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tv   Headliners  GB News  April 16, 2024 5:00am-6:01am BST

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gb news. >> in a moment. headliners but first, mps have tonight voted to reject multiple house of lords amendments to the government's flagship rwanda bill. >> eyes to the right. >> eyes to the right. >> 315. >> 315. >> the noes to the left, 250. >> the noes to the left, 250. >> so the ayes have it. the ayes have it. unlock >> that followed a debate in the house of commons tonight. mps dismissing all the changes the lords had raised a number of concerns, including age assessments, uk court jurisdiction and modern slavery concerns . but conservative mp concerns. but conservative mp sir william cash dubbed the proposed changes ridiculous. labour said the scheme was doomed to fail anyway. the bill will return to the lords tomorrow for further scrutiny . tomorrow for further scrutiny. now the prime minister is appealing to israel's leader to show restraint following iran's drone and missile attack . drone and missile attack. earlier, rishi sunak repeated the uk's support for israel but said he wanted to caution
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benjamin netanyahu about a further escalation of violence in the middle east. there was condemnation of iran's military offensive against israel from both sir keir starmer and rishi sunakin both sir keir starmer and rishi sunak in the commons today. >> our aim is to support stability and security because it is right for the region and because although the middle east is thousands of miles away, it has a direct effect on our security and prosperity. >> at home. there can be no doubt that the attack perpetrated by iranian forces this weekend has left the world a more dangerous place. it targeted innocent civilians with a clear intent to destabilise the region. it must be wholly condemned by all. >> sir keir starmer , now a >> sir keir starmer, now a judge, ordered prince harry to pay judge, ordered prince harry to pay 90% of home office legal costs today after losing a case over his personal security. the duke of sussex had argued the
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court should reduce the amount he was required to pay by more than half. he launched legal action against the home office for his police for cutting his police protection , after he stopped protection, after he stopped being full time member being a full time working member of he in of the royal family. he in maryland in the united states, the fbi has reportedly opened a criminal investigation into the baltimore bridge collapse. six people were killed when a cargo ship lost power, veered off course and hit the iconic bridge, causing it to buckle into the water below in a matter of seconds . the washington post of seconds. the washington post says the investigation will centre on whether or not the crew knew the vessel had serious problems with its systems before it left port, and meanwhile work to clear the wreck and restore traffic through the busiest shipping channel in the eastern united states is ongoing . now. united states is ongoing. now. here at home, you may have noficed here at home, you may have noticed it was a trifle windy today. well, count yourself lucky if you weren't in staffordshire, where a suspected tornado ripped through a sleepy
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village. roof tiles were blown off, windows were smashed by flying debris and cars damaged as gale force winds hit knutton near stoke on trent. windy two in parts of nottinghamshire today as well. it all happened early on this morning, affecting several properties , meaning several properties, meaning roads had to be cordoned off by staffordshire fire and rescue services as teams work to make the area safe. that's the news for the latest stories do sign up to gb news alerts. scan the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. common it's time now for headliners . for headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners >> i'm simon evans, taking you through tuesday's top stories with the help of my comedian panel with the help of my comedian panel. i'm joined tonight by tower of toxic masculinity, leo
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kearse and ed mansplainer extraordinaire nick dixon . extraordinaire nick dixon. >> so not much to choose between you there by the sound of it . you there by the sound of it. >> we're going to need some toxic masculinity soon though, because looking like because putin's looking like he's going to going to invade more in europe . more places in europe. >> that down to the >> and you put that down to the lack of masculinity . lack of toxic masculinity. >> some argue the >> well, some would argue the opposite. what caused it . opposite. that's what caused it. it's got to be met by equal and opposite toxic masculinity . opposite toxic masculinity. absolutely. suggesting the most toxic country will toxic masculine country will win. yeah, well, this is the old way it was fought out, wasn't it? i do way it was fought out, wasn't it.7 i do think it's about time we return to champions, basically doing battle one on one spears. you. one with spears. i nominate you. i'm saying for some time. i'm saying that for some time. anyway, let's have look at anyway, let's have a look at those front pages. i don't think putin has made it onto the front pages a while , actually pages for a while, actually thinking daily mail thinking about it. daily mail are with the are certainly gone with the toxic line now banned. trans women female sports . women from female sports. financial times, us and europe in frantic diplomacy to deter israel from striking back at
