Skip to main content

tv   Headliners  GB News  September 5, 2024 2:00am-3:01am BST

2:00 am
essential to stabilise the it's essential to stabilise the economy in the us. two students and two teachers have died after and two teachers have died after a shooting at a high school in georgia. these are pictures of apalachee high school in barrow county, which was put on lockdown this morning after reports of gunfire there. georgia state police say a 14 year old student at the high school is in custody after the shooting. the white house has now been briefed on the incident. director of the georgia bureau of investigation chris hosey, has more . chris hosey, has more. >> there are four individuals who are deceased from this incident, nine that have been taken to local hospitals with various injuries. of those that were have are deceased, two are students and two are teachers here at the at the school . as here at the at the school. as the sheriff mentioned earlier this morning, the shooter is in custody. he is a 14 year old student here at the high school. again, he has been taken into custody, he is he will be
2:01 am
charged with murder and he will be tried as an adult and back in the uk, priti patel has become the uk, priti patel has become the first tory mp to be voted out of the party's leadership contest, with only 14 votes from 121 tory mps. >> meanwhile, robert jenrick came top of the ballot with 28 votes. mps cast their opening votes. mps cast their opening votes this afternoon, reducing the number of candidates from 6 to 5. the contenders now include james cleverly, robert jenrick, tom tugendhat, mel stride and kemi badenoch. those are the latest gb news headlines for now. now it's time for headliners for the very latest gb news direct to your smartphone , sign up to news smartphone, sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code, or go to gbnews.com >> forward slash alerts . >> forward slash alerts. >> forward slash alerts. >> thank you sophia and hello
2:02 am
and welcome to headliners. your first look at thursday's newspapers with three available comedians. i'm leo kearse and joining me tonight are kerry marx and jonathan coogan. >> i'm barely available. i'm going on holiday in like two hours. >> where are you going. >> where are you going. >> two hours. go to roads. yeah i've got like a late flight and i've got like a late flight and i've got like a late flight and i've got to like pack and everything and i've got to remember all these stories. i'm stressing out, man. and i'm. it's going to be okay, right.7 >> the most important thing are these stories. of course. i don't care about your packing. you just need some some speedos i had i wasn't available either. >> i had to cancel everything. right. so. so busy. >> i'm glad you did it for us. anyway, let's have a quick look at tomorrow's front pages. the mirror leads with. now get them justice. talking about the grenfell tower inquiry, the telegraph has sewage leak bosses to face two years in jail. the guardian has grenfell a disaster caused by dishonesty and greed. the times has killed by greed and a culture of dishonesty . the and a culture of dishonesty. the eye has everyone failed them again. talking about grenfell.
2:03 am
and finally the daily star has. i'll tell you all about the little green men. that's donald trump. he's going to reveal the ufo files. and those were your front pages . and let's have a front pages. and let's have a closer look at tomorrow's . front closer look at tomorrow's. front pages, starting with the times. kerry, what have they got.7 >> kerry, what have they got? >> yes. well, the times have interesting lead with a full front page cover of, all the victims of the grenfell disaster. and the story, of course, is that the inquiry has finally, finally reached a conclusion after seven years that moved like a sloth in a tank of peanut butter and told us what what we already knew. it's been a cruel, for cruel those who've been awaiting justice and i suppose they've had a huge amount to get through in this inquiry. and it's been it's been very thorough, but we're hearing sir keir starmer has said that companies found
2:04 am
responsible by the public inquiry for horrific failings will be banned from winning pubuc will be banned from winning public contracts. do you think their new cv would be enough? it shows exactly what they've been up to. the inquiry basically found everyone involved is guilty. you know , from guilty. you know, from government level, at local government level, at local government level, at local government level, all the building companies involved. it was just horrendous. resident concerns were ignored. they were dismissed as troublemakers, there is still thousands of people up and down the country in buildings that are unsafe with the cladding, and they're sort a time bomb, really. and there was a fire last week at a block in dagenham in here. yeah. >> well there you mentioned the building . there's about 4500 building. there's about 4500 that have been identified , tall that have been identified, tall buildings, all with unsafe cladding and again, like anything here, it's going to be anything here, it's going to be a slow process to try and get that fixed. >> now we're already years on. you'd think, you know, if i lived in one of those buildings, i'd be out with a hammer the next morning getting this flammable cladding off my building. >> i think i think part of it, if you're a freeholder of a
2:05 am
building, i think if you were right, you. it's really hard to sell or move out because you're not allowed to, or there's all these extra fees that you have to do. so you're now stuck in a building with extra fees that you didn't sign up for. like the danger itself is obviously the main concern. but then there's the financial element where you're kind of stuck and you can't move. so it's all pretty tricky. happened to a friend of mine. and yeah, i mean he got out in the end. he's all right. but yeah, yeah. >> it's like every disaster film in the 80s always turns out to be the builders cutting corners. you know, that's the we know this alien. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i think this is something we'd all watch out for and say that, there should have been processes in place because they're always talking about new legislative, legislative, legislative, legislative, legislative, i had to actually move to say the word then, changes to deal with, to deal with this . but you'd think laws with this. but you'd think laws for criminal negligence already exist. yeah. i'm kind of surprised that we need new ones. yeah. and getting on that, getting down to the actual cladding itself, i think it was just the, the amount, the cost that they were shaving off. >> it was like thousands of pounds, when it could have been other cladding that isn't flammable. so. yeah, yeah. i mean, it seems crazy that, you
2:06 am
know, just that that small incentive to just, you know, increase the profit margin by a few thousand pounds could lead to such a horrific tragedy. and also the i mean, the people in the, in the flats were told to stay in their flats. i gotta be honest, the same thing was tragic. the same thing happened in nine, nine, 11. people were told to stay in the twin towers. i gotta be honest, if i'm ever in a block of flats that's on fire, i'm going to get out as soon as possible. i am not, you know, this is this is a lesson. both. well, both of those things are lessons to us. don't listen to anybody. and get out, i think. >> but it makes it all the more tragic, doesn't it? trusting the authority when it's the authority when it's the authority to let you down in the first place. so yeah, the whole thing is one great big horror, but glad the, the inquiry's finally over and then that people can get some justice now i guess so yeah. >> hope so. and moving on. we've got something a bit lighter in the daily star. jonathan >> absolutely. well it could actually be the most interesting thing of all time if it becomes true. but let's get to the headline. okay, i'll tell all i know about the little green men .
