tv Headliners GB News November 15, 2024 2:00am-3:01am GMT
2:00 am
>> hello! >> hello! >> it's 11 pm, which means it's >> it's11 p.m, which means it's time for tomorrow's newspapers. tonight. join us over the next hour to find out which european league table are the uk top of. >> who has gone and killed santa, and why women get less first class degrees than men. period. i'm simon evans and tonight's comedians scott capurro and nick dixon waiting in the wings there. this is headliners. but before tomorrow . headliners. but before tomorrow. but before tomorrow's news. let's go to tonight's headlines with sophie reaper . with sophie reaper. >> a very good evening to you. the time is 11:00. and these are your latest gb news headlines
2:01 am
tonight. rachel reeves has given her first speech at mansion house since being appointed as chancellor. she addressed issues of financial instability and promised to make economic growth what she called labour's central mission in the coming years. she also unveiled new plans for an overhaul of the british pension structure, which she promised would enact real change in our economy. >> for too long, pensions capital has not been used to support the development of british start ups , scale ups or british start ups, scale ups or to meet our infrastructure needs. so tonight we are publishing the interim report of the pensions investment review. it sets out our plans to create canadian and australian style mega funds to power growth in our economy and start the most significant set of changes to the pensions landscape since the turner review. underpinned by a clear commitment to legislate for these changes for the first time in the pension scheme bill, next year, fewer pharmacies
2:02 am
could be open in the evenings and at weekends from the new year. yeah >> that's after pharmacy owners voted in favour of collective action for the first time in their history. more than 3000 independent community pharmacies independent community pharmacies in england, wales and northern ireland took part in the ballot, with 97% of those who voted saying they would serve notice on opening hours above the minimum required by their contract. earlier, the chief executive of peak pharmacy told gb news this action is a cry for help. >> pharmacy and the general health service is in a sorry state now. i'm unfortunately community pharmacy has suffered under the imposition of a ten year fixed funding deal, effectively , which has really effectively, which has really meant that it's now straining in every direction to continue to uphold the service that that, frankly, is starting to deteriorate to the us now, where tonight it's been announced that donald trump has chosen robert f kennedy jr as his new secretary
2:03 am
of health, a job that will see him take charge of areas such as drugs, food and vaccine safety. >> meanwhile, the republicans have now won the congress, meaning they control both chambers. the house of representatives and the senate. president biden and president elect trump met in the white house yesterday with both men promising a smooth transition of power , and it's victory for power, and it's victory for england in their uefa nations league fixture as they beat greece three nil with goals from aston villa's ollie watkins, an own goal from the greek keeper and from curtis jones on his debut. the three lions took the win in athens. the squad's next fixture will take place on sunday evening and will see them take on the irish national side at wembley . those are the latest at wembley. those are the latest gb news headlines for now, and now it's back to headliners for the very latest gb news direct to your smartphone, sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code , or go to gb news .com code, or go to gb news .com forward slash alerts .
