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tv   Headliners  GB News  April 9, 2024 2:00am-3:01am BST

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unharmed. shopping. the baby is unharmed. police want to speak to police say they want to speak to any taxi drivers who may have dnven any taxi drivers who may have driven suspect to bradford driven the suspect to bradford moor park, and they're warning the public to approach him, the public not to approach him, but to call 999. but instead to call 999. assistant chief constable damian miller spoke to news teams earlier today. earlier on today. >> there are significant resources conducting cctv and house to house enquiries and we also have local bradford officers carrying out increased patrols in the area, which i hope will be of some reassurance to residents. >> meanwhile, the killers of 23 year old footballer cody fisher have been jailed for life with minimum to serve of 26 and minimum terms to serve of 26 and 25 years. the semi—professional footballer was stabbed and killed during a fight on the dance floor of a birmingham nightclub on boxing day in 2022, a jury at birmingham crown court found 23 year old remi gordon and 22 year old cammy carpenter guilty of his murder. cody fisher's mum tracy said you never expect your child to be murdered .
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murdered. >> the sentence passed is somewhat a blessing that they are no longer on our streets and hopefully go somewhat to try and eradicate this awful epidemic thatis eradicate this awful epidemic that is ruining so many lives. sadly, not all have been brought to account yet, but they know who they are for us as a family, cody will still not come home and we will forever live in the shadow of his senseless murder. >> cody fisher's mum. now millions turn their eyes skyward tonight as a total eclipse of the sun passed over north america. it's an extremely rare event, and areas of mexico and the united states at various points, were plunged into darkness as the moon passed in front of the sun, leaving crowds in awe of the phenomena. many parts of the uk were also hoping to see that, although for us it's a partial eclipse, but we understand cloud left many understand heavy cloud left many keen disappointed. keen spectators disappointed. for the latest stories, sign up to gb news alerts. scan the qr code on the screen right now or
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go to gb news. com slash alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners. >> your first look at tuesday's newspapers. i am simon evans . newspapers. i am simon evans. joining me tonight are the comedic duo who know that the first rule of fight club is to put photographic evidence on it. on twitter, stroke exits josh howie and louis schaefer, and we have an image of them here, courtesy of twitter account proper memes. let's have a look at that. there they are, ladies and gentlemen. that's a live footage from an earlier conference altercation. >> yeah, people think that we don't like each other. josh. yeah, and they also just stopped how. >> now. >> just over there. that's what we have to say. >> i'm a little disappointed that brad pitt appeared in that
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photograph without my face transposed photograph without my face trans know that would have >> i know that that would have that have finished. that would have finished. >> have the kind >> it would have been the kind of if you're of proper memes. if you're watching maybe you can watching tonight, maybe you can make iteration. yeah. >> then show that to your >> and then show that to your wife. >> first rule. so let's have a look the pages. look at the front pages. we kick off daily mail. off with the daily mail. they have record surge in £150,000 have a record surge in £150,000 council fat cats. not quite sure what that means. we'll hopefully find out shortly. the telegraph children must not be rushed to transition . take it in their own transition. take it in their own good time. guardian starmer told to resurrect sure start to help the poorest. the times labour set to close non—dom loophole . set to close non—dom loophole. thatis set to close non—dom loophole. that is actually a picture of the eclipse. they're not a non—dom loophole being closed and the express nhs must end long cruel journeys for cancer care. and finally, the daily star give us a little light relief. both give cows the right
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hump. well, those were your front pages. so let us take a look at some of those in more detail . josh, you have the guardian. >> yeah, quite a lot of news here. we've got a picture of a bunch of geeks watching the, the solar eclipse . there's news solar eclipse. there's news that, it's all a bit confusing in in gaza, but it seems like, some of israel's forces have pulled out of, around rafah and are pulling up to the north of the country in israel , so who the country in israel, so who knows what's going on there. and, but the big story for me, and this is actually because i used to work there, starmer told to resurrect. sure to help to resurrect. sure start to help poorest, start an poorest, sure. start was an organisation gordon organisation started by gordon brown, idea was to sort brown, and the idea was to sort of get to families early on whilst the children are still very young and babies and toddlers , and provide them that toddlers, and provide them that sort of holistic help that would carry them through. and we've seen the first results coming out that people who were part of
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that start programme when that short start programme when it that got gcse it started and that got gcse results year, results just like last year, three three higher . so three three grades higher. so who dan than people who hadn't had access. so it wasn't universally available at the time. universal. well time. it wasn't universal. well no they didn't catch no it wasn't. they didn't catch everyone. people everyone. so for the people and comparing like for like comparing it like like for like for sure start for when the sure start programme under the programme was finished under the tory government. so this was around 2000 was it. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> was early. so so >> it was early. yeah. so so okay, it shows. okay, so it shows. >> it's intervention >> it's an intervention educational or at home. >> it was like a one stop centre and they would send people out into homes . into homes. >> right. they would identify like, i mean, i worked there as like, i mean, i worked there as like a filing person. right. but you like a couple of you had like a couple of families so families who would dominate so much services, and much of the social services, and it a lot of this stuff it bought a lot of this stuff under under roof. right. under, under one roof. right. and like family under, under one roof. right. and would like family under, under one roof. right. and would like like family under, under one roof. right. and would like their family under, under one roof. right. and would like their kidsamily under, under one roof. right. and would like their kids would who would like their kids would get 13. and then 13 get pregnant at 13. and then 13 years you'd see the next years later, you'd see the next part of the file continue as they got pregnant again. >> broke that. >> and it broke that. >> and it broke that. >> and it brightened that point was it broke that cycle and it really a difference to really did make a difference to these lives.