2:07 am
know about the little green men. so this is the headline in the star, first of all a bit harsh. they've said orange man baby at the top. they just had to take a swipe at trump there. it didn't really seem like he's been. it's not one of the aliens that is trump orange man baby. yeah now they're green man babies. that's true. oh well get them together. it's like a tick tax which is also a ufo anyway. right. so basically this is an interesting story because trump has said in the middle of a big interview with i think it was lex fridman, the podcaster and seesahai plant and just a cool guy. superman's enemy, is he? oh yeah. lex luthor, he, he has hair. this guy - luthor, he, he has hair. this guy . but he's basically trump guy. but he's basically trump has said that he's if he gets in, he's going to reveal all the secret secrets of area 51 about all the spaceships that have been either dug up or crash landed. >> why didn't he do it before ? >> why didn't he do it before? >> why didn't he do it before? >> yeah. why didn't he do it before he knew it? >> he had that chance, didn't he? this is this time. >> i'll do it. >> i'll do it. >> i think he knows already, kamala, when she says, oh, when i'm in power, i'm going to fix the economy. it's like you're in power, >> this is just trump says
2:08 am
things really, isn't it? trump vows to release new pentagon ufo videos if he wins, after admitting there could be life on other planets. what does it mean admitting it? he's admitting it like he knows and or he's responsible hard to explain, and maybe there is auen explain, and maybe there is alien life visiting us. it seems odd that they choose america and like to be seen by american pilots, and not the rest of the world, and also they're all over the place. >> they are. they're also in russia, in scotland, in scotland, they tend to be american. >> and oh yeah, there's an awful lot. they travel millions of light years to come here and probe my anus, you know. well, in scotland there's better things to do. >> in scotland. there's a triangle around falkirk. i don't know what it is about falkirk if they put something in the buckfast, but there are a lot of ufo sightings there. but trump has also said something a bit closer to home. he's going to release the epstein files. so epstein island, where obviously rich and powerful men like bill
2:09 am
clinton and bill gates, travelled or, you know, were on his private jet, may have gone there and could have been stephen hawking, could have been stephen hawking, could have been stephen stephen hawking . and stephen stephen hawking. and there are a lot of girls there. some of them apparently underage, according to the to the charges that were laid against jeffrey epstein and trump said on the podcast, he said, you know, a lot of powerful men went to this island. fortunately, i was not one of them, suggesting that if he if he got an invite, he would have been there. >> yeah, yeah, yeah. which i mean, is he just angry he wasn't ianed?is mean, is he just angry he wasn't invited? is that what you think? yeah. no, he's getting revenge. yes. >> but yeah. are you looking forward to to the the epstein client list? i don't know why. why isn't the epstein client list been released either? surely we should know which rich and powerful men were going to epstein island to get up to no good with with underage girls? yes. >> what possible reason is there for keeping that a secret? i mean, the ufo files as well. but you think this one would have some kind of priority, wouldn't you? yeah. we need to know what went on at this billionaire island where you can do this ultimate fantasy island. yeah. like that. you know , the regular
2:10 am
like that. you know, the regular program of the spaceship. >> the what? >> the what? >> getting a spaceship or ufo files are going to reveal that they all happened. i think so, yeah, it's all connected. >> it's all connected. i've got, like, all the string on my wall. >> there was there was the sighting, the ufo sightings in lincolnshire a few years back. do you remember that one where, people saw lights in the sky, the balls of light? they couldn't explain. and, a wind farm got hit. one of the blades came off a wind in a wind farm and a wind turbine. and at the time, everyone was saying it can't be explained by any natural phenomenon . aliens have natural phenomenon. aliens have travelled all this way and then lost control of their vehicle at the last minute. but it turned out when they looked into it, there was a fireworks display going on down the road and there was just damaged metal fatigue of the wind farm. >> let's just end on this quickly. it's the story of the telegraph about sewage, >> okay, so this is the, water companies that, the government is now going to block rewards given to company bosses who've received £26 million in bonuses since 2019, despite the sewage
2:11 am
spills, and the industry regulator that has the unfortunate name ofwat. careful how you say it, is consulting on this. some of the companies have refused to take bonuses, and some of them, like anglian water's boss peter simpson, has taken 302,030 3pi wonder what the £0.33 was about, but that seems like quite an extraordinary amount to be putting sewage into our waters. and yeah, and also losing losing a lot of shareholder value as well. well absolutely . yeah. well. well absolutely. yeah. yeah. and it's also just not what their job is supposed to be, you know, and it's concerning. my grandfather once said, you know , if you're said, you know, if you're thinking of pooing in a river, thinking of pooing in a river, think of the little fishes. they do it. so you may as well. but he was mad. so i don't know why i thought that. >> and he didn't run thames water. >> well, he didn't fortunately, but i think maybe he would have been popular with him. >> yeah. and what's odd here is keir starmer has actually gone on record and said that will be pollution free from the river to the sea. so i don't really know what to make of that, but okay,
2:12 am
well, he said it. >> that is the front pages done and dusted. join us after the break for the latest on the tory leadership contest . how labour leadership contest. how labour are helping and tony blair about the downside
2:13 am
2:14 am
2:15 am
welcome back to headliners. your first look at thursday's newspapers. i'm leo carson, i'm still here with carrie marks and jonathan kogan . we've got the jonathan kogan. we've got the sun now with a famous face knocked out early in the tory leadership contest. to paraphrase the sex pistols is pretty vacant. well, priti patel slot is now vacant. jonathan. >> yeah, a woman hasn't been knocked out so brutally in pubuc knocked out so brutally in public since the olympic boxing. so priti patel is first out of tory leadership race as robert jenrick surges ahead. but kemi badenoch hot on his heels. so robert jenrick has today emerged as the new frontrunner in the tory leadership race, followed by kemi. so the x immigration
2:16 am