2:04 am
forward slash alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners , your first look at headliners, your first look at friday's top stories with three comedians in a quick reshuffle on the top desk. here, let's have a quick look at what scott and nick will have to deal with on those front pages. the independent kick us off reeves fight back to woo the city anneliese banking regulations. the telegraph have three police forces called in to probe a single tweet, and we all know which one the daily express ridiculous £3,000 budget hike for small shops. the i have wreaths to give bankers their bonuses early as she unveils major pensions fund revamp. the metro has a £3 billion apple icloud rip off case, and the daily star keep us grounded with planet of the octopuses. i'm sure it should be octopods. there were you front pages. so
2:05 am
we're going to kick off with the guardian scott. all right. are we. have we got the daily express? i'm sorry. yeah. >> very close, but not the ridiculous 3000 k33k sorry, 3000. i'm thrown off budget hike for small shops. >> it's like kilocalories. very confusing. >> you throw up, i throw up anyway. furious shop owners claim that rachel reeves budget bombshells will pile an extra £3,300 on bills and wreck small businesses. you know , it's not businesses. you know, it's not that much to ask, but also, i feel like if you can't afford a £3,300 bill, you might have a bad business plan and might need to rethink how you're running things . things. >> well, that's a that's a strangely unempathetic and one, some might say downright cruel. and callous attitude to small businessmen. >> yeah, but the corner shop that sells bread near us charges a fortune . and the other day we a fortune. and the other day we went to pick up our surprise basket, which we paid for online. there was no bread in it. >> so what you're saying is rachel reeves is taking a sort
2:06 am
of vicarious retribution for the for the humiliation you've suffered. exactly. nick, do you have a slightly wider angle you can bring to this issue? >> yeah . of course. i mean, it's >> yeah. of course. i mean, it's labouh >> yeah. of course. i mean, it's labour. they hate small business. they hate farmers , business. they hate farmers, which we're getting into later. they hate the kulaks. they hate everyone with aspiration doing it for themselves . obviously it for themselves. obviously scotts you know, he's just deep in the labour machine in the deep state. >> so he has to say that i'm doing it for myself though for a long time. >> i mean, have we checked your immigration status? >> actually we will later. >> actually we will later. >> actually we will later. >> a lot of people have incurred a 3000 or more tax hike in the last budget, and so that isn't unusual. but i imagine if you're a shop owner, you're not. this isn't your only tax. you're also going to be hit by income tax if you going to be hit by income tax if you pay going to be hit by income tax if you pay yourself an income out of your your shop takings and so on. this isn't an isolated incident. everyone's getting battered at the moment, and obviously a few things are taking time to sort of yeah, take you own a shop and you're doing all right. >> so cough it up. i think. >> so cough it up. i think. >> have you noticed they work like 25 hours though? i mean, i'm not sure is it. yeah. i'm
2:07 am
not sure it's this great thing scott. i mean who has done well out of the budget is my question. apart from obviously rachel reeves breaking the huge glass ceiling of first female chancellor and anyone who makes wind farms or, you know, other supposedly zero sustainable got a 50% raise, he did all right. >> yeah. and we'll be coming on to bankers as well shortly. so let's have a look at the next papeh let's have a look at the next paper. is that the times telegraph. telegraph close. this is yesterday letter. yesterday the write letter. stop looking at the . at the. >> so yeah they've got three police forces called in to probe single tweet. and of course this is alison pearson. we've heard so much about excellent journalists with one of the most popular columns in the country who for some reason was investigated by police . now, the investigated by police. now, the police came to her door and said it was a non—crime hate incident. the police have now said it's not. actually, it's more to do with hate crime. both are completely absurd. she did a tweet a year ago. they didn't name it. they didn't. >> we have no, we literally have no idea. still, do we know the police wouldn't tell her or they wouldn't tell her. >> who posted the know who the victim was, not the accuser. >> the victim. completely absurd. anarcho tyranny. i've talked about it online, but
2:08 am