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these people's lives. >> you think, >> well, what do you think, louis? >> well, what do you think, louyeah, or i'm not 100% sure >> yeah, or i'm not 100% sure about i know is about this. all i know is this is sure, start the labour was is if sure, start the labour was in until 2010 or something, right. yeah. and so they had they 12 years of they had at least 12 years of doing thing. where are doing this thing. where are those today. well they just those kids today. well they just got their results. got their gcse results. >> did better. >> they did a lot better. >> they did a lot better. >> but know what.7 because >> but you know what.7 because those who started as those kids who got started as every every time have one of every every time you have one of these called new these new it's called new projects start projects syndrome, you start a new the first people to new project. the first people to go totally go in there are totally enthusiastic. the first people who are going are working there like are totally like yourself, are totally enthusiastic, and then later on it just goes down the drain. >> well, it went down the drain because tories pulled the plug on it would would because >> it would have would because because some point all of because at some point all of these well , it's because at some point all of thes�*14 well , it's because at some point all of thes�*14 on well , it's because at some point all of thes�*14 on from fell , it's because at some point all of thes�*14 on from the, it's because at some point all of thes�*14 on from the end of now 14 years on from the end of the labour, be interested to the labour, i'd be interested to know what the numbers are. >> i'm saying year >> all i'm saying is 16 year olds, state gcse is 15 or 16 year olds, would to year olds, so they would have to be them be the very last of them if they'd taken now. but they'd just taken them now. but maybe have earlier results maybe they have earlier results i would be interested to see. >> i don't want to throw cold water over i will say there water over it. i will say there
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was more famous, enterprise of was a more famous, enterprise of a nature under bill a similar nature under bill clinton. they poured clinton. i think they poured like if not trillions like billions. if not trillions into it had ultimately like billions. if not trillions into disappointing ultimately like billions. if not trillions into disappointing ultimateand very disappointing results. and there mean , there does seem to be i mean, some people say this, if you're going to spend any money at all on state educational on state sector educational interventions, as early as interventions, do it as early as possible , especially in families possible, especially in families that are failing. but is that are failing. but there is also a tendency for it to peter out a little bit once they get through. >> you know, i'm with you. i don't know, i don't know the full story about this. if i had to money on it on all to put money on it based on all the projects in america where they where they first they did, where they the first people, you people, the peace corps, you know, millions these projects know, millions of these projects and they all at the end, they just they they into nought. >> because ultimately, unfortunate as we all unfortunate as it is, we all have a, i think, a built in disposition either to be in favour welfare or in favour favour of welfare or in favour of families taking responsibility own responsibility for their own kids . but there's probably some kids. but there's probably some cases presented cases that we can be presented to challenge us. >> but i'd like to i'd like to write. i'd like to see the number and i'll tell you something he mentioned something else. he mentioned something interesting about the palestinians. this is the
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biggest news well, we have biggest for news well, we have that on the we have that coming up on the telegraph i think as well maybe. >> no, no maybe not. no. okay >> no, no maybe not. no. okay >> and that's the thing. this is what's amazing about british newspapers. much non—news newspapers. how much non—news non—stories . non—stories are in this thing. the, the, the what's happened is , is israel is probably acting under pressure from the world. the world has turned on israel to , to get out. and now they're to, to get out. and now they're getting out, but they're just not telling anybody. we're getting out. >> you don't you don't know what's on. they're pulling what's going on. they're pulling up north. they've been up to the north. they've been they've fired by they've been fired upon by hezbollah few hezbollah over the last few months. they're months. so it could be they're building attack building up for a for an attack or retaliation. there don't or retaliation. there we don't know don't know what's know what. we don't know what's going there's very sad, going on. there's also very sad, very today, which is very sad news today, which is the turns out the hostages. it turns out there's but think about there's 130. but we think about they there's130. but we think about they about 30 have been they think about 30 have been killed. but out that killed. but it turns out that they 40 immediately of they wanted 40 immediately of they wanted 40 immediately of the who have basically the women who have basically been and been sexually assaulted and raped tunnels, it turns raped in these tunnels, it turns out actually they're out they actually have they're saying even have saying that they don't even have 40 to exchange. so if 40 left alive to exchange. so if that's true, that's obviously incredibly depressing.
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that's true, that's obviously increditwhyapressing. that's true, that's obviously increditwhy isn't sing. that's true, that's obviously increditwhy isn't israel keep on >> but why isn't israel keep on pounding forward? this is basically the war in gaza is over. >> oven >> well, you don't know that. you don't know that. >> we need we need to. >> we need we need to. >> it is we need to move on to the next newspaper. we have the times. you have that one, louis, is the times. >> good news. labour set to close down a non—dom loophole . close down a non—dom loophole. and so the tories. this is in the times and the tories were closing down the non—dom loopholes. non—doms are people like me who claim residence in other countries and hoard mass amounts of money here and lives off the largesse , the health off the largesse, the health care system. i just had some. >> they just basically tell everyone that they pay their tax elsewhere, you know, and everyone well, where exactly? >> and then there's and then they but truth is, is they don't. but the truth is, is that you start treating them that if you start treating them badly, find other badly, they will find many other places to go to. yeah. >> of course it's interesting. i mean, tories, people said they had clothes with had stolen labour's clothes with their stuff . so labour their non—dom stuff. so labour is trying to emphasise that there loopholes. there are still loopholes. >> there some still >> i guess there are some still some there. so that some loopholes there. so that
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should to to, pay should raise enough to to, pay for of the things they for some of the things that they want put through when, when want to put through when, when and if they shorten to government. start. government. well, sure. start. but things, dealing government. well, sure. start. but the things, dealing government. well, sure. start. but the nhs,gs, dealing government. well, sure. start. but the nhs, payingiealing government. well, sure. start. but the nhs, paying for, ng with the nhs, paying for, breakfast primary breakfast clubs for primary school children, so, but yes , school children, so, but yes, it's like any time labour says anything, then the tories go, oh, well, that's quite a good idea. we'll we'll do that. >> well, they've had that for a while. it's interesting that two new tory labour policies announced consecutive announced on two consecutive newspapers, and newspapers, one for the left and the they're the right, as if they're starting sort of warm up a starting to sort of warm up a little bit now towards possibly making promises little bit now towards possibly makseparating promises little bit now towards possibly makseparating sort promises and separating the sort of general from making general vibe from making a promise is not generally news. >> no, no, it's not generally news. and that's the thing . news. and that's the thing. >> it will be in an election yearin >> it will be in an election year in an election. >> but, you know, we're saying we might do this. the truth is what is news. news is over. what is news. news is wars over. war an election. war begins. there's an election. there's there's there's an earthquake. there's a there's a can. >> we have a look at the telegraph. josh, we have . telegraph. josh, we have. >> so what you were saying earlier, there's council staff earning more than £100,000 now
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at high. so obviously, at nine year high. so obviously, tories came in and there was this austerity and it was this whole austerity and it was going be cutting on going to be cutting down on all these and it seems to these wages. and now it seems to have back certainly have crept back, certainly amongst leaders amongst the council leaders who are earning some, some are now earning some, some proper big bucks. yeah, so and i think people feel, i mean, let's just make it clear i'm speaking from my own personal experience , from my own personal experience, but council taxes are is have gone up is brutal. >> yeah , it's high because >> yeah, it's high because council services have gone down. we're already in a very high tax regime, the highest for 70 years, depending on exactly how much you're earning and on. much you're earning and so on. and council comes and then council tax comes around the and really around the back and really wallops to be, wallops you. now, it used to be, i'm a much less i'm sure, a much less considerable sort of £210 a day or something that came through. >> and it's just like every month and it's like, and as you say, there is no sense that anything getting better. no, anything is getting better. no, the getting worse. the rubbish is getting worse. potholes, everything. with the council. the other big council. anyway, the other big story children must be story is children must not be rushed to transition. so is rushed to transition. so this is the is finally the cass report is finally coming out , the interim report coming out, the interim report came year or, and but
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came out last year or, and but this is pretty damning and definitive and really, actually says what, what the critics of gender ideology have been saying for a long time is that these are children with mental health problems and just rushing them into transitioning with, chemicals, with surgery is the wrong thing to do. a lot of them also have like they're neurodiverse or they've suffered from abuse. this is all self—evident. the evidence has been time, but been there for a long time, but finally out there. it's on finally it's out there. it's on the pages the the front pages of the newspapers. in government newspapers. it's in a government report. madness. report. and the madness. hopefully after hopefully will stop. and after so careers been so many careers have been finished for saying very simple things that now seem so very self—evident, i think that's fair. >> and louis, just to pull this off very quickly, 20s on the cows with the right hump , if you cows with the right hump, if you wouldn't mind. >> oh, this about cows. this >> oh, this is about cows. this is about camels providing milk. and boffin says that that and a boffin says that that camels are going to provide milk. they're already providing milk. they're already providing milk in the middle east to a lot of people. and the truth is, it's going to be for
