tv [untitled] October 17, 2024 3:30am-4:01am BST
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ireland, lee carsley played for ireland, presumably because he wasn't good enough to play for us. and then refused to sing the national anthem. it was ridiculous. absolutely ridiculous. >> this is the point, patrick. the point is, we have an english premier league that's owned virtually in whole by foreign owners. you know, it's not engush owners. you know, it's not english football anymore. it's a diverse national international. >> yeah. okay . >> yeah. okay. >> yeah. okay. >> that's neil neil i'm just going to go. >> can i go to use a footballing phrase here. neil can i go route one and just ask you whether or not we should have a german in charge of the england national team? >> i have no problem with having a german in charge of our a german in charge of our national team, or a frenchman or a russian or whatever. if they national team, or a frenchman or a russian or whatever. if they can do the job properly. after can do the job properly. after all, we are engaged in a all, we are engaged in a professional team and manage the professional team and manage the team. so i think the nationality team. so i think the nationality is irrelevant here. but if it's is irrelevant here. but if it's the national team, whoever does the national team, whoever does these jobs needs to commit these jobs needs to commit himself ioo% these jobs needs to commit himself 100% to everything for himself ioo% these jobs needs to commit himself 100% to everything for which that team stands. and that which that team stands. and that includes, in my view, singing includes, in my view, singing our national anthem, of which we our national anthem, of which we
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should all be proud because it's should all be proud because it's not just the words of the song not just the words of the song itself, the fact that it does itself, the fact that it does act as a symbol to bring the act as a symbol to bring the whole country together. whole country together. >> yeah. no , i'm patrick, i'm >> yeah. no , i'm patrick, i'm >> yeah. no, i'm patrick, i'm >> yeah. no, i'm patrick, i'm sorry. >> this is double talk. you sorry. >> this is double talk. you know, the guy just said to do know, the guy just said to do the job properly. do the job the job properly. do the job properly as a as a coach of any properly as a as a coach of any football team is to win football football team is to win football matches. england can't win any matches. england can't win any tournaments. so they brought tournaments. so they brought some guy in who can win football some guy in who can win football matches. and win a tournament. matches. and win a tournament. that's what he said. to do the that's what he said. to do the job properly . it isn't to be job properly . it isn't to be job properly. it isn't to be taylor swift and sing properly a job properly. it isn't to be taylor swift and sing properly a national anthem or badly. it's national anthem or badly. it's to win football matches. to win football matches. >> yeah . >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i mean, look, just just to >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i mean, look, just just to just to round this off, you just to round this off, you know, if i was trousering £4.5 know, if i was trousering £4.5 million a year, i'd sing million a year, i'd sing absolutely flipping anything . absolutely flipping anything . absolutely flipping anything. >> so i can imagine you would absolutely flipping anything. >> so i can imagine you would bakhmut. yes. >> all right, guys, let's take bakhmut. yes. >> all right, guys, let's take care. thank you very, very much. care. thank you very, very much. that's football writer harry harris and former ukip leader neil hamilton. who do you agree with? should it be compulsory for thomas tuchel to sing the magis— and national anthem? blair on access. he's not english, of course. he shouldn't just do a good job managing the national
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fascinating story that okay. and one that actually will have consequences going forward for years to come. so do watch it. but first sky news have had a shocker. they set out to investigate the links between the so—called far right and the summer protests. only to find out that foreign interference played the biggest role in whipping up the unrest. so is this time now for the media and their lefty mates to stop blaming nigel farage for riots? lee anderson joins and i wonder if he thinks
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welcome back. coming up, could the right to die fast become the duty to die? but first, sky news have been left embarrassed after they set out to investigate the links between the so—called far right and the summer riots, only to find out that it was largely foreign interference that whipped up the unrest. >> sky news has, for the first time uncovered and mapped the networks on telegram, the encrypted messaging app where the flames were fanned and the riots were organised. >> one interesting thing we can see here, especially considering this is the first day, is that the source of most of the information that people are talking about on telegram isn't british english language communities. >> the most widely shared content on telegram during the initial three days of the unrest was primarily authored by non—domestic accounts from the usa and europe. >> gosh. well, who would have thought it? i mean, surely not.
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after, you know, the police in pakistan charged a man with cyber terrorism for his alleged role in spreading claims about the riots. oh, and just a few weeks ago, the bbc confronted a 20 year old man in finland who apparently gave rioters in the uk some arson tips. apparently gave rioters in the uk some arson tips . just for the uk some arson tips. just for the record as well. probably worth noting that that chap was not white himself either. but i'm joined now by reform uk mp lee anderson. lee, do we think that people. oh nigel farage an apology for calling it the farage riots? >> i think they certainly do , >> i think they certainly do, patrick. i mean, all along, anybody with an ounce of common sense knew this was a load of nonsense. they keep banging on in parliament, you know, the mainstream media about these far right groups in great britain. seriously, patrick, i don't know who they are . these far right who they are. these far right groups, there's certainly nobody. i know it's just a lot of nonsense. it's very, very easy, patrick, and lazy to blame these groups when you know the problem lies elsewhere. we need a reality check in this country and stop blaming other people and stop blaming other people and realise that you know, the
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deep rooted problems we've got in this country come from our own mistakes that we keep continually making . continually making. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i mean, look, wherever the initial sources of misinformation came from, there were obviously cases of people in this country. i mean, there was a bloke with a swastika on his back, for example, the migrant hotel did get set on fire. so i think people do have to take personal responsibility and not get whipped up into that kind of frenzy, or behave like you're always going to get these lunatics in any country. >> you're always going to get this. but, you know, to keep blaming, you know, a group of people saying that , you know, people saying that, you know, sort of rising on the streets, creating mayhem , causing creating mayhem, causing problems is not there. this is just a few individuals which the press pick up. and then they sort of, you know , sort of, you sort of, you know, sort of, you know, force that, that narrative onto us, that these large swathes of society are going around causing problems. and it's not it's just a few idiots. >> yeah. i mean, so we've had the bbc now . we've had like the the bbc now. we've had like the actual police when it comes to the bloke that was arrested in lahore in pakistan and we've had sky news all do deep dives into
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where the initial source of the misinformation came from and where they were pumped out . and where they were pumped out. and all of them overwhelmingly have said that it was non—british. so this idea that britain lee is full of far right racists is wrong , isn't it? and i think wrong, isn't it? and i think i can't help but wonder whether or not that was actually pumped out there so that keir starmer didn't have to deal with immigration. >> well, yeah, i mean, i'm just going to reiterate what i've just said, patrick, it is a lazy argument. it's a cheap argument. it's easy to blame a certain group of people in this country. you know, for all the, you know, all the problems that we have, you know, let's be honest, patrick, these problems that are happening on our streets have been created by parliament, have been created by parliament, have been created by politicians. and when it goes all goes wrong. we start to look for certain sections of society to blame. and it's nonsense. like i say, there are a few idiots in this country. we know that that's always been the case. but this is cheap, it's lazy and it's, you know , and we saw we saw you know, and we saw we saw riots in
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