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tv   Headliners  GB News  January 21, 2025 11:00pm-11:59pm GMT

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>> hello. it's 11:00, which means >> hello. it's11:00, which means it's time for tomorrow's newspapers tonight. join us over the next hour to find out why benefit cheats have to. >> start getting the bus. >> start getting the bus. >> has jk rowling. >> has jk rowling. >> joined team. >> joined team. >> trump.7 >> trump.7 >> and what will robot. >> and what will robot. >> hands help you to practice? i'm josh howie and tonight i've got two of my favourite comedians with me with the letter x. >> in their surnames. >> in their surnames. >> it's paul cox and kerry marx taking you through wednesday's top stories. >> this is headliners. >> this is headliners. >> but before tomorrow's news, let's go to tonight's headlines with sophia wenzler. >> josh thank you. good evening. your night, your headlines at
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11:00. donald trump has begun his first full day back in office, arriving at the washington national cathedral for the post—inauguration day prayer service. but trump didn't seem pleased when the bishop took the opportunity to lecture the new president and jd. vance on immigration and the fear felt by many lgbtq+ families across the country. after his inauguration, the new president signed a range of executive orders to pull the us out of the world health organisation and declared a national emergency at the southern border. he also pardoned nearly 1600 people tied to the january 6th capitol riots, with some already walking free, including former proud boys leader henry enrique tarrio. but speaking moments ago, trump defended his decision. >> these people have already served a long period of time and i made a decision to give a pardon. joe biden gave a pardon yesterday to a lot of criminals. these are criminals that he gave
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a pardon to. and you should be asking that question. why did he give a pardon to all of these people that committed crimes? why did he give a pardon to the j six unselect committee when they burned and destroyed all documents which showed that they did what was wrong, not me. wait a minute, wait a minute. why did they give a pardon to all of his relatives? his brother, who made millions of dollars to all these different people? he gave pardons. that's the question you should be answering. all right, go ahead. >> back in the uk, the home secretary has said public bodies completely failed to identify the terrible danger axel rudakubana posed as she announced a public inquiry into the southport attack. yvette cooper said the 18 year old, who admitted carrying a knife over ten times before his deadly rampage, should have faced stronger intervention. she also revealed his case wasn't escalated despite three
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referrals to the prevent counter—terrorism scheme. earlier, sir keir starmer said tougher laws could be needed to regulate the nightmares of the onune regulate the nightmares of the online world after it emerged rudy cabana trawled the internet for extreme violent content before the atrocity and had a pdf file of the al—qaeda training manual. at least 76 people have been killed in a fire that engulfed a popular turkish ski resort hotel, forcing some people to jump from windows. at least 51 others have been injured in the blaze, which erupted in the early hours at the grand cartel hotel, the country's justice minister said. four people have now been arrested, including the owner, and get ready for a wild weather weekend. storm eowyn is on the way and it's set to bring severe gales to the uk this friday. the met office has issued yellow wind warnings for northern and western scotland and northern ireland, with gusts of up to 80mph possible. expect power
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cuts, travel chaos and localised damage as the storm rolls in, accompanied by heavy rain and hill snow. those are the latest gb news headlines. now it's time for headliners. for the very latest gb news direct to your smartphone, sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code or go to gbnews.com/alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners, your first look at tomorrow's top stories with three top comedians. let's kick off with a look at some of the front pages. the express britain's new threat from violent. online misfits. the i labour makes new threats to tackle tech moguls over harmful content, and the guardian pm's pledge to overhaul terror laws amid tidal wave of online violence. so a bit of a theme there, paul. let's see what this
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express is going on about then. yeah, the daily express here josh howie . britain's new threat josh howie. britain's new threat from violent online misfits. so britain faces a new threat. i wouldn't say it was that new of terrorism and extreme violence from loners, misfits and young men in their bedrooms, sir keir starmer has warned. and i'm afraid every time we have a terrorist attack, it doesn't matter whether it's a conservative or labour government, they fail to tackle the issue head on. it's always this is a distraction for me. this is a distraction. look, i'm not suggesting that the problems don't exist online, but the problem isn't what's going on online, yvette cooper said. we failed to identify the danger of alex cabana, and that's because they were focusing elsewhere. the problem is focusing. well, they were focusing anywhere . but they were focusing anywhere. but they were focusing anywhere. but the problem. prevent failed. the police failed. we are scared to death of being of being called racist in some way. the problem
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for yourself. the problem? yeah. i mean, i don't mind. the problem is, is. >> i'm not. >> i'm not. >> afraid of calling you racist. >> afraid of calling you racist. >> the problem is islamism. the problem is islamism. well, okay. and i can give you i don't have the problem in this case is islamism. i think there is a problem of islamism. i'm not sure if that applies in this particular case. well, we don't know fully, and i understand why you say that. however, he did have an al—qaeda. we don't even know. partially. we know one little thing that doesn't. there's very little evidence apart from this al—qaeda handbook. and i know that, of course, that is evidence, but there's no evidence. they haven't been able to find evidence of him being this religiously radicalised. this i mean, for this, we can also read westminster bridge, london bridge, david amess, manchester arena well, those were yeah, but they had they went to mosques, they had they went to mosques, they were islamists. they were ideologues who followed that particular extreme form of islam. there is the problem is here, and i'm not saying that evidence isn't out there, but that ain't here. and what they're focusing on is what
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they're focusing on is what they're saying is a new type of threat, which is of just mental young, usually blokes just spending way too much time, i would argue. >> online misfits. >> online misfits. >> i would say, i would say that that lockdown might have exacerbated this situation more than religion. that's my personal take. >> i don't know. online misfits. >> i don't know. online misfits. >> i don't know. online misfits. >> i think, is a lot of the people who are online, frankly. >> so i don't know whether you're going to catch up with those. yeah. but, you know, there's good and bad online misfits, isn't there? and i do think, you know, there is an extent there was an al—qaeda book. i agree that it's a training manual. i agree that's not enough right now to say what's what's involved in this. but at the same time, we don't in this country at least have a problem with extremist christianity or judaism or anything else. it's largely there is something here that. >> you want to call out. >> you want to call out. >> i'm avoiding it. >> i'm avoiding it. >> i'm avoiding it. >> i'm your dude. i'm not like, all right, you know, and. >> they are. >> they are. >> 35% of terror attacks. >> 35% of terror attacks. >> so sure, let's put that
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aside. let's put that aside for one second. i think what's unquestionable is that prevent did their job was to prevent. that's what they're called. they're not called carry on. you know, although this is a bit like carry on prevent. they had every clue going and they didn't do the thing they should have done. there was an inquiry in 2019, but it did what most british inquiries do, which is it's too it doesn't have the, the will or the, the rules to go far enough and properly cover all these types of eventualities. so and largely they were looking at far right extremist extremism. so which once again isn't what this, you know, is umbrella by. >> and i agree. >> and i agree. >> very much. >> very much. >> with, with paul's point that this is something that they do to deflect onto, hey, it's let's go social media. there's toxic social media out there. these people, if you are interested in murder and the grim things of life, you'll find it whether a social media company has it or not. if you don't mind kerry just talking us through the i papen just talking us through the i paper. and this is what their plan of action is. >> well, we're not going to
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we're going to leave out the fact that prince william is working up a sweat to fight homelessness. and there's a picture of him with boxing gloves that looks like he's punching homeless people. >> two sections of the show we're focusing on. >> are you really drive
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