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tv   Headliners  GB News  November 28, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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. the 75 and two thai nationals. the 75 year old mother of a british israeli man is among them. we're also hearing 30 palestinian prisoners have been released , prisoners have been released, but they're believed to be 15 women and 15 teenage boys . women and 15 teenage boys. meanwhile, the united states has changed its approach slightly , changed its approach slightly, asking israel today to take greater care if there are any future strikes on gaza. the white house saying earlier on that civilians and vital infrastructure must be protected . now, news here at home, schools could be forced to stay open during strike action under tough new plans to be introduced by the government. teaching unions have attacked the announcement as shameful, but the education secretary said the recent strikes by teachers have been some of the most disruptive on record, a total number of 25 million school days being lost in the last year, something gillian keegan says we can't afford to repeat . rates of afford to repeat. rates of shoplifting are on the rise with
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the sharpest surge seen in conservative constituencies in 2014. the conservative has changed the law to reclassify the theft of items under £200 as low value shoplift . eating it low value shoplift. eating it meant some police forces disregarded that as petty theft . disregarded that as petty theft. the first transatlantic flight powered by cooking oil and animal fats, has landed in new york. the boeing 787 journey was the first time a commercial airline had operated a long haul flight entirely powered by so—called green fuels. aviation enthusiasts are celebrating the milestone journey, but environmental campaigners have cast doubt on today questioning whether alternative fuels really are 100% sustainable. all and snow and ice are set to hit parts of the uk overnight. yorkshire is already seeing snowfall and the met office is predicting a cold snap as we head into the early start of december . a yellow weather december. a yellow weather warning is in place until
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tomorrow morning with hazardous conditions to continue in the north—east of england and parts of scotland . and lastly, some of scotland. and lastly, some households will be rewarded with cash for reducing their energy use between 5:00 and 630 tomorrow, according to the national grid. their forecast suggest electricity supply could be tighter than usual during that upcoming cold snap . it that upcoming cold snap. it marks the first time the grid's voluntary blackout prevention scheme has been activated this winter. they say the move doesn't mean electricity suppues doesn't mean electricity supplies are at risk. they just want people to use power. more wisely. you with gb news across the uk on tv , in your car, on 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 . this is britain's news channel. >> thank you, polly . hello
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this is britain's news channel. >> thank you, polly. hello and welcome to headliners, your nightly run through the next day's newspapers with three top comedians. >> and one of them, i'm leo carson. >> tonight, i'm joined by perrier award winner scott capurro and perrier water drinkerjosh howie . drinker josh howie. >> how drinkerjosh howie. >> how are you both doing? >> how are you both doing? >> i'm still angry about it. i'm all right. oh, thank you. i'm fine . thank you. sorry we have fine. thank you. sorry we have builders in today , so i'm a bit. builders in today, so i'm a bit. i'm covered in dust. >> i'm a bit. »- >> i'm a bit. >> i'm a bit. >> i'm a bit spacey. >> i'm a bit spacey. >> you had to be there during the building. always. >> right? you know, you have to watch make, right? >> and he'd the other day >> and he'd come the other day and wasn't there. and the, the and i wasn't there. and the, the knobs didn't match. oh. so we had to match our knobs right. the builders. okay i won't ask what that entailed. let's have a look at those front pages . the look at those front pages. the daily mail leads with scobie book pulled for naming royal racist by mistake. the telegraph has patients at risk from virtual gp sessions. the sun has. they stole her voice. that's one of the hostage is
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taken by hamas. that's one of the hostage is taken by hamas . the mirror has taken by hamas. the mirror has book names. royal racist. the eye leads with generic goes rogue with dig at number 10 over migration . and finally, the migration. and finally, the daily star has you're a daft pair of witchetty grubs and those we are front pages . and those we are front pages. and let's have a closer look at those front pages starting with wednesday's sky news. josh, what have they got? >> jen derek goes rogue with dig at number 10 on migration. >> jen derek goes rogue with dig at number 10 on migration . and at number 10 on migration. and this , by the way, i always this, by the way, i always thought rogue was pronounced rough because i thought, do you ever remember rough trooper, rogue trooper from 2008? anyway, whatever . basically, rogue trooper from 2008? anyway, whatever. basically, i learned last week that rogue and yeah, this is the immigration minister who's seems to be very angry that he is not managed to cut down on migration. the figures revealed last week as 700 odd thousand. yeah. and there seems to be a bit of a hoo ha where
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people have said, is he stepping out of line because he's blaming everybody else , which is seen as everybody else, which is seen as a no no and also a sign of things to come as we're moving towards an election is sort of a tory minister is going to start sort of losing their discipline and kind of fighting. and start kind of fighting. >> sort plotting for >> they're sort of plotting for what next, what comes what comes next, what comes after election, which after the election, which they're already assuming they've lost, scott i don't know. >> i think the migrants are missing a trick because if they're to over they're going to come over and they're going to come over and they from not not from they come from even not not from nice should bring nice places, they should bring something want nice places, they should bring syouthing want nice places, they should bring syou know, want nice places, they should bring syou know, i want nice places, they should bring syou know, i don't want nice places, they should bring syou know, i don't know, want . you know, i don't know, something like i know well, iphone builders. yeah. all that. yeah i mean i read that one of the biggest complaints is about bulgarians coming to this country, that a lot are coming in, but we have bulgarian builders they're really in, but we have bulgarian buildeso they're really in, but we have bulgarian buildeso thinky're really in, but we have bulgarian buildeso think if'e really in, but we have bulgarian buildeso think if they lly good. so i think if they come over skill a meal, over with a skill or a meal, they can make this nice or they can so close together, i don't know, little iphones with know, make little iphones with their tiny fingers, something that we need. >> i mean, i guess it's just the numbers i know numbers because i mean, i know the figure the net migration figure was 750,000, the gross figure
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750,000, but the gross figure was 1.2 million in a year, which is which is insane. obviously, you know, 500,000 people left britain as well, which brought it, brought the net figure it, which brought the net figure down, gives us the net figure. but 1.2 million new people arriving in the uk doesn't seem doesn't seem feasible. a lot of them are they long term? are they even students have to live somewhere and a lot a of somewhere and a lot a lot of people use student visa as people use the student visa as a way of coming in and working. i mean, i did it when i worked in canada and then bring their canada and then they bring their family. bring my family. i didn't bring my family. i didn't bring my family. trying to get away family. i was trying to get away from mean, are you from them. but, i mean, are you surprised that the immigration minister out and minister is coming out now and saying, listened me, saying, nobody listened to me, nobody listened? i'm just like, you've had you've had you've had enough be listened to. enough time to be listened to. maybe put foot maybe you could put your foot down maybe you could put your foot dovwell, seen as a as an >> well, he's seen as a as an ally of sunak, but this seems to indicate actually ally of sunak, but this seems to indicate more actually ally of sunak, but this seems to indicate more towardsially ally of sunak, but this seems to indicate more towards the' moving more towards the braverman the party. braverman side of the party. >> but should he not have already the braverman already been on the braverman side? saying that that >> well, he's saying that that he's and the stuff he's been thwarted and the stuff that was promoting would have that he was promoting would have been if been pushed through last year if they'd listened to him last christmas, pretty much christmas, which is pretty much what suella was saying. yeah,