there's some new parts to it, which is that the home office have sort of had to come up with something now because it's been humiliating for them. they said. we are carefully considering how best to protect individuals and communities from hate, which is impossible, by the way, whilst also balancing the need to protect the fundamental right to free speech. so suddenly labour are worried about it. we know that suella braverman tried to get rid of these things or tone them down and make them much more sensible. yvette cooper has brought them back, but now this is embarrassing them a bit. so they're having to say something and this looks like it's going further into it, saying that actually there was like an extensive operation about this tweet, and now there's this ridiculous kind of circular pattern going as well, where the police have complained to the press complaints commission because allison pearson wrote, treated them unethically. they said she treated them unethically. they're the real victims. >> won't someone think about the police as the real remembrance sunday, which i happen to think is like particularly nasty because they know who she is. she might have been at home. >> i think they're making a point, though, obviously. >> yeah. it's disgraceful. it's pure projection. this hate business is always projection. it's them. who is who are
2:09 am
seething with resentment. and you're right. absolutely. >> and then she posted online what had happened. and then, like you said, the police came after her and said everyone's pointing fingers at one another. it's insane what we all need is this woman who's also on the front page of the daily telegraph in the uk, tulsi gabbard. she's the head of the intelligence chief. yeah, look at what she's carrying several guns, a camera. she's in love with herself. >> she's a babe. >> she's a babe. >> she's a babe. >> she's intense. she's. she's turning me . turning me. >> she's insane. >> she's insane. >> she's insane. >> she's she's she turned as well. she was a democrat who's gone to trump. so have you gone with us? >> we're all turning at least there's all kinds of. >> there are all kinds of whatsapp chats dedicated to tulsi gabbard. >> and you're in six of them. >> and you're in six of them. >> she's on firing ranges. she's she's done quite a few rogan's, incidentally, as well. yeah, she is an extremely viable and of course, the a lot of people want to say she's a russian asset . as to say she's a russian asset. as long as we agree on the word asset.i long as we agree on the word asset. i think outrageous. no comment. do you want to move on to the guardian scope? what have we got on them? >> well , we got on them? >> well, pulsing with we got on them? >> well , pulsing with life we got on them? >> well, pulsing with life in colour world's largest coral reef found in the pacific ocean. not the biggest story, but the
2:10 am
prettiest one on the front page. >> well, that's really nice. although in black and white it loses some of its splendour. >> to be honest. >> to be honest. >> but. but they were talking a few years ago about about the coral reefs being, you know, bleached out because they were it was true in australia. yeah. and now they've all switched back. >> yeah. i think they're pushing it up. they're like, they'll find a way i think i think tulsi gave them an order. yeah. hundreds of carers could face trial for benefits. error. that's all i can read because the print they've handed me is smeared. but i think it says something about more than 250 unpaid carers risk criminal prosecution after falling. and that's all i can really falling foul of a document like an eye test in the past. >> can you make out anything on the top line? >> yeah, i've been blinder for longer than you, so i've learned how to reveal the real story. >> anyway. is gwen stefani fame? love , and the power of don't love, and the power of don't speak. yes. oh, yeah. >> wow. or someone telling someone else to shut up. that sounds like the guardian, doesn't it? so yeah , i think doesn't it? so yeah, i think some carers are in trouble. apparently a carer who earned
2:11 am
more than £151 threshold for 52 weeks would pay back a certain amount of money, which looks like a lot, over £4,000. >> and can we also mention cop summits? no longer fit for purpose? nick, this is the un have been told cop summit. so it sounds like police helmets, but they were referring to the to they were referring to the to the big meeting that starmer and ed miliband recently announced all their plans and no other significant nation was there at all. >> yeah, they're not talking about a bunch of policemen getting together. these are the cop cop, 20 something cop, i think, rather than i don't know. yeah, because i was confused by that. i was like, i mean, i mean, i don't love the police after what they did to alison, but i don't have a go at their summits. >> are their climate policy experts. there is. oh is it? >> well, the point there was no no one from america. there was no one from america. there was no one from china, no one from india. so that's like two thirds of the world's carbon emissions. there's no one from germany who will still have some kind of skin in the game. no one from france. i mean, it was literally us talking to paraguay. >> it's like a birthday party and only the weirdest people
2:12 am