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iran. the telegraph wallace r no mention from gromit wallace west must stand up to iranian bullies i news britain and us tell netanyahu don't start a world war with iran revenge. metro no, this is an outrage. that's donald trump's criminal case. and finally, the daily star tv vicky the dog ate my passport. those were front pages . so let's those were front pages. so let's start with tuesday's metro. leo and recidivist jailbird donald trump . yes, this is donald trump. yes, this is donald trump's trial. well, one of his one of his trials has started today with jury selection. and he was in court. trump was in court. he spoke to journalists. he said this is political persecution like never before . persecution like never before. and he's got a point. he's being you know, this has been trumped up. no, no pun intended into ,
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up. no, no pun intended into, you know, it should be a misdemeanour. it's over. him paying misdemeanour. it's over. him paying off stormy daniels, who's a porn star that he, you know, had had sex with and then paid money to go away as politicians in america tend to do. well, that what is what they that is what that is what they say you pay a prostitute for. it's not the sex, it's the go away elle edwards. yeah. and it didn't in case. and it didn't work in this case. and it really if you're, if you're really does if you're, if you're famous. bill clinton famous. but bill clinton obviously paula. obviously did it with paula. paula a much worse paula jones got a much worse deal even paula jones got a much worse deal. even porn deal. she wasn't even a porn star. paid much more star. and he paid much more money. but trump's case, it's money. but in trump's case, it's being they're trying peg it being they're trying to peg it as finance. they're as campaign finance. they're saying campaign saying he breached campaign finance rules, which makes it a hush money, which makes it a felony because, you know, he was doing you know, while he was doing it. you know, while he was campaigning. but he could argue , campaigning. but he could argue, well, he will argue in court that he's just protecting his personal reputation and protecting to his personal reputation and prote and to his personal reputation and prote and edwards to his personal reputation and prote and edwards , to his personal reputation and prote and edwards , who his personal reputation and prote and edwards , who is wife. and john edwards, who is a democratic presidential candidate, did the exact same thing and, you know, wasn't charged with any with any felony. so yeah, it does seem that trump's been singled out and persecuted , you know, based
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and persecuted, you know, based on who he is rather than what he's done. it has been relentless, isn't it, nick? total outrage. yeah. it's outrageous. and the judge actually threatened trump with arrest if he doesn't show up every day for court. so he's calling this election interference because you're in peak season. you're peak election season. you're tying know, tying him up. you know, physically as as, you know, physically as well as, you know, financially. apparently financially. and also apparently there questionnaire there was a juror questionnaire from the judge that only asked people follow or people if they were follow or have an association with donald trump, ask about trump, but they didn't ask about biden. know, there's biden. so, you know, there's some about some scepticism on x today about whether a fair whether there will be a fair jury whether there will be a fair jury and, you know, he can appeal it later, but by the time he it'll already the he does, it'll already the election will be over. so it's all tying him up for the all about tying him up for the election few little election a few a few little extra things, was, extra things, trump was, i think, rightfully complaining that able to to that he won't be able to go to his son's graduation, which seems quite mean, and he's calling a scam and calling it a scam and a political which political witch hunt, which i have i agree with. and have to say, i agree with. and i mean, it's tying him up, as you say, physically, which or say, physically, which may or may a service that may not have been a service that stormy at one stormy herself provided at one point, it's point, we don't know. but it's sort tying up mentally as sort of tying him up mentally as well, it? even not just well, isn't it? even not just that he's able to attend the
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that he's not able to attend the election or election rallies or so on. i don't effort and don't know how much effort and time puts into them, whether don't know how much effort and tinhas puts into them, whether don't know how much effort and tin has other into them, whether don't know how much effort and tin has other people em, whether don't know how much effort and tin has other people doing 1ether don't know how much effort and tinhas other people doing his|er he has other people doing his speechwriting running speechwriting or running his campaign. it campaign. obviously it's not. it doesn't demonstrate a huge amount input, amount of intellectual input, but of thing but still, this sort of thing preys mind. but it's preys on your mind. but it's quite a lot of energy to go and do those big rallies. he's 77. yeah, been