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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  November 22, 2023 2:00am-3:01am GMT

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>> good evening. your top stories from the newsroom. police searching for a group of missing teenagers say they've recovered four bodies from a crashed car in north wales. a major search was launched after javon hurst harvey , owen, wolf javon hurst harvey, owen, wolf henderson and hugo morris failed to return home from a camping trip in the snowdon area on sunday. police confirmed their car left the road near tremadog . car left the road near tremadog. superintendent irwin llewellyn said earlier it appears to have been a tragic accident . the been a tragic accident. the chancellor is set to declare the economy is back on track when he gives his autumn statement tomorrow . jeremy hunt will tomorrow. jeremy hunt will unveil measures to boost
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businesses investment by £20 billion a year. cut tax and get more people working . hunt is more people working. hunt is also expected to slash national insurance for 28 million people . insurance for 28 million people. meanwhile, it was earlier announced the national living wage will increase by almost 10. more than 2 million full time workers are set to benefit from a pay workers are set to benefit from a pay rise of more than 1000 hundred pounds a year from next april . israel's hundred pounds a year from next april. israel's prime minister says hostages taken from the terror group hamas will be released in stages. benjamin netanyahu is holding a cabinet meeting as a possible hostage release deal. is thought to be imminent. earlier us officials said a tentative deal between israel and hamas that could see a pause in fighting and the release of hostages had been agreed. it would see the release of 50 mostly women and children in exchange for 150 palestinian prisoners . and a pause in prisoners. and a pause in fighting of four and five days
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as . and the king and queen have as. and the king and queen have hosted a state banquet for the president of south korea and his wife. this evening . their wife. this evening. their majesties hosted . 171 guests in majesties hosted. 171 guests in buckingham palace ballroom room. the king's banquet speech praised south korean culture as remarkable ability to captivate imagination . it's the first imagination. it's the first incoming state visit since the king's coronation and the second of his reign. the king used that banquet speech to throw in some unexpected references to korean popular culture. >> north korea has matched danny boyle with joon ho , james bond boyle with joon ho, james bond with squid game and the beatles. let it be with bts's dynamic or dynamite . our culture does share dynamite. our culture does share a remark markable ability to captivate great imaginations across the world and
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transforming a so—called soft power into a shared superpower . power into a shared superpower. this is gb news across the uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio, and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news now it's over to headliners . over to headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners. >> your first look at tomorrow's newspapers. >> i'm simon evans. >> i'm simon evans. >> joining me tonight are the brain and the braw that's leo kearse and the brain . steve allen. >> i don't know what happened there. >> they've they've just removed one of leo's characters mystics as if you're sort of like his eve taken from one of his ribs. >> i think you've got to specialise. there's no point having brawn. you've having brains and brawn. you've got know how to use got to focus on know how to use you. >> they? >> do they? >> do they? >> have to build the whole >> they have to build the whole team around or the only only team around you or the only only in i be considered
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brawny. >> that's true. only london >> that's true. only west london for matter well. for that matter as well. >> yeah. for that matter as well. >> soah. for that matter as well. >> so let's have a look at those front pages. have the daily front pages. we have the daily mail. going out my mail. i'm going to sort out my collar . we have the mail. i'm going to sort out my collar. we have the daily mail and i did the right hand as and i did with the right hand as well who went camping well for pals who went camping and came home. and never came home. >> sad story. hunt back >> very sad story. hunt back those to tory demands for tax cuts in bid to revive the economy. that's the guardian the mirror back to those camping boys so tragic camping pals horror the times hunt offers. that's the image image. there we go . hunt offers tax cuts for go. hunt offers tax cuts for workers and businesses. the sun back to those lads so young an and kate, they're emerging from and kate, they're emerging from a car with her legs and the daily star never mind the cliff. richard that is a sex pistols reference. it's lost on me. those were your front pages . those were your front pages. >> so we are starting with the
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daily mail. leo and a very sad story, which i have to say i've only just become aware of. yeah, it's absolutely tragic. so the four who camping have four pals who went camping have been for a couple of been missing for a couple of days. been missing for a couple of days . they out their days. they it turns out their car flipped and was lying undiscovered for 48 hours. yeah. so and they're dead there . yeah. so and they're dead there. yeah. it's terrible. like for young men, you know, just on the cusp of manhood and cut short when they're out doing something that would have been such a fun thing to do. absolutely. >> an activity you want to encourage young people to do. you know, get out there into snowdonia , which is good. i had snowdonia, which is good. i had some of my happiest memories of that time of my life around there. not much else to say about it, is there? >> tragic. >> no, it's tragic. >> no, it's tragic. >> i don't think should. >> i don't think they should. >> i don't think they should. >> be a story that >> it should be a story that stops people doing things like this. of those tragic, this. it is one of those tragic, unfortunate happenings. this. it is one of those tragic, unfort you've|appenings. this. it is one of those tragic, unfort you've|app
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for goodness sake, don't stop young looking into the young men looking into the countryside. guardian . countryside. the guardian. >> well, many stories on >> steve well, many stories on their front page. we can talk about netanyahu. they over about netanyahu. they talk over this the deal is close on this says the deal is close on hostages, not giving lot hostages, not giving away a lot of information. joe biden's in the as refusing to the article as well, refusing to give lot of information. give away a lot of information. interestingly it's not interestingly saying it's not done till it's done. a is done till it's done. a deal is being done to get some of the hostages back. it's 50 hostages release saying 150. i know some places will be discussing the ratio. there's a bit in the story i did think stands out. it says here any deal would be significant propaganda coup for hamas. propaganda hamas. it's also a propaganda coup for netanyahu, isn't it? i mean, like as soon as this tragic event happened and william hague was writing about it, saying that this trying it, saying that is this trying to netanyahu into having to tempt netanyahu into having a strong response and then you can vilify israel as the brute of the region. but this is a negotiation . this is getting negotiation. this is getting hostages back. this is showing that you can do the negotiation . that you can do the negotiation. surely it's a propaganda coup for netanyahu. >> i don't know that anyone can claim coup the
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claim a propaganda coup for the last month it's been so last month. it's been so horrific. month and half now, horrific. month and a half now, 150 palestinian prisoners . i 150 palestinian prisoners. i mean, that seems an extreme. they have been bought at an extraordinarily high price, if that's what it was about . i've that's what it was about. i've struggled, to be honest , to make struggled, to be honest, to make any kind of sense of it. other than possibly what people said initially , which hamas initially, which is that hamas are hoping to destabilise the ongoing normalisation of relationships between saudi and israel. but that didn't seem to happen at all. i mean, that was the that didn't bark at all, the dog that didn't bark at all, wasn't way. so yeah, wasn't it, in a way. so yeah, there's a there's a lot of fuss initially, think long initially, but i think long term, know, as years go by, term, you know, as years go by, there's going to be there's there's not going to be there's not to be any of the not going to be any of the destruction of bonds between destruction of the bonds between israel and the arab countries and the gulf countries. >> i think so. the ones >> i don't think so. the ones that functional state that have got a functional state and see their future as being part of functional community part of a functional community do not want to be destabilise by these dogs. these mad dogs. >> know, in in paragliders. these mad dogs. >> they? now, in in paragliders. these mad dogs. >> they? low, in in paragliders. these mad dogs. >> they? i mean, n paragliders. these mad dogs. >> they? i mean, it'saragliders. these mad dogs. >> they? i mean, it's like iders. these mad dogs. >> they? i mean, it's like ,iers. these mad dogs. >> they? i mean, it's like , you do they? i mean, it's like, you know, who would want to kind of ally that? and ally yourself to that? and hezbollah seemed to have fizzled
