager well. delicious got lager as well. delicious lagen got lager as well. delicious lager, peroni smooth throughout the yeah, do . only 4% the week. yeah, they do. only 4% of adults binge drink in italy because they've got a civilised drinking culture as opposed to our smashing a bottle. >> buckfast. so drink all >> buckfast. so they drink all the way through the day. it's not binge you pace it not a binge if you pace it dunng not a binge if you pace it during war. yeah, just keep during the war. yeah, just keep it you watch that it in it. did you watch that great that danish great film that danish film where drunk, got where they get drunk, they got a dnnk where they get drunk, they got a drink their alcohol drink like their blood alcohol at thing. it's so at a certain thing. it's so funny. and it's been proven that if of keep it at if you sort of keep it just at like something like 0.4% or something like microdosing . yeah, yeah. then it microdosing. yeah, yeah. then it improves all your abilities improves all of your abilities really you. really bad for you. >> you did. >> you did. >> he used drink. well then >> he used to drink. well then they alcoholics and it's they become alcoholics and it's really a really funny but it's a brilliant got to brilliant film. i've got to remember. it's got the baddie, one in a bond one of the baddies in a bond movie anyway, it's movie in it. anyway, it's brilliant. i'm sorry. >> that was really it. oh, you got it. yeah. british people dnnk got it. yeah. british people drink really a drink a lot. it's not really a news the. just news story to find the. i just want to the definition want to find the definition because quite important. because it's quite important. the binge the definition of binge drinking, to jongleurs. >> yeah >> bristol. yeah >> bristol. yeah >> because they say the british dnnk >> because they say the british drink an adult an average of 100 bottles of wine a year , which i
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bottles of wine a year, which i think is almost sounds like that feels a bit tame to me . two feels a bit tame to me. two bottles of wine a week. >> speak for yourself. you're very yourself. >> simon yeah . >> simon yeah. >> simon yeah. >> i don't think that that's it's pretty hard. >> the definition of binge is only like three pints of lager or something, which yeah, or something, which is. yeah, that's you're getting that's what you're getting charged to. and pick the charged up to. go and pick the kids from nursery. that's kids up from nursery. that's kyrees isn't it. yeah. yeah. that's that's binge that's not, that's not a binge time time now. time for some down time now. josh guardian, something josh in the guardian, something known as an electric shuffle. it's nothing with a it's nothing to do with a battery flesh. battery powered flesh. >> shuffle board, axe >> light the shuffle board, axe throwing activity bar throwing and bingo activity bar boom defies uk hospitality , a boom defies uk hospitality, a downturn. we've seen lots of pubs closing across the country. this has actually been a long term trend, not really do term trend, not really to do with maybe exacerbated with covid or maybe exacerbated by exacerbate, exacerbate by covid. exacerbate, exacerbate , exacerbated. thank you. >> exasperated landlords probably. >> yeah. but but we're now seeing things like darts, places , ping pong, shuffleboard , axe , ping pong, shuffleboard, axe throwing, all of them . i think throwing, all of them. i think it's part of a larger trend of
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people just not being good at small talk anymore. yeah, it's like they have to go and do an active. they're saying here it's because companieswanting because of companies wanting to have out and have like social nights out and whatnot. but i think it's actually people don't know actually people just don't know how in each other's how to just be in each other's spaces something. spaces without doing something. yeah. to yeah. like if they're not to going on phone. going be on their phone. >> also these things go >> but it also these things go in but i remember pubs in cycles. but i remember pubs that be like that bar that used to be like that bar billiards football top billiards and football table top football those football and there were those little the little tabletop electric, the asteroid one, know. yeah asteroid one, you know. yeah i mean is not like. but these mean this is not like. but these are dedicated, like dedicated purely so that the darts place i've been to went friend's birthday. >> it's properly fun. like it's really set you're there really well set up. you're there with you're having a with some mates, you're having a laugh, drink as laugh, you're getting a drink as you then. my turn now. laugh, you're getting a drink as you to en. my turn now. laugh, you're getting a drink as you to going my turn now. laugh, you're getting a drink as you to going do my turn now. laugh, you're getting a drink as you to going do this. turn now. laugh, you're getting a drink as you to going do this. so �*n now. laugh, you're getting a drink as you to going do this. so it now. laugh, you're getting a drink as you to going do this. so it is. n. i'm to going do this. so it is. it's also it seems like it's big. but also it seems like bowling taking out of the alcohol thing massively alcohol thing is also massively increased well. people increased as well. so people seem do stuff. seem to be wanting to do stuff. >> remember >> yeah, i remember it's interesting young interesting that young people because older people, old men always used sit around because older people, old men always |dominoes around because older people, old men always |dominoes inound because older people, old men always |dominoes in certain playing dominoes in certain pubs i a thing and you get i went to as a thing and you get that that they hadn't that feeling that they hadn't done day done anything during the day worth done anything during the day worso just wanted to >> so they just wanted to experience, nice experience.