all day. yeah, it's been court all day. yeah. a way of taking yeah. it's just a way of taking him because their him out because they know their guy can't win legitimately, which sleepy 38% which is sleepy joe. 38% of voters be voters think is going to be dead by of his second turn. by the end of his second turn. yeah. and they're trying to winnow with attrition, winnow him down with attrition, you attrition you know, financial attrition because you know, financial attrition becausit costs, money. mean, it costs, costs money. even ones that trump uses. even the ones that trump uses. well, it lawfare. well, they call it lawfare. now that's that's got that's that's a word that's got to be chambers word of the year i would say. we'll see i would say. but we'll see whether out. even ella whether it comes out. even ella toone even ellen, ellen toone i say even ellen, ellen does that. anyway, does agree with that. anyway, moving on the telegraph, moving on to the telegraph, nick. ben wallace. nick. and we've got ben wallace. yeah. must stand up yeah. wallace west must stand up to bullies. this is to iranian bullies. and this is the a the telegraph quoting a different telegraph piece and calling so he calling it a front page. so he did. did a comment piece in did. he did a comment piece in the and quoted the telegraph and they've quoted from an from it. and it was an interesting piece. you know , he interesting piece. you know, he was to stand up was saying we need to stand up to bullies. the to bullies. we've taken the wrong with he says.
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wrong tack with iran, he says. we've them like a child we've ignored them like a child misbehaving restaurant, we've ignored them like a child misbeha\a|g restaurant, we've ignored them like a child misbeha\a tantrum,;taurant, we've ignored them like a child misbeha\a tantrum, thinking, throwing a tantrum, thinking, oh, away. yeah, oh, they'll go away. yeah, yeah, a a mixed metaphor a bit of a mixed metaphor because he then says they're a bully, from bully, which is different from the metaphor, says the child metaphor, but he says they're we have to they're a bully. we have to stand them and hit back stand up to them and hit back twice as hard. interestingly he also that also says in the piece that israel not stood israel hasn't not has not stood with says it also with ukraine. so he says it also has go both ways. he says we has to go both ways. he says we have stand firmly with have to stand firmly with israel, they've got cough israel, but they've got to cough up ukraine and get up for ukraine as well and get involved that. so that was involved with that. so that was it quite strong criticism, it was quite a strong criticism, quite rishi, quite different from rishi, who's that who's popped up saying that netanyahu show netanyahu needs to show restraint. wallace has restraint. yeah. so wallace has gone say what gone now he can say what he wants and taken different wants and he's taken a different angle who's probably angle from rishi, who's probably just cameron a just following cameron in a slightly know, less slightly more, you know, less bullish about israel realm. well, the consensus from most western does be western leaders does seem to be hang i hang on israel, because i do i mean, does to that mean, it does seem to me that iran did as much as they could get away with doing without necessarily, but they basically sent missiles knowing sent some, some missiles knowing that they would be intercepted, that they would be intercepted, that they would fall on empty desert, that it was a kind of like, we have to do something you can't just destroy our consulate expect
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consulate and, you know, expect to us and actually to us remain. and it actually revealed iran looks weak . i revealed that iran looks weak. i mean, they sent they sent a lot of drones. i think was 350 of drones. i think it was 350 drones missiles. but there drones and missiles. but there are shahed drones that fly are these shahed drones that fly really slowly. were easy really slowly. so they were easy targets countries around targets and countries around israel actually helped. you know, previously we would know, the previously we would have helped have maybe, you know, helped an invasion israel actually have maybe, you know, helped an invasiorshootrael actually have maybe, you know, helped an invasiorshoot down :tually have maybe, you know, helped an invasiorshoot down the lly have maybe, you know, helped an invasiorshoot down the drones. helped shoot down the drones. jordan shot down shot down these drones when they went over its airspace. so if israel fights back, know, sends missiles back, you know, sends missiles back, you know, sends missiles back, you know, people in jordan, in countries jordan, people in countries around us will be worried about these missiles over their these missiles flying over their head. sympathy. head. they'll lose sympathy. they'll on their they'll put pressure on their own to not support own governments to not support israel. it'd a bit israel. so i think it'd be a bit of a mistake for israel to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory by hitting back. and victory by by hitting back. and then i saw the other day, i don't know if this is connected that saudi arabia, think that saudi arabia, i think one of crown said out of the crown princes said out loud knowledge that iran was loud at knowledge that iran was trying destabilise trying to destabilise the normalisation of israel, which of has been of course, saudi has been involved in. i think the involved in. i think that's the first time anyone's actually officially put that on the record. but i mean, that's still what's stake. and we talked