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ally yourself to that? and hezbolwell. eemed to have fizzled out as well. >> but if you listen to >> so yeah, but if you listen to the two ministers in jordan , the two ministers in jordan, ministers across across the middle east, they're more aware of the dangers of islamism than politicians in the west are. >> it's a really good point because that's exactly why egypt has refused to open its border, as course , you when you as of course, you know, when you might why don't they as of course, you know, when you might them why don't they as of course, you know, when you mightthem in why don't they as of course, you know, when you might them in fromy don't they as of course, you know, when you might them in from from 't they as of course, you know, when you mightthem in from from gazay allow them in from from gaza to lebanon they've all lebanon. exactly. they've all seen now . and that's seen it coming now. and that's not the future that they want. a lot people have lot of people actually have written length, written about this at length, about how islamic countries, as you on on on the you say, are harder on on on the fundamental mentalists and the, you know , i suppose the only you know, i suppose the only other thing you could conceivably say is that it has exposed possibly some kind of gap in sentiment between the authorities, between the states, the rulers in countries like ours and great masses of people. and we've all learned that there are different sympathies. maybe ten, 20 years ago that would have been slightly different. i don't if that's don't don't know if that's i don't know that's advantage to anyone. >> i think a sheer numbers >> i think from a sheer numbers game, got, know, 4 or game, we've got, you know, 4 or 5 million muslims this
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5 million muslims in this country. 5 million muslims in this coui'm. saying, you know, all >> i'm not saying, you know, all muslims the palestinian muslims support the palestinian cause or, you know, it's delineated cleanly as that, delineated as cleanly as that, but it kind of is. and there's, what, 300, but it kind of is. and there's, what, 300, 400,000 but it kind of is. and there's, what, 300, 400,000 jews. just what, 300, 400,000 jews. so just you know, sheer weight of numbers . you know, sheer weight of numbers. that's an imbalance. and it's weird that, you know, we sort of we treat muslims globally as a minority when there's almost 2 billion muslims and there's huge 50 million, 59 million jews is a tiny a tiny proportion, an extraordinary stable population for the last few years , thank goodness. few years, thank goodness. >> but they they make such an extraordinary contribution . i extraordinary contribution. i suppose that it sometimes you forget how tiny that number is . forget how tiny that number is. so anyway, that's hopefully moving into goodness, i don't know what to call it. the beginning of the end, but maybe the end of the beginning. what are looking now? the daily are we looking at now? the daily star of the times today we got the times . sorry, we haven't the times. sorry, we haven't done the times yet. sorry. i'm moving spice up your moving on. how to spice up your marriage, yes. marriage, leo? yes. >> so by fergie . wow. >> so by fergie. wow. >> so by fergie. wow. >> fergie. so i should imagine
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there's some toe sucking involved there , which is rather involved there, which is rather disgusting for anybody with a fungal foot infection. but i'm sure i'm sure she doesn't i'm sure i'm sure she doesn't i'm sure she's got a fantastic podiatrist. >> she was very good at flirting with cliff the other day on the telly. clip telly. they showed that clip earlier putting his earlier where he's putting his foot about literally foot in it about literally fitness intensity . fitness intensity. >> in terms of a will, >> but yeah, in terms of a will, in terms of a will, they won't they, if cliff's involved won't they. >> cliff. yeah they're not going to do nightmarish vision to stay with us tonight . with us tonight. >> stephen they're both sets of bones creaking like an armada , bones creaking like an armada, like a maracas going . on like a maracas going. on >> both they're taking turns to go >> both they're taking turns to 9° up >> both they're taking turns to go up in the stair lift. but we've got, we've got on the times. we've got jeremy hunt to cut business tax and national insurance. this is apparently to revive the economy. don't revive the economy. it don't make this is to revive make me laugh this is to revive the tory party tory party. the election hopes maybe give them an extra 1% so they get beaten by 39% instead of 40. i mean, we said this when because we were
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all doing this show, when the truss may fly briefly to existence and was gobbled up, you know, caught on the long sticky tongue of sunak and swallowed whole. >> but back to cliff richard. >> but back to cliff richard. >> i remember when they were saying, yeah. and hunt was like, no, this is most brutal tax no, this is the most brutal tax regime my lifetime and it regime of my lifetime and it cannot possibly last until the next election . it would be a next election. it would be a suicide note. i've got a feeling they've left it too long as it is. i mean, i don't think people are going to forget the pain that they've been put through here. even though truss here. and even though truss obviously did well, kwasi kwartengs did destabilise obviously did well, kwasi kwe markets, did destabilise obviously did well, kwasi kwemarkets, it did destabilise obviously did well, kwasi kwe markets, it would destabilise obviously did well, kwasi kwe markets, it would destibeene the markets, it would have been an extraordinarily better regime for to live under. i can't be for me to live under. i can't be the only one who's thinking that it's stickiness message problem. >> so this government did spend billions off billions giving us money for off our electricity bills. but what they didn't do is send you a check. so it's just been sunk in. if they'd have actually done it, ought have sat here it, we ought to have sat here and done our funny of and done our funny bit of vouchers with a picture of some electricity on it. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and then you'd think, oh,
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look but look what they've spent. but that wasted that money is absolutely wasted in good, good in terms of like good, good credit government as it credit for the government as it was under the pandemic. >> course, because get >> of course, because people get used quickly. i mean, used to it so quickly. i mean, this is the problem. got this is the problem. we've got this is the problem. we've got this argentinian guy talking this is the problem. we've got this it argentinian guy talking this is the problem. we've got this it a|argentina.guy talking this is the problem. we've got this it a|argentina. thetalking about it in argentina. the problem socialism that problem with socialism is that it all the it just ratchets all the time. people that's people never go, oh, that's nice. i can getting nice. i can i'm getting something nothing. they now something for nothing. they now think, work. think, well, that seems to work. i'll carry getting i'll just carry on getting something i'll just carry on getting somethi also it's like boiling >> and also it's like boiling the frog seen the the frog we've seen over the past decades, every western country share of country has seen the share of gdp the state gdp that's spent by the state just gradually increase, gradually ratchet as you gradually ratchet up, as you say. eventually you reach say. and so eventually you reach a where the state controls a point where the state controls the entire economy you're the entire economy and you're basically communist. basically a communist. >> and everybody just >> yeah. and everybody just begins treat like a de begins to treat it like a de facto yeah, it's very, facto parent. yeah, it's very, very finally we do get on very sick. finally we do get on to the star and i am longing to hear what what explains this headune? >> never mind the cliff , >> never mind the cliff, richard. he's actually had sex with fergie. >> and what? what? >> and what? what? >> no. thankfully punk legends, the sex pistols were secret fans of sir cliff, even though he described their music as a
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racket. he also was a bit. >> that's true. i mean , the sex >> that's true. i mean, the sex pistols, for a start, had no consensus about music. john johnny lydon was a very smart guy, a proper kind of rebel situationist, you know, he was interested in the sort of the rest of them were just like clutter heads, weren't they? >> i mean, well, glen matlock was was a pretty smart guy. and like, know, it was actually like, you know, it was actually a the songwriter. yeah a lot more the songwriter. yeah yeah. well, he wrote some of the songs. then he was booted. i think he was booted out. yeah, but steve they they but steve jones, they all they all a real pop sensibility, all had a real pop sensibility, so them so i can imagine them liking, you beach and you know, the beach boys and cliff stuff like that. >> cliff richard was pretty tame. >> i mean, oh, she's a devil. come on. she's just a devil woman you're thinking 70s. woman oh, you're thinking 70s. >> who want to be >> cliff who wouldn't want to be wired anymore? yeah, >> cliff who wouldn't want to be wired the anymore? yeah, >> cliff who wouldn't want to be wired the way anymore? yeah, >> cliff who wouldn't want to be wired the way he lymore? yeah, >> cliff who wouldn't want to be wired the way he danced.yeah, >> cliff who wouldn't want to be wired the way he danced. that it was the way he danced. that was that really turned was the thing that really turned my you to dance on >> if you tried to dance on rollerblades. yeah. >> wired for sound. >> wired for sound. >> you've got. >> oh, you've got. >> it was awful. >> it was awful. >> truly, truly dreadful. >> it was awful. >> iruly, truly dreadful. >> it was awful. >> i knowruly dreadful. >> it was awful. >> i know thatdreadful. >> it was awful. >> i know that the dful. >> it was awful. >> i know that the very, very early records , they're like, early records, they're like, literally rock literally just one called rock
