tv Headliners GB News December 11, 2024 11:00pm-11:59pm GMT
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cousin on the uk of first cousin marriages. what is robert jenrick immigration plan? apart from too late now because they're not in power, and we're leading the world at stopping something linked to climate crisis. and i think you'll like it. i'm stephen allen and tonight i've got leo kearse and paul cox on my panel to take you through tomorrow's top stories. this is headliners. hello and welcome to headliners. >> your first look at tomorrow's top stories with the three comedians. >> but before we get stuck into all the details the nitty and the gritty, if you will, let's take a look at what leo and paul will have to work with. with thursday's front pages. the express has killed by the very adults who should have loved and protected her. the telegraph goes with labour bid to bulldoze the home counties. the daily mail has little sarah let down by everyone supposed to protect her. the metro, not even a tear
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for sarah for the guardian. we've got ministers to axe more than 10,000 civil service jobs in budget purge. and finally, the daily star rise of the psycho scumbag chatbot zombies. that all makes sense. but for the rest, let's see what's happening. on the front page. we go to the daily mail first of all. >> so the daily mail has the horrific story of sara sharif. so her parents , or i think so her parents, or i think father and stepmom have been have been convicted, finally brought to justice after a decade of failure by the authorities. and the daily mail says, why does this keep happening? she's been let down by everyone supposed to protect her. so the courts, police, social services and teachers missed at least 15 chances to stop her being savagely murdered by her evil father and stepmother. i mean, in fairness, they do have i mean, our services, child protection services, child protection services, are very overstretched, and we've had the sort of breakdown of communities
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that would formerly, you know, formerly you'd sort of keep an eye on each other. neighbours would look out for each other and possibly notice or possibly intervene when something like this would happen. but now, you know, communities are so atomised and, you know, we've had this mix of people around the country and, you know, from from overseas as well. so, you know, a lot of people have been uprooted. i mean, i've come from scotland to, to london. i don't really know my neighbours apart from one who i don't like, but but yeah, i mean, this is this is a horrific story. and, and also not to make excuses for the authorities that didn't notice things, but she was taken out of school and she was forced to wear a hijab. and so then they couldn't notice, i think a teacher or a social somebody from the from the authorities did notice bruising. but obviously under a hijab it's you know, it's harder to spot. so you know that that could be a that makes it more difficult. >> yeah. but moments like this,
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it's >> yeah. but moments like this, wsfime >> yeah. but moments like this, it's time to double down and say, yes, the services are under pressure, but the one job we expect from them is to be able to save kids. >> yeah. i mean, this is a harrowing story. it's all over the papers. you've only got to see the beautiful little girl that's on the front of all the pages to know that this is this is something that we should all kind of be hanging our heads in shame about, really. >> because as a society now we have. and i don't want to crowbar in culture war stuff into, into these stories. but as a society now , we've found a society now, we've found ourselves unable to tackle certain cultural issues because we're at the risk of maybe being called racist or or being challenged in a negative way. and i feel that when it comes to stories like this, we need to wake up. i mean, the fact that this the fact that this young girl was going to school in a huab girl was going to school in a hijab to hide what was quite clearly some serious abuse, had anyone at any point stopped and said, can i look under that huab? said, can i look under that hijab? there would have been in
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quite serious trouble for doing so, but they may have saved life. >> yeah. do you think there is still that fear of being seen as being racist? no, no. >> but joking. but it's the one takeaway. literally, literally. like yesterday, the muslim council of britain put out a press release calling me islamophobic because. because i talked about muslim issues. i talked about muslim issues. i talked about muslim issues. i talked about grooming gangs, i talked about grooming gangs, i talked about grooming gangs, i talked about terrorism. now we're talking about this. what? we're supposed to ignore this? no. >> but to my point, clearly it's not silenced you. >> so that is, if anything, evidence that you're not silenced by it. >> and if you are in the police or one of these services, then hopefully one of the lessons we've learned after all of these stories is actually you can report higher up about these things. >> no. absolutely not. there's still there's still a culture of, you know, don't mention anything that could get you into trouble. there's still, you know, we've still got a public sector that's dominated by critical race theory that says, you know, they literally have classes on how to abolish whiteness and all this sort of nonsense. so they're very captured by this sort of this grim, racist and anti—white
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ideology that, you know, elevates all other minorities above, above , white people, above, above, white people, above, above, white people, above, above, white people, above, above, i guess, native, nafive above, above, i guess, native, native brits. and it's really it's really a shame we're seeing children dying, not just in this in this case, but i mean, for example, the manchester arena bomber, a security guard, saw the man walking in with a backpack and didn't stop him because he was afraid of being called racist if he stopped him. so children are just being sacrificed on the altar of political correctness, and it's absolutely horrific to see. >> well, here's a sentence you don't often say in these kind of shows. >> for something a bit lighter, let's go to the telegraph. >> paul, what do you got for us? >> paul, what do you got for us? >> labour bid to bulldoze the home counties. so this is the tories are claiming that planning blitz for new homes will mean local opposition is swept aside, as the government are being accused of trying to bulldoze through the home counties. this is angela rayner once again. and i mean, what can i say? labour appear to hate the
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countryside. this is something we've always kind of understood about labour is that labour are for the people of the cities, and the conservatives tend to be for the people of the countryside. but it's never been more true than it is now, what with the farmers. >> the fox hunting ban was an even more true than this, wasn't it? that was a good example. >> yeah. no, it's devil's advocate. well played steve, but i think i do think that what they're going to they're going to play sort of they're going to ride roughshod over, over the planning laws here. that's that's what's happening. that's what's going to happen with this particular story, is it's going to become easier for them to build on that land because they're not going to put the power with the local authorities, which is something they've always said that they would do with absolutely everything else. but when it comes to building and trying to hit their housing target or building prisons, whatever they want to do, they are just going to say, no, no, no, we're going to say, no, no, no, we're going to make that decision centrally. and i think therein lies the issue, because whilst we do have a housing issue, half of our problem is the ability to build quickly and we it doesn't matter
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where you do it. and if you start just building all over greenland and just and disrupting the countryside, there's going to be all sorts of problems. they're going to get mired. it's going to end up costing more because they get mired in local lawsuits, and people aren't just going to stand for this. we've seen with the farmers when it comes to inheritance tax, people who live inheritance tax, people who live in the countryside that are deliberately moved out of the city to live somewhere where there is fresh air, they're not going to want to see this kind of thing. >> yeah. and so it's been a long while. normally, if you talk about the lack of prison space, people of the right say, well, build more prisons, then they start to build more prisons. >> and they say, well, not there, not there. >> maybe, maybe don't build them in the village green in chalfont saint giles, you know what i mean? they're they're probably angela. >> i mean, they get sent there. >> i mean, they get sent there. >> the whole, the whole essence of the labour party is to punish the rich, to punish the sort of, you know, what they see as the enemy, the you know, what they see as the enemy
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