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but because we but they are tricky because we do students . we do do need students. we do need their subsidise our their money to subsidise our universities yes, how do universities. yes, we do. how do we before our students? we survive before our students? well, we paid more money towards our university , so. oh, no. our university, so. oh, no. >> paid more money. no, we didn't. >> no, i went to i went to university in the 90s. >> i got paid to go. >> i got paid to go. >> no, i mean the government and the paid more money the taxpayers paid more money towards remember towards it. i don't remember a huge were huge universal because you were at brian . at university, brian. >> never paid taxes >> you've never paid taxes anyway. hide all your cash anyway. you hide all your cash and we need workers who do certain jobs that british people are to do. are not willing to do. >> now, we can make the we >> now, if we can make the we can british people can pay the british people enough jobs, great. enough to do those jobs, great. >> they still won't do them. my husband a comedy club husband works in a comedy club and hire and when they had to hire british the two british people the last two years, they're resentful and they of jensen's they make fun of jensen's accent. and they're they accent. so and they're and they steal . so i accent. so and they're and they steal. so i like accent. so and they're and they steal . so i like the accent. so and they're and they steal. so i like the foreign. the foreigners are better, right 7 the foreigners are better, right ? they appreciate it more. they like being here. >> okay. moving to on the daily star. what have they got in the front scott front cover? scott >> well, apparently you're a daft witchetty grubs is daft pair of witchetty grubs is all about the naturalist chris
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packham , accusing ndec of packham, accusing ndec of ruining their reputations by allowing animal abuse on. i'm a celeb. they've been eating bugs, eating spiders. i think. and spiders are our friends. i love spiders. >> so they actually eat spiders , >> so they actually eat spiders, i think because they roll around in the green things and eat spiders. >> i think they do, yeah. >> i think they do, yeah. >> because i feel like if we're talking i'm not talking about animals, i'm not two or two creatures. people or creatures. i'm not too fussed about people eating bugs or cockroaches or bugs. spiders, bugs. bugs >> technically, animals are animals. >> well, the yeah, they're saying animal abuse here, but i think this chris person meant a creature like, you know, inhabitants abuse of things who live there. right. like we're just visitors with this show and we should respect the creatures who actually call that home. and instead they're feeding them to the celebrities . but it's weird the celebrities. but it's weird to me that they pick on the celebrities in a way because they're they? they're starving, aren't they? they're hungry. they're starving, aren't they? th that's a great point. and also because they're eating
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>> that's a great point. and also b that's a great point. and also b> you've really thought this through. have you been googling kangaroo testicles ? kangaroo testicles? >> but if you live with somebody who eats all the creature, like my husband brazilian or my my husband is brazilian or my grandfather used to the pig's feet and ears the eyes feet and the ears and the eyes and really and everything, you really respect that. people that eat all this all that stuff. but maybe this person chris person is angry. this chris packham angry because packham person is angry because they credit they don't seem to give credit to environment moment to the local environment moment and how important it is to keep it thriving and all that stuff. >> this is this the sort of >> does this is this the sort of guy he's walking guy who, like when he's walking down he's sweeping down the street, he's sweeping all the bugs out his way with all the bugs out of his way with all the bugs out of his way with a brush? doesn't like noise. >> that @-l $n— >> he's that type of person. >> he's that type of person. >> doesn't like signs >> he doesn't like any signs of it anyway. eat cucumber. >> he doesn't like fun. i love that show is my favourite. i love watching celebrities suffer. it's great. it's suffer. i think it's great. it's a it's so much fun a great show. it's so much fun to especially right now to watch, especially right now with oh, it's with nigel in there. oh, it's hilarious. to hilarious. they're trying to catch haven't hilarious. they're trying to catch him haven't hilarious. they're trying to catch him yet. haven't hilarious. they're trying to catch him yet. he'saven't hilarious. they're trying to catch him yet. he'sjust't hilarious. they're trying to catch him yet. he's just a guy caught him yet. he's just a guy who makes jokes. >> okay, well, on the
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who makes jokes. >> oof 1, well, on the who makes jokes. >> oof wednesday's on the who makes jokes. >> oof wednesday's telegraph? who makes jokes. >> (howie dnesday's telegraph? who makes jokes. >> (howie patientss telegraph? who makes jokes. >> (howie patients atelegraph? who makes jokes. >> (howie patients at riskraph? who makes jokes. >> (howie patients at risk from josh howie patients at risk from virtual sessions. virtual gp sessions. >> it seems like up to a third of appointments going now of gp appointments are going now on zoom and because of that, people are falling through the gap. it's got some pretty horrific actually. a 16 horrific stories. actually. a 16 year diagnosed with year old girl diagnosed with glandular she died glandular fever. she died of sepsis afterwards. yeah, i know a mother, a pregnant mother . a mother, a pregnant mother. they thought she had urinary problems, but she had a premature rupture. so there is a payoff to what they're doing. i guess it's a cost cutting measure. they're able to see more patients, but they're seeing them in a blurry webcam instead of in real life. exactly. so they're trying to implement some measures that are going sort, you know, and going to sort, you know, and there's like some oversight. and obviously, less experienced obviously, the less experienced doctors what to see doctors won't know what to see as much . so, yeah, this is just as much. so, yeah, this is just another way that we're not getting the service that we deserve. >> i mean, to be fair, before they introduced virtual gp sessions , we weren't getting the sessions, we weren't getting the service, we weren't we deserved. >> no, i was misdiagnosed with the to go home and the flu and told to go home and almost with pneumonia at
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almost die with pneumonia at home. misdiagnosed almost die with pneumonia at honand misdiagnosed almost die with pneumonia at honand in misdiagnosed almost die with pneumonia at honand in the misdiagnosed almost die with pneumonia at honand in the flesh.nisdiagnosed almost die with pneumonia at hon and in the flesh. yes, agnosed almost die with pneumonia at honand in the flesh. yes, innosed almost die with pneumonia at honand in the flesh. yes, in theed me and in the flesh. yes, in the flesh. and she said, just go home and rest. and edson was saying , your temperature is saying, your temperature is really, really , you know. and really, really, you know. and anyway, so yeah , we weren't anyway, so yeah, we weren't getting the service we deserve already. so yeah, i see them. i understand they're trying to do cost cutting measures, but it seems they're they're seems like they're what they're doing putting the doing is they're putting the patients at risk and that's really bad. yeah >> and finally, we've got that royal racist story in the mirror i >> - - >> scott oh, write a book has named a senior royal as the person at the centre of the harry and meghan racism row. person at the centre of the harry and meghan racism row . and harry and meghan racism row. and in the book end game by ahmed scobie, he details how the royal had remarked about the skin colour. we've all heard about this of archie, baby , and he this of archie, the baby, and he names the person in the book. but . the media does it too. but. the media does it too. >> yeah, but the daily mirror puts exes in with the name is. >> well, one of you must have googled it. >> who is it. >> who is it. >> it's i've got it here. it's.