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and something. rock and and roll or something. rock and roll. they just can't use it no matter what they say. they're just one note special. what's going replace it? sorry young going to replace it? sorry young ones, though. they brought him back into fashion, didn't they? do that? yeah do you remember that? yeah the young soi do you remember that? yeah the young so i guess that young ones? yes so i guess that was a pistols kind of adjacent year. was a pistols kind of adjacent year . oh, well, was a pistols kind of adjacent year. oh, well, i'm not was a pistols kind of adjacent year . oh, well, i'm not sure year. oh, well, i'm not sure it's worthy of a headline, but we choose as much juice as we're going to get out of it. that is it. that's part one. rishi supports tough sentences such as this one with three subordinate clauses , one of which, if with clauses, one of which, if with the wrong emphasis, would ruin everything up in everything that's coming up in the second section. see you
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real connection in your listening to gb news radio . listening to gb news radio. >> well , come listening to gb news radio. >> well, come back to headliners. >> i'm simon evans. still joined by leo kearse and steve allen. i neglected to insert your initial before hopefully that hasn't undermined your i'm i'm still
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here. >> whatever. yeah people get confused. >> who was the famous steve allen is the irish guy? >> no, he's the guy who invented the tonight show. the comedian. >> the comedian? yes >> the comedian? yes >> of dave allen. >> i'm thinking of dave allen. dave allen? >> yes. >> yes. >> that's more my. >> that's more my. >> well, i've on telly, by the way, of this, leo? way, are you aware of this, leo? >> on >> let's get started on some news. >> independent rishi gets >> the independent rishi gets tough just stop oil a bit tough on. just stop oil a bit like he did on immigration, i suspect. >> yeah . so rishi sunak has hit >> yeah. so rishi sunak has hit back at criticism from a united nafions back at criticism from a united nations expert over long sentences handed to just stop oil protesters. so this is morgan trowland and marcus decker were jailed for three years and two years and seven months respectively. after they used ropes and climbing gear to scale the queen elizabeth. the second bridge, which caused gridlock when the police had to close them down. so close it to get them down. so i mean, seems it seems fair mean, it seems it seems fair enough. the criminal enough. finally the criminal justice system starting to justice system is starting to deal with just stop oil, because they stop people money. they stop people earning money. they people immense they cause people immense distress. they stop ambulances getting hospital and some getting to hospital. and at some point to going to point somebody is to going to
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get you somebody's get killed. you know, somebody's going by a bus going to get run over by a bus or know, then it'll be or you know, then it'll be tragic somebody tragic because somebody or somebody will their temper somebody will lose their temper to extraordinary to such an extraordinary extent with a with them that there'll be a serious charge, which serious gbh charge, which i think would be a terrible thing as honest. exactly. as well, to be honest. exactly. then to. two victims. then you'd have to. two victims. really? and we saw really? yeah. and we saw in panama last week a man pulled out a gun and shot two environmental protesters. were was middle class was he a lower middle class american, retired himself down in panama. american, retired himself down in iand�*na. american, retired himself down in iand he just it >> and he just does it incredibly casually as well. yeah. incredibly casually as well. yea but want why the >> but i want to know why the united nations raising issues united nations is raising issues like this with ministers in the uk. they've either got many uk. they've either got too many staff they're looking staff that they're looking around to meddle around for, for stuff to meddle in, which is the problem with a lot public sector organised lot of public sector organised actions. mean, united actions. i mean, the united nafions actions. i mean, the united nations guy, he he's nations guy, he says he's worried about the of worried about the freedom of expression freedom of expression and freedom of peaceful and peaceful assembly and association. it's like, why are you getting involved in the un is a classic example of i, i think is conquest second law think it is conquest second law that any organisation or institution not explicitly rightwing in its aims will drift left over the course of its lifetime. >> yeah, the un started out with
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the best of intentions, but it has become essentially indistinguishable from stonewall now. it's just a now. yeah. yeah. it's just a meddling of leftists and meddling bunch of leftists and i'm not going to use it. >> yeah . meanwhile, i would >> yeah. meanwhile, i would steve to bring balance . that's steve to bring balance. that's great. what a teeing up that is . great. what a teeing up that is. >> these leftists. no, i think rishi is at least wrong in how he justifies this . so i don't he justifies this. so i don't know what the length of sentence should be, but i do know this is a fact. protesting isn't a crime. so sentence you crime. so the sentence you should get is for the crime that you committed, which is stopping blocking whether blocking a road. so whether you're doing it shouting oil or doing not shouting anything , doing it, not shouting anything, you the same you should get the same sentence. when rishi says you should get the same sen entirely when rishi says you should get the same sen entirely righten rishi says you should get the same sen entirely right for1ishi says you should get the same sen entirely right for the says it's entirely right for the selfish protesters intent on causing misery to face tough sentences , it's entirely right sentences, it's entirely right for people who block a road to get you get for get the sentence you get for blocking sorry that blocking a road. sorry that that doesn't intent and doesn't show intent and motivation is a huge factor of the is not a crime, the protesting is not a crime, but doing it on the top of a on the qe2 bridge is hate crimes or something. >> it adds a new dimension to it, which allows them to expand the sentencing. won't . i
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the sentencing. you won't. i mean, why you have mean, this is why you have judges. could all judges. otherwise it could all be you know, one be just done by, you know, one day they look, i'm very i'm quite sure you're but quite sure you're right. but i do think will say, as a sort do think i will say, as a sort of think of devil's advocate, i think possibly classic example possibly it's a classic example of judicial system failing of the judicial system failing to enough now to act quickly enough and now overcorrecting course. yeah, overcorrecting its course. yeah, very similar to the civil case. followed up with all the yewtree investigate actions which investigate actions in which you know history cases were blighted , lives were blighted unnecessarily because they failed to act at the appropriate time. yeah. now time. you know. yeah. times now steve student societies working for china, at least they're working anyway . working anyway. >> yeah. student societies at british universities are working for china . they've got societies for china. they've got societies unked for china. they've got societies linked to beijing which are posing as normal student associations, but actually they are harassing pro—hong kong democracy activists and shutting down dissent. and i mean, it seems unnecessary because when you're a student, you dabble with communism anyway. it's one of things three some of the things you try three some you marx for me, sadly, you read marx for me, sadly, as a chemist , no you read marx for me, sadly, as a chemist, no threesome. and it was howard marks finally became a hazard, was absolutely part of
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my student days as well. >> mr nice guy. i will say this though. i don't think i mean, it's interesting. they are still called the chinese called technically the chinese communist it was marxism with always said it was marxism with chinese it's fascism chinese character. it's fascism now, corporate , now, isn't it? it's corporate, it's state ownership . it's corporate state ownership. it's corporate state corporatism . it's not anything to do with with . but there hasn't with communism. but there hasn't been. >> that's the problem with communist country it up communist country is it ends up not to with not being anything to do with communism. that's the fundamental power but fundamental flaw. amte power but i mean, this shows the learnt the lessons of when they're were communist, when you know, the lessons of lessons they learnt sort of inculcating these ideas in the youth and really in the west we totally take our eye off the ball with, with young people. >> we let all these nefarious ideas sprung out the ideas sprung out of the universities like you know, critical race theory, this critical race theory, all this nonsense, ideology . and. nonsense, gender ideology. and. whereas chinese are in there whereas the chinese are in there putting paying to seed these messages to destabilise the west and also strengthen china, well, it's aristotle , the jemmy the it's aristotle, the jemmy the boy until he's seven, i'll give you the man, the jesuits .