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it's not going to be good for anything because cows do not . anything because cows do not. they they they burp methane. >> oh, this is the issue, is it? they think camels will be a less, less of a climate. right >> the truth is, the vegan vegans, whatever they are, they they hate humans messing with animals. and they're not going to be happy with cows kept on farms or camels. yeah, camels kept on farms. >> i slept, i took a camel trek across the desert in rajasthan about 30 years ago. the camels belched and farted their way through the night, as much as any could conceivably have any cow could conceivably have done. may have been, any cow could conceivably have done do may have been, any cow could conceivably have done do they may have been, any cow could conceivably have done do they taste?1y have been, how do they taste? >> do you know how taste? >> do you know how they taste? >> do you know how they taste? >> may have been less enriched? >> may have been less enriched? >> don't know that do >> i don't know that they do eat them, do they? >> got tongue. >> they've got a tongue. >> they've got a tongue. >> they taste. >> that's how they taste. >> that's how they taste. >> well, on that, wonderfully archaic note, that is it for the front coming we have front pages coming up. we have honour the rise, but in a honour on the rise, but not in a good ofcom finally good way. and ofcom are finally given opportunity to given an opportunity to exonerate
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and welcome back to headliners with me, simon evans. still with the top tier jews. josh howie and lewis schaefer. two and a half jews with the news tonight. so, josh, bad news for fans of chivalry in the daily mail as it seems honour is behind many of the very worst things that can happen modern britain . happen in modern britain. >> yeah, a number of honour based crimes being committed in britain, rape and britain, including rape and forced surges by more britain, including rape and force 60% surges by more britain, including rape and force 60% in surges by more britain, including rape and force 60% in two surges by more britain, including rape and force 60% in two years, by more britain, including rape and force 60% in two years, figuresa than 60% in two years, figures suggest, an and this is obviously we're talking about, japanese people. honour is deeply i wrote i read the entire article. >> i read it through twice in case i missed it. the first time. the words islam, muslim, islamic, anything of relation to that? not one mention of. yes. despite the fact that that's clearly what we're talking about here. and this is in the daily mail, which is not normally known for pussyfooting around sensitive issues. and yet, has it that this is to it been decided that this is to be treated as though it could conceivably transcend quasi religious cultural issues of
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this kind? >> yeah. i mean, you know, it's , >> yeah. i mean, you know, it's, it's very strange. yeah. it's gone up since 2016. 193. now they're saying it could be because more victims are coming forward, improved identification or even they're talking about court backlogs. one thing they're not mentioning is , my they're not mentioning is, my migration . migration. >> imran cody gakpo imran cody gakpo was a director at the family law company, told the newspaper that delays in family courts are part of the problem . courts are part of the problem. i don't think that's the problem. i think it's the people doing the raping and the killing that's the problem. >> possibly could the >> that possibly could be the case. yes >> what do you say about >> what what do you say about that, i mean, i don't want that, luis? i mean, i don't want it become an entire consensus necessarily. >> i would say no. and i would say i'm was say i'm not jewish. i'm was raised. both my parents were italian, and i became jewish for the sake of the comedy business. and took wrong turn. but and it took a wrong turn. but what this is what the bigger issue here is. should parents have control over their children? and that's the ultimate question . and the fact ultimate question. and the fact is, is that they've taken i
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mean, obviously we're at the point of murdering them. you know what my kids have been pretty and maybe they would pretty bad and maybe they would be behaved if they be better behaved if they thought that a parent could, could, could do that. we're talking about for, for talking about here for, for wearing t shirts, wearing western t shirts, wearing western t shirts, wearing t shirt. they wearing a short t shirt. they weren't i mean, up until a certain age , parents should have certain age, parents should have responsibility their. certain age, parents should have res|well,ility their. certain age, parents should have res|well, we're their. certain age, parents should have res|well, we're talking about >> well, we're talking about adults being killed by their parents. >> yeah. adults. and that's wrong. that's totally should be wrong. >> up to 18. you're allowed to kill your kid. >> not 18, maybe 16. 15. >> maybe not 18, maybe 16. 15. i don't know what you do for them, but an issue here. but we have an issue here. >> have a cultural issue of, >> we have a cultural issue of, of different ideas of you say as to family systems and imported into a western liberal democracy . and we are seeing people being murdered in this country. . and we are seeing people being murdered in this country . yeah. murdered in this country. yeah. that's wrong. that's an issue. and we should be able to talk about it without accusations of islamophobia or fear or hatred. we should be. >> but i think you're the wrong guy to talk about it, as i'm the
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wrong to talk about it. but wrong guy to talk about it. but the there are people the truth is, there are people here who believe in this, here who who believe in this, and i'm going to have to defend some it. whereas parents do some of it. whereas parents do not have control over their children. and obviously they came from a country where parents did have control and they're told here this is. >> but they didn't know. but what you're saying, like no honour happen in back honour killings happen in back in in the countries of in the in the countries of origin. point. origin. no, that's the point. it's imported problem. it's an imported problem. >> but they used to >> but they but they used to have honour killings in this country. >> they do have honour killings. what do you know? >> used to honour >> but they used to have honour killings among whatever killings among among whatever you who lived you call the people who lived here, native english the welsh. >> when are you talking about? >> when are you talking about? >> talking about like, >> i'm talking about like, like hundreds ago. right. hundreds of years ago. right. when. yeah. when. so. yeah. >> is have like >> so the issue is we have like when used to have, like, burn when we used to have, like, burn witches stuff. when we used to have, like, burn wit> you're talking about that. >> you're talking about that. >> you think the society, >> do you not think the society, the society has progressed? >> agree with that. agree >> i agree with that. i agree with that. >> right lewis, you >> all right lewis, thank you lewis you this story. lewis, i'll give you this story. >> is the worst >> donald, this is the worst show ever done. show i've ever done. >> think that may be we may be >> i think that may be we may be on for that, donald trump
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on track for that, donald trump revisiting the scene of one of his or notorious his most glorious or notorious outbursts from his first terms. this is in the telegraph. >> well, and that wasn't true ehhen >> well, and that wasn't true either. donald trump says says he is for all, for immigrants, so long as they come from nice countries . and this is, this is countries. and this is, this is this is one of those things. i can't believe it. this is what they say about donald trump to depower him. it's a it's possibly a lie. he said something like, there are countries which are a disaster. he's not saying the people are a disaster, but he's saying we shouldn't let people come in from countries that do not follow the rule of law , and they follow the rule of law, and they might not follow the rule of law here. and because that's no, that's not that's not a direct quote at all. it's but it says it says we talk about yemen, where they're blowing each other up the place where up all over the place where their out control. their country is out of control. that's a cultural thing in yemen. >> is a cultural well, no, >> it is a cultural well, no, they they've been at war for some time. >> i'm just. >> i'm just. >> well, but you are joking. >> well, no, but you are joking. but on the hand, we have
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but on the other hand, we have just talking about just been talking about a cultural thing which has created issues in this country. what cultural thing which has created isrthe in this country. what cultural thing which has created isrthe in thiscountry. what cultural thing which has created isrthe in this the 1try. what cultural thing which has created isrthe in this the nature what cultural thing which has created isrthe in this the nature of1at cultural thing which has created isrthe in this the nature of itt is the what is the nature of it in view? josh is he saying in your view? josh is he saying that we shouldn't regard immigration as a function of people escaping failed states in their home? or is he saying that we shouldn't regard immigration as being all like human capital is just interchangeable economic units? instead, we should be honest about the fact that human beings different . beings are different. >> yeah, i think the latter. but what he's specifically is what he's specifically saying is , is like he says, like, why can't get people from denmark can't we get people from denmark and switzerland, which i think his of nordic his family are sort of nordic scottish. yeah. why can't we have people like me coming over? the irony is, of course, people from denmark from switzerland, denmark probably want to go to probably don't want to go to america. they'd probably be like, is a. yeah, like, oh, that place is a. yeah, they used to. >> mean, that was a massive. >> i mean, that was a massive. oh yeah. in the oh yeah. back in the scandinavian, back in day. scandinavian, back in the day. third german and third only to german and english, but but now they'll probably like, we're pretty probably be like, we're pretty happy you. that's the >> thank you. so that's the thing about immigration. you want somewhere where your want to go somewhere where your life going better.