show up. only a weird friends. you're like, where are the cool friends? >> ed miliband feels that way anyway, so the times now, what have we got from them ? have we got from them? >> they've got police treat classroom jibes as hate incidents, which is this shocking story that nine year olds are among thousands investigated. i mean, nine year olds, if they for example, there was one child who called another primary school classmate a word beginning with r that i doubt i can say on air and two secondary school girls who said another pupil, which is just effectively a fancy word for slow. yes, but i've got no idea if i can say it anymore without getting the police coming to the studio back. but i think, yes, i've seen, you know, i've seen people say online, obviously, but it appues say online, obviously, but it applies so well to so many people i work with. it's a big problem. yeah, yeah. you said you said it to me before the show, but never on the show. >> you didn't hear me though, because it's the way you are. but also, he told two girls that they smelled of fish like fish. >> yeah, yeah, yeah. what if that's just. could it be accurate? what if they. what if they were fishmongers daughters? yeah. >> oh, he likes fish. yeah. >> oh, he likes fish. yeah. >> it's insane. this whole non—crime hate incident. obviously it's orwellian nonsense. we don't need these things. the idea that we need to sort of balance. we're balancing hate against actual. you don't
2:13 am
need these. if someone murders you, that's the crime. it's murder. you don't go . yeah. murder. you don't go. yeah. also, there was some hate involved, but of course there was. it was a murder. >> he's just a pescatarian that hates stupid people. >> but the reason it's happened, a number of reasons, obviously, of interwoven. but one of them seems to have been like a gradual diminution of the status, the seniority, the authority that is invested in the role of teacher. right. if you've given a class, these people have been gradually diminished and now they're having to sort of like surge it up the scale, not just to the headmaster, but to the police. >> absurd. but they're diminished by something so much more fundamental as you know, which is a sort of the erosion of hierarchies in general and the idea that children know best. i mean, that's the complete collapse of the culture. so you won't fix that with some non—crime hate or that you can tell people anything. >> people just don't want to hearit >> people just don't want to hear it anymore, do they? >> can i draw attention to one even greater outrage and shock? on the front page we have a picture of king charles. he is wearing a three button suit jacket and he has all three buttons done up. wow. i cannot understand how he can have reached the age of what, 7677, in the royal family and not been
2:14 am
basically a prize. well, he didn't fundamental understanding them with those bloated, arthritic hands of him. >> no, but someone else has made the mistake. >> do you think somebody from styling came in and buttoned them up quickly before he had a rachel ayers? >> he's changing it if you're the king. presumably. lots of these things came from the king. presumably he can just change it. top down. >> famous one. the wig button, the waistcoat button, the bottom button on your waistcoat should be undone. that's from the prince regent, who was too fat to do all his up. >> so you've proven my point. so if charles wants to say, right, this is what we're doing now, lads. we all. you just have to fall in line. >> or maybe i will. i've only got two buttons tonight. i would obviously do anything i would fall on my own sword to protect the king's reputation. but the star. to finish this off with this section. what have we got there, scott ? there, scott? >> so gay. the planet of the octopuses from the daily star. apparently there's a gun toting mentalist talking apes will not take over the earth when humankind inevitably destroys itself. but these cheeky octopuses might. okay. >> and that's the entire story, right? that's it. yeah. >> okay. you say that as if it's
2:15 am
not the usual depth we expect from the star. they've got the boffins. what do you want? well, do you know what? >> they're 80 miles below the surface of the water for some. >> obviously there is. there is a lot of evidence that octopuses are extraordinarily intelligent. really frighteningly so. the one thing that they don't have is a decent lifespan. and any kind of culture, they cannot pass on any of their knowledge to the next generation. that's their problem, that's their floor. >> that's why they haven't taken over the world. >> they're basically like they hatch and then their parents are gone before they, you know, the good thing is they don't have non—crime hate incidents. >> but can i just say one thing about this? it says gun toting mentalist. now, is that a mental person or someone who can read your mind because both are quite dangerous with a gun. >> i don't know what kind of future they're referring to. that's not a major motion picture, is it? gun toting mentalists. that's not the matrix or whatever you're going to break into song. >> i've had three non—crime hate things filed against me. oh, really? really. >> just for was that one set? >> just for was that one set? >> no. >> no. >> basically it's when you pushed the envelope for a long time in a way, you sort of pre armoured yourself. you, you, you're the poster boy of cancellation of non—crime hate. >> the thing is, i was told that
2:16 am
i was homophobic and that i've always said that about you and then i borrowed that from you and that i am two right wing. yeah. that was one crime that i'm just right wing. just my politics in this building barely touched the sides of right wingers. >> that's the side. >> that's the side. >> that's the side. >> that's what we're going to end on. that's all for part one. coming up, we have migration milestones, hate crimes for all ages, and a good old fashioned tractor ban. don't go anywhere. we'll see you in a couple