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you the man, the jesuits. >> oh, ignatius loyola . they >> oh, ignatius loyola. they never got around to my daughter who is 19, still not a man , but who is 19, still not a man, but she's only in her first year yet. >> and she's at kingston. and it's funny. and i just finished reading a book about c.s it's funny. and i just finished reading a book about cs lewis and tolkien. called and tolkien. they were called the they this sort the inklings. they had this sort of society english of informal society of english professors the professors at oxford in the 1920s, exactly 100 years 1920s, almost exactly 100 years ago. they were the big dispute was whether any english literature after chaucer was worth studying with the i mean, whether it was a viable academic subject, you know, it was worth reading for enjoyment, but whether there sort of whether there was any sort of academic, know, grist to be academic, you know, grist to be properly chewed and demonstrate your skills. now she's studying engush your skills. now she's studying english and it's mainly about sex, gender and diverse city. you she's reading judith you know, she's reading judith butler. it's extraordinary how these things kind of just constantly and i'm saying constantly and i'm not saying that's plot. of that's a chinese plot. of course, but there is there is a degree to which all these sort of university courses just of university courses are just move away move further and further away from of really , you from any kind of really, you know, chewy like muscle and bone skeleton of academic discipline
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towards activism. if it were up towards activism. if it were up to me, you get rid of english courses anyway, just you've learnt to read, you've done it. >> move on. i agree. >> yeah, move on. i agree. >> there for the contacts guardian. now leo and the correlation between following lockdown and subsequent lockdown rules and subsequent mental health, but suspect mental health, but i suspect we're probably thinking the we're probably all thinking the same thing, aren't we? yeah. >> who stuck by uk >> so people who stuck by uk covid worst covid rules have the worst mental health this survey . mental health says this survey. so at last. so so some good news at last. so yeah those who followed the restrictions most closely when the the most the pandemic hit are the most likely from likely to be suffering from stress. anxiety and depression. and they split people out into two different personality types . two different personality types. there's the communal personalities who are more caring, sensitive and aware of other's needs, and they obviously they're all crying now. they're all depressed and anxious and also anxious and stuff. and also there's the other type, the agentic personalities, where people who can wipe their own bum and they don't they didn't follow the rules and they're happy. they were happy then and they're these they're happy now. but these communal, personal parties, socialists, you know, the low earning fat people , mostly, they earning fat people, mostly, they did what they were told and now
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they're they what they're miserable. they did what they're miserable. they did what they now they're they were told, and now they're miserable. the song says it >> and also the song says it says the researchers said they found it difficult make the found it difficult to make the transition from receiving regular about regular exhortations about following public health advice dunng following public health advice during pandemic to no advice during the pandemic to no advice when the lockdown ended . when the lockdown ended. >> deal. they >> so they couldn't deal. they couldn't with the lack of couldn't deal with the lack of being what to do. being told what to do. >> new. this this >> this is not new. this is this is textbook institutionalisation, isn't it? and exactly happened. institutionalisation, isn't it? aknow exactly happened. institutionalisation, isn't it? aknow iexactly happened. institutionalisation, isn't it? aknow i won't( happened. institutionalisation, isn't it? aknow i won't( heapened. institutionalisation, isn't it? aknow i won't( hea name, i know i won't mention a name, but there was a comedian once who kind of who was in one of those kind of reality shows , a little bit like reality shows, a little bit like big brother, but it was one where had learn where you had to learn some skills tap dancing skills like tap dancing or whatever, and that was whatever, and when. and that was like like a fortnight was like a like a fortnight he was on there, and you and on there, you know, and you and you a sort of boarding you live in a sort of boarding school, basically, and you get woken up morning you woken up every morning and you learn, it learn, you know. and when it ended, like depressed. he ended, he was like depressed. he had found that so much more reassuring than having to be responsible for his own life and decisions, know. decisions, you know. >> people don't want that's a comedian. it's a vastly comedian. i think it's a vastly more prevalent condition . more more prevalent condition. you know, a lot a lot of men say a lot of people say that when
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men when are widowed, they struggle because because somebody not them somebody else not telling them what to do. >> yeah, exactly. exactly >> yeah, exactly. exactly >> sounds ridiculous >> and it sounds ridiculous because also there is a i because but also there is a i can't remember which book it is in they say the main in and they say the two main personality types are the dependent or the independent. that's right? that's what we think of, right? that's what we think of, right? that's yeah, that's that's what you're. yeah, that's basically what there is a third one the interdependent, one which is the interdependent, which to be. which is what you want to be. that's basically when you that's like basically when you knit together and knit your community together and yet some degree yet maintain some degree of autonomy and it sounds, autonomy. and i mean it sounds, you know, sensibly enough there's also dependent there's also anti dependent which of my which is why a lot of my relationships which is why a lot of my relation butts which is why a lot of my relation but just for a bit of >> but but just for a bit of balance on this one as well, the tories didn't to lockdown tories didn't stick to lockdown rules and now they look miserable. so maybe there's more rules and now they look mithis.yle. so maybe there's more to this. >> that's although that's >> that's true, although that's because know, lose an because, you know, to lose an election . election. >> yeah, exactly. >> yeah, exactly. >> they another three >> if they had another three years, be fine. talking years, they'd be fine. talking of institutional steve daily mail, it seems a certain amount of institutional the bbc of institutional bias at the bbc is obvious even its is becoming obvious even to its former , the ex bbc former controller, the ex bbc television chief brands corporation institutionally antisemitic . antisemitic. >> it's danny cohen. we actually covered it on the show a few weeks he said before weeks ago. he said this before
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now says the independent inquiry should into i agree should look into it. and i agree because difficult because it's difficult to know whether whether you've got whether the whether you've got three things. you've just got anti—semitism people who anti—semitism of the people who work institutional work there, institutional anti semitism journalism . semitism or just bad journalism. and certainly this article, there bad, terrible there are some bad, terrible journalism. them journalism. one of them was misreading a line from a reuters report. yeah. now if you were to try and do some sneaky institutional anti—semitism misreading stuff might not be your to manifest it . your best way to manifest it. and they had to correct later and the article brings up the thing about not calling hamas terrorists . i can't believe this terrorists. i can't believe this still needs to be gone through. again, stupid rule, but again, it's a stupid rule, but it's where they've it's not a rule where they've sat down the bbc and gone, sat down at the bbc and gone, should we call hamas terrorists? it's blanket rule that it's a stupid blanket rule that they have. but it's a they shouldn't have. but it's a blanket surely they should have >> but surely they should have some common check. some sort of common sense check. so it, it just so when the reading it, it just shows journalist, if shows a bbc journalist, if they're something, they're reading out something, saying, oh, the idea of a targeted medical teams, they don't have a they think, oh that's what that's no that's that's what people staff room people say in the staff room coming through which coming in through the air, which you can yourself you sometimes can find yourself saying you've got saying nonsense if you've got something ear. saying nonsense if you've got sonat hing ear. saying nonsense if you've got