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it's four exes. so i didn't, you know, i thought about googling it, but i didn't think it would come because they hadn't come up because they hadn't listed mirror. listed it in the daily mirror. but maybe mirror being listed it in the daily mirror. but of|ybe mirror being listed it in the daily mirror. but of honourable �*ror being listed it in the daily mirror. but of honourable �*ror iit.ng sort of honourable about it. yeah, have decided to the yeah, we have decided to the mirror. yeah. are not mirror. yeah. yeah. we are not going you after they put going to tell you after they put that about that story about charlie, about archie's the archie's skin colour on the paper i've got to paper for about, i've got to query this is actually racist. >> i mean if you've got i've got friends, know, mixed race friends, you know, mixed race families mixed race families. i'm a mixed race family you know, you family myself. you know, if you have kids, you're going to you're discuss, you you're going to discuss, you know, colour what know, what colour eyes, what colour colour skin. colour hair, what colour skin. it's not racist it's not it's not a racist thing. would racist if thing. it would be racist if they then said, and that's bad. but they're just discussing but if they're just discussing it, could it, you know as well they could have just left it really and not really . we could just leave really. we could just leave everything and not talk about anything. but i mean, yeah , but anything. but i mean, yeah, but this person discussing it might have been doing it for a point or wanted some sort of . or wanted some sort of. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> or maybe some people are just a bit touchy about to get offended about everything . i'm offended about everything. i'm not saying harry and meghan in particular. >> oh i like that it's been
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revealed by a person called scooby. yeah yeah, it's coming in. >> yeah. yeah >> yeah. yeah >> turned up in the magical mystery bus. anyway, that's the front page is done with, but stay with us. coming right up, we've got another covid conspiracy theory coming. thank god . olivia colman in a latex god. olivia colman in a latex suit and a plane powered by chip fat. see you in a couple of
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radio. >> welcome back to headliners. i'm leo carson. i'm still here with josh howie and scott capurro kicking things off here with the telegraph and another conspiracy theory becomes reality , as michael gove tells reality, as michael gove tells the covid inquiry that the virus is likely manmade. josh cove it could be manmade. >> michael gove tells inquiry yeah , how far we've come . what yeah, how far we've come. what a change this has been . and but change this has been. and but the interesting thing is that he
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he's the angle he seems to be pushing is like look, it was probably manmade so we weren't prepared for a manmade virus . so prepared for a manmade virus. so really it's just him trying to absolve any absolve himself of any responsibility . and yeah, that responsibility. and yeah, that that was messed up. but the thing was that that wasn't what went wrong , arguably, like in went wrong, arguably, like in terms of us being able to deal with it medically , it was as with it medically, it was as much the response that they sort of ignored the evidence or to fit their narrative that they were pushing forward at the time in terms of things like you have to be this far apart or you have to be this far apart or you have to wear a mask or you have or the lack of schooling or whatever it was. so it was the ignonng whatever it was. so it was the ignoring the evidence ignoring of the evidence that for me the that's come for me is the stuff that's come out of this covid inquiry that is troubling stuff . is the most troubling stuff. whether or not it had been a manmade or not, that manmade virus or not, that wouldn't have changed in terms of how they responded. >> yeah, but for me, i mean, for me, is mind blowing. we've me, this is mind blowing. we've seen seen conspiracy seen we've seen conspiracy theory conspiracy theory seen we've seen conspiracy theory conspiracyracy theory seen we've seen conspiracy theory conspiracy fact. heory seen we've seen conspiracy theory conspiracy fact. they
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seen we've seen conspiracy theory conspiracy fact. the lab become conspiracy fact. the lab leak theory is now seen as completely plausible . vaccine completely plausible. vaccine damage has been has been proven. and this this is this is another one. another one's toppling. >> i think they know that it's manmade and they're putting it out there see how people out there to see how people react. they say it and react. but they just say it and see they do. and then in see what they do. and then in a month, we'll say, oh, look like they it. mean, some they did with it. i mean, some people were kind saying people were kind of saying this lab and then lab created initially and then like people said it like you said, people said it was theory then was conspiracy theory and then eventually fact. eventually it became fact. i think this kind going think this is kind of going to become point. and become fact at some point. and what about this, he what i like about this, he spends a lot of time kind of sort apologising to people sort of apologising to people who . and i'm really sorry who died. and i'm really sorry if it's bad. it's if you died. it's bad. it's really kind of. and then he really bad. kind of. and then he said, but you know, we're human beings. mean, the ones who beings. i mean, the ones who lived messed but human lived so we messed up. but human beings do. so i think that's what he's saying mistakes what he's saying is mistakes were there's to what he's saying is mistakes we more there's to what he's saying is mistakes we more information,'s to what he's saying is mistakes we more information, i to what he's saying is mistakes we more information, i think, to be more information, i think, revealed not just this , but revealed not just this, but we're hear more the we're going to hear more in the future actually future of what actually happened. i think, like happened. and i think, like you said, years time, the said, in a few years time, the story will completely flipped. what actually happened will be almost different we
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almost different from what we think now happened. >> yeah, it seems pretty >> yeah, and it seems pretty obvious governments obvious that having governments in charge of things we should have just had the freedom to handle safety instead of handle our own safety instead of having government deciding having a government deciding what safe for us. that what was safe for us. that always there was much fear always there was so much fear and hysteria, though . and hysteria, though. >> agree with that 100, >> but if i agree with that 100, yeah, it's what i'm seeing is right i'm not saying you're going to agree it. going to agree with it. >> stuff we've got the >> kwasi the stuff we've got the independent with ructions independent now with ructions over demanding that over greece demanding that britain elgin britain returns the elgin marbles , why can't greece marbles, why can't greece just wait the british museum wait until the british museum stick ebay for £20? stick them on ebay for £20? scott apparently not. >> want their path . indian >> they want their path. indian scriptures, parthenon , whatever. scriptures, parthenon, whatever. they're called scriptures because they're such hot because they're such a hot ticket. everybody wants to see them. that people them. but i think that people don't seen don't want to see him. i've seen him you know what him now. yeah, you know what i mean? it's like liza, we've. we've seen it's on film, we've got i think i think got it. so i think i think greece back greece just want them back because greece says they're ours. and meeting with with ours. and a meeting with with i'm try this the prime i'm going to try this the prime minister greece, kyriakos minister of greece, kyriakos mitsotakis aukus, thank you very much . and he was snubbed by the much. and he was snubbed by the prime minister here in the uk
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because he don't want to meet with him because he knew that the going turn the meeting was going to turn into we want our marbles back. they're talk about they're supposed to talk about the on how greece the wars going on and how greece is how well is contributing and how well athens now that's owned is contributing and how well atithe now that's owned is contributing and how well atithe chinese now that's owned is contributing and how well atithe chinese andv that's owned is contributing and how well atithe chinese and maybe, owned is contributing and how well atithe chinese and maybe, maybe by the chinese and maybe, maybe we to the we can sell palestine to the chinese because, i mean, from the to the sea, palestine the river to the sea, palestine should be free is, think, to should be free is, i think, to i think that's you're asking for too off is the too much. i think 20% off is the most hope palestine. most we can hope for palestine. and you deal, the chinese and you make a deal, the chinese might because they're always might buy because they're always looking for cheap, cheap deals. right money in right if they can make money in greece, can fun greece, maybe they can make fun of think that it turned of it. so i think that it turned out that the meeting going out that the meeting was going to be about one thing and then it about nothing because it was about nothing because rishi has pulled the whole meeting. rishi has pulled the whole meetmean, josh, seems unfair rishi has pulled the whole me greece , josh, seems unfair rishi has pulled the whole me greece to>sh, seems unfair rishi has pulled the whole me greece to be. seems unfair rishi has pulled the whole me greece to be bringing; unfair rishi has pulled the whole me greece to be bringing itinfair rishi has pulled the whole me greece to be bringing it up.ir for greece to be bringing it up. we them fair and square we stole them fair and square back in the old days when that sort was okay. and sort of thing was okay. and also, they're greek, also, if they're really greek, why the elgin why are they called the elgin marbles? place in marbles? that's a place in scotland. shouldn't be scotland. so shouldn't they be thanking keeping them safe? >> yeah, well, no, no. and two things, i think number one is by sunak kind of cancelling this meeting, it's had a bit of an