2:19 am
so, scott, no chance. i thought this wouldn't be on the front pages, but it hasn't. so we're going to do it now. and for what it's worth, too many foreigners do. i have to spell it out in the in the daily mail. >> apparently the uk saw the biggest rise in immigration of any major country last year as numbers hit 750,000. the article says that, and then it says the oecd has put britain at the top of the international table ,
2:20 am
of the international table, although the us had a significant jump as well, with 1.2 million arrival per capita. >> isn't it per capita, i guess it must be. yeah. they've got a huge border, which yeah, thank you very much. >> thanks for noticing. now i feel fat. >> the us immigrants don't touch the sides. no, they they're not allowed. >> so yes, in the us 1.2 million and then here three quarters of and then here three quarters of a million. and the new person in charge of all this here, keir starmer has said that he's not relaxed about these migration levels, and he's going to bring them down to a medium term of 315,000 a year. that's his goal . 315,000 a year. that's his goal. that's what he's promised. yeah. >> and they're all about the goals. pardon me. they're all about the goals. they're about the goals at this point they're like a football team. >> spain has recorded a 12% increase and canada followed with an 8% increase. now these are legal migration people. >> oh yeah absolutely 750,000. but we are at the point where the illegal boats are also like not in order of magnitude lower than this. right, right. yeah. >> well, 50 people have died
2:21 am
this year so far in illegal boats, which is tragic. and we're going to report on that later. i think about the boat. >> imagine if we just put some gunboats out there eight years ago, imagine how many lives we'd have saved . have saved. >> well, yeah, it could be an idea. i mean, starmer says he's not relaxed. he's not really relaxed about anything, is he? so that's not a surprise. but he seems a bit relaxed because i mean, i was looking at some stats in the year 2022 to 23. there was 1.2 million people came in, 499,500 signed on to universal credit, which is 41%. so we're just a sort of receptacle for the world. how can you have open borders and benefits for all? it's impossible. >> plus, half the people who were on furlough during lockdown haven't come off it yet. you know , vast numbers to universal know, vast numbers to universal credit when they get here, do they just point them? >> you want the free money? there's a big sign that says free money at the border. >> he's supposed to be the people. the only pragmatic justification for allowing this to happen is supposed to be the pensions black hole. these are supposed to be people who are coming in to earn money to pay our pensioners, because we're because of the ageing
2:22 am
population. turns out they come in and sign on themselves what it does mean is that even in the telegraph, was it sam ashworth? >> hayes was talking about mass deportations. that is now going to be a sort of mainstream position. it sort of sounds like, oh, it's bad, it's wild, but now it's griffin. yeah, well, that's where we are now, isn't it? that's the new moeen ali reform policy. >> and then it will be tory policy by about 29. >> then rachel reeves will be boasting about it in a few years. >> but i do wonder if they direct him toward universal credit just so they have a bit of money once they first arrive, and they're not completely destitute. in a way, it's better to have people on a reasonable sense of income than have them committing crimes. sense of income than have them committing crimes . street. committing crimes. street. >> well, i mean, i agree to the extent, obviously, you know, there isn't the difference. the ones that arrive with nothing in a dinghy and have to be put up in a hotel, which will be coming on to very shortly. yeah. you want to get people on their own two feet and operating functionally and there is presumably work for them to do, but it doesn't seem to be, you know, very much in the balance of , of, of favour for know, very much in the balance of, of, of favour for our account system at the moment. you know, that's, that's and that has happened historically, right. that was a couple of weeks ago. the office for national statistics produced a report which demonstrated really
2:23 am
incontrovertibly, that they had been a net drain on the economy rather than a net benefit . they rather than a net benefit. they increased the size of the gdp, but per capita had gone down. so there we are. britain literally overrun even by the alarming standards of other western nations. but one glimmer of hope in the times a single arrest in amsterdam that could make all the difference. yeah. >> major supplier of boats for channel crossings. arrested. it's a turkish man who's 44, and he was arrested in amsterdam. and this is this is a starmer smashing the gangs and he calls it a significant piece of the jigsaw. starmer says why is it a jigsaw? it's like we're in ireland, we've got the sea, we've got a navy. it's like a three piece jigsaw to me, very, very simple. a child's jigsaw, really. could we possibly stop them? yeah, i know it's like a three year old jigsaw. i mean, it's not that complicated in my mind, but maybe i'm some sort of hippos or something like that. >> that sort of level of. yeah, yeah, intellectual. >> but there must be different levels of suppliers. people they don't know who are involved in this whole thing. i mean, obviously there's illegal