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what's at stake. and we talked about october, about that a lot in october, that presumably what about that a lot in october, that intentionumably what about that a lot in october, that intention thatbly what about that a lot in october, that intention that seems|t about that a lot in october, that intention that seems to was the intention that seems to have been forgotten since, because it's just all about because it's just all been about raining on gaza. yeah. raining hell down on gaza. yeah. but iran is kind of but now that iran is kind of expanding the theatre bit, expanding the theatre a bit, people remember people are starting to remember what possibly the what it was. possibly the motivation the first motivation was in the first place. yeah. would you say, nick, yeah, nick, i don't know. yeah, yeah. no, generally with what no, i generally agree with what you said it very you said. enough said it very well. you can just give me well. yes. you can just give me an that would be fine. an emoji. that would be fine. what are the daily mail leading with daily mail have with leo. so the daily mail have no women female no ban. trans women from female sports . so transgender athletes sports. so transgender athletes should be banned from competing against women , the culture against women, the culture secretary secretary told the sporting yesterday sporting chiefs yesterday they've got a picture there of a before and after transition . no, before and after transition. no, that's donald trump and stormy daniels. i was thinking these transitions are getting good. i mean, we should have more of them. stormy daniels, she's them. but stormy daniels, she's you have the best you would have the best transition ever heard transition anyone's ever heard of, many people are of, wouldn't he. many people are saying the transition saying it's the total transition . so. yeah. so this is, lucy frazer said officials had a duty to give female athletes a sporting chance because male
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born rivals have an indisputable edge. and yet if you go through male puberty, you know, you get stronger bones, greater muscle strength. it's easier to parallel park outside the stadium . i mean, lucy frazer is stadium. i mean, lucy frazer is cropping a bit later cropping up again a bit later about the, the trans lobby and the nonsense and the ideology that's penetrating the nhs. it does like more are does feel like more people are breaking cover coming above breaking cover now. coming above the but they've taken the parapet, but they've taken them isn't it been them long enough. isn't it been at least a couple of years? we've known this. it's taken people a long time. and now there's sort of glory hunters. now they're coming. said now they're coming. you said we've supported city. now they're coming. you said we'vecoming supported city. now they're coming. you said we'vecoming through ad city. now they're coming. you said we'vecoming through now. city. now they're coming. you said we'vecoming through now. riding yeah coming through now. riding down wounded. down to bayonet the wounded. yeah financial fair play issue. but look, it's late than but look, it's better late than neven but look, it's better late than never. welcome aboard. never. so welcome aboard. really? well, those never. so welcome aboard. reathe well, those never. so welcome aboard. reathe pages. nell, those never. so welcome aboard. reathe pages. join those never. so welcome aboard. reathe pages. join us ose never. so welcome aboard. reathe pages. join us in; are the front pages. join us in are the front pages. join us in a couple of minutes for the second with home office second section with home office criminals. the hate second section with home office criminand the hate second section with home office criminand bbc the hate second section with home office criminand bbc make he hate second section with home office criminand bbc make yet1ate second section with home office criminand bbc make yet another crime and bbc make yet another lame apology over israel. we'll
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and welcome back to headliners. your first look at tuesday's newspapers with me. simon evans and comedians leo kearse and nick dixon. so, leo, the world's least popular travel agency, has added four new destinations to its roster. this is in the times , so the uk targets four countries for a rwanda deal. so this is i mean they're going to use these countries like they're trying rwanda is now a sort of genenc trying rwanda is now a sort of generic terms. yeah. so they're going to replicate the rwanda migrant deportation scheme, which by which i guess they mean is never going to nothing's going to happen. yeah. so and the countries they're looking at are armenia, ivory coast, are armenia, the ivory coast, costa and botswana. so costa rica and botswana. so quite a bag. there quite a quite a mixed bag. there this according leaked this is according to leaked documents list of african documents and a list of african countries, including cape verde, senegal, tanzania , togo, angola senegal, tanzania, togo, angola and sierra leone were also putting a reserve list that could be approached if other targets failed. but some countries in africa, just explicitly declined. they didn't . they didn't want it at all there. morocco, tunisia and namibia and the gambia.