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opportunity to keir starmer to step in. there's photos of him meeting the greek prime minister said of the said gives him the role of the prime minister in waiting . prime minister in waiting. >> and of course labour hate the uk so they're going to hand everything back. >> well, they want >> well, they just want to borrow them. greece just wants to borrow a little while. to borrow for a little while. they said, look, we'll give them back, to take back, we just want to take a look them, make sure they're look at them, make sure they're looked you looked after. well, like, you know, check both sides know, and we'll check both sides front and then we'll front and back and then we'll send we all send them right back. and we all know lying. know that's lying. >> i think we'll get those boxes back and they'll full of breezeblock. >> think they'll borrow them >> i think they'll borrow them for, years. for, like a thousand years. yeah. actually, them yeah. yeah actually, get them back. off them. you >> they'll eat off them. you know, they'll make a mess. so it's that have it's better that we have supposedly the of the supposedly the majority of the country it's. country think that it's. >> it's fine to give them back. >> it's fine to give them back. >> i'm bothered. i've >> yeah, i'm not bothered. i've seen that seen them. they're not that great. now and great. the telegraph now and just esg mafia shakedown just as the esg mafia shakedown pyramid scheme starts to collapse, want collapse, this new labour want businesses it. businesses to sign up to it. >> , that's slight >> josh well, that's a slight misnomer . force all misnomer there. force all businesses embrace the esg businesses to embrace the esg urges new labour think tank. so this was a think tank that was big under old new labour. now
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we've got new, new labour lite or whatever. i don't know . and or whatever. i don't know. and yeah, but you are right in that this whole business model is collapsing capitalism is about making for money the shareholders in terms of large companies and whatnot. we have seen these companies beholden to this . esg and seen these companies beholden to this. esg and esg means environmental , social this. esg and esg means environmental, social and governance movement . things like governance movement. things like bud light go and losing huge amount parts of its shares pricing because of using what was the name again? his name dylan . dylan mulvaney. dylan. dylan mulvaney. >> name you bigot sorry. >> name you bigot sorry. >> and so yeah, this is a slightly ridiculous strategy when it's been disproved, when we've seen companies backfire. and we've also seen huge companies like unilever essentially reject this idea because it has cost them so much money. well, yeah. >> i mean, this idea of assigning morality to capitalism, it just doesn't it's not workable in practice . i not workable in practice. i mean, the esg score for tobacco company is can be really high
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because they have, you know, diversity schemes and all the rest of it, all the sort of layers of bureaucracy that gunk up a business and stop being up a business and stop it being competitive. tesla , competitive. whereas tesla, which making green which is making the green machines that to save machines that are going to save the has a terrible esg the planet, has a terrible esg score, makes no sense. score, it makes no sense. and also arms dealers, arms manufacturers used to have terrible esg scores . now we need terrible esg scores. now we need them for ukraine to defend itself. so now they're morally good. it just seems ridiculous to assign morality to capitalism. yeah i don't own a gun or drive a car or do any of those things because i, i believe in earth , in mother believe in earth, in mother earth, and also because i'm poon >> these things don't . none of >> these things don't. none of this stuff. i mean, i buy whatever i can get my hands on because i'm basically i'm a live performer , so i'm by nature, performer, so i'm by nature, working class . but performer, so i'm by nature, working class. but i think that these these worries these issues and these worries are , oddly , who live are for people, oddly, who live in a higher echelon and have time to worry about this stuff whilst they're flying private jets around the planet and they've got other people's money to play with. >> and that's what is being done
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with. it's being done with pension all the rest pension funds and all the rest of which is and of the of it, which is and some of the pension of the pension funds, some of the pensioners suing because pension funds, some of the pensiorsaying suing because pension funds, some of the pensiorsaying their suing because pension funds, some of the pensiorsaying their money,ecause they're saying their money, invest money in oil, make invest my money in oil, make money instead of . that's more money instead of. that's more important to me. yeah, i'd rather go on a cruise than than , rather go on a cruise than than, you know, have somebody i mean, i think we can agree that esg belongs in chinese and belongs in chinese food and that's good. we've that's it very good. we've got the times now and olivia colman has filmed dress in latex has been filmed dress in latex to people investing in oil. to stop people investing in oil. and if they keep doing it, she'll release release more pictures. >> yeah, well, she's stars >> scott yeah, well, she's stars in the climate change advert attacking pension funds. the award winning actress plays a latex clad oil executive who celebrates the fact that we're just talking about the ,88 billion. >> hey, now. >> hey, now. >> all right. there she is . >> all right. there she is. >> all right. there she is. >> she's got with a friend of mine, actually. yeah, she's a talk over it. >> oh, she's 8.8 billion of uk pension savers. money goes to fossil fuel companies. so in this in this clip, it lasts a little longer than a minute. she plays oblivia coal mine thanking
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pensioners, see what they've done there for their generosity in achieving record profits oil companies. and then she she obviously black is meant to be oil but also evil and then at one point she pours, she pours oil all over her. yeah yeah. she's 49 years old. she's done pretty well. she won an oscar and she wants to save the world. but also private jets. so it's hard for her right? right. >> this campaign is being led by richard curtis. i know . she richard curtis. i know. she pretty sure richard curtis has got a higher carbon footprint than me. >> she has three rolls—royces and she's really and stuff, but she's really worried trees. so worried about fig trees. so she's going to promote the non—drinking of oil or something. yeah, there we go. and yeah, that. now that photo for it looks familiar. and yeah, that. now that photo for it looks familiar . so yeah, for it looks familiar. so yeah, she's, she's, she's a good girl. she's a, she's a nice person and she's funny and stuff. she's funny in peep show. i like her in that. yeah she's great. do the movies and stuff. i mean i wonder, you know, like i was on
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a show last week and these two girls cried and screamed because i a couple of jokes about i told a couple of jokes about what's hamas. and what's going on with hamas. and they really, they screamed and cried really, really out really loud and followed me out of the club. and they said, you're you're promoting a genocide. they screamed genocide. and then they screamed at owner. and he said, at the club owner. and he said, no, he defended me. and then they said, you're a c—word. and then one of the women who works at the club who's muslim said, why invest and why don't you guys invest and give the to save, you give money for the to save, you know, and they said, know, palestine? and they said, well, we're going to go across the and buy wine . so, the way and buy more wine. so, you people don't really you know, people don't really want . yeah, not really . want to give. yeah, not really. >> i mean, it goes back to what you before, it? well, you say before, isn't it? well, there's here from the there's hypocrisy here from the people this stuff . people pushing this this stuff. but don't want people to but if you don't want people to invest in these funds, their pensions make them not pay so well . yeah. then. so that's well. yeah. then. so that's that's how it happens. the pension funds have a duty to make money for pensioners . yeah. make money for pensioners. yeah. ultimately, if that money is unfortunately coming from hydrocarbon ions, which we all
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use , which we all use, which. use, which we all use, which. >> olivia colman and richard curtis. >> well this is it. curtis. >> well this is it . so let's curtis. >> well this is it. so let's put some money into other things which will then make this money. >> not so maybe she drives an electric car and eats raw food . electric car and eats raw food. >> maybe. anyway we've got the metro now with a story about cooking oil used for flying . cooking oil used for flying. speaking of which, although as a scotsman, i'd prefer to see it used for frying. >> josh, it's been a few years i've been in scotland. i haven't had my usual deep fried mars bar i >> -- >> it's lam >> it's actually a delicious, sweet mars bar. and i went on a diet once and i steamed my mars bars and it's disgusting. >> yeah . so, yeah. crisp and fly >> yeah. so, yeah. crisp and fly first transatlantic flight powered by cooking oil takes off from heathrow. this is a virgin atlantic boeing 787 for any geeky people out there . the geeky people out there. the government paid them about £1 million last year to do this flight to show that it's feasible at and they're also because the idea is if we start investing in this , it could investing in this, it could bnngin investing in this, it could bring in like £2.5 billion a yean bring in like £2.5 billion a year, 5000 chip shops.