2:24 am
behaviour going on. >> oh, if they want to catch the suppliers, that is difficult. and i'm not saying that isn't necessary. >> just, just you just have the best navy in the world. we're an island. >> the channel. yeah. >> the channel. yeah. >> protect your border. it's just an idea. >> and it's pretty basic. or indeed patrol the libyan coast. you know, that would have worked as well. but it's too late for that now. >> but yeah, this guy is going to smash anyway. we're smashing the gangs one person at a time. >> yeah, well, maybe he is, mr big. i do think maybe, you know, if they if they absolutely go at him hard, then there is the possibility that it could, you know, be a deterrent i suppose. and the possibility that they could think. but my suspicion is this will drag for on years anyway. >> it sounds ridiculous, i know. i mean, america has a wall, which you don't need because you have a sea and it is huge. and i guess it is almost impossible to patrol on a regular basis. >> no, it'd be dead easy. there's absolutely no will to do it. nigel farage in a in a single, you know, outboard motor is capable of doing it more effectively than our borders. >> do you know what it would be if he turned out to be the pablo escobar of people? typekit. i mean, it's he's always there. the mystery cat . but
2:25 am
mean, it's he's always there. the mystery cat. but imagine like this would save starmer, 32,000 people and they all stop with this one arrest. yeah , with this one arrest. yeah, mick, the altrincham hotel wedding scandal now in the daily mail and greg appears to be the super villain. >> we've suspected all along. >> we've suspected all along. >> yeah, it's the weddings that were cancelled to make room for migrants in hotels that has enraged local residents and was at the centre of private health care row, so i'm sure many people saw on twitter or x this video going around suggesting that people were getting private health care in altrincham. these migrants. then it turned out, no, it's a not for profit provider. gtd healthcare, which is stressed, which stressed it did not provide private healthcare and was being commissioned by the nhs. i mean, same difference probably to a lot of people, but then it puts a strain on the nhs. >> exactly. >> exactly. >> so neither is good. so dan butler and katie evans were trying to get married and they had it all planned. of course they'd spent money on it. it cost £9,000. they're planning this wedding and it was called off for basically to house migrants, which means you basically can't have a country or a society, and some of them are coming from now syria , are coming from now syria, yemen, iran and somalia. and we've all known somalians who
2:26 am
are nice, great people, great people , but they do. 60, 72% of people, but they do. 60, 72% of them are on social housing versus 16% of the general population. >> tremendous. you know, but and also these people were given less than 24 hours notice, from what i can understand. i mean, it was they were almost like they were they found already, they were they found already, they found another place for next year, but it was still a massive hassle of next year. >> they'd be. yeah, it's but should that happen you've got your wedding planned and you know you're out a load of migrants. >> it's not great for touring comedians, scott. so sooner or later this is going to suddenly land on your toes. >> i mean, these things happen. people's marriages get moved around hours. did you know we had one location? we moved to another during our ceremony at hackney town hall. the person leading it got up to leave and we thought, are they going to get the police? are we in trouble ? and she had a trouble? and she had a cigarette. so, you know, weddings have bumps, don't they? >> all sorts of farmers marched next tuesday . scott, i feel like next tuesday. scott, i feel like i'm halfway towards a surreptitious obscenity there. and the city types are becoming agitated at the prospect of tractors driven by real men down whitehall. >> it's a real it's a real
2:27 am
debbie downer for the because i love tractors, i love a good tractor rolling through town. yeah, they're beautiful to watch. yeah. if you know to how drive it, it's fantastic. not like the videos i watch where they fall over and i love those videos on facebook. but anyway, these are experiments . these are experiments. experienced drivers driving their tractors into town because their tractors into town because the farmers are angry because they've got some sort of tax to pay- they've got some sort of tax to pay. they don't want to pay it. and so, well, it's inheritance tax. >> yeah. but they're going to they say they're going to bring they say they're going to bring the tractors. they're not going to they're not going to actually block up the roads. they've accepted that they want the first protest to be a family affair and so on. yeah. what do you think, nick? should they go? >> i'm sorry. i couldn't tell by the quote. actually, that's what she was saying. to be honest with you, i do. i read the quote a number of times and she said, we've been asked by police not to bring tractors into town in what is effectively a tractor ban. but we're not planning to do that. i can't decide if they mean we're not planning to do what the police have asked. >> yeah, no, she's not planning to bring in tractors. oh, that's too bad. yeah, yeah, this time. but i think, you know, we'll see. >> yeah. look, this i've called this farmers versus starmer's. this is the new conflict in this