minister picked up 28 votes, which was enough to win well enough to be in the lead and miss badenoch got 22 votes and then, yeah, priti patel, who was then, yeah, priti patel, who was the home secretary, which i already knew apparently was knocked out of the contest picking up just 14 votes. so that's it. the results are in. who's your money on leo on kerry? >> well, this is i mean, it's interesting, isn't it, kerry? because there doesn't seem to be much passion for any particular candidate. >> no. it could go any way at the moment. which do you think. who did you think was going to go out first? >> i didn't think pretty was going to go out first. i thought she might actually win. really? >> yeah. okay. >> yeah. okay. >> she's i mean, she's a recognisable face. she's probably the only one a lot of people have heard. >> i think she'd be the one that the membership would go for, rather than necessarily the, the party. >> i don't know because and she's got that sex appeal as well. is that what it is. also would also see that, you know what i thought would come back on her is that she was blamed for the failure of the rwanda scheme, and she was also accused of bullying those allegations, which may have come back to
2:17 am
haunt her. >> a little bit, and it's really a case of what the, what the party is going to look for now, because they've got to look to where they're going to take votes from and whether it's from the reform voters and win them back over, in which case they need someone to the right of the party, or whether they're going to look more to the centre ground. yeah, to bring people in, which is interesting to see, you know, who's going which direction there kemi of course, is firmly right of the party on the right side of the party. so, but she's also very popular in the party. i don't think there's any easy predictions at the moment. what we're going to see is, you know, also the one nafion is, you know, also the one nation has and what the grassroots want and so on is going to be also those who whoever's going to sweep up british votes now. yeah. right. now that she's out of the race. so i don't know. they definitely want it done and dusted by, you know, october 30th, which is in time to have someone there to reply to whatever the budget's going to be, but here's an interesting thing. tugendhat, who finished fourth but he achieved the same percentage of votes as liz truss did in the
2:18 am
first ballot before she went on to win the win. the you know, the seat. so, it's a bit of a pyrrhic victory, though. >> i mean , she did. well, yeah. >> i mean, she did. well, yeah. >> i mean, she did. well, yeah. >> i mean, that might have actually stopped someone else. they might say, oh no, we're going to learn from that and not do that again. i think where we're at right now, my, you know, wisdom here says anything could happen. yeah. >> and it's interesting that you mentioned are they going to shift shift to the right to hoover up reform votes or are they going to tack to the centre because all the advice says, you know, the votes, elections are won in the centre. i think the centre has shifted. and i think reform getting 20% of the votes in the in the general election shows that . and i think here is shows that. and i think here is going to be a one term, one term prime minister, if that. yeah. if he even makes it to the end of five years. so, i mean, i think it's the tories if they can get their house in order, it's the tories to lose so they can. now's the point where they can. now's the point where they can pick and choose how they want to govern. and it seems to me that they lost because they didn't govern as tories, because they went to centrist and they were basically just a fluffy
2:19 am
labour party. >> it does feel like the tories have taken a bit of a gap year, and they're going to come back like, like, yeah, we're going to do it properly this time. who knows? >> yeah, hopefully it's a gap year somewhere that's going to toughen them up instead of coming back with, you know, henna tattoos. >> and it's also it's also what happens with labour in the meantime. and whilst they're still talking about ten years of pain, it might be that after five years people go, that's enough pain. >> yeah. we've got the times now and prospective tory candidate robert jenrick has been accused of noticing segregation in britain . britain. >> he accused of noticing robert jenrick recorded calling birmingham a segregated city. this is written like a gotcha but i'm sure he just said it, meaning it. yeah, former immigration minister said the recent level of net immigration, which hit a record of 764,000in 2000 2022, was not only placing pressure on public services and housing, but also leading to inter—communal violence and diminishing public trust. it's really a case of how everyone's phrasing this, whether it's, we use terms like self—segregation, where different groups cluster
2:20 am
into specific neighbourhoods, or sometimes we get more polite and call it cultural pluralism, but of course, these are all phrases for the same thing. what's happening is that, a lot of people feel that integration isn't happening at all, that it's. and there was the violence that broke out in 2022, in leicester and then moved to on birmingham between muslims and hindus and i suppose what seems to be happening is a lot of people thought that, people would come here and integrate, but they've the numbers are expanding so fast that instead what's happening is all the animosities, the regional geopolitical tensions of thousands of miles away are now coming into the country. and i think that's partly why, for the last 11 months, with the pro—palestine marches, people are saying, hold on, this is not something normal for our country. this is now changing foreign policy and of course, with the election as well. so there was a graffiti writer, recently who put up a sign saying who wrote no whites allowed, which caused a lot of upset. >> and although every advert
2:21 am
casting bracket . casting bracket. >> yeah, well, we don't know. maybe he didn't finish it. maybe he got scared away and he was actually going to say no whites allowed to sweep the streets or something. i could have been, but i don't think that was it. yeah. >> i mean, look, call me a purist, but i think banksy's work has gone downhill. >> yeah, you're a purist looking at the i mean, they see this as if robert jenrick is just inventing the fact that there's segregation. but no, he's pointing out that in different wards in birmingham, there are seriously different levels of demographics. so in sparkhill north, 82% of the population are asian and only 4.5% are white. and in other areas, 90% of the population is white, while only 3% are asian. and there's a lot of, you know, words that are close to each other but are completely demographically distinct. so that's yeah, that's clearly a sort of almost the start of the balkanisation of the uk. what does balkanise mean? it means when, areas separate by, by, you know, ethnic or religious groups.