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>> communality of being old >> the communality of being old men together. but men in the pub together. but there's not much to do. younger people is people relying on that is a little i don't know, little bit maybe. i don't know, not sadder. but it is interesting, you say, if interesting, as you say, if they've they're they've lost the they're probably texting. and also i think a work think if you're booking a work day you need something day out, then you need something you can't just be we're going to this venue and there's going to be some sandwiches. that be some sandwiches. i did that for party. we did for my stag party. we did archery middle of archery in the middle of cheltenham i went, cheltenham racecourse. i went, i'd have to talk about. >> i went to and i did. >> i went to poland and i did. what's it you know, the shooting , paintball. mistake , , the paintball. and by mistake, my best man signed us up against the polish national team . he got the polish national team. he got totally destroyed . totally destroyed. >> it was black and blue. yeah it was horrible. it's not funny either . the paintballing catches either. the paintballing catches you on the wrong flank. >> no, it was. it was truly horrific . i'm traumatised now. horrific. i'm traumatised now. >> everyone needs to be credentialed nowadays. leo and the express have news of the latest diploma on offer. so bnan latest diploma on offer. so brian with brains diploma for doors staff to make clubbers feel safer on a night out. so apparently 50% of partygoers say
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they find security staff threatening. you're supposed to find them threatening. that's the whole point of them should be 100. we want to get that number up, not down. it's ridiculous, it's been ridiculous, but it's been brought diploma for brought this diploma for security been brought brought this diploma for se(despot been brought brought this diploma for se(despot rados. been brought brought this diploma for se(despot rados. you�*n brought brought this diploma for se(despot rados. you know1ght brought this diploma for se(despot rados. you know that by despot rados. you know that beer that tastes like tequila. so say it's part of their so they say it's part of their their platform for fostering respect, equity and empowerment on the dance floor so everyone feels safe to be themselves in the parking space. it's like you're that tastes like you're a beer that tastes like tequila the person to be tequila. the last person to be fostering equity . earl green. fostering equity. earl green. >> this is the new bud light academy . academy. >> that is. you're right there. let's not what dormant doormen are there to intimidate anyone who might fancy them and to sell you yeah, exactly. yeah. you drugs. yeah, exactly. yeah. to control that trade. >> control trade, get >> control the drug trade, get your you and them your drugs off you and sell them back your drugs off you and sell them bacjosh, love to say science >> josh, i'd love to say science news now, be honest, this news now, but to be honest, this is speculative fiction. my dog wouldn't fall and still wouldn't fall for and he's still looking a stick. didn't looking for a stick. i didn't throw thursday. looking for a stick. i didn't thr(yeah, thursday. looking for a stick. i didn't thr(yeah, thurtotally. this is >> yeah, yeah, totally. this is there's to this, but there's nothing to this, but still disturbing of how still disturbing image of how humans could evolve by 3,002nd
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eyelid, text, claw and neck. essentially these all come down to using mobile phones and sitting at desks all day , sitting at desks all day, hunched a 90 degree hunched over, having a 90 degree arm, which i've got already. and but not for and claw the thing. >> what they do and they've done this before in these stories maybe it's obvious to everyone doesn't need but what doesn't need saying but what they do they confuse they do is they confuse evolutionary pressures with the ways your body ways in which your body deteriorates of deteriorates over the course of your own because of your own lifetime because of your own lifetime because of your lifestyle habits. your own lifetime because of youtheestyle habits. your own lifetime because of youthe picture abits. your own lifetime because of youthe picture they've done of >> the picture they've done of somebody sort of hunched over in the happen to you the hat, this will happen to you if you text all day, but if you if you text all day, but it won't improve chances of it won't improve your chances of mating. so you won't. mating. yeah. and so you won't. these need to be genetic mutations which you then pass on because they they offer an advantage in the game of life and they don't do that. they've also made the mistake of assuming that we're going to have smartphones for the next thousand years. we're obviously gonna chip in our brains. gonna have a chip in our brains. we're always we're probably always have a feeling the smartphone is almost all probably peaked. i mean, it could i think we're probably on