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there. morocco, tunisia and namibia and the gambia . yeah. namibia and the gambia. yeah. and this comes as the rwanda bill is i think it's about to receive royal assent. i mean, i don't know too much about each of these individual countries. i think botswana is often held up as the greatest post—colonial success.i as the greatest post—colonial success. i think i think its economy and its political stability and so on have been struggled, apparently, with the providing sufficient accommodation , whereas costa accommodation, whereas costa rica considered good rica is considered a good candidate positive candidate due to its positive relationship the un. echr. relationship with the un. echr. so you listen here. they've so you can listen here. they've sort them all like a sort of listed them all like a choose fighter. yeah. choose your fighter. yeah. poverty ivory poverty country ivory coast would to problems cote would lead to problems with cote d'ivoire, would lead problems d'ivoire, would lead to problems with really yeah. with chelsea. really yeah. that's they get half their that's where they get half their players didier players from okay didier drogba from there. good point. another footballer i should got it, footballer i should have got it, and apparently would cause and apparently it would cause problems anglo—french problems with anglo—french relations. i found relations. one line i found mildly it said mildly amusing was it said they're things like, mildly amusing was it said they know, things like, mildly amusing was it said they know, they things like, mildly amusing was it said they know, they have ngs like, mildly amusing was it said they know, they have ng be ke, you know, they have to be signatories to the refugee convention have have convention and they have to have good refugees. but good treatment of refugees. but it have to have a good it says you have to have a good track record asylum decision track record on asylum decision making. we don't track record on asylum decision makiithat. we don't track record on asylum decision makiithat. they we don't track record on asylum decision makiithat. they just we don't track record on asylum decision makiithat. they just w
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quite like idea of the south quite like the idea of the south american for a couple american countries for a couple of reasons. first all, of reasons. first of all, they're definitely going they're definitely not going to paddle there, are paddle back from there, are they? know, they're they? you know, so they're they're there also is they're there and also there is a long people seeking a long history of people seeking amnesty in, in south america, you know, from, problematic you know, from, from problematic regimes. yeah. well, yeah. funnily enough, even even now germans are moving to paraguay because, you know, they can see what's happening in germany with, you know, the, the massive, of massive, insane levels of migration they've had, they've had they're they've had there. so they're they've done the past. done that in the past. nietzsche's set a nietzsche's sister set up a specific, explicitly anti—semitic there , and, anti—semitic commune there, and, and they all died of, like, malaria and stuff. they might steer clear of argentina. they didn't always go well for everyone, it? no. absolutely everyone, did it? no. absolutely still is i like the way still also is i like the way it's up because rwanda it's opening up because rwanda has a bit has proved to be a bit disappointing. but gone disappointing. but they've gone you we're just let's you know what? we're just let's let's this let's really double down on this and this can't be. i'm let's really double down on this and they'llhis can't be. i'm let's really double down on this and they'll findan't be. i'm let's really double down on this and they'll find one be. i'm let's really double down on this and they'll find one in. i'm let's really double down on this and they'll find one in due sure they'll find one in due course. guardian. nick and course. guardian. now nick and my concern with this story my main concern with this story is meaning of the word is the meaning of the word dozens. interesting. yeah. go ahead. dozens. interesting. yeah. go ahead . dozens of home office ahead. dozens of home office staff under criminal