2:22 am
okay. so and then, you know, like so yugoslavia broke up into the sort of balkan territories. what's the falklands ? the what's the falklands? the falklands is an island off the coast of argentina . and we went coast of argentina. and we went to war in the 80s. >> did i miss something? >> did i miss something? >> well, it's actually an island of argentina. >> yes. good. join us after the break. >> no, we've still got more to go. >> oh, you can't do that. >> oh, you can't do that. >> we've got the telegraph now with tony blair finally admitting that the mass immigration that he started does actually have some downsides. jonathan >> well, you should have said something, leo. come on. sorry sir. tony blair admits influx of migrants under his premiership placed strain on communities so celebrated. war criminal sir tony addressed his record on immigration, which has come under scrutiny since his departure from number 10 in two thousand and seven. so he defended his record during his time in downing street, saying that his approach helped the economy. but he did also comment on how his immigration policies that he set in motion has caused
2:23 am
strains in certain communities. so it does seem to be a new story day where people are sort of commenting on the fact that there is that there are unfortunately , tensions perhaps unfortunately, tensions perhaps between different groups within certain communities. and it's no longer something that isn't being commented on. it seems to being commented on. it seems to be something that has really become visible. yeah. and that's going to be discussed . and like, going to be discussed. and like, like anything, any issue, no matter how big or small, you have to address it, otherwise it will just continue in a certain direction. >> yeah. and it seems to be quite a radical experiment for a country to attempt as well. i mean, we went from having quite low numbers of immigration, you know, well under 100,000 and now we're having 1.2 million people a year come into the come into the uk and it's, it's not without some friction . without some friction. >> there was a lot of immigration during the 60s and 70s, but then suddenly it's, but even then it was much lower. this kind of. yeah, it was slower. and what's happened now? it's accelerated incredibly. >> and it also tended to be,
2:24 am
more it was people who were culturally similar. so people from the west indies , people from the west indies, people who, you know, christian christians and, and also, you know, more middle class. my uncle came from india in the, in the 60s. and, and he's a middle class guy, whereas now it's just anybody who can get here. >> it felt it felt like that. it felt like back then people were just grateful to be here. and now it feels like the numbers are so, so much that there's a different dynamic going on. i'm sure plenty of people are still just very grateful to be here and so on, but it's still it takes small numbers. you're not i know, i know, i'm only here because i can't get into america. the thing is with blair is that he's he's admitted this. he's really odd thing to say. anyway, it's like it's fairly obvious he's admitting a lot of things at the moment that he got wrong. and, but as for as with what's going on in germany at the moment, where a million people were, were let in and it's going to be a bit late for whoops, really, net migration increased fivefold during the labour administration and his decade in power have been shown to be
2:25 am
almost directly aligned with the start of the modern mass to immigration the uk, which is basically that's what happened. he flew the doors open, let down the drawbridge, opened uk's legs and bent over. and this is where we're at now. a lot of metaphors. yeah, i thought i'd throw them all into to see how long i could get that sentence. really? you'd hope.i get that sentence. really? you'd hope. i mean, there's lots of peaceful people who, are immigrants in this country who you'd hope what would happen is we would demonstrate to the rest of the world how this leads to harmony. but that doesn't seem to be happening. and i think as experiment has gone wrong, and he's kind of admitting, but he's also being a bit mealy mouthed over it, he's saying that it wasn't really his fault and he would do the same thing. but at the same time, if i was in again, i wouldn't do the same thing. >> and he also says that it boosted the economy, but we've seen since 2000, since his blair's experiment in mass immigration kicked off, gdp per capha immigration kicked off, gdp per capita has absolutely stagnated in the uk after rising for decades. in the uk after rising for decades . because obviously, as decades. because obviously, as you let more people in, you know it. although it provides fuel for the economy per capita, you're not going to. yeah, well,
2:26 am
we've we've done this with slogans and insisting that, you know, the health service is strained. >> we need more doctors. so letting in more doctors makes sense which it does. but the trouble is, if you then let in 10,000 people for every doctor, you've still got the same problem you had before, or worse. yeah. as it continues, that's the end of part two. >> coming up, facebook decides to allow anti—semitism. prostitutes can't get bank accounts , and another big brand drops diversity. and inclusion. see you
2:27 am
2:28 am
2:29 am
and that's why he's banned from pets at home. oh, hey, welcome back to headliners. we've got the guardian now, and facebook will allow people to post from the river to the sea. is this a win for free speech or a lose for jews? jonathan. >> let's find out. lose for jews? >> yeah, it's a bit of a slogan. i'm working on. >> yeah, i've noticed right . >> yeah, i've noticed right. metas moderation board backs decision to allow from the river to the sea in posts. so meta's
2:30 am
content moderation board has supported the company's decision to allow facebook posts containing that catchy old phrase from the river to the sea, after ruling that a blanket ban on the pro—palestine slogan would hinder free speech. so they've taken the free speech in post approach and allowed it, they've also said that the phrase has multiple meanings and can be used in various ways with different intentions. so it could be seen as encouraging anti—semitism and the elimination of israel. but they also said they're happy to take that risk. so that's what they've gone. they've gone with. i mean, look, the yes, things can have multiple meanings. i mean, also people really started chanting it early october last yeah chanting it early october last year. so there's obviously an association at the same time. should you block people being able to say a phrase which in their minds might mean just solidarity with a, you know, a group of people ? i don't think group of people? i don't think you should block block it. i'm a free speech guy, but it's yeah, i'm a free speech guy as well.