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life is going to be better. >> a slur on donald >> this is a slur on donald trump. trump, quote trump. donald trump, he is quote quoting quoting him . quoting him. it is quoting him. but it's not quoting him what he what he means. >> what do you think he means? then go on, paraphrase him. >> i think he means what josh says he means. yeah, but he was saying it. he did not that. saying it. he did not mean that. >> i think he >> i'll tell you what i think he means. think he means that means. i think he means that countries are downstream the countries are downstream of the human live in them human beings that live in them and build them and make their institutions and their laws and their cultures and their traditions. and if you if traditions. and that if you if you encourage the people who made the good countries to come and america and live in america, america will that. if will benefit from that. and if you people who live in you allow the people who live in the countries whose cultures and industries and institutions are manifestly , a case, then manifestly, a basket case, then your is likely to be your country is likely to be degraded by their presence. and i don't know whether people are confident or willing to state that they disagree with that in principle, or simply say that it's distasteful to say it out loud. yeah, i think most people in most countries in the world that attract any degree of immigration would say it was
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true . true. >> well, and what we're having now is countries like , now is countries in europe like, i think denmark, but also sweden, now having very sweden, who are now having very opposite conversations coming from left, originally from the left, who originally brought a lot of people brought over a lot of people going, these are people in need. we should help them. they came over and violent over then crime and violent crime and rape have gone up and now they're having these conversations going , okay, that conversations going, okay, that that an issue, whether that was an issue, whether we're whether to be having whether we're going to be having that conversation here. well, whether we're going to be having that c(areersation here. well, whether we're going to be having that c(are we tion here. well, whether we're going to be having that c(are we having e. well, whether we're going to be having that c(are we having it?vell, whether we're going to be having that c(are we having it? and where are we having it? and honesty or whether going to honesty or whether it's going to progress politicians and progress to our politicians and honesty on the left as well. that's whether the overton window to move in that window is going to move in that direction is the question isn't whether, saying downstream. >> he's saying upstream. he's saying people are flowing saying the people are flowing from this horrible country into our country. >> no, no, you misunderstand what i meant by downstream. but never mind, joe, guardian. now, albanians, can't live with them. can't live without them. we're on the same track here. yeah. >> albanians willing to be repatriated, detained for weeks in uk . watchdog. fine. so in the uk. watchdog. fine. so last year, there was this
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landmark , joined communique with landmark, joined communique with albania, basically we albania, where basically we could just instantly send them back because it's a safe country. yeah. and that actually had a massive impact. and they it dropped their percentage of the boats dropped way, way down, and so people the idea is that, that when they are caught, when they get off the boat here, they would be sent to a centre and said, look, you're going to be sent the is, they've sent back. the thing is, they've been for weeks in these been waiting for weeks in these centres to actually sent centres to actually be sent back. they kind back. so even though they kind of opted said, all right, of opted and said, all right, fine, early retirement or fine, like early retirement or voluntary redundancy. yeah, they so ages. so it's just it's taking ages. there's they're complaining there's also they're complaining that when they're on coach that when they're on a coach that when they're on a coach that have the toilet open that they have the toilet open or someone had a foot in the dooni or someone had a foot in the door. i think that's , you know, door. i think that's, you know, you want to go the toilet and you want to go to the toilet and privacy. don't actually have privacy. we don't actually have that here at news. no, that option here at gb news. no, we're other, other we're stuck with other, other states. always watching, states. lewis. always watching, but , but yes, states. lewis. always watching, but, but yes, you think that after all of this , you know, after all of this, you know, issues have been gone through and crossing all that stuff, they'd go, all right, let's get them out quickly. and can we
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have money? >> going to hurry you >> i'm just going to hurry you through on the last of through on the last couple of stories of section. but the stories of this section. but the ofcom investigating david ofcom are investigating david lamb's lewis, lamb's show. yeah. lewis, which is for is an opportunity for schadenfreude, i hope schadenfreude, which i hope you'll it's not schadenfreude. >> i don't see any. i don't see any. whatever that word means is, launches is, is ofcom launches investigation lamb's investigation into david lamb's lbc show over alleged rule breach, which is david lammy is a labour council, a labour mp , a labour council, a labour mp, mp and he's the shadow foreign secretary. it's hard to believe because david cameron is basically take over, taking over his thing , but basically take over, taking over his thing, but he's doing his entire thing, but he's doing on lbc what rees—mogg was doing with us is he was he had he had two jobs. he was a politician . two jobs. he was a politician. and supposedly according to ofcom, you're not supposed to do that. why is ofcom in everyone's face? this has this is not about schadenfreude. this is about ofcom wanting to remain relevant and being in power no matter who's in power they want to. well, actually, what it's about is there's hypocrisy that was exposed here because the, the,
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the supposed, violations that gb news had with jacob rees—mogg , news had with jacob rees—mogg, the other politicians have also been on other channels in this case david lammy. >> so when people complain because there are people out there trying down gb there trying to shut down gb news. imagining here that news. so i'm imagining here that no, but i'm imagining what happened here. is that a bunch of next time, david lammy of people next time, david lammy did similar, did something similar, complained and there was a couple thousand complaints couple of thousand complaints and 51 and there was only 51 complaints. reading about complaints. so i'm reading about 50 complaints. >> get for what i said >> did i get for what i said about covid anyway? >> point 151 well, you're >> the point 151 well, you're leading the well done, but, and that they went oh okay. yeah, fine. so it's just hypocrisy was pointed out to them. it's whether that rule was it is you guys are focused so much on like fairness everything. guys are focused so much on like fairness shoulderything. guys are focused so much on like fairness should there1g. guys are focused so much on like fairness should there be with so >> why should there be with so many stations and so many news outlets? should there be a outlets? why should there be a government team government agency part of team world watching over? >> well, we have agreed as gb news has agreed and we have agreed to abide by terms which allow defined as a news