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investigation . foi data shows. investigation. foi data shows. and you're you're saying that it's far more than a dozen. no, i'm saying it's two and a half dozen. and that's to me is not quite dozens. i don't know why, but i feel you need to have three. yeah yeah, yeah. yes. you're right. good point. so it's the akua who are the anti—corruption criminal investigation unit. and it turns out there were 16 allegations and there was a further 18 under investigation. there's already been two criminal convictions and these are for things like immigration crime, is immigration crime, which is quite in home quite bad if you're in the home office. i imagine and drug office. i imagine fraud and drug offences . and so i'm not quite offences. and so i'm not quite sure why the guardian's going with i think it's because with it. i think it's because they an attack on the they think it's an attack on the government. i see the home government. but i see the home office of welfare office as kind of the welfare scuppered all braverman scuppered all suella braverman plans. are off plans. so of course they are off drugging themselves that's plans. so of course they are off druggin how amselves that's plans. so of course they are off drugginhow inselves that's plans. so of course they are off drugginhow i read es that's plans. so of course they are off drugginhow i read it. that's plans. so of course they are off drugginhow i read it. was|at's exactly how i read it. i was shocked it was in the guardian and wondered whether was a, and i wondered whether it was a, you know, whether shot you know, whether they shot their in exactly what their own feet in exactly what you're this home you're saying. if this the home office department is not is office as a department is not is not chamber. yeah not a torture chamber. yeah well, the biggest corruption not a torture chamber. yeah welcivil biggest corruption not a torture chamber. yeah
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welcivil servicet corruption not a torture chamber. yeah welcivil servicet corru|fact the civil service is the fact that defy elected that they defy elected representatives. don't representatives. like we don't vote civil service. we vote for the civil service. we don't for those don't vote for those for those mandarins whitehall. but we don't vote for those for those mavoteins whitehall. but we don't vote for those for those mavoteins the lhitehall. but we don't vote for those for those mavoteins the mps1all. but we don't vote for those for those mavoteins the mps who but we don't vote for those for those mavoteins the mps who make; do vote for the mps who make rules like rwanda scheme and rules like the rwanda scheme and then the civil service turn around say they openly say around and say they openly say we're going to even if it we're not going to even if it gets we're to do gets passed, we're going to do everything can stymie everything we can to stymie it. and, obviously this and, you know, obviously this was yes, minister was the theme of yes, minister and prime minister. it's and yes, prime minister. so it's been for long time. been going on for a long time. but was interesting. i think, but it was interesting. i think, that a lot people thought that a lot of people thought when out, yes, minister that a lot of people thought when satire out, yes, minister that a lot of people thought when satire on ut, yes, minister that a lot of people thought when satire on the (es, minister that a lot of people thought when satire on the newviinister that a lot of people thought when satire on the new toryter was a satire on the new tory administration, which come administration, which had come in earlier, in a couple of years earlier, margaret thatcher. but apparently, according to the writers, book about it. writers, i read a book about it. it written under harold it was all written under harold wilson. a kind of wilson. so it was a kind of satire. so what i'm saying is it's not always the left wing civil service muffles the civil service that muffles the agenda of a government, a right wing government. actually wing government. it's actually they just muffle them, whatever. i mean, i don't know, what are they to do muffle they going to do to muffle laboun they going to do to muffle labour. they're labour. yeah. they both they're both ideologically both completely ideologically aligned. yeah. terrifying. we need checks and balances urgently . will they put through urgently. will they put through starmer's agenda or also defy starmer. quite interesting .