2:31 am
>> and, but it's interesting that this is a phrase that appears in hamas's charter. so it's got that association. so to see people chanting at kyrie after hamas, problem with atrocity i have no problem free speech. >> totally. i'm fine with it. free speech should allow this. but the saying don't kid me, don't don't lie to me about the meaning of a thing in order to push that through. we know what it means. it was it's been the slogan of hamas and it's and it's and it means from one side of israel to the other, get rid of israel to the other, get rid of it. and also but the other thing is it's, the will be free. what are you talking about ? what are you talking about? there's this fantasy, this myth that before israel existed, it was this lovely place where everyone just got on. and it was all balloons and parties and, there were some cross—cultural ization that happened, like there was in pakistan. but of course, the nationalist movements formed , and then movements formed, and then everything, everyone gets swelled up into it and so on. but we're talking about a piece of land. we know its history. before, before the british had it, the ottomans, the mamluks and so on. it's been 2000 years of mostly christian and muslim
2:32 am
empires fighting to liberate jerusalem for themselves as long as as well as everywhere else that they took. there was a lot of violence and a history of pogroms and so on. you can't free something that was never free. the last time it was free was back when it was the kingdom of israel and judea. judea. right. so since then it hasn't been free. this is freeing. it is like saying free colditz island back to a time when it was a prison. you can't. it's not, it's not, it's not history. you're making up your history, but also, you know, to say it's not about calls for violence. after the barbaric acts of october the 7th is just really quite insulting. i think so, yes. free speech? sure. so you mean nasty, evil little thing that makes you happy. but and don't. and also with the intifada that's going on across the middle east and africa and so on, and the jihadi groups and so on, and the jihadi groups and so on, and the jihadi groups and so on, don't pretend that there's not violence involved in this. oh, yeah. >> and i think, you know, hamas, they have been associated with some violence and, you know, for them to say that, oh, we just
2:33 am
want palestine to be free. it's not going to be free. it's going to be ruled by hamas. it's going to be ruled by hamas. it's going to be ruled by hamas. it's going to be ruled by absolute genocidal barbarians who are going to execute gays and deny women rights. so, you know, the freedom that you're begging for might not be the freedom you get. anyway. moving on. we've got the telegraph now in the nhs as more diversity, equity and inclusion coordinators than it knows what to do with, but not enough to stop it being anti—semitic. >> kyrie, are we having an anti—semitism theme now or are we just moved on to this? claire murdoch, the trust chief executive, interrupted her summer holiday to say to personally and swiftly address how the message was sent in error. so the message we're talking about is one telling staff they don't need to attend an anti—semitism training, she explains. a small number of concerns were raised by some individuals through the bame network network, which is the black, asian and minority ethnic community within the trust about so basically this is a training exercise. you could go along to, to learn a bit about anti—semitism, which i personally don't think would do anyone that much harm. it
2:34 am
depends what it is, really. it's, you know, you've got the kind of hatred we're teaching right now, which is all about social justice and structures and so on, which i don't think is very helpful. it's very much kind of lost in this idea that, that entire, you know, all white people and so on and entire identities have got this inherent evil that comes out of them and so on that can't be gotten rid of. and universities and organisations have diversity coordinators who explicitly state we need to abolish whiteness, which sounds like the language of genocide, to me. >> and jews are seen, as, you know, almost the pinnacle of white people, the mythical controller of this whole pyramid , controller of this whole pyramid, rather than the people who are a 0.2% of the world. >> after 2000 years of being mass murdered . but but the thing mass murdered. but but the thing is, i think 67% of the headliners shown up tonight for hatred are really interesting subject. you know, how how how how hatred forms how nazis worked and why in the russian empire and so on and across the middle east, how different forms of hatred. that's that's thousands of years old, surely
2:35 am
is interesting. yeah. so i think it's a good one to teach. it just depends. i don't know what they're teaching. yeah. >> and obviously there's some, you know, if you're anti—semitic, you might be opposed to anti—semitism training, which, you know, it sounds like that might be the case here. >> what might have happened? >> what might have happened? >> quite distressing at the end of that email when they said, you don't have to go to the anti—semitism training, they said from 2 pm. to half three, our afternoon will be free. so i just think it's just we're seeing a side of the hospital to the other side of the hospital, and the only thing anybody cared about was, is there going to be sandwiches? >> are they going to be bagels? can i go home early and is there going to be sandwiches anyway? we've got the guardian now putting forward the idea that working class people just watch tv. they don't work in it. >> jonathan well, let's find out again. so working class parents do not see film and tv as a viable career for their children. fair enough, fair enough for everybody. yeah. so, research conducted by netflix, of all people, in conjunction with the national youth theatre , with the national youth theatre, have found that 89% of working class parents would advise their children against trying to work in the industry because of the
2:36 am
perception it's not a sustainable career. so they interviewed 500 students and 2000 parents. and yeah, it really seems like it's the very sensible, loving parents who don't want their children to go into the arts because it is incredibly risky. i mean, it's i think it's risky for anyone, really. >> i mean, @gbnews for three years, this is the longest i've ever had a job. >> that's true. but you are still on, what's it called, apprenticeship. when you start getting paid next year? yeah. i mean, i think it's a very difficult thing if you come from if you're benedict cumberbatch and you come from a really rich family and yeah, that does help. >> it definitely helps. yeah. of coui'se. >> course. >> yeah, yeah. because you can you can afford not to. i mean, i don't know his history, but you can afford not to earn money whilst you're. >> yeah. pursuing make your mistakes. absolutely. yeah. and on the other hand on the other handi on the other hand on the other hand i was remembering i had i was really interested in magic tncks was really interested in magic tricks and so on when i was a kid. and then i believe it, it was i know it's did you have a fedora? obviously i was, but we had a we had someone come into the school and he was the