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>> we got here. >> we got here. >> so whether we can that's actually going to happen. but it's, you know, as a proof of concept, it's great. i think people would like to do maybe feel like when they go flying that they're not killing the planet. >> i had a friend tell me he won't go on a trip because he's worried about the planet. really. he's a tree hugger. and he told that yesterday at he told me that yesterday at lunch. i started laughing. i thought was kidding. but then thought he was kidding. but then i. really impressed i. then i was really impressed with well, with him. i'm like, well, that's, that's putting that's, you know, that's putting up, really it's up, you know, really is it's phone call had an old, old mercedes actually you mercedes that could actually you could chip could put a old chip fan. >> had filter it. but old >> you had to filter it. but old chip from from shops chip fat from from chip shops and stuff in the car and it would run and you got this delightful fragrance sort delightful fragrance of sort of fish they don't to fish and chips. they don't to remodel the engines do remodel the engines or do anything planes. anything to the planes. >> just about half oil >> they just fill about half oil and regular fuel and then and half regular fuel and then it like than it it flies 70% like less than it would normally use terms of would normally use in terms of pollution . pollution. >> and but the problem is >> and also but the problem is you lot mcdonald's you have to eat a lot mcdonald's to go to majorca. yeah, right. >> so the plane kind of sinks
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with the people with all the people on board eating the fried eating all the fried food. right. people right. and then people are fatter which case you fatter and in which case you have use more fuel get have to use more fuel to get them up into the sky. >> anyway, the way >> anyway, we're at the half way point. for owen point. stay with us for owen jones sharing neo nazi propaganda, more crispy. i'm standing up for bush tucker and how playing football hurts your brain. see you in a couple
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radio. welcome back to headliners. >> we've got the express now. and after after making a career of calling people nazis under jones is minimising the biggest atrocity against jews since the holocaust . first there always holocaust. first there always the thing they accuse you of, aren't they, scott? why am i getting the owen jones story? >> why do i get that? because the gay thing may be. >> well, they didn't want to give jew, so i was give it to the jew, so i was gonna go for it. >> i do think he's cute, but. and watched his video and i watched his video explanation what he actually explanation of what he actually said but owen jones told,
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said, but he owen jones told, quote, seek help or quote , over quote, seek help or quote, over deeply morally repugnant and wrong, end quote. hamas claims apparently jones watched the footage that a lot of journalists were called in to watch about the october 7th brutal attacks on israelis. and it was about a 45 minute selection of footage that was put together to show these journalists and his comment afterwards. i having afterwards. i think having watched his response on video before we did the show, i think his response has been misinterpreted because what he actually said was in this video, maybe didn't say maybe he didn't say this originally, but in the video explanation, the apology, he he said, i asking said, look, what i was asking for. think all the for. i think that all the footage it should have footage, all of it should have been handed over to journalists so examined so that been handed over to journalists so could examined so that been handed over to journalists so could be examined so that been handed over to journalists so could be putamined so that been handed over to journalists so could be put together) that been handed over to journalists so could be put together piece day could be put together piece by piece, minute by minute, he said, which is totally reasonable request, which any anyone would make. >> that request is probably going to be a less going to be a bit less anti—semitic in apology he anti—semitic in the apology he had has gone on had said about he has gone on and on and on on to make a point that he has not i don't know
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that he has not i don't know that he's defended palestinians , that he's defended palestinians, but he has seemingly taken a side in the discussion and it seems like he took that side for a minute, one like he was ready to he was ready to pounce on israel and israelis. to he was ready to pounce on israel and israelis . and now israel and israelis. and now josh is ready to pounce on him. no just look, rachel riley, jewish presenter, jewish tv presenter, mathematician . mathematician. >> she basically said it best in terms like he's the kind of terms of like he's the kind of guy watched holocaust, guy who'd watched the holocaust, like about like watch a documentary about the and go, wait the holocaust and go, wait a minute, really get minute, did people really get gassed? because didn't see any gassed? because i didn't see any footage the footage of the gas inside the gas happen, gas chambers as they happen, which he which is essentially what he said that original. said in that original. >> he saw footage of he >> he said he saw footage of he said he said he said boys running the father, the running with the father, the father being killed. >> calling what he father being killed. >> was calling what he father being killed. >> was like calling what he father being killed. >> was like callingling what he father being killed. >> was like calling into what he father being killed. >> was like calling into doubtie did was like calling into doubt that, you know, stuff that outside of that footage that hasn't been filmed but is evidence there's firsthand evidence there's firsthand evidence he wants to examine it himself as a journalist. yeah, because there jews saying it. because there is jews saying it. yeah, that's the issue . there's yeah, that's the issue. there's eyewitness testimony of the most horrific kind of people of the first responders turning up on
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the scene who are absolutely traumatised it physical traumatised by it and physical evidence but for him, evidence as well. but for him, it's not good enough that that he doesn't actually see it. he can't just take the well—documented evidence as fact because it's coming from a jewish source , from an israeli jewish source, from an israeli source. it must thus be or maybe he's saying that to have a second perspective. >> other than the perspective we've had already, to have some people standing away a bit and examining what happened would in a make it more to people who a way make it more to people who may not think that what happened happened , it would make it happened, it would make it completely credible. and that argument , completely credible. and that argument, would completely credible. and that argument , would away. argument, it would go away. >> here's the thing. >> okay. but here's the thing. you hamas filmed it on the you have hamas filmed it on the day. that stuff day. yes. right. put that stuff out there. put this all out there. stuff out there. yeah. and so it's already in the pubuc and so it's already in the public domain. but the idea is that that's to that somehow that's going to convince people convince them like these people are nutters, they are insane and they will do anything to vilify israel and jews, basically. yeah >> i mean, are you surprised because the adl have have put forward neo—nazi groups that are saying the exact same thing as
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owen jones? and are you surprised to see people on the left who are supposed to be so full and tolerance full of kindness and tolerance and all the rest of it suddenly basically aligned with with hardcore neo—nazis? hardcore neo— nazis? >> but hardcore neo—nazis? >> but it's not suddenly this is these are people i've been fighting now for coming up to 7 or 8 years. they are scum. they are evil . they're horseshoe are evil. they're horseshoe theory. have met around on theory. they have met around on theory. they have met around on the side, far left , the other side, the far left, the other side, the far left, the lie . they the far right. they lie. they they abuse skate on any issue . they abuse skate on any issue. it's insane. and, you know, people out there were celebrating and protesting against israel before israel even responded on october 7th. people are protesting october 8th. and out there celebrating what happened to israelis and whatnot. so someone like owen comes along and of course, you know, on one hand is like but believe all women believe unless the jewish women suddenly they must be liars. a comedian tell me, like a week after october 7th gig at the comedy 7th at a gig at the comedy museum, said, yeah. 7th at a gig at the comedy mu aum, said, yeah. 7th at a gig at the comedy mu a friend said, yeah. 7th at a gig at the comedy mu a friend of|id, yeah. 7th at a gig at the comedy mu a friend of mine ah. 7th at a gig at the comedy mu a friend of mine told me that >> a friend of mine told me that the jews deserved it. he told me right went on, he said,