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sonat the| ear. saying nonsense if you've got sonat the same ear. saying nonsense if you've got sonat the same time, ear. saying nonsense if you've got sonat the same time, we'dear. saying nonsense if you've got sonat the same time, we'd never >> at the same time, we'd never i would, i would never happen. i'll you what i have seen i'll tell you what i have seen in of days, and in the last couple of days, and you have as well, you probably have as well, jeremy bowen suggesting you probably have as well, jerem are ywen suggesting you probably have as well, jerem are possiblygesting you probably have as well, jerem are possibly hospital these are possibly hospital issue ak you know, that issue ak 47. but, you know, that sort and again, it's fine. >> you think of know for sure, but it seems to be going to extraordinary lengths to cast doubt. >> and also you'd think because jeremy put forward the jeremy bowen put forward the possible committee that all the armaments they found in the hospital hospital hospital were for the hospital security. surely then the security. but surely then the hospital would have been to hospital would have been able to keep hamas out? >> that's true. yeah, >> yes, that's true. yeah, i still it . i tend to agree still find it. i tend to agree with you and by principle these are not deliberate things. these are not deliberate things. these are revealing , you know, are revealing, you know, institutional codes of practice and so on that need to be looked oven and so on that need to be looked over. and, you know, but some of them, when i worked at the bbc in the same direction, you begin to wonder, don't you? but when i were there, there was a rule about don't with a story about you don't go with a story until get independent until you get to independent sources until you get to independent source�*even though if it were >> so even though if it were a misreading mistake, if you're reading two sources, you reading it from two sources, you wouldn't got wouldn't misread it. you've got two different ways of writing it. so it just seems like
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there's and bad there's bad practice and bad journalism there was journalism and maybe there was the book. journalism and maybe there was the hook. was called the >> i think it was called the noble lie. i think his was noble lie. i think his name was robin aitken, was a robin aitken, who was a bbc newsroom, book about the newsroom, wrote a book about the extent the extent to which the bbc newsroom, current affairs newsroom, the current affairs department, don't but department, they don't lie, but they certain they tend to focus on certain stories they feel, you stories that they feel, you know, into narrative know, play into the narrative that sell and that they want to sell you. and it's it's come to it's weird that it's come to light extent to which there light the extent to which there is more sympathy for palestine than israel this than than israel in this conflict whole the conflict ties into the whole the whole you know, whole woke culture of, you know, oppression, decolonisation , all oppression, decolonisation, all this. seen that coming, would you i mean, if anything, i would have said, you know, that there was, you know, the historical oppression the jews would was, you know, the historical opprewould the jews would was, you know, the historical opprewould have jews would was, you know, the historical opprewould have counted uld have would have counted for something. have would have counted for son buting. don't about >> but people don't care about of anti—west, of historical. it's anti—west, it's anti civilizational. and obviously being mainly obviously the bbc being mainly made posh , educated made up of posh, educated wokeist are going to be are going to be bang against it. >> last story for this half year reassuring. we'll have to crack through this quickly. reassuring news in the telegraph as it appears. i'm not going mad. the nhs not the envy nhs is absolutely not the envy of though. maybe still of the world though. maybe still of the world though. maybe still of france. yes. >> a quickly is
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>> so seeing a gp quickly is easier in rwanda than britain, according to this study, is the worst place in the world or the third place world third worst place in the world for and 70 access to a for 24 hours and 70 access to a family doctor in just 35% of britons able to gp britons were able to see a gp within 24 hours, to within 24 hours, compared to a global average of 67. people in rwanda of rwanda had an 87% chance of seeing their in the same seeing their doctor in the same day and it wasn't a man in a grass skirt . day and it wasn't a man in a grass skirt. no, i've day and it wasn't a man in a grass skirt . no, i've got grass skirt. no, i've got access. you racist , cutting edge access. you racist, cutting edge drugs as well. why you all drugs as well. why would you all even and also the even think that? and also in the uk got the phone between uk you've got the phone between 8 am. and 8:01a.m. uk you've got the phone between 8 am. and 8:01 am. yeah >> only minute. that's how it used to be. now you don't even get call, you're on a get that. you call, you're on a you're hold told to use you're on hold to be told to use the internet . yes, yes. i've the internet. yes, yes. i've tried see my gp, but tried so much to see my gp, but all can ever do is see all i can ever do is see a picture of him online and maybe call him. he's like a babe station. >> no, it is extraordinarily dysfunctional. although canada >> no, it is extraordinarily dysffranceial. although canada >> no, it is extraordinarily dysffranceial. .worse gh canada >> no, it is extraordinarily dysffranceial. .worse and anada >> no, it is extraordinarily dysf franceial. .worse and worse and france are worse and worse still, canada, you still, if you phone canada, you get gp and he get through to the gp and he gives instructions on how to gives you instructions on how to top yourself. so yeah, know, top yourself. so yeah, you know, they have quite a lot to sort out that you maybe. out that was just you maybe. >> you calling from a >> why are you calling from a plus for number top plus four for number top yourself if that's part two done
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in we have education in part three, we have education reforms in part three, we have education refc rethinking the black death in part three, we have education refcitrans king the black death in part three, we have education refcitrans footy he black death in part three, we have education refcitrans footy .a black death in part three, we have education refcitrans footy . we'll k death in part three, we have education refcitrans footy . we'll seeeath in part three, we have education refcitrans footy . we'll see you
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> welcome back to headliners telegraph. >> now , steve, the first glimmer >> now, steve, the first glimmer of an enlightened education reform and it's in wales of all places. >> yes, they could have summer holidays cut to four weeks. yes, but they're moving the weeks around. >> still . that's fine. around. >> still. that's fine. is it, though? >> so look, i mean, the idea is they're spreading the holidays because the long break is really detrimental for those of a lower financial background. you do, you analyse it, you can get the kids almost up to the same level after the school holiday. it's the poorer kids who have dropped behind the posh, the behind because the posh, the middle was like, behind because the posh, the midlittle was like, behind because the posh, the midlittle tarquin was like, behind because the posh, the midlittle tarquin needs; like, behind because the posh, the midlittle tarquin needs; li go oh, little tarquin needs to go and tuition . and have tuition. >> they just don't even have books. i'm sorry, they books. i'm sorry, but they don't. homes don't have don't. a lot of homes don't have books, you know, and a middle class books. if class homes have books. even if it's suddenly
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it's only virtual, suddenly they've got in the place. they've got books in the place. >> them because they've got books in the place. >> got them because they've got books in the place. >> got jordan. them because i've got jordan. >> written about eight >> jordan's written about eight books. so let's not just love books. >> there's different kinds of what happens . what happens. >> remember time what happens. >encounteredamber time what happens. >encountered thiser time what happens. >encountered this fact time what happens. >encountered this fact was time what happens. >encountered this fact was in:ime i encountered this fact was in a malcolm gladwell yeah. and malcolm gladwell book. yeah. and he about and did he talked about it and he did some interesting research, some very interesting research, which have sort which may or may not have sort of cold light of of stood up in the cold light of scrutiny, about education scrutiny, but about education opportunities in particular offered to poor black communities and on. communities in harlem and so on. there one which was there was one school which was a kind i think, for kind of template, i think, for the michaela school, where basically underprivileged kids were to were given the opportunity to work and they work really hard and they have virtually these virtually no holidays. and these kids knew would be a way out kids knew it would be a way out of the, you know, out of out of poverty. >> and that's my problem with this the week this story. moving the week round all well, round is all very well, but surely get i mean, surely they get enough. i mean, it's not like our kids are too clever. oh, we've got to give them more holiday because look how the teachers. >> w- w— >> you know, the kids aren't going rebel. it's the going to rebel. it's the teachers. they take these jobs assuming to 13 assuming they're going to get 13 weeks they weeks of holiday. you know, they are. they are an are. i'm sorry, but they are an extraordinarily are. i'm sorry, but they are an extrteachers,y are. i'm sorry, but they are an extrteachers, and we have to the teachers, and we have to break them. >> and also. yeah, yeah. >> yeah. and also. yeah, yeah. and also, it's going to make it