2:37 am
careers advice officer. so he sat with us each and talked to us, and i told him i wanted to be well, i confessed, i wanted to be a magician. and he said, right, you can't rely on that. you need something to fall back on. so you need to go to university. you need to get some degrees and so on. so you sort of have that as a choice. but here was i did not saw him in half. this is not it's much better than this. what happened was about ten, 15 years later, i'm doing magic as a professional and performing to rich and famous around kensington and so on. and royals and that. and i ended up doing the redundancy parties that happenedin the redundancy parties that happened in the late 80s. and guess who was there was , was guess who was there was, was this person this, this, this careers advisor , and he was careers advisor, and he was being made redundant and made yourjob being made redundant and made your job to being made redundant and made yourjob to save him. learn a magic trick. learn a magic trick. you'll always have something to fall back on. sorry, sorry. >> he made his job disappear. but yeah. you want to step on your punch ? fair enough. your punch? fair enough. >> at my school, the dinner ladies were also the career advisers. we've got the guardian now accusing banks of denying access to access to bank accounts to prostitutes. they seem much more worked up about this than banks denying access
2:38 am
to right wing people. >> carey. yes, absolutely. and i think they're just pretending not to recognise them when they come in, you know , this is a come in, you know, this is a this is business accounts, of course, so they can take out personal accounts. but the problem with personal accounts is you have to give your name out . so they're worried about out. so they're worried about blackmail . and now regulators blackmail. and now regulators are stepping in oh , and this are stepping in oh, and this this doctor raven bowen, the chief executive of national ugly mugs, who came up with that which provides support to sex workers. so basically this is about sex workers being able to carry out their business. and i think not being able to. and it's largely a fears about whether they'll get involved to with, do with soliciting and unlawful behaviour. that happenedin unlawful behaviour. that happened in brothels and so on. they don't want to be associated with, but i think the sex workers should go on strike and put their customers tools down. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and refuse service to bank managers for a while, and they'll get what they want. yeah. and of course, they should be able to get bank accounts .
2:39 am
be able to get bank accounts. >> absolutely. i mean, it's not to illegal sell sex in this country. apparently. i just found out. got some plans to make. and yeah, i think it's a reputational thing for a lot of the banks. they're just worried about, the sort of the image damage that could be seen. but, i mean, it's not like they're you know, like, recruiters or something like that . it's something like that. it's a different thing. yeah, yeah. >> sex is becoming big business with not just the world of pornography , but also, onlyfans. onlyfans. >> that's pornography. >> that's pornography. >> right? it's a kind of i think it's pornography. >> yeah. it's soft. well, i think it's all soft. i've heard i don't know nothing. what is onlyfans . onlyfans. >> moving on. we've got the daily mail with another nail in the coffin of diversity , equity the coffin of diversity, equity and inclusion as huge american beer brand couriers dropped dup targets. sounds like they're actually interested in making money instead. >> jonathan nana go woke get rich, that's what they say. so another american classic brand rolls back its dei rules after a backlash. so the iconic american beer brand molson coors has been the latest corporate giant to
2:40 am
announce a major rollback of its diversity, equity and inclusion policies. so this came about, according to this article, because conservative activist robby starbuck actually messaged executives from coors, from the company and let them know that you plan to expose their woke policies, their hiring policies, their marketing policies, and pre—emptively, they've then made these changes. so it kind of seems like maybe the causation is not correlational the other way around, whatever you meant to say. but it does seem like they've reacted to this, and they've reacted to this, and they've announced publicly that they're getting rid of these dei goals because they're worried about the backlash they're going to get with, i guess, conservative consumers about having these woke policies. now, this is really interesting because especially the last sort of ten years, companies have done everything they to can look like they're doing all these dei policies and that kind of thing, because that's what consumers wanted. yeah well, or that's what they were incentivised to do through things like blackrock and other i mean yeah, esg funds. >> so yeah, environmental funds i think essentially, you know , i think essentially, you know, the core of it came from when
2:41 am
there was occupy wall street, you know, the banks and big business were like, how can we get the public to think we're good again? and so they were like, oh, we'll put put some lgbtq flags up and now it's not profitable. >> they just axing all of it. and that shows they were never sincere. they were never they don't care about you at all. >> you don't think so? you're really cynical. >> ben& jerry's cares about you , >> ben& jerry's cares about you, do i think. >> yeah, absolutely. and when i, when i, when i see banks with rainbows on them and so i think they really do care about you. they care about the society they're in. this has all been some mad fashion of intimidating ideology that's taken over everything. so fast. and it's not that there weren't some good ideas, and it's not it's not that, saying, let's have some, systems to help people from underachieving parts of society or, you know, where there's other difficulties and so on, help them rise up or get role models from their group and so on. but this became an insanity where we just have to diy everything. yeah, and became meaningless for it and also just
2:42 am