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the jews deserved it. he told me rididn't went on, he said, the jews deserved it. he told me rididn't that,1t on, he said, the jews deserved it. he told me rididn't that,1t orheie said, the jews deserved it. he told me rididn't that,1t orhe said,d, i didn't say that, but he said, and the way, do you want to and by the way, do you want to play and by the way, do you want to play a gig? have you said to me, i said, want you to leave the i said, i want you to leave the room, want to leave the room, i want you to leave the club. insane. why would you club. it's insane. why would you why, why why you why, why would you why would you repeat yeah, that repeat that sort of. yeah, that garbage. would you? garbage. why would you? >> it ties down into >> because it ties down into their. anti—semitism that their. their anti—semitism that is very deep there . yeah. is buried very deep there. yeah. >> or not, owens is embarrassing . yeah. >> en- p got the sun now. and >> we've got the sun now. and staying anti—semitism >> we've got the sun now. and staying the anti—semitism >> we've got the sun now. and staying the bbc anti—semitism >> we've got the sun now. and staying the bbc is1ti—semitism >> we've got the sun now. and staying the bbc is in—semitism >> we've got the sun now. and staying the bbc is in trouble ;m >> we've got the sun now. and staying the bbc is in trouble for theme, the bbc is in trouble for its topical show , which its topical comedy show, which should have got should be called have i got angry jews for this angry jews for you? this >> yeah bbc slam for making guz khan host of have i got news for you after comedian accused israel of genocide. now gaza is someone who i have argued with onune someone who i have argued with online on twitter about these very things. he's basically spent seven weeks put forward essentially what i believe to be hamas propaganda. the usual stuff about genocide , even stuff about genocide, even though there's no genocide taking place, even though the palestinian population has doubled in 20 years, terms like occupation, even though israel
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left gaza in 2005 and also just even as jews were being murdered, even as babies were being murdered and children raped. i don't even want to say the stuff that is out there. he was out there retweeting essentially a mixture of whataboutery and victim blaming and whatnot. so the fact that the bbc, who are making themselves all about being impartial , themselves all about being impartial, are pushing someone like him to the to the front of one of their prime time shows. just for me, that's just another slap in the for face jews. this is after a week after the bbc said that that that bbc jewish employees or jewish or not are not allowed to go out and march against anti semitism, against racism . and of course on the racism. and of course on the back of the fact that the bbc has just absolutely just the bbc news has been despicable all over the last month and a half in terms of the way that it's presented news that have led to real repercussions, ones real life repercussions, ones for around the forjewish people around the world. someone like gaz, who world. and someone like gaz, who has this this stuff and has pushed this this stuff and looking for his tweets, he's
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still these tweets up about still got these tweets up about how israel bombed hospital how israel bombed the hospital and whatever. and then it turns out it wasn't hostile and then it wasn't israel. then it it wasn't israel. and then it wasn't it was a car wasn't hostile. it was a car park wasn't dead. it park and it wasn't 500 dead. it was well, you know, was 100 dead. well, you know, that night people went out around the world rioted and around the world and rioted and synagogues burnt down and synagogues were burnt down and this and gaza still got those kind of tweets up there. so i think it's disgusting. >> on tour with them. >> on tour with them. >> i wonder i'm just thinking how is that i wonder how his act would do in gaza. i mean he he i think he seems to have some sort of brotherhood thing with these people he's seem to be people that he's seem to be defending. really , i think defending. but really, i think his brotherhood is here in this country for a reason. well, should and his act works in this country. wouldn't it be great if more people thought like that and felt the number one affinity with with britain if. >> yeah, i'm sorry, i'm just speaking about that brotherhood. i believe he's from a pakistani family, right. i believe he's from a pakistani family, right . what has family, right. what has that necessarily do with him, necessarily got to do with him, that of the world? very,
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that part of the world? a very, very complicated part of the world, handful of tweets i've world, a handful of tweets i've noficed world, a handful of tweets i've noticed years noticed from him over the years with syria , yemen, sudan and the with syria, yemen, sudan and the uyghurs , like a handful. and uyghurs, like a handful. and we're talking about hundreds of thousands of muslims who have been killed in those instances. but here he's on it all the time. and by the way, 1.7 million, they talk about ethnic cleansing, 1.7 million afghans are being kicked out pakistan are being kicked out of pakistan in right recently right in right now. recently right now. is he tweeting about that ? now. is he tweeting about that? >> no, no, because it's not being done by jews anyway. the independent teachers on independent now and teachers on strike still have to fulfil strike will still have to fulfil their roles a very basic their roles at a very basic level . will anyone the level. will anyone notice the difference? josh >> teachers must . so difference? josh >> teachers must. so i'm just coming down on my girls high. >> take a breath, take a breath . >> take a breath, take a breath. really enjoying this. >> teachers must meet minimum service levels in schools to protect children from strike action. government says yeah. so we have two competing rights here. we have the rights of people to withhold their work, their labour and we have the
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right of that. yeah, well , their labour and we have the right of that. yeah, well, and we have the right of children to gain an education. and what we've seen over this last with the strikes in the last year is there are 25 million school days lost . the amount of the brain lost. the amount of the brain drain of our on our future population because of that it's been proven. how does losing 1 or 2 days for a child makes a big impact through their life? and this comes right after the covid year when teachers , covid year when teachers, teachers were very quick to say, oh no, we've all got to stay at home because then they didn't have any work. have to do any work. >> could start drinking at >> they could start drinking at noon instead waiting till noon instead of waiting till 3 pm. they do anyway, you know. >> they do. yeah yeah, it's well, you know , we want it to be well, you know, we want it to be paid more. >> let's. let's squeeze in one more story before the break. we've got the times now with a correlation between football and a decline in brain function. >> well, just like missing day a decline in brain function. >>schooljust like missing day a decline in brain function. >>school meanse missing day a decline in brain function. >> school means your.sing day a decline in brain function. >> school means your brain day in school means your brain shrinks. also in football, if you're heading the football, if you're heading the football, if you're hitting, doing nothing that that that more heading means that your is being damaged. and your brain is being damaged. and they two different studies
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they did two different studies and one study where they took these for years in these people for two years in not professional football, not in professional football, but in amateur and they made about 75% male, 25% female. and identify as female, right . about 75% male, 25% female. and identify as female, right. i'm sorry. pronouns and lesbians. and they , they, they bang their and they, they, they bang their heads against the ball and they found that it did diminish their brain capacity over a two year period. so who'd have thought like having a large, heavy ball ? like having a large, heavy ball? >> weird, right? it would be bad for it. >> explains ?-- >> this explains all the interviews football interviews after football matches interviews after football ma'where they going to stare >> where are they going to stare at camera? i mean, they did at the camera? i mean, they did say just cognitive, but say that not just cognitive, but speech patterns seem be speech patterns seem to be diminishing. then football diminishing. but then football players, mean, you know, players, i mean, you know, verbal not the first verbal speech is not the first form of communication. let's face just be that face it. so it may just be that they're thick and maybe they're a bit thick and maybe their thicker their crowns should be thicker to from the hitting to protect them from the hitting the ball against the head thing. but will do anyway but they will do it anyway because that's because they love it. that's a beautiful when they it, because they love it. that's a beauit?|l when they it, because they love it. that's a beauit? when when they it, because they love it. that's a beauit? when the hen they it, because they love it. that's a beauit? when the ballthey it, because they love it. that's a beauit? when the ball and it, because they love it. that's a beauit? when the ball and the t, isn't it? when the ball and the thing, it's beautiful. >> like, my head looks >> it's like, say my head looks like a ball. >> one more section to go. >> well, one more section to go.