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channel. >> why should we be forced in order us to be on the air, order for us to be on the air, which but we're not? >> be on the air and >> we could be on the air and brand ourselves as model brand ourselves as a model railway channel, also railway channel, which also reports. we be allowed reports. and would we be allowed to do? >> wouldn't be able to. >> wouldn't be able to. >> called a news channel, >> you're called a news channel, and idea of people want to and the idea of people want to watch in order to watch the channel in order to get unbiased version of the get an unbiased version of the news. it's fine. it's understood that the that lammy and rees—mogg and the likes dispense that lammy and rees—mogg and the likes can dispense that lammy and rees—mogg and the likes can hostispense that lammy and rees—mogg and the likes can host conversations comment, can host conversations and their own views, and can give their own views, but they're actually but when they're actually reporting rather than reporting the news rather than comment, they are supposed to step allow an either step back and allow an either reporting the news. you should probably attend one of the ofcom briefing and your briefing sessions and get your head around this one before we lose yet another one of our bloody guests. anyway, we're at the coming up, the the halfway point coming up, the foreign oils that foreign office oils that may soon be ebay and the catholic soon be on ebay and the catholic church come out against trans only genderism. the substantiation stuff is still real. we'll get the details in a couple of minutes. see
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and welcome back to headliners. so we have the son, louis. >> this is the son in the morning and the moon at night. yeah, you just go. >> that's fine. yeah. freud. >> that's fine. yeah. freud. >> is that what it is? fraudster behind blm statue. typekit. he wrote a link. >> he wrote a special link. >> he wrote a special link. >> oh, did i interrupt him? yeah >> oh, did i interrupt him? yeah >> no, was just. >> no, no, i was just. >> so busy talking the >> you're so busy talking the entire show. it's all your show. it's. this is a this is louis schaefer's world. i know you think it's not. it's my world. it's my. it's not my world. go on. i finished finish the joke. i'm sorry, i didn't. i wasn't paying i'm sorry, i didn't. i wasn't paying attention. really. i'm sitting there. >> do you want to do it? do it mate. >> no. what do you want? what do you want to do? >> blm statue. go on. >> blm statue. go on. >> okay, here we go. for once , i >> okay, here we go. for once, i said this is the worst show that i've ever done. >> well, got frauds. >> well, you've got frauds. >> well, you've got frauds. >> i've done worse. >> i know i've done worse. i haven't done worse. maybe i haven't. waiting you to haven't. i'm waiting for you to say louis. you're amazing say no. louis. you're amazing fraudster blm statue fraudster behind blm statue toppling. £70,000 donation
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toppling. used £70,000 donation toppling. used £70,000 donation to fund lifestyle is ordered to fund lifestyle but is ordered to fund lifestyle but is ordered to pay back £1. this is a 23 year old girl. woman. excuse me. her name is sarah saleem . and her name is sarah saleem. and she was involved in the thing that tore down the colston statue. and she stole £70,000. two takeaways and uber's and amazon's and they made. >> josh, do you want to have a crack at this? well yeah. >> oh well okay. she went to jail. yeah. you did right. okay. she's gone to jail for two and a half years. they basically said to that no money. so to her that she has no money. so they've you pay a they've said you pay back a pound it's really quite pound. it's really it's quite a heinous crime because it took from organisation. from this charity organisation. the has had the organisation has had to close at and, but close down since at and, but they're saying that in the future, as and when she earns more money then she may have to repay it, like being a student. i think she shouldn't have to repay it. i think the people who gave idiots, and gave that money were idiots, and they that money to be they deserve that money to be frittered away onto nothing. >> i mean, i of think it's >> i mean, i kind of think it's taught us all a valuable lesson and affordable and maybe a fairly affordable one. just is these one. just £70,000 is that these charities spring up and
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charities that spring up and parasite on, suddenly emergent like, society and social justice movements with no oversight. exactly. which are obviously expressing as much a kind of general tantrum towards, you know, cosmic injustice than they are actually addressing anything that you can see on the other side of the world. people are these children are hungry or whatever. yeah, exactly. you get bitten, you get burnt. >> i'm sure it should be >> i'm not sure it should be criminal. think be criminal. i think it should be a civil case, you know, you know, like, well, pound, it like, well, for a pound, it probably is virtually, isn't it? why government, why why does the government, why does why does the does the state, why does the government doesn't government so that she doesn't get stake. yeah. get burnt at the stake. yeah. well, burnt at the well, let it get burnt at the stake by, by monopoly of violence. >> it's fairly basic principle. >> it's fairly basic principle. >> else . >> something else. >> something else. >> okay. over to the telegraph now, josh. and they clearly aren't what they were happily repeating this kind of mealy mouthed libel against the glories of empire. i'm referring to the telegraph . yeah. what? to the telegraph. yeah. what? >> they were yeah, >> they were very good. yeah, foreign office be less foreign office should be less elitist fewer colonial era elitist with fewer colonial era pictures. is from the
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pictures. this is from the authors, lord sedwill. he ran the civil service under theresa may and moazzam malik, who was a former foreign office director general. and get very general. and i get very frustrated kind of frustrated with these kind of reports beyond just the content of them. and we had something in the yesterday. basically, the news yesterday. basically, when they're when people leave, then they're like, you know what? they should do it all differently and they should not do this they should not do this and they should not do this and they should do. like, but should not do. it's like, but when actually there, when you actually work there, you any of it. you didn't do any of it. >> you think you could have >> it's you think you could have attacked the woman with attacked it like the woman with the with the painting, the battle for painting. he should have a stanley knife. >> well, just well, >> well, just like well, at least were the building least they were in the building at time or whatever, but at the time or whatever, but i mean, the is, they were in mean, the point is, they were in a position to actually do something it. but that something about it. but now that they've, they've got, they've gone got their gone and they've got their retirement, should retirement, they should do. >> accepted it. >> you've sort of accepted it. you've deleted the, the argument. >> oh, i don't know they >> oh, i don't know if they should anything. should actually do anything. no. >> mean, a rather >> but i mean, there's a rather lovely of the foreign lovely picture of the foreign office, room in the foreign office, a room in the foreign office. foreign office. the foreign office is a large building. i suspect most of who work there of the people who work there working offices, of the people who work there woriit's offices, of the people who work there woriit's obviously offices, but it's obviously got a nice couple of rooms. it
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couple of reception rooms. it looked the garrick or looked a bit like the garrick or something, know what something, you know what i mean? just leather sofas and just big red leather sofas and a bloke with a big peacock feather hat. know, think that sort hat. you know, i think that sort of is all right, isn't it? of thing is all right, isn't it? an it's bit history. >> want modernise all >> they want to modernise all like we've got is like this is what we've got is our that's like one of our history. that's like one of our history. that's like one of our bits. exactly. our best bits. exactly. >> would sell tickets to >> i would say sell tickets to it. that would be the thing to do. they have guided tours, maybe move the actual work to milton all, milton keynes like they're all, you suggested. you know, been suggested. yeah. >> mean, maybe upgrade >> i mean, maybe, maybe upgrade from windows 95. >> feel about >> how do you feel about colonial history, louis? >> were you >> oh, i'm sorry, were you speaking me? i i speaking to me? yeah i think, i think another example of think this is another example of people wanting to people coming in and wanting to destroy britain. and this is a team world story. want they team world story. they want they want to spend money, their want to spend our money, their money, country's money, this country's money tackling climate change and reparations people don't reparations for people who don't deserve and all that other deserve it. and all that other stuff. and the is, is that stuff. and the fact is, is that it it's just one more knife into the heart . the heart. >> the chap i saw, lord sedwill, whose photograph was on the piece , he looked pretty like, piece, he looked pretty like, lordy, yeah, pretty old fashioned aristocrat, foreign