2:28 am
country. because think about farmers. obviously they're it's all about localism. they're obviously rural. they're tied to the place. they're there for generations versus the davos man represented by starmer, who is atomised, detached from history in any way a man. so there's an essential war between those two. and it is a real movement. look at holland, where the farmers have their own party, the bebe, the farmers party, as you say, the farmers party, as you say, the inheritance tax is what's really set them off. but there's also other things clarkson pointed out in his piece on this. and he's the de facto leader now of the farmers. there's also those large vehicles have extra tax on them. fertilisers can be more expensive. they've hit them from sort of multiple angles, and you don't want to pay off the farmers in europe. but the farmers in europe. but the farmers would have lost him. >> they would have liked to have been asked, actually, they didn't get a place at the table at all, and they just thrown on them and they're all quite shocked. >> it's going to be like the ants marching in lord of the fings ants marching in lord of the rings. well, i will be there. >> i will be there with my gumboots and my straw. we are halfway through the show coming up. we'll have sunday school. jihad sounds like a punk band. women doing worse in further education. what it be? and
2:32 am
and welcome back to headliners. we're at the halfway point and we kick off with the independent with reeves fight back to woo the city allies banking regulations. she says, oh no, we haven't. oh we haven't got that. sorry. what are we doing? no, it's the i presume it's the jihad teacher. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> sorry. there's a there's been some extraordinary behaviour with the teleprompter. this evening. >> sorry. >> sorry. >> from paper. from now on, you go ahead, nick. all right, so it's jihad. >> teacher. never a great two words to see together. jihad teacher wanted muslims to carry out arson in the west. court told so . this is a 19 year old told so. this is a 19 year old who is a spreading pro—isis or accused of spreading pro—isis propaganda. there was a book called something like little mujahideen or something crazy and encouraged arson in the west. and the person. this is the unfortunate thing. the
2:33 am
person later bragged on a voice memo about conning the police. and then they picked up that voice memo as well. and they were saying, oh, i never even watched the video. it's never that's a textbook kind of classic. if you're going to commit crimes, don't brag about them on a voice memo. that then ends up getting handed over to the police. and incredibly though, this person still has bail. unlike someone who's puts a bad post on facebook about children getting stabbed in southport, how is this person on bail? >> it does seem extraordinary how? i mean, if they want to, they can actually collate extraordinary amounts of evidence from digital devices. now, you have to be extraordinarily careful if you're planning a jihad , don't you? >>i you? >> i don't know whether you, especially if you're working with teachers. i agree with you. and that's what she was doing. and that's what she was doing. and then they searched her home. they searched her school and that's how they found some of this material. and as you said, she's she's been on bail. she didn't she denies putting together a terrorist documents. but obviously the proof. >> i'm just going to do a delete some of my messages to leo. i'll be back in a minute. >> i love this kind of jihadi
2:34 am
arsonist in maidenhead. it just sounds like a morrissey song. but there is a b—side. i remember a b—side, my, my, my wife's small village. they come from in in east sussex called rotherfield. and there was a, there was an old convent, i think, or a nunnery or something up on the hill that had been bought by some sort of islamic school and all the, all the villagers were absolutely convinced it was a jihadist training centre . and we laughed training centre. and we laughed at them. ha ha ha, silly old bigoted villagers. and then there was a police raid, and it was , you know, these things go was, you know, these things go on in leafy suburbs. >> this is a jihadist training centre, can take all sorts of , centre, can take all sorts of, you know, images. i mean, it can not appear that way because it's decrepit, like you said, in an old building. or she could be a young person with young people. you know, 6092 00:
4 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
TV-GBN Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on