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right on the cusp. you can get smart glasses now that do half the work. finally paying the work. yeah. finally paying subscribers only. here's a little palate cleanser in the sun, leon. well, mate, cleanse your palate. it's from the optimum pieces of blue paper to the best technique. how wiping your backside wrong can put your health at risk . so your backside wrong can put your health at risk. so this basically tells you how to how to not that we're degenerating this information, but wipe your bum. there's several pages of this still not definitive , though. >> that's the problem. >> that's the problem. >> you've got to go side to side and then eat the paper. i think it's much more i remember when we had a daughter. it is we had a baby daughter. it is quite if you're a man and you're not familiar with with not that familiar with with cleaning there not that familiar with with clya ning there not that familiar with with clya ninyof there not that familiar with with clya ninyof a there not that familiar with with clya ninyof a skill there not that familiar with with clya ninyof a skill to there not that familiar with with clya ninyof a skill to that. there not that familiar with with clya ninyof a skill to that. but re is a bit of a skill to that. but i can't believe adults need to is a bit of a skill to that. but i can'tdo lieve adults need to is a bit of a skill to that. but i can'tdo they?adults need to is a bit of a skill to that. but i can'tdo they? yeah. need to is a bit of a skill to that. but i can'tdo they? yeah. well to know, do they? yeah. well there's constant about there's a constant debate about sitting up. sitting down, standing up. >> to the big one. >> that seems to be the big one. yeah. and you're walking. yeah. and here you're walking. >> nearly over. >> the show is nearly over. let's another quick look at let's take another quick look at wednesday's front pages. daily mail. pray they don't end up with a riot at the cenotaph if men to that express have soon
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accused starmer of plot to lock the uk in an eu deal, guardian defiant met chief rejects ministers calls to ban pro—palestinian march . the times pro—palestinian march. the times police resist calls to ban march the i news braverman split with number 10 as tories accuse her of leadership bid . and finally of leadership bid. and finally the daily star with very little evidence. carrots turned me into an oompa loompa . that's all we an oompa loompa. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, leo kearse and josh howie and drew doyle will be back tomorrow at 11 pm. with steve allen and lewis schaffer. and i'm he tell you i'm sure he will tell you himself will be our second himself. that will be our second anniversary show. we're going strong. it's been a joy. if you're a 5 stay you're watching a 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. otherwise,
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by it's 9:00. >> i'm mark dolan and this is gb news tonight in my big opinion ,
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news tonight in my big opinion, today's historic king's speech the first in the reign of charles iii contained about as much content as the inside of a ping much content as the inside of a ping pong ball . and after this ping pong ball. and after this snorefest it looks like the tories will be bounced out of power. sunak only hope is pushing back on the madness of net zero and stopping the boats . net zero and stopping the boats. but will it be enough? i'll give my verdict on today's big political showdown shortly alongside tonight's panel, esther mcvey , derek lord and esther mcvey, derek lord and rebecca reid. plus with a slimmed down king's speech is sunak plotting a surprise may election? and is that what the country needs? i'll be asking the leader of reform uk richard tice , who's live in the studio . tice, who's live in the studio. breaking tonight, protesters have vandalised the rochdale cenotaph with free palestine graffiti. in a latest assault against a british war memorial. so as tensions continue to rise across our communities , should across our communities, should the government ban marches on armistice day? x colonel philip
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ingram takes on shoaib khan in what's going to be a lively clash and in a dramatic twist to royal snub gate, an almighty pubuc royal snub gate, an almighty public row has broken out between the palace and the sussexes with harry and meghan insisting that king charles did not invite them to his 75th birthday bash and they're even off the guest list for christmas. royal insider angela levin cuts through the noise to deliver the truth on this bombshell story . and as always, bombshell story. and as always, we'll bring you a first look at tomorrow's newspaper front pages. this is gb news. tonight. my takedown of the king's speech thinner than posh spice on the keto diet. it's an action packed two hours, and i'm taking no prisoners. first, the news headunes prisoners. first, the news headlines and polly middlehurst.
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>> mark, thank you and good evening to you. well our top story tonight is that the labour leader has criticised the first king's speech to parliament in 70 years by saying the only fight left in the government is the fight for their own skin . the fight for their own skin. earlier, king charles outlined the prime minister's legislative agenda for the year ahead amid traditional pomp and pageantry . traditional pomp and pageantry. the speech included measures on tougher sentencing for murderers and a ban on leaseholds for new houses built in england and wales . sir keir starmer said the wales. sir keir starmer said the conservatives were severing britain's future . rishi sunak britain's future. rishi sunak hit back by saying the new measures will change the country for the better. now the foreign office says that more british nationals have crossed the border into egypt from gaza via the rafah crossing today , adding the rafah crossing today, adding that the uk teams continuing to provide consular support to victims wishing to flee the area. this comes as ministers

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