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office kind of chap. he had the teeth and everything, you know what? i don't think he's come into this country. i think he's grown out of like a turnip. grown out of it like a turnip. but, i very much doubt but, anyway, i very much doubt anything will be more anything will be done, more outrage the daily mail. they outrage at the daily mail. they have discovered the pill have discovered the red pill analysis sexual relations . analysis of sexual relations. shapps louis. >> yeah, well, they did, they did? yeah. outrage over controversial female female privilege, quote unquote, female privilege, quote unquote, female privilege list drawn up by men's rights activists. and this is, and this was there was a tiktok. they had this list which lists all these different things that show much better it is to be show how much better it is to be a it it is a woman. and it said it is better convincing , isn't better to be convincing, isn't it? it is very convincing. the problem is, you're telling a woman this who believes women, women this, who don't believe that it's good to be well, no woman found it on reddit . woman found it on reddit. >> i don't know that it was. it wasn't like being introduced into a female room. into a female chat room. >> it wasn't. found it. but >> it wasn't. she found it. but okay, a woman should hear okay, so a woman should not hear this. be discussing this. we shouldn't be discussing this. we shouldn't be discussing this. if you say what this. because if you say what you if say women have you if you say that women have certain privileges, not all the
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privileges. they're not. they're not going to like it. >> what do you think, josh? do you think it's a i mean, obviously it's a it's intended to counterbalance some of the other arguments rather than. >> yeah, she she kind of refutes it. of are kind it. and a lot of them are kind of ridiculous. yeah. one of of ridiculous. yeah. but one of them really number them is really funny. number eight i can look at eight is it says i can look at children for more than three seconds with no fear of being labelled paedophile. labelled a paedophile. yeah, that's like that's true. >> know whether it's >> and i don't know whether it's a privilege female a male privilege or a female privilege to led privilege that has to led virtually the entire faculty, for want of a better word, staff in like junior schools, infant schools , schools for under 11 schools, schools for under 11 seconds are all women. >> primary well, seconds are all women. >> primary well , there are some. >> primary well, there are some. >> primary well, there are some. >> and they weren't. when i was a kid, there were men teaching us. >> us. >> we've had some male teachers at our school, but i just think it's funny that someone cared enough to write up. i just enough to write that up. i just really at kids and really miss looking at kids and it's so unfair that. >> does the what >> but how? what does the what does woman say? who was does the woman say? who was answering woman? answering this? this cc woman? >> said, a pedo. >> she said, you're a pedo. >> she said, you're a pedo. >> she said, you're a pedo. >> she says. she says, why would you to at a child?
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you want to look at a child? yeah, as if children are horrible. here's woman. horrible. here's a woman. >> park? just >> why are you in the park? just staring whimsically? staring at kids whimsically? >> guy needs. >> oh, that guy needs. >> oh, that guy needs. >> needs to get a dog. >> he just needs to get a dog. just a golden retriever. you just get a golden retriever. you get speak to loads. get to speak to loads. >> but there 22. was >> but there is also 22. was many now higher many places now higher preferentially exclusively preferentially or exclusively women . and she says that's not women. and she says that's not true. can't discriminate true. you can't discriminate based gender in our industry based on gender in our industry we do see, comics hired because of their gender, solely because of their gender, solely because of their gender, solely because of their gender. >> my agent certainly says that he gets inquiries along those lines. we want. so we need a female actress. and this this, i would also say, though, it's more historical analysis of society, it? because they society, isn't it? because they are. he is he is refuting the idea of the patriarchy being this kind of thing, which, you know, despite our best attempts to underpin society. and he says, historically says, well, historically speaking, only men were conscripted and forced to go to war. know, millions of men war. you know, millions of men died sometimes died in war. yes. sometimes women you know, the brunt of women get you know, the brunt of that because they're left to bnng that because they're left to bring children it's no bring up children alone. it's no fun still, the men fun either. but still, the men are 96% workplace are dying. 96% of workplace deaths occur
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deaths and fatalities occur among men. almost always, the children are given to the woman in a divorce. almost always, she gets a very beneficial financial settlement. all that kind of stuff. those fairly big, meaty stuff, you know? yeah. but she's not tweaking little kind of, oh, women, you know, always get served first on the, you know, on aeroplane or whatever. on the aeroplane or whatever. it's fairly big structural stuff. >> she @ she sort of counter >> but she does sort of counter some of those points says, some of those points and says, well, no conscription well, there's no conscription nowadays. like this is an american society and women usually the primary carers, usually are the primary carers, which they might get. so which is why they might get. so there are she does provide, to be some counter points be fair, some counter points for, the saddest thing for, i think, the saddest thing about woman best about being a woman or the best thing about a woman, i thing about being a woman, i should is that you can sort should say, is that you can sort of lie and look at of lie in bed and look at lewis's calendar and touch a and by probably literally by lewis probably literally dozens out there right dozens of them out there right now that. now doing exactly that. >> the daily mail also have outrage at the vatican. josh, as the pope discovers an inch of backbone his dotage . backbone in his dotage. >> yeah, vatican slams sex changes and gender ideology for hurting a person's unique dignity in rare pope francis
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boost boost to conservatives. it's a it's interesting phrasing, this unique dignity. i can't i don't really understand how it fits in with theology, but as we have seen, catholicism sort of bending over backwards, adapting to the modern world, that's not necessarily wrong with that, but to take a stand in this matter, i think, is very important. yeah. and, and there is and there are women, and is men and there are women, and we should be able to say that and that extends to religion. >> i think he's also saying, and this is what i thought was quite interesting, just as you say in terms that there terms of theology, that there was a danger that anyone who felt could, change felt that they could, change their sex, they were essentially playing god. i mean, he doesn't say playing that you, say playing god, but that you, that yourself in that you interpose yourself in a, in a sort of, in a role that only god has , you know, has the only god has, you know, has the right to which is another way of saying being born in the wrong body. >> yeah. or, you know, that that seems to be part it, and that seems to be part of it, and that the, the ego also not the, the ego and also it's not by it's so much by coincidence that it's so much of like a youth
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of this is like a youth movement. yeah, fad movement. yeah, a youth fad where your ego is out of control and do you're the and you do think you're the centre the universe. centre of the universe. >> i think there's some truth to that. what do think, louis? that. what do you think, louis? >> okay, well, the >> i agree, okay, well, just the final to final section to go. >> now. about the >> now. we talk about the marital of booze, the marital benefits of booze, the decline manners, and decline of table manners, and the power of touch. it the healing power of touch. it sounds like a