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starmer. quite interesting. yeah. we are going to find out. leo. looks the scottish leo. it looks like the scottish hate crime bill could be the liz truss legislation . possibly. truss of legislation. possibly. so humza yousaf, the snp leader and the first minister of scotland, faces a tory vote to repeal hate crime law, he's facing a vote at holyrood to repeal his disastrous hate crime laws amid warnings that a deluge of complaints is placing an intolerable, intolerable strain on police scotland. so there have been over 7000 complaints so far and some of them, only around 4% of have been, you know , taken up as serious and investigated by the, by the police , but that's still a lot police, but that's still a lot that's still 240. and they've included there's a 74 year old woman who posted on facebook that basically our neighbour had maliciously vexatiously complained . and, you know, she's complained. and, you know, she's had issues with her neighbour before. all the neighbours have apparently. the, the apparently. and, and, the, the police along and arrested police came along and arrested her, took her phone and all the rest of it. so it's an incredibly traumatic process for her. unfortunately, this motion
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to repeal the hate crime bill, is unlikely to pass because the tories were the only party to oppose the legislation during its passage. before and, you know, unfortunately, hate to shock you, but there aren't that many tories in scotland. there's about five of them, aren't there? yeah. i mean, i don't know going to happen , to know what's going to happen, to the the next election, the snp at the next election, but labour, snp, the they but the labour, snp, the they called snps as against snps. right. the scottish. yeah snp msps. yeah snp yeah. they were keen on this bill as well. this is, this was not an snp creation in the anas sarwar. >> the labour leader, he's also done his own anti—white speech. >> he's basically a copy of humza yousaf. but yeah, the problem with it, what thought problem with it, what i thought when this is the problem when i read this is the problem with tyranny is that you with anarcho tyranny is that you have have the resources, have to have the resources, don't so they're don't you? yeah. so they're trying a narco tyranny, trying to do a narco tyranny, but got enough but they haven't got enough resources to terrorise the population. and that's probably why soviet union why things like the soviet union collapsed. these collapsed. at some point these things so absurd they things become so absurd they just the only thing
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things become so absurd they jlwas the only thing things become so absurd they jlwas thinking the only thing things become so absurd they jlwas thinking the onlis:hing things become so absurd they jlwas thinking the onlis who i was thinking as well is who i mean, terrible for mean, it's terrible for them because a high case because it's a high profile case and they've never done anything good it. but also the good to counter it. but also the amount people reporting amount of people reporting these things, these things, who's reporting these pointless like, pointless hate crimes like, can you doing that you imagine ever doing that except but was except as a joke? but i was thinking, we to start doing thinking, we have to start doing it otherwise they'll thinking, we have to start doing it say, otherwise they'll thinking, we have to start doing it say, oh, therwise they'll thinking, we have to start doing it say, oh, there se they'll thinking, we have to start doing it say, oh, there are hey'll thinking, we have to start doing it say, oh, there are no 'll just say, oh, there are no crimes straight white crimes against straight white men or something. you what men or something. you know what i no one's i mean? because no one's reporting yeah, yeah. reporting them. yeah, yeah. people it's people in scotland know it's true. to build up the true. you've got to build up the stats. you've to keep stats. yeah, you've got to keep it good question whether it is a good question whether most these cases the most of these cases are just the initial surge enthusiasm initial surge of enthusiasm or indeed of indeed the initial surge of satire, just people satire, you know, just people cynically demonstrate satire, you know, just people cynicallyunworkableamonstrate satire, you know, just people cynicallyunworkable would rate that it's unworkable would be need see calm in need to see it calm down in a couple of weeks time. but that is principle which is not the principle on which i wish to be opposed. you wish this to be opposed. you know, morally abhorrent. know, it's morally abhorrent. it's it's workable . it's not that it's not workable. staying with telegraph and staying with the telegraph and the in lukewarm water the bbc are in lukewarm water over a clumsy nick robinson subjunctive . yeah. bbc's nick subjunctive. yeah. bbc's nick robinson. i should have been clearer over israel has murdered palestinian claims. so he was interviewing david cameron. i still can't can't call him lord.