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harder to them harder to recruit them if it becomes a regular becomes more like a regularjob where to do it. where you have to do it. >> yeah, absolutely right. >> yeah, absolutely right. >> half three. >> finish at half three. >> finish at half three. >> just imagine there >> imagine if just imagine there would an if you would be like an offset if you could say, okay, you're going to lose, let's just weeks lose, let's just say two weeks of but on a of holiday a year, but on a daily the kids are going daily basis, the kids are going to easier teach. they're to be easier to teach. they're going more pliable. going to be more pliable. they're going more they're going to be more amenable of amenable to the idea of education. would maybe education. and that would maybe balance out. could balance things out. you could even quarter of an even shave off a quarter of an hour the end the day. hour at the end of the day. guardian leo, i think it's guardian now, leo, i think it's fair the most rowdy, fair to say the most rowdy, roundly social roundly mocked story on social media the black death. >> oh, so yeah, literally the black death. with black black death. women with black african ancestry greater risk black death. women with black africathe|cestry greater risk black death. women with black africathe plague greater risk black death. women with black africathe plague glondon.;k when the plague hit london. this is century is the 14th century bubonic plague. done some plague. they've done some some researchers have done some research. found that i research. they found that i mean, they're dealing with pretty small numbers here. apparently, victims apparently, nine plague victims that looked at appeared to that they looked at appeared to be african heritage . the word be of african heritage. the word appeared a of heavy appeared is doing a lot of heavy lifting sentence. they lifting in that sentence. they basically skulls or basically because it's skulls or the of skulls, they're the remnants of skulls, they're measuring sockets and things measuring eye sockets and things like that. >> important say >> very important to say they use but not cranial use callipers, but not cranial capacity. which that's capacity. callipers which that's a racist, single, most racist
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thing do is measure the thing you can do is measure the wrong part of this. >> they're using other >> yeah, they're using other other parts haven't been other parts that haven't been judged races yet . probably going judged races yet. probably going to rename the black death the people colour death. yeah people of colour death. yeah deaths of colour. the death of colour. but yeah. and it's colour. yeah but yeah. and it's to push this , this agenda. they to push this, this agenda. they say england say medieval england was a diverse population and they're trying to butter us up for more immigration. it's been this way andifs immigration. it's been this way and it's always been this. and it really it really hasn't. i mean, there was immigration in the ages, the vast the middle ages, but the vast majority was european. it was from from countries that were close and similar. there was there was but , close and similar. there was there was but, i mean, there was some, but, i mean, we're an island, so that really restricted immigration restricted the immigration compared to spain, you know, places augustine places like that. and augustine is the one told us we looked is the one who told us we looked like angels. >> was from kind of >> and he was from kind of morocco. yeah, yeah. >> and he was from kind of moiand . yeah, yeah. >> and he was from kind of moiand also, 1, yeah. >> and he was from kind of moiand also, 1, yeainot on >> and also, we're not on a trade route, so it's not as if, you know, lot of people would trade route, so it's not as if, yotcoming lot of people would trade route, so it's not as if, yotcoming through people would trade route, so it's not as if, yotcoming through likele would trade route, so it's not as if, yotcoming through like lebanon be coming through like lebanon or were after the tin , the >> they were after the tin, the bronze age, cornwall . but then bronze age, cornwall. but then it went into deep recession around 1100 bc. i think kemi badenoch had it absolutely right . funnily enough, it takes
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somebody badenoch to somebody like kemi badenoch to call for the nonsense. call this out for the nonsense. it is. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and you're right point out >> and you're right to point out the mean, the the numbers. i mean, the statistical is on 140. statistical analysis is on 140. yeah data points . yeah. it's all yeah data points. yeah. it's all over the shop. and they compared it to the non plague deaths which were eight that looked to be from african heritage and 88 that it's just one that were white. it's just one small like three small postcode like three different cemeteries. >> are these ? it is a >> and where are these? it is a cemetery, not? cemetery, is it not? because i think a lot of the black deaths i black apparent is i mean, black heath apparent is a plague burial site. i mean, black heath apparent is a theyague burial site. i mean, black heath apparent is a they were.)urial site. >> they were. >> they were. >> yeah. emergency plague burial dumps, . dumps, lime pits. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i think we need to see more research. radical bill haslam in the doc now steve, that's not a typo. that is his name. >> this is the reasonable for protesters to call iain duncan smith tory scum. a court rules. so the high court has rejected an attempt to overturn the acquittal of two protesters. look we know he's a tory, so we can wipe that one off the page. scum >> well, he's risen to the surface and stuck to the side long after his fourth purpose.
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>> think probably true >> i think that's probably true as well. >> 5 have defended >> you should have defended them. do you want him? them. look do you want him? >> do you want to make it illegal to use word scum of illegal to use the word scum of all the words? i mean. angela rayner all the words? i mean. angela rayn think it's right the >> i think it's right on the edge of acceptable. i do think it's funny, you know, sometimes this sort of dehumanising talk, the that. the left complain about that. people katie people talk about katie hopkins was the single worst was essentially the single worst thing that she ever did was say that the immigrant libya were that the immigrant in libya were like . yeah. that like cockroaches. yeah. so that kind is, is like kind of thing is, is like dehumanising scum. i think is fine. some of the language that some commentators have some of the commentators have used farage being in used about nigel farage being in the jungle, that being the jungle, that he is being normalised for this is abhorrent, that needs was it abhorrent, that he needs was it not disinfect thing. i mean, they do sometimes talk about him in a way that as if he's some sort of imam who's sort of radical imam who's preached sort of radical imam who's pre it'szd sort of radical imam who's pre it's just nonsense. but yeah, >> it's just nonsense. but yeah, i think, you know, i mean, i think, you know, you're to say this just you're wrong to say this is just the and the scum. the word tory and the word scum. this about protected groups this is about protected groups. and to talk about and if we're going to talk about marginalised get marginalised groups who get attacked people , i mean, attacked by by people, i mean, you can laugh, but look at jo cox, at david amess, two cox, look at david amess, two politicians are attacked
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politicians who are attacked for their for their politics, for their for their politics, for the security of politicians is a good point. >> i think you can't ban the phrase . phrase. >> you can't say we can have lots racism. we'll just lots of racism. we'll just provide to minorities. provide security to minorities. i that's a terrible i >> -- >> but then, look, if you're going have there is going to have is there any is there any suggestion a there any suggestion of a physical think there physical attack? i think there was. there was before. was. well, there was before. >> this was someone put >> so this was someone put a traffic head? yeah traffic cone on his head? yeah that against law. that surely is against the law. at least a parking violation, i imagine. i, i take imagine. but no, i, i take taking wizard. i take taking a wizard. yeah. i take your about the use of your point about the use of language, but people left language, but people on the left always kissed always say, like, never kissed a tory. i've looked into it. the last election, it was like 40% of the vote went to tories. so there's no statistically, there's no way statistically, they tory t shirt. >> you never really feel terribly sorry that you've you've access to you've i'm sure denied access to dodged a bullet there. >> thanks much ladies >> thanks very much ladies telegraph and the fa are telegraph leo and the fa are looking to find a resolution to settle the trans issue. >> i would suggest a low resolution. >> so yeah, the football association has intervened to find a resolution. the transgender row. this is after at least four women's teams in a
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sheffield league are refusing to play sheffield league are refusing to play a team whose transgender player has been accused of seriously injuring an opponent. so apparently this is francesca needham. they always pick needham. they always pick needham and that's exactly what she does by the look of it, yeah. >> needham kneed him in the gooues >> needham kneed him in the goolies yeah, well, jesus, that's some that's, that's that's some that's, that's that's . francesca needham that's that's. francesca needham that's the woman. >> and she, i mean she looks like she could bench press. she looks like hulk hogan. anyway, she apparently she accidentally struck a ball against a player's knee. and this is a gravely debilitating effect for the woman in day to day life, the player that she injured and the rossington ladies team have come out and said that the accident is due to passion and commitment from very talented player and from a very talented player and not from the fact that there are 150 of pure muscle. 150 stone of pure muscle. >> extraordinary how this >> it's extraordinary how this amount on, amount of delusion carries on, isn't i mean, and football. isn't it? i mean, and football. i the things we've i mean, some of the things we've had recently, a woman had like recently, a woman refused to play a transgender opponent in a ladies pool. and