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and welcome back to headliners. so we have the daily mail . now, so we have the daily mail. now, josh, with a story. i distinctly recall the daily mash carrying seven years ago. >> did they really? okay, here's to us. couples who drink together, live longer and have better marriages . research better marriages. research suggests. so they, examined a question . 4500 married or question. 4500 married or cohabiting couples over two years. oh, and yeah, it turns out that if you drink together, you get on better, which and you live longer, and you, and you get and you have better
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marriages. and if one person doesn't drink and one person doesn't drink and one person does drink, that doesn't it doesn't work. and if both of you don't drink, then that doesn't work either. so you basically got to both be drunk. >> i think there i mean, >> i think there is. i mean, it's interesting they didn't have a huge amount of statistical on just statistical detail on this, just a louis, do you a general trend. louis, do you have kind of experience? have any kind of experience? what appropriate level? >> yeah, n level? >> yeah, i don't know what >> yeah, well, i don't know what the level but the appropriate level is, but i see couples and i envy see boozy couples and i envy them. and the reason the reason they're together is they're happy together is because matter much they because no matter how much they fight each other, they fight and hate each other, they go home and drunk and go home and they're drunk and they have sex and everything's okay sex. they have sex and everything's okayi sex. they have sex and everything's okayi think sex. they have sex and everything's okayi think the sex. they have sex and everything's okayi think the marriage and i think 90% of the marriage is sex. when you is just having sex. when you don't have sex with don't want to have sex with somebody, does somebody, and alcohol does that and does it. it makes and alcohol does it. it makes people more attractive. it people look more attractive. it loosens loosens up, loosens up. it loosens up, loosens up. it loosens up, loosens for their loosens up the woman for their loser or loosens up loser husband, or it loosens up the loosens up the man for the man loosens up the man for his who's belligerent his wife, who's been belligerent and belittling him. >> is that why your wife left you? you think she wasn't drunk enough? >> do want to know >> do you want to know something? had stopped something? she had stopped drinking met me. yeah, something? she had stopped drcould met me. yeah, something? she had stopped drcould be. met me. yeah, something? she had stopped drcould be. that'smet me. yeah, something? she had stopped drcould be. that's what1e. yeah, something? she had stopped drcould be. that's what it. yeah, something? she had stopped drcould be. that's what it is.eah, it could be. that's what it is. it be it. i would, yeah, it could be it. i would, yeah, we solved it. that's a.
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>> what about rose? does she dnnk? >> rose? who is that? is that, is that i would i should go out with it . with it. >> drug girl i don't well, i imagine that they're out there. they're plenty people there. there is a. >> don't mention my personal life. josh please, i apologise. >> there is a famous rose . it >> there is a famous rose. it was a famous hockey stick graph which demonstrates that drinking a little has all kinds of health benefits. people live a lot. >> that's a film, right? >> that's a film, right? >> but it's just. yeah. what were they just top themselves up? yeah, but it's almost impossible to stay there. that's the trick to have a drink a day is better than not having one. right. but it's so hard just to stay there. >> what about. yeah. leaving. was it leaving las vegas or something? las vegas. >> talking the >> you're talking about the danish right? danish one, right? no. >> yeah. film. i'm >> yeah. that film. but i'm thinking another film now. thinking about another film now. the cage where the one with nicolas cage where he drinks death. he gets drinks himself to death. that you should do that should be. you should do that, louis. yeah. >> here's the point. i think we don't what relationship don't know what the relationship between alcohol is to long marriages. think the
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marriages. and i don't think the story tells it. louis. >> the, another small step for man here and another catastrophic decline for mankind. this is in the mail. >> this is the mail. gen z are ditching traditional table manners because they're irrelevant. and it means elbows back on the table. and this is a study that was done for a restaurant. i'm not going to mention the name pizza express. and it's not pizza express. it's not pizza express. but why should we give the company good for why should give them for you? why should we give them the it says that the the thing? but it says that the young kids, they're leaning on the on the table, they're they're on their phones the thing their phones during. the thing is ditching any is not that they're ditching any any restaurant thing. it's just any restaurant thing. it's just a generational thing. they never had it. but but surprisingly, here's the thing. point. here's the thing. one point. could i make one point? it says it says that even though they say they're ditching it, most of them still follow it . it says them still follow it. it says that 46, like 54% say you that like 46, like 54% say you shouldn't take a call at the table while you're eating. oh, right. >> okay. >> okay. >> almost half of them over half i >> amazing. yeah. over to the guardian now. josh, it sounds
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like they're beginning to realise their standoffish ways may be doing more harm than may be doing them more harm than good. yeah. >> can reduce pain, >> touch can reduce pain, depression , anxiety, say depression, anxiety, say researchers. the interesting thing it's not just human thing is, it's not just human touch like robots even touching. so it could be in the future when we're cloned and we're raised by these kind of automatons, that that will be enough to give us emotional well—being. i don't a little bit of haptic vibration at the possibly . possibly. but, it is possibly. possibly. but, it is interesting that it doesn't have to be necessarily human, just. but it's one of the senses that's like the least explored. and and supposedly has this, like, huge impact on, on our well—being. we don't really discuss it. well, you know, the story about the monkey and the milk and the rag, right? >> fur, the monkey would >> the fur, the monkey would rather on the fur, than , rather hold on to the fur, than, than than hold on to the machine. the metal machine that gives it the milk. no, no no no. this. yeah. they did a behaviourist experiment where they have a monkey and it's, it's got like a, a fake monkey
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mother. that's got milk and his fur, and the baby is happy. but if it's if those two elements are separated, one is giving it milk and the other is just furry, it will stay with the furry, it will stay with the furry one all the time. and when it's really thirsty, it will kind lean over and try and kind of lean over and try and get some milk, right? >> so once it wants to shave myself, wants the of myself, it wants the best of both is one of both worlds. this is one of those non—story stories. it's like it just like non story. it just says basically want be basically people want to be touched them. touched by people who love them. if to be touched if they don't want to be touched by watch this, watch this . by watch this, watch this. >> i don't want you to touch me. suddenly, less exactly . suddenly, less exactly. >> exactly. but i thought you wanted to be touched according to this. this we just have. >> one now. don't touch >> one minute now. don't touch me. just minute where we can me. just one minute where we can get next one. the get through this next one. the antinatalist the antinatalist story in the guardian. another reason guardian. another sound reason not children and instead not to have children and instead adopt cats from uzbekistan. yeah, is this is another story. >> this is if you know, no kidding. sherlock. pregnancy may speed up by biological ageing. study finds . it says that every