just flew in the face of talent, hard work and achievement. so it's nice that we're getting back to that a little bit and say that actually, you know, merit is a good thing. although apparently a lot of merit, a lot of academics and a lot of diversity advocates say that meritocracy, that word is white supremacist, which is i mean, that sounds like a racist thing for them to say, to be honest. >> anyway, we've got just one more section to go and you won't want to miss it. we've got kamala taking tips from labour and why a of brits think that they can
2:43 am
2:44 am
2:45 am
>> because my cousin welcome back to headliners. >> we've got the daily mail now and labour don't seem to be helping anyone in britain, but they are helping the democrats to get elected. >> kerry how kamala harris is looking for inspiration from britain's left wing government to beat trump in november. of course she's not at all, but she
2:46 am
is having deborah mattinson, one of the prime ministers, starmer's top advisers. in fact, she was the director of strategy for, for keir starmer. so basically she's going over to america to talk about her methods and what might help them. and basically this is a press release that she's probably put out to say, hey, look at my career and i'm doing this thing, but really? and she's going to advise them to do less of the hope and change stuff and to do more of a laser focus on winning states. but the hope and change stuff, of course, is very popular in america. the recent democrat convention was basically a load of lobotomised delirium of people just talking about how happy they are and how amazing everything is. yeah, joy . joy everything is. yeah, joy. joy seemed to be the word oh, joy, joy, joy, joy, joy- seemed to be the word oh, joy, joy, joy, joy, jov- and seemed to be the word oh, joy, joy, j0y, joy, joy. and they just kept repeating joy. as much as keir starmer says the word pain really, kind of their complete opposite, but it's hard to know whether it's really hard to know whether it's really hard to know whether it's really hard to know whether, mattinson actually did a good job anyway, because by that time, the tory
2:47 am
party had become pretty toxic in this country , i know people this country, i know people writing, and not to me it wasn't. but with the voters, and so what she actually should be advising, harris is to say what you need is a really unpopular party who are going to be voted out anyway. then you'll stand a good chance, and you need a former leader of your party that was an extremist and that people wanted out anyhow. so i don't know what really she's going to add to that. >> i think she's just going to have sort of absolutely no policies and lock people up for tweets. that's right. >> just like keir starmer. we've got the guardian now, and apparently a third of british people think that they could solve a murder in fairness to british people, i'd say about a third of them are smarter than your average police detective, jonathan. >> not the ones i've dated . leo. >> not the ones i've dated. leo. so elementary. watson. why one third of britons believe they could solve a murder . so third of britons believe they could solve a murder. so this has all come about because true crime documentaries, podcasts, books and films have all created a generation of armchair detectives who are convinced they could succeed where police have failed. so a new study has
2:48 am
shown that a third of britons are convinced that they could solve a murder case. and then 18% believe they could find a missing person . it depends where missing person. it depends where they were, i suppose, and 17% think they could solve a fraud case.i think they could solve a fraud case. i think people are seriously overestimating their kind of perceptive and deductive capabilities just in general. like half of people didn't realise that joe biden had been dead for three years and they were still sort of cheering that on. so yeah, i don't know. do you reckon people are people i think people are much smarter than that. >> kiri. i think i think these people i think we should we should have a volunteer police detective squad. >> i think what's happened is that tv programmes , the fiction that tv programmes, the fiction makes it all look easy. but really what they should do is we should be making police programmes that are really incredibly boring. so how the real job would look. but here's an interesting thing. this is according to a new study and here's a bit of detective work. i did because i read through the whole thing and realised that at no point does it mention any study. there is no seriously look down. there is no study here at all. so you just passed
2:49 am
the test? >> yes, i think i've solved. >> yes, i think i've solved. >> welcome aboard. someone's making stuff up. >> okay, well, we've got the express now with a sign that britain is no longer a caring high trust society. kyrie >> nonsense. so i refuse to give up train seat for elderly woman. she should have thought ahead. well this is a 32 year old lady who was. and at first, not that old. no, no, she's not the one. oh, the story, as you first get it, is that she's sitting in a chair and an elderly woman comes over and asks to have her chair, and she refuses to give it up, which, i had that recently. i was on a bus and i was on that seat where it says, give up, give it up for an elderly or a disabled person. but then both got on at the same time, so i wasn't sure who to give it up to. so i kind of made them fight it out, you know? so intersectionality of the bus. yeah, absolutely. what actually happened here though is this is like a seven hour journey from like a seven hourjourney from london to aberdeen. and the woman in the 32 year old has booked a seat in the first class because she needed to get work done and she was tired from all
2:50 am
her conventional whatever she'd been up to. and then it's not really. it's a 60 year old woman comes over and says, hey, age, get out. but like, no, no, you're supposed to. i mean, if she was like really disabled or whatever, i'm 57, mate. so what are you trying to say? >> no, no, no, i'm saying that's not old. no. exactly. yeah. that's like that's, you know, middle, not middle age. >> i give a seat for someone. not not with today's medical advancements. >> chairs. and she did find a seat , but it >> chairs. and she did find a seat, but it was in standard class. >> the staff managed to get her a seat. well, she didn't have one booked, so she wanted first class. why should she? you don't get to say i'm 60. i'm going to go into first class and just move someone out of your seat. so they got to stand for seven hours. there's being polite and being being respectful, and then there's being absolutely bonkers. >> i think i would have got up but then limped really obviously down the corridor to make her feel bad and kept looking back every time. >> and what if she did and she wouldn't feel bad? not someone who's then i'd throw my coffee on her. >> that's why i did it. >> that's why i did it. >> yeah. so you would let her. you would let her. you would let her stand as well? >> no, no, i'd give her the seat, but i'd make her feel horrible about it. oh, right.