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you well, might be you think, well, that might be a matter what's the word matter of what's the word principle for her. and that's fine that she's entitled to do it, but there's probably not a huge advantage in terms of upper body strength. you cannot have men women playing men and women playing pool playing you playing football together. you just . and not just can't. and not competitively. yeah i'm not in this boat, but i would have thought, you know, if you if you're situation where you you're in a situation where you want some got want to have some if you've got all rights apart from sunday all the rights apart from sunday football, might take that as football, you might take that as a win. >> but you know, i don't care about football, so maybe not >> but you know, i don't care abo notyotball, so maybe not >> but you know, i don't care abo not in ball, so maybe not >> but you know, i don't care abo not in eithero maybe not >> but you know, i don't care abo not in either of1aybe not >> but you know, i don't care abo not in either of these not >> but you know, i don't care abo not in either of these two not boats. >> it does seem, as i've been saying it for ages, that there were polite fictions in place which was able live which everybody was able to live by for an awfully time. and by for an awfully long time. and now they now suddenly they've they wanted to 3% the gap to close the last 3% of the gap and everyone's gone. no, i'm sorry. you know, all polite fictions. the third half fictions. that's the third half done. and that's going to be my autobio fiction. that is autobio polite fiction. that is the third half down. only the fourth, fourth, fourth, fifth to go. the fourth, the what's going on? the fifth. what's going on? toxic sex toys. furious footy fans and the death of the patriarch aki. it's all coming up. see you shortly
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welcome back to headliners for our fourth and final section, we have micro plastics news. now, liam, and specifically micro plastics in sex toys, which doesn't sound ideal for a couple of reasons i can think of. >> they put a lot of the microplastics into it. well many of milton muckle it will have some girth, but doctors have found made of found that sex toys made of materials plastic , rubber materials like plastic, rubber and can all result and latex can all result in microplastic bloodstream microplastic in the bloodstream is particle that enter is a tiny particle that enter your body. i'm glad i took my love eggs out. it caused serious health problems in the run. health problems in the long run. like diabetes, immune disorders and metabolic disorders. obviously metabolic is what might happen to the sex toy as well. so but yeah, apparently the sex toys contained phthalates. i'm not trying to spit out a bit of a bit of broccoli. that is , it's a nylon
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broccoli. that is, it's a nylon mimics a hormone that mimics a hormone that affects your hormones . lady hormones. yeah, hormones. lady hormones. yeah, it's bad. so i think we should go to our science correspondent for. >> yeah, this is this is terrible news for women. >> yeah. because guys, let's be honest in the sex toy market. yeah. all of them were designed for tools, don't we. if, if it's not got a petrol engine in it. i'm not interested. yeah, it's basically the only thing men ever get is sex dolls and you know those, those weird ones that are on like, tv shows like this morning. some bloke i really love they. are really love her, they. they are always like everything always exactly like everything else ai. always exactly like everything els> oh me. well which is disgusting. >> now oh me. well which is disgusting. >> now you oh me. well which is disgusting. >> now you want me. well which is disgusting. >> now you want a me. well which is disgusting. >> now you want a dishwasher friendly one. of course. >> well, they could >> well, maybe they could just, like, something like, revert to something like ivory or something. >> you know, there have >> you know, there might have been used the queen of sheba been used by the queen of sheba that there. there must that must be there. there must be synthetic rose be a sort of synthetic wood rose wood know . wood or. yeah, i don't know. maybe you make your own. i was talking this. the talking about this. it's the other had other day. i suddenly had a flashback. i remembered that my
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mother something mother used to do something called plastic craft, which is basically anything basically when you took anything like a small flower or a gem or something, you encased it in something, and you encased it in a huge lump of acetate , like a huge lump of acetate, like clear and then it clear plastic, and then it became a paperweight or a massively unwieldy cuff, and then shoved wet and then then you shoved it wet and then it just given a gift. it was just given as a gift. >> oh, she's obviously like, everyone their everyone should get their plastic rough. >> i'm not suggesting my mother anyway . anyway. >> oh, steve daily mail. >> oh, steve daily mail. >> now we've discussed a few possible pro natal strategies on this show . possible pro natal strategies on this show. this possible pro natal strategies on this show . this is a new one to me. >> 45,000 women prisoners in putin's jail should be freed temporarily so they can get out there and get pregnant and reverse falling birth reverse russia's falling birth rate. feel rate. you've got to feel sorry for blokes. an offer . for the blokes. what an offer. you remember cell block you remember prisoner cell block h take your pick one of those. they're to need viagra. h take your pick one of those. the but to need viagra. h take your pick one of those. the but obviously1eed viagra. h take your pick one of those. the but obviously she's/iagra. h take your pick one of those. the but obviously she's gone. h take your pick one of those. thebut obviously she's gone back inside. >> that's good news, right? inside. >> thet's good news, right? inside. >> the well,)d news, right? inside. >> the well, that's s, right? inside. >> the well, that's what1t? >> the well, that's what happens. out happens. yeah, they're out apparently the apparently released like the dirty movies , surveillance dirty dozen movies, surveillance . but then they've got to go back in pregnant, i imagine. give birth in prison. and that's what i call hard labour. >> that was how wasn't it?
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>> that was how wasn't it? >> that was how wasn't it? >> that was how ann widdecombe that was how she met her downfall, that she wouldn't she wouldn't allow women giving birth holloway prison, birth in holloway prison, i think to be unshackled for the experience, right? they were, yeah. this was what seemed yeah. and this was what seemed slightly harsh. yeah. well they're not going run away. they're not going to run away. they're articulate women. they're very articulate women. yeah, she's on the on the channel occasionally isn't it. is the solution to their problem more criminal mothers. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> well we've the we've got >> well we've got the we've got a solution scotland a better solution in scotland where men , biological where we send men, biological males women's prisons to males into women's prisons to impregnate the women. >> very good indeed . they should >> very good indeed. they should be sent over to russia . there's be sent over to russia. there's a win win win 101 be sent over to russia. there's a win win win101 abuses of an fmri scan . now, steve, this is fmri scan. now, steve, this is football brains. >> yeah. what happens in football fans brains has been looked at. not a lot, i imagine. we they they put them in these mri machines. they show them some and the most some football and the most fanatical supporters, the regions, some fancy regions, there's some fancy words there . emotions get words there. emotions get the better it's easy better of them. it's the easy way of saying it. their
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cognitive powers lose the battle. a surprise. battle. again, not a surprise. all looks like was all of this looks like i was going to say bother doing going to say why bother doing this analysis? and this amount of analysis? and then the bottom it then on the bottom it says it could useful for other areas could be useful for other areas of where people are tribal. of life where people are tribal. oh, all of life now? oh, you mean all of life now? >> of life? yeah. >> all of life? yeah. >> all of life? yeah. >> it is interesting. and i know i of i mean, there's a couple of things time this things at time with this oxytocin, which a more oxytocin, right? which is a more female dominant drug. this female male dominant drug. this is you particularly get a is one you particularly get a surge it when you breastfeed surge of it when you breastfeed and when you see a little baby and when you see a little baby and lowers people's and so on. this lowers people's tribal instincts oxytocin tribal instincts, oxytocin given to or women, and they to either men or women, and they become much more open to the idea of mixed communities, diversity on. it just diversity and so on. it just lowers your tribal. so lowers all your tribal. so i think the tribal thing is the kind of male brain thing. and i do genuinely believe that this is why even though they are forcing us to sort of overcome our instincts, this is why male sport is more is followed more avidly by men, because they project more , you know , project more, you know, powerfully onto the onto the tribal entities playing in their colours on their, you know what i mean? women just don't