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study finds. it says that every time somebody has a child. this is a study that was done in the philippines . philippines. >> just let me touch your face. >> just let me touch your face. >> i know people people, okay? that that that mothers age when they have children in the philippines , in the philippines philippines, in the philippines when you left there. right. and that men and that men don't age. >> yeah. that's pretty pretty much the article. >> they ain't by about like two months or something. >> they ain't by about like two mo 2hs or something. >> they ain't by about like two mo 2 or or something. >> they ain't by about like two mo 2 or 3' something. >> they ain't by about like two mo 2 or 3 months. ng. >> they ain't by about like two mo 2 or 3 months. it's like, >> 2 or 3 months. it's like, yeah, right. compared to yeah, trivial right. compared to what children is to what having children is going to do to you. how the rest of your life, how many kids you have. >> to women, not to women. >> not to women, not to women. it's not trivial do you feel it's not trivial to. do you feel like guardian wants people like the guardian wants people to stop having well, as to stop having kids? well, as i called it, death of love. yeah, that's to whole that's the answer to the whole thing. it. thing. they don't want it. >> oh, well, the show is nearly oven >> oh, well, the show is nearly over. another quick over. let's take another quick look front pages. look at tuesday's front pages. the record surge in the daily mail record surge in £150,000 council fat cats. that's it's talking that's salary it's talking about. telegraph about. i think telegraph children must not be rushed to transition . in the guardian, transition. in the guardian, starmer told to resurrect sure start to help the poorest the
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times labour set to close non—dom loopholes . the express non—dom loopholes. the express have nhs must end long cruel journeys for cancer care and finally, the daily star boss give cows the right hump. look forward to milking camels. those were your front pages. that is all we have time for. thank you to my guest, josh howie and louis schaefer. we'll back louis schaefer. we'll be back tomorrow p.m. louis schaefer. we'll be back tomorrow pm. with leo tomorrow at 11 pm. with leo kearse damien slash . if kearse and damien slash. if you're watching at 5 am. stay tuned breakfast. otherwise tuned for breakfast. otherwise thank you. night. thank you. good night. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news. >> good evening. here's your latest gb news weather brought to you by the met office. most of us will see some heavy rain and some strong winds as we go through tonight into tomorrow, in with a relatively in association with a relatively deep pressure . now, deep area of low pressure. now, this feature has been named by meteor france because it's going to bring some impactful weather there. the uk, not so
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there. in the uk, it's not so stormy , but nonetheless there stormy, but nonetheless there will winds, will be some strong winds, particularly around coastal parts, also spell of heavy parts, and also a spell of heavy rain in across parts of rain feeding in across parts of northern england across northern england and across scotland. go through the scotland. as we go through the early of tuesday because early hours of tuesday because of and cloudy of the blustery, wet and cloudy weather, temperatures for many of us aren't going to drop much. most places holding up in the mid to high single figures, so a relatively start tomorrow relatively mild start tomorrow morning, but quite cloudy and morning, but quite a cloudy and a one and a windy start for a wet one and a windy start for most of the heaviest rain most of us. the heaviest rain will be across eastern parts of scotland. some scotland. could cause some problems, particularly on the roads. some heavy for roads. also some heavy rain for northern england. of northern england. but all of this gradually clear away this does gradually clear away towards with towards the northeast, with something a bit drier following in behind, but also a scattering of showers . now temperatures of showers. now temperatures will down several will be down several degrees compared highs of just compared to today. highs of just 13, perhaps even 14 celsius towards southeast . a chilly towards the southeast. a chilly but bright start for many of us on wednesday. however, the fine weather doesn't last. wet weather doesn't last. more wet weather doesn't last. more wet weather push its way weather is going to push its way in the west, and we're in from the west, and we're going to see strengthening going to see winds strengthening again could again and again. that rain could cause problems, cause some problems, particularly and particularly over southwest and
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parts of scotland. at the moment, like moment, thursday looks like a dner moment, thursday looks like a drier day for many of us, and that drier theme looks like it will continue into friday across the rain the south before more rain arrives north. arrives further north. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar for sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> it's 9 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight. >> stay at home. women's job is to stay at home. they only come out when there is a need . out when there is a need. >> some muslims back. hamas want shana >> some muslims back. hamas want sharia law and women to stay at home. devastating polling reveals the truth . reveals the truth. >> also, bear in mind all this is talking about 15 years ago when she wasn't an mp . when she wasn't an mp. >> don't listen to the establishment media. angela rayner's scandal is actually a big story and we have a big development at nine. also . we
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development at nine. also. we warn the police about this last week. why are they allowed to cause mayhem? plus the only party that says right, we're going to get to zero waiting lists in two years? he joins me . lists in two years? he joins me. is reform standing dodgy candidates or are they caving to in the left wing mafia by removing them? also, a gb news exclusive grooming gang. monsters are set for release. we speak to a brave survivor and you'll be shocked to learn how many ebikes explode every single day on my panel tonight. it's the one and only carol maloney. we've got journalist benjamin butterworth and political commentator suzanne evans. oh, and is this your worst nightmare 7 and is this your worst nightmare ? some of your older. >> there you go. there's the rest of it . rest of it. >> get ready. britain. here we
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go. the labour party is hoisted by its own petard . next. its own petard. next. >> just after 9:00. i'm polly middlehurst in the gp newsroom. and the top story tonight is that west yorkshire police have confirmed that a nationwide wide manhunt is now underway for the manhunt is now underway for the man wanted in connection with the murder of a woman in bradford, and they confirmed today the suspect is known to them. 25 year old habibul masoom is a bangladeshi national who came to britain on a student visa two years ago. police say he knew the victim, who was stabbed as she pushed her baby in a pram while out shopping. the baby is unharmed. police now want to speak to any taxi drivers who may have driven the suspect to bradford bradford moor park, and are warning the
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pubuc moor park, and are warning the public to not approach him, but instead to call 999 with any information . an assistant chief information. an assistant chief constable, damian miller, spoke to reporters this afternoon . to reporters this afternoon. >> there has since been no confirmed sightings of masoom. however i would like to thank again everyone who has been in touch. again everyone who has been in touch . we have had teams of touch. we have had teams of officers working through all the contacts that we've received and following up on all lines of inquiries, there is significant resources conducting cctv and house to house enquiries , and we house to house enquiries, and we also have local bradford officers carrying out increased patrols in the area, which i hope will be of some reassurance to residents. >> meanwhile, the metropolitan police has identified human remains found in a park in south london as those of 38 year old sarah mayhew. the discovery was made in new addington in croydon on tuesday the 2nd of april. a man and a woman have since been arrested on suspicion of murder. they remain in police custody
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and police say

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