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we'll you squirrel we'll bring you squirrel replacement theory and a school chaplain terror chaplain investigated by terror police gender police for questioning gender ideology right
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welcome back to the final part of headliners. we've got the mail now with the latest woke reimagining of history scientists think women were better at hunting than men. oh, yeah, a bit. men were better at picking cushions for the cave. josh we got through that speaking quickly. >> debunk the myth of the male hunter. >> prehistoric women were better at hunting than men. study claims. well that isn't what the study claims at all. it doesn't say that they were better than men. it's if anything, it says they were maybe as good. and even then , they're not it's not even then, they're not it's not fully clear . they're saying that fully clear. they're saying that the female body , because of the female body, because of oestrogen, could endure for longer runs and the hip and stuff like that. but that doesn't prove that they're actually better at catching.
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>> say that about >> well, they say that about older marathon runners. the ones >> well, they say that about olde dorarathon runners. the ones >> well, they say that about olde do best|on runners. the ones >> well, they say that about olde do best are runners. the ones >> well, they say that about olde do best are older's. the ones >> well, they say that about olde do best are older females1es that do best are older females and they they because they're, they're mind their minds are more settled and more calm. they also say in this article that there weren't enough people for people to there weren't enough people to there weren't enough people for people people in the tribe for people to specific i mean, to have specific skills. i mean, everybody right. to have specific skills. i mean, eve so ody right. to have specific skills. i mean, eveso ody is right. to have specific skills. i mean, eveso ody is but right. to have specific skills. i mean, eveso ody is but this right. to have specific skills. i mean, eveso ody is but this is right. >> so this is but this is prehistoric times and but also because they found female bodies that had same what they call hunting damage or whatever, the male ones broken ankles and things. yeah, but but all that means is it wasn't necessarily something that they could have got from hunting . it might have got from hunting. it might have just what life was just been that was what life was like back then. >> a could have been like back then. >.fetish. could have been like back then. >.fetish. yeah could have been like back then. >.fetish. yeah itzould have been like back then. >.fetish. yeah it couldhave been like back then. >.fetish. yeah it could havebeen a fetish. yeah it could have just been really bad at picking berries. >> yeah. over fallen >> yeah. fallen over and fallen on tiger. but the on a sabre tooth tiger. but the idea this proves and this idea that this proves and this person here tries to say at the end in a broader sense, you can when at a person's sex when you look at a person's sex or you assume or gender that you assume someone's abilities. >> no, i see >> yeah, it's like, no, if i see a man who's foot two and a man who's six foot two and i see a who's five foot see a woman who's five foot four, i'll yeah, the man's four, i'll go, yeah, the man's stronger. that. there are stronger. like that. there are different there's a value
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different types. there's a value system physical, what she system on physical, what she calls physical. in inferiority. and men and women are good and bad at different physical things. >> but you got to watch. you got to watch inaya. you got to watch that film night about that swimmer. the woman who swam from cuba she swims for cuba to florida. she swims for three in sea without three days in the sea without touching anything. three days in the sea without tou why| anything. three days in the sea without tou why didn't ing. get boat or >> why didn't she get a boat or because was it was challenge. >> you to watch, right? >> you have to watch, right? >> you have to watch, right? >> well, we've got the >> amazing. well, we've got the mirror and scientists are mirror now, and scientists are stupid to me. scientists are concerned that aggressive invaders replacing britain's invaders are replacing britain's nafive invaders are replacing britain's native population and costing the of money. relax, the state lots of money. relax, everyone. we're talking about squirrels. poor wife. >> shush. your poor wife . grey >> shush. your poor wife. grey squirrels. the hamas of the squirrels. the hamas of the squirrel world as an mp calls them . this westminster mp jim them. this westminster mp jim shannon used a hall debate to compare the invasive creatures to palestinian terrorists who slaughtered 1200 israelis last month. as we all know, grey squirrels are the hamas of the squirrels are the hamas of the squirrel world. i mean, we all they they run at my building and they they run at my building and they past bedroom window.
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they run past my bedroom window. i do hate them. i would like to murder they are cute. >> i mean, they're cute. i don't know. they're >> they're rats with fuzzy tails. >> they're an invasive. people say that, but not like say that, but they're not like rats. rats in sewer. rats. rats live in the sewer. squirrels probably rats. rats live in the sewer. squirrin. probably rats. rats live in the sewer. squirrin squirrels, robably rats. rats live in the sewer. squirrin squirrels, into bly trees, in squirrels, into in sewers live. up sewers they live. i grew up where you get red squirrels, which are very, very, very cute. and red, that's why they're which are very, very, very cute. and red. i, that's why they're which are very, very, very cute. and red. we're's why they're which are very, very, very cute. and red. we're not hy they're which are very, very, very cute. and red. we're not talkingre called red. we're not talking about. but they're smaller. and these squirrels have these these grey squirrels have come basically they're come in and basically they're pushing squirrel, pushing the native red squirrel, squirrel population out . squirrel population out. >> that was the point he was trying to make. yeah that that they're yeah, they're ethnic cleansing. the squirrels . cleansing. the red squirrels. yeah.i cleansing. the red squirrels. yeah. i the analogy he yeah. i think the analogy he used is might have been used probably is might have been inappropriate. well unfortunately you know red squirrels backed by squirrels aren't backed by the american military industrial complex. >> right. so they can't retaliate against the grey squirrels. >> are you saying that because you want me to make a call? well, this is about. well, they want intervention. >> you're talking about giving. giving which . giving them the pill, which. which as opposed to killing them. but they could. they could just red and we won't. just dye them red and we won't.
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>> no. the bigger people >> no, no. the bigger people will know. anyway, we've got the mail we have mail now and we have 40,000 islamists terror watch lists. islamists on terror watch lists. but somehow counter—terror police still have time to target school chaplains for questioning lgbtq ideology. >> josh yeah, this is mental chaplain at 40,000 a year. trent college was reported to counter—terror police after telling pupils they should question lgbt ideology in the same way they did brexit. so what we're talking about here and as he says is by his speech that he wants to he's trying to have a reasoned debate about beliefs. and it's okay to try and persuade each other, but no one must be told they should accept that an ideology. and he then says like believing in whether brexit should happen or not, you're not going get me not, you're not going to get me brexit becoming should be brexit or becoming should be forced to be a muslim and this there's nothing wrong with this speech. the idea that he was is fired and the idea that he was actually then recommended to prevent is insane . sane. yeah.
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prevent is insane. sane. yeah. >> where does the terror aspect come in? i just. i can't even. >> i know. piece it together in my head. it's it seems like the school recommended him. it seems like brought in one of like they brought in one of those outside companies to do the sex education. and it's thingwall or something. yeah, well but know, probably well but but, you know, probably pushing the gingerbread man and all this ridiculous gender all of this ridiculous gender identity . identity. >> i had a couple of guys complain when i handcuffed them. oh, complain when i handcuffed them. 0h, yeah, complain when i handcuffed them. oh, yeah, because oh, fair enough. yeah, because i was trying to train them about what it was to be gay and i think they had be. i didn't think they had to be. i didn't need to make them quiet and calm. so gay conversion, need to make them quiet and calm. slopposite. conversion, need to make them quiet and calm. slopposite. yeah,ersion, need to make them quiet and calm. slopposite. yeah, exactly. need to make them quiet and calrl. slopposite. yeah, exactly. need to make them quiet and calrl. slopp�*mye. yeah, exactly. need to make them quiet and calrl. slopp�*my husband xactly. need to make them quiet and calrl. slopp�*my husband isctly. so, i mean, my husband is only 10% 0h, so, i mean, my husband is only 10% oh, that 10. but 10% gay, but. oh, that 10. but i feel like for this case, it seems like a bit of an overreach , which it seems like it's a bit of a pimp slap against religion in from the left. yeah. in general. from the left. yeah. saying don't want saying you know, we don't want them all. so let's get saying you know, we don't want them on all. so let's get saying you know, we don't want them on this all. so let's get saying you know, we don't want them on this issue. so let's get saying you know, we don't want them on this issue rightet's get saying you know, we don't want them on this issue right ?'s get them on this issue right? because everybody's sensitive about issue too. about the lgbt issue too. although are we? there's so many of us that said aids kill them in 80s. but there's more now in the 80s. but there's more now than god, there's than ever before. god, there's so and rainbows.