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fighting vicariously get that women might half women might watch half a football match before they decided which team they sport. you know what i mean? if it's based on colour. yeah. yeah . based on colour. yeah. yeah. anyway, so i don't know whether it's a good thing or a bad thing, but we do do it. we do project. and it's also, i think why people understand how why people don't understand how supporters donald trump, for supporters of donald trump, for instance, refuse to accept that he lost an election because he has lost an election because if there's any gap, if there's any opportunity to find an alternative explanation that doesn't involve defeat, you will you will find it. you know, and this is why it's a very dangerous strategy, you know, mean. >> well, it did lose the last one. but he's is going to win big in 2024. don't worry. >> i know it's going to be such fans anyway. leo on to the mail now. following the progressive news from their education sector, reassure to see sector, which reassure to see the are still capable of the welsh are still capable of backward and backward suspicion and anglophobia . anglophobia. >> yeah so a plan to create a fourth national park in wales has caused division as local farmers say, a vast influx of engush farmers say, a vast influx of english tourism mean the country
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will die . they might be will die. they might be overegging the pudding a bit. basically they fear that the extra footfall will increase house prices, push young people out of their community and even harm wild life. so i harm rare local wild life. so i mean , it's interesting, if you mean, it's interesting, if you said this about another group of people, maybe cross—channel migrants or something, you'd be you'd be cast out as a racist. but say it about english people andifs but say it about english people and it's fine. obviously, as a scot, i approve of that rule. but yeah, the apparently it's a £4 million annual expense of a national park and i just think these these locals are they're not seeing the bigger picture . not seeing the bigger picture. people bring money with them. if the go up, that's the house prices go up, that's money into region. money coming into the region. it's have a sentimental >> if they have a sentimental aversion the english arriving aversion to the english arriving in they in their country. well they should express such. should just express it as such. but it has that it but the idea that it has that it will house prices also will raise house prices and also like destroy the economy. house pnces like destroy the economy. house prices rise when the economy is doing well. i mean, that's a pretty basic index, right? >> it's people buying >> unless it's people buying a second holiday homes. second home holiday homes. but that's talking that's not what we're talking about going about here. it's people going there, going, spending there, visit, going, spending their their
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economy. >> absolutely. well, i hope they see steve, as someone see sensible steve, as someone once said , millions long for once said, millions long for immortality that don't know what to themselves on a rainy to do with themselves on a rainy sunday afternoon. this is in the times. >> the search longer life >> the search for longer life could catastrophic for the could be catastrophic for the planet. this is, i should say, early doors . most of the quotes early doors. most of the quotes in here are from a philosopher. so you know, guessing with big words what as well words is what his name, as well as craig cave. as dr. stephen craig cave. >> cave. >> cave. >> plato's cave . >> plato's cave. >> plato's cave. >> yeah, but it makes a good point. if we all live longer, we will use more resources. his but it won't be us. over it won't be all of us. get over it. it's inheritance tax. it. it's like inheritance tax. it's you. it's for it's not for you. it's for the rich. it's jeff bezos is investing it. of course he is, because if you're jeff bezos, the you face is the only problem you face is that die and that you're going to die and stop bezos. stop being jeff bezos. >> wants literally the >> so he wants literally the definition of elite, isn't >> so he wants literally the de'that)n of elite, isn't >> so he wants literally the de'that youf elite, isn't >> so he wants literally the de'that youf to lite, isn't >> so he wants literally the de'that youf to liveisn't >> so he wants literally the de'that youf to live longer, it, that you get to live longer, you it is the one you know, and it is the one thing which don't currently thing which they don't currently have do. have the power to do. >> not yet. i think they are going to go it. there is going to go for it. there is that one chap, isn't there? have you a you been watching him? a billionaire he's billionaire who is sort of he's like live tweeting, blogging it does. >> he mixes his blood with his
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son's then pumps it back son's and then pumps it back into weird into both of them. it's a weird sort of vampiric sort of way of way doing hard to get way of doing very hard to get older mortality older and resist mortality without crazy. without going crazy. >> you know, the epic, >> you know, the oldest epic, the of gilgamesh, the epic of gilgamesh, is that's the epic of gilgamesh, is that's the as the main plot thrust of it. as old sumerian guy. and he doesn't end anyway, alert , end well. anyway, spoiler alert, steve. no, this is leo for steve. sorry no, this is leo for our final story of the evening. would your would you would you take your wife's surname ? this take your wife's surname? this is suppose it would depend is i suppose it would depend whether leo the whether it was a leo leo the lion something. maybe lion or something. maybe yeah. >> , so this this is >> i mean, so this this is about. would your husband take your surname after marriage research third of men research shows a third of men would swap to their wife's last name trend , and 35% name in a growing trend, and 35% of men say they would. i don't know if they actually will. or maybe just saying maybe they're just saying it to get yeah, get some brownie points. yeah, but but yeah, i don't know. it just seems like i mean, i hate to brownie points in a marriage as weird double meaning but as a weird double meaning but yeah. >> e can those be yeah. >> can those be traded in >> well can those be traded in for them . but yes. for them. but yes. >> well you sound like a like an antediluvian throwback but i mean, men should like women
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should take the man's name, maybe the double barrelled one. if progressive if you're that progressive double all very best. >> all you'll be taking is her father's name. yeah, her name, wake it up. >> double barrel is a bad problem because if you keep having extra generations, it becomes the m becomes two to the power of m minus barrelled names. ten minus one barrelled names. ten generations in, up to 500. we have long term a system >> we have long term a system that evans. that my name is evans. >> did keep her her >> my wife did keep her her professional kate van beek professional name kate van beek because business cards because she had business cards and fair enough. but and so on. fair enough. but i reckon we can superimpose those names. evans what? names. kate evans what? >> i like we just need some >> i mean like we just need some brackets. okay show is nearly over. >> oven >> let's take another quick look at wednesday's front pages . at wednesday's front pages. we'll through these. the we'll zip through these. the daily terrible, sad story daily mail terrible, sad story about four pals who went about the four pals who went camping . the guardian bow camping. the guardian hunt bow to tory demands for tax cuts in bid to revive economy and win election. the mirror tragic story again of the four lads in the car times hunt offers tax cuts for workers and businesses . cuts for workers and businesses. the sun so young. those are those boys again. never mind the cliff, richard. that's the daily star and his affinity for the
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sex pistols. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guests, leo, kirsten, steve and alan andrew doyle. excuse me, back tomorrow at 11 pm. with nick dixon and schaefer . nick dixon and louis schaefer. if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. if you are about to turn in for the are now about to turn in for the rest of the night, i wish you happy dreams. see you again very
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>> good evening and welcome to patrick christys. tonight, the falklands are out. back off argentina. their new president says he wants them back. well, he does seems like seemed like an absolute legend, but i think he's dead wrong on this . but he's dead wrong on this. but should we deport illegal migrants to the falklands? lee anderson thinks he's on anderson thinks so. he's on shortly he'll get stuck into shortly and he'll get stuck into benefits. as well . net benefits. britain as well. net migration to hit migration expected to hit a record high. indian students rush relatives over to game the system. the polling's in the toilet, but i've got the inside
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scoop on what tory mps are saying about rishi sunak with leaked what's sap messages? you won't want to miss that. now the clash. well, it's a kick in the balls for trans women. females are refusing to play against them. are they right to do so? i've them. are they right to do so? pve the them. are they right to do so? i've the woman walked i've got the woman who walked out sporting final instead out of a sporting final instead of competing against a cheating bloke. what? the bbc bloke. and guess what? the bbc says is racist. today the play? yes, the plague . well, i also yes, the plague. well, i also have a blockbuster interview with phil the power taylor. that's coming your way later on as well. we've got a brand new panel tonight. sensational. suzanne evans , tory mp randall suzanne evans, tory mp randall on the panel, jayawardena. and everybody's favourite lefty, it's rebecca reid. this is patrick christys. tonight and, well, i've i want to hear directly from you gb views gbnews.com straight forward should the falklands
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