2:51 am
>> yeah, that's the classic. that's the british thing to do. passive aggressive. anyway, the show is nearly over. so let's take another quick look at tomorrow's front pages. the daily mirror has now get them justice. the telegraph has sewage leak bosses to face two years in jail. the guardian has grenfell a disaster caused by dishonesty and greed. the times has killed by a culture of by killed by greed and a culture of dishonesty. the eye has everyone failed them. and finally, the daily star has. i'll tell you all about the little green men. that's donald trump. he's going to release the x files. and those were your front pages. and that's it for tonight's show. thank you to my guests, kerry and jonathan josh howie will be here tomorrow night at 11 pm. with adam koumas and nick dixon. and if you're watching at 5 am, then stay tuned for breakfast until then. good night and god bless. goodbye we don't clap . bless. goodbye we don't clap. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on gb news
2:52 am
>> hello. good evening. welcome to your latest gb news. weather update at the start of a pretty wet period across southern areas, with a warning in force all the way through until the end of friday. but it will remain quite dry actually across north and western areas we've got high pressure starting to build in from the north and west. we will develop an easterly wind over, so that's going to drag in some cloud across eastern areas of scotland, northeastern england as well. overnight tonight further north and west though staying dry and clear across northern ireland and western areas of scotland , as well as areas of scotland, as well as some northwestern areas of wales into the south, though some outbreaks of very heavy rain starting to develop. and we do have that warning in force. so potentially a bit of a fresh start to the day across northwestern areas of scotland, but it's across the south with plenty of cloud around and outbreaks of heavy rain. we could see some travel disruption where we have got that warning in force. not everywhere is going to see the rain all day, but where you do see it is likely to bring some surface water. it could be quite a murky
2:53 am
start to the day across eastern areas of scotland, as well as north eastern england, but plenty of sunshine across northern ireland, the western highlands as well as the islands throughout thursday. and it will feel quite warm in that sunshine with light winds. much better weather than we've had lately across these areas. and in fact, temperatures could climb higher than they have done since may. by than they have done since may. by friday, across parts of the north—west. very different story though. in the south with outbreaks of heavy rain developing most likely to turn quite heavy across south western areas of england, south wales as well. so pretty dull day across the for south quite a big difference from the north—west and a similar day to come on friday. further outbreaks of rain across the south. so we'd like to see further flooding issues and surface water. easterly wind will continue to bnng easterly wind will continue to bring some cloud to the coast of the north—east, but it will burn back a little more so there will be more in the way of sunshine on friday. more widely in northern areas. another fine day to come saturday and sunday in the north, with further outbreaks of heavy rain across southern areas by by a brighter
2:54 am
outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on
2:55 am
2:56 am
2:57 am
gb news. >> a very good evening to you lovely people. it's 9 pm. this is the patrick christys tonight show with me. martin daubney standing in for pat of migrants have attempted to cross the channel just hours after 12 people, including a pregnant woman and six children, died when their boat sank and more than 3000 migrants are waiting on the beaches of france . on the beaches of france. despite the tragic death of 12 in the channel yesterday . and in the channel yesterday. and despite that, starmer, macron loving le bromance just a few weeks ago now the french are blaming britain's soft touch migrant rules for the channel deaths. >> plus, so can the prime minister explain to britain's
2:58 am
low income pensioners why he has taken money away from them, whilst at the same time giving more money to highly paid train drivers? >> yeah, rishi sunak sticks the boot into starmer at pmqs today, blasting why did you prioritise train drivers over vulnerable pensioners and the simple truth is that the deaths that occurred were all avoidable , and a were all avoidable, and a damning report lays bare the culture of dishonesty and the unscrupulous cladding firms that led to grenfell. we'll be speaking to a representative of a grenfell victims group. plus, as a result of the ballot, priti patel is eliminated from the contest. the seine patel is booted out of the tory leadership contest. but be honest, does anybody care ? well, honest, does anybody care? well, on my panel tonight it's the director of the popular conservatives, mark littlewood, businessman and activist and friend of the show, adam brooks. and of course, broadcaster nina
2:59 am
mishakov . oh, and he's at it mishakov. oh, and he's at it once again . and the prime once again. and the prime minister, the prime minister knows the. yeah. starmer is calling rishi sunak the prime minister. get ready britain. here we go . here we go. well it's a show. it's a delight to have your company. tonight's big question i'll be asking, surely. is this all the refugees welcome brigade, the ones who are truly responsible for the continuing deaths in the channel. but first, it's time for your latest news headlines. and it's sophia wenzler. >> good evening. i'm sophia wenzler with your headlines. just after 9:00, the grenfell tower fire, which killed 72 people, was the result of decades of failure. that's according to a long awaited report over almost 1700 pages.
3:00 am
the grenfell report reveals how missed opportunities by the government building companies, contractors and council staff turned grenfell into a death trap. families and survivors of the deadly blaze seven years ago say today's final damning report shows they were failed by calculated dishonesty and greed. housing, communities and local government minister rushanara ali said the blame lies with the previous government. >> the report sets out that successive governments have failed to provide the protection and tackle this issue. and so what's absolutely crucial is that we make sure that buildings that we make sure that buildings that are unsafe, the remediation work happens speedily. it hasn't happened fast enough. enough people are living in unsafe buildings and they need these buildings and they need these buildings to be remediated. >> rishi sunak, now leader of
3:01 am
the opposition, has

10 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on