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so many gays and rainbows. >> think it's more there's so >> i think it's more there's so many seriously time. >> they keep adding letters >> and they keep adding letters because so lonely because gays are so lonely every time a village or a town time i go to a village or a town to play gig, there's a rainbow to play a gig, there's a rainbow crosswalk. why why? why? they ruin atmosphere . every town ruin the atmosphere. every town and were in a and village we were in a hillside community. my husband and coal miner and i like a coal miner community with bunch of community with a bunch of working doing their working class people doing their jobs the crosswalks jobs and all. all the crosswalks for pedestrians were rainbow y . for pedestrians were rainbow y. >> they wanted to make you feel comfortable . comfortable. >> it made us feel employed . it >> it made us feel employed. it made us feel pointed at why. >> they just had a big >> maybe they just had a big irish community. want my irish community. i want my anonymity handcuff anonymity when i handcuff people. squeeze people. let's quickly squeeze the stories in. we've the last two stories in. we've got you got the express with a sign, you know, the idea of know, staying with the idea of stay overreach, the state is far too power. stay overreach, the state is far too scott, power. stay overreach, the state is far too scott, a )wer. stay overreach, the state is far too scott, a retired music >> scott, a retired music teacher psycho was , you teacher and psycho 97, was, you know, with the birds and the wild sparrows and robins who wild sparrows and the robins who flock to her seeds and her bird table in her garden. but the council ordered her to stop after a neighbour lodged an official with official complaint with the local and she was told local council and she was told she'd fined £100 if she she'd be fined £100 if she continued to feed seeds to the
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birds. she's 97, an and she was community protection notice under the anti—social behaviour crime and policing act of 2014. if she can feed the birds, they're going to get her on that. >> i mean, this is this is horrific. this is the worst, worst use of anti—social behaviour powers than we've seen this week at the anti. >> the problem she >> i think the problem is she has dementia. she doesn't remember the remember each day feeding the birds. goes out and does remember each day feeding the bi again. goes out and does remember each day feeding the bi again. that's)es out and does remember each day feeding the bi again. that's the )ut and does remember each day feeding the bi again. that's the problem.oes it again. that's the problem. yeah.i it again. that's the problem. yeah. i mean she's 97. >> this is what brings her joy in life. in her life. >> not like she can >> josh it's not like she can just go down to the park. yeah. or well, no, can't. or the pub. well, no, she can't. >> she literally can't >> like, she literally can't probably. know, she will probably. i don't know, she will be seeds in a couple years. be seeds in a couple of years. >> will pecking >> the birds will be pecking her. >> the birds will be pecking hen they >> the birds will be pecking her. they to do then. >> then they'll really have to hand finally hand that fine out. finally we've the with good we've got the times with good news for those of us glued to our josh gaming our phones. josh yeah, gaming and don't harm and social media don't harm mental health, says oxford. and social media don't harm mental he which ays oxford. and social media don't harm mental he which ayrgreat rd. and social media don't harm mental he which ayrgreat news. >> study, which is great news. i read that three in the read that at three in the morning on my phone and the problem is everybody's stupid. >> so how do they explain that? >> so how do they explain that? >> yeah, so exactly. well, they're trying that they're trying to say that
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because this is a because they sort of this is a study of 2 million around study of 2 million people around the because early the world and because early adopting south adopting countries like south korea, an korea, they didn't have an upfickin korea, they didn't have an uptick in mental health issues that you would have seen earlier than everybody else. so then it's then the internet isn't the problem or facebook or whatever. they correlated all those things. so something's going on because mental health is definitely i think people have just made up more syndromes now. >> everybody's got adhd, even perfectly people have perfectly normal people have got adhd . part of it's a way to get adhd. part of it's a way to get medical grade speed from the nhs i >> -- >> we forget that flaws are attractive . i mean, look at attractive. i mean, look at comedians. we're bunch of comedians. we're a bunch of losers to do losers with nothing better to do right but people want to sleep right? but people want to sleep with us. yeah, figure. with us. yeah, go figure. >> we can get it. >> yeah. if we can get it. anyway, the show is nearly over, so let's take another quick look at pages . the at wednesday's front pages. the daily mail leads with scooby book pulled for naming royal racist by mistake. the telegraph has patience at risk from virtual gp sessions , as the sun virtual gp sessions, as the sun has. they stole her voice. that's one of the child hostages
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taken by hamas has been returned. the mirror has book names. royal racist. although the mirror did not i news has genenc the mirror did not i news has generic goes rogue with dig at number 10 on migration on and finally the daily star has you're a daft pair of witchetty grubs and those were your front pages and that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest josh howie and scott capurro and simon evans will be back tomorrow at 11 pm. with josh and johnathan corgan. if you're watching do stay tuned watching at 5 am, do stay tuned for breakfast. thanks for thanks for breakfast. thanks for thanks for watching. abby lucas good
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away . away. >> good evening . welcome to >> good evening. welcome to farage. with me camilla tominey. again, i'm with you again till 8:00. i'm here in all week in fact. so you're stuck with me
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and we've got a great show planned for you. we're going to discuss andrew bailey , the bank discuss andrew bailey, the bank of governor is of england governor who is saying britain's saying that britain's growth outlook he's ever outlook is the worst he's ever seen. he a doom monger that's seen. is he a doom monger that's talking down the economy? we're also going be by also going to be joined by nimrod pal—mac , who is an nimrod pal—mac, who is an israeli hero who saved hundreds of on october the 7th of lives on october the 7th after leaving goodbye message after leaving a goodbye message to own children . and we head to his own children. and we head back the gold coast to get back to the gold coast to get the jungle latest from ben leo. as questions are raised over nigel's airtime, all of this and much, much more to come after the news with polly middlehurst . camilla >> thank you and good evening to you. we begin this bulletin with some breaking news. we can tell you 12 more israeli hostages have now this evening been released from gaza . we've had released from gaza. we've had word from israel defence forces, which says ten israeli , his and which says ten israeli, his and two foreign nationals are now on their way home to their families. of course, after
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medical checks. the exchange is part of the commitment to a fifth day pause in fighting a humanitarian truce, if you will, with the hamas terror group. we're also hearing that in exchange , 30 palestinian exchange, 30 palestinian prisoners will be released tonight as well, prisoners will be released tonight as well , taking the form tonight as well, taking the form pretty much of what happened last night. and this comes as the united states slightly changed its approach today , changed its approach today, asked israel to take greater care in any future strikes on gaza, a shift to their approach at the white house, saying civilians and vital infrastructure must be protected . but surely the headline news tonight is that good news, at least for those israeli families who are waiting for those israeli hostages to get home. 12 more are on their way back to their families . now news here in their families. now news here in their families. now news here in the uk, a double murderer who sexually abused more than 100 dead bodies wasn't caught due to serious failings at the hospitals where he worked. an inquiry was found today. david

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