tv [untitled] October 12, 2024 11:30pm-12:01am BST
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publicly available anyway. if you google them. so yeah, it's balanced. musk not perfect. is he . he's he's balanced. musk not perfect. is he. he's he's a guy balanced. musk not perfect. is he . he's he's a guy responding he. he's he's a guy responding going you're doxing. you're banned. and we know he's it's somewhat arbitrary sometimes how he does these things of course i'd rather have it this way around than the other side. banning the new yorker story and trying to win the election for biden and banning donald trump off the platform. some of this is going to come back on these people, and they're going to realise, oh, we don't we don't like it when it's when it's the other way around. right. yeah. >> all right. leo, the sunday telegraph starmer removes a portrait from number 10. don't worry. i'm sure he knows someone who can buy him a new one. >> so starmer removes a portrait of gladstone, william ewart gladstone from number 10 in the wake of slave trade accusations against william gladstone, not starmer. so a 19th century painting of the four time liberal prime minister had been displayed in downing street under the previous government, and this follows keir starmer taking down the portrait of margaret thatcher. and this, this does happen, you know , the this does happen, you know, the when a new leader comes in, they say i don't want these pictures, i want these ones. but this is this seems particularly ridiculous considering william gladstone. i mean, he's been
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accused. you know, we've got this trend for decolonialism and, you know, all this sort of stuff , reparations and, you know, all this sort of stuff, reparations and and, you know, all this sort of stuff , reparations and stuff. stuff, reparations and stuff. but william gladstone wasn't a supporter of slavery. he made, you know, early on in his career, he made some comments saying we should refund the people who've given up their slaves. but that was he was under pressure from his from his father, the rest of his life, the rest of his career. he was a huge critic and even that wasn't, you know, pro—slavery. it was just saying, you know, we should refund these people the rest of his life. he was very progressive, definitely progressive, definitely progressive by those times and probably quite progressive by by these times. he became one of these times. he became one of the founders of the society for the founders of the society for the extinction of the slave trade and the civilisation of africa. and he denounced slavery in the american confederate states as detestable. so this is i mean, he's basically a pink haired, he's a pink haired, like, liberal democrat, you know, so if it is ideological, it's absolutely absurd. >> but we don't know because starmer took down the thatcher painting just because he didn't like the way it was looking at him. so we're not sure. rachel reeves ghostbusters two. yeah, yeah, rachel reeves was purely ideological because she only wants art from women there
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because she's a philistine obsessed with you know, whatever that means. but the idea that this sentence here, gladstone has images of gladstone have proven contentious since the black lives matter protest. you know what else is contentious? the black lives matter protest. starmer kneeled for black lives matter in his office but can't have gladstone. so if it is ideological, it's completely absurd, right? you can't have a reformer. four time liberal prime minister, but you can kneel for a sort of violent, discredited organisation . discredited organisation. >> there are so many ifs in this story, though. it's a classic telegraph one, because all we know is that the log book that tells you where art is says it's no longer in number 10. it's in storage. that's all we know. and they've managed to get a thousand words out of it, going, oh, it might be because of how dare you say classic telegraph steve on gb news telegraph. that's the end of part two. in the next section, adolf hitler an influencer. as if you didn't hate him enough already. and rupert everett says he
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welcome back to headliners. hello , nick to the mail on hello, nick to the mail on sunday. gen—z. think that hitler had some good ideas. so gen z have worked with louis shaffer. >> i'm not getting tricked into reading this headline because this will be clipped and used by my enemies against me, and i've seen that game. so all i'm going to say is that polls suggest a fifth of the younger, you know, polls suggest , oh, the polls polls suggest, oh, the polls poll. yeah, not those polls. >> sounds like you want to invade poland. >> let me just finish that. a fifth of the younger generation believe an obscure austrian painter was underrated. that's all i'm going to say. they can't clip that. so there's a poll and this is an american poll anyway. but it indicates that 21% of those under the age of 29 say this painter had some good ideas compared with 16% of those between the ages of 30 and 49. 7% 50 to 64, and 5% for those over 65. and that is sort of grimly fascinating, because what it shows is the decline of the post—world war two narrative, if
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you want to call it that. i'm of the generation we were still my grandparents were alive. we could talk to them about world war ii. you know, they were a big part of my upbringing that's faded. and so people don't know anything about world war ii. they don't know anything about the holocaust. they barely know what these things are . so and what these things are. so and with the woke rise of the palestine movement, they're sort of they're very anti—israel , of they're very anti—israel, that kind of sort of bleed over into anti—semitism. so you're just seeing a different landscape. when we grew up, it was like, you know, it was like hitler's, like everyone knew about it and you wouldn't really get this kind of thing. but that is changing now with the zoomers not knowing about it. >> basically, young people don't even know what 9/11 was. so, you know, why are we asking them questions? >> yeah. no, absolutely. but a lot depends on how the question is phrased as well. so the survey asked 1000 likely voters whether they think hitler had some good ideas or if he was evil and had no redeeming features . now, that's a very, features. now, that's a very, you know, absolutist way to look at it . and, you know, you might at it. and, you know, you might think, well, yeah, what he did was absolutely evil and, you know, horrible. but the uniforms were nice.
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>> i thought you were going to go with the roads. you went with the uniforms. yeah. >> or, you know, you could find or , you know, some people might or, you know, some people might say, well, the weimar republic, germany had been absolutely broken. so , you know, broken. so, you know, economically he he lifted it, you know , brave war hero in you know, brave war hero in world war one. yes . world war one. yes. >> that's what they're going they're going to take. yeah , but they're going to take. yeah, but can we talk about anyone. let me just take that out. >> i mean, anyone that's the trouble with sort of absolutist questions . questions? questions. questions? >> yeah. there's a scene in a family guy where they're doing a court room scene, and they said, how would you describe whoever it is, a bad guy or a pencil, like, well, it's not a pencil. then you must be saying it's a bad guy. it's basically that, isn't it? do you think absolutely everything is wrong with it? if not, well, it turns out you love hitler. yeah, that's the clip to the sunday telegraph. celebrity masterchef contestant talks about hummus and sausages. but it is really not what you think. >> so this is a comedian, yishan ackbar berated for an october the 7th massacre joke. so he appeared on celebrity masterchef, and he's been accused of mocking and
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belittling the 1200 victims of the hamas terror attack. i should point out i'm a mate of ishaan's . and, you know, i don't ishaan's. and, you know, i don't know. i think he's a i think he's a nice guy. he's a funny quy- he's a nice guy. he's a funny guy. i think this is a bit unfair. his full post on instagram read a year ago today, something mad happened involving hummus and sausages at a music festival that resulted in the self—defence against children and their families, resulting in over 45,000 deaths that we in the uk massively helped with. aren't we the good guys? big up us. so he's trying to make the point. i mean, he's been sort of a bit silly about it. you know, people say, you know, people made the joke, the pun that hamas sounds like hummus, not ali g. and borat did that. and also keir starmer did said sausages instead of hostages. and he's trying to make the point that you know, we're complicit in this, this horrific attack. and we're attacking children and all the rest of it. i don't agree with them on that, but i know that a lot of people agree with him, and i don't really see the problem in him. you know, i don't think he's horrifically mocked. the victims
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