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he's not my lord. and. and he was saying that he used a phrase israel has murdered tens of thousands of innocent palestinians. thousands of innocent palestinians . and obviously that palestinians. and obviously that is strange immediately, because it's really war word, is it's not really a war word, is it? no you say kill in it? murder? no you say kill in war, you don't really say murdered. it sounds murdered. so it sounds already a bit a sort bit biased. and he's he's a sort of apologise on x and said i should have been clear that i was expressing, not expressing my view, let alone of my own view, let alone that of the you wonder whose it the bbc. so you wonder whose it was i mean, wasn't was then? i mean, it wasn't anyone's now, i suppose some people pro—palestine people on the pro—palestine side would use a phrase like that. so you is it sort of you could argue, is it sort of the adversarial style of the bbc is known of course, the is known for? but of course, the problem when you've already problem is when you've already been be suspected of been known to be suspected of bias, refusing hamas bias, refusing to call hamas terrorists, so everyone terrorists, and so on. everyone is for the bbc to is now looking for the bbc to behave like this. and they've behave like this. and so they've walked that again. walked right into that again. although is bbc although a spokesman is bbc spokesman said that bbc spokesman has said that the bbc holds standards holds itself to high standards of and of impartial reporting and rejects we rejects the suggestion that we are against israel, but are biased against israel, but everyone thinks they are somehow. i think having somehow. yeah, i think having looked at the question, i, i'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt that he intended to
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make it a sort of, a hypothetical question . yeah. hypothetical question. yeah. well, he exactly. but but the way he said it didn't come across that way. if i, if i had if i was partial to the israeli cause, i would have found that unacceptable. and it echoes comments that have been made by other bbc journalists . you know, other bbc journalists. you know, one them referred to, you one of them referred to, you know, an interview said, oh, so the israeli army are happy to kill children , which is a very kill children, which is a very loaded way phrase that. and loaded way to phrase that. and also , i mean, this is repeated, also, i mean, this is repeated, you know, time and time again, the israel has killed tens of thousands of innocent palestinians and in reality, a huge swathe of those are hamas militants. and hamas used civilians as human shields. so it's difficult to kill them. really. the blood is on hamas's hands as much as israel. extraordinarily difficult. i mean, it's a you know, you could talk for an hour about whether or not the word murder is appropriate in war. a lot of people say, well, what know, people say, well, what you know, whole lives to trying dedicated their lives to trying to understand the legitimacy of taking another life under
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certain conditions. and i am not 100% clear. maybe i should find out whether they are technically at war, because it's not technically quite the same as two sovereign nations, is it, in that regard? so it's quite difficult to say, well, is this war? do you know what i mean? it's asymmetric war. but i it's an asymmetric war. but i mean, if israel doesn't wage war on no, basically on hamas, then no, no, basically we've precedent where we've set the precedent where hamas can just go into hamas can can just go into israel, kill whoever wants, israel, kill whoever it wants, go israel can't go back, and then israel can't attack them because some civilians i'm not denying civilians might. i'm not denying that. i'm not denying the legitimacy. category, legitimacy. just what category, because in the same way that the bbc got into trouble for refusing to say hamas are a terrorist organisation, well, if you say they're terrorist you say they're a terrorist organisation, then you can't be at because you can at war with them because you can only war with another only be at war with another sovereign right. and only be at war with another sovereigyou've right. and only be at war with another sovereigyou've essentiallyi only be at war with another sovereigyou've essentially said hamas, you've essentially said they're illegitimate because they're illegitimate because they're organisation they're a terrorist organisation . you see what i mean? it's very difficult. but still, robinson needs to be careful in your wheelhouse here, leo, and work shy scroungers the mail. shy scroungers are in the mail. i lot of them . you might i know a lot of them. you might be able to tell from the accent, but, calls for universal
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creditor to be. there are calls for credit to be for universal credit to be reformed as the number of those on long tum sick leave doubles in a decade, so this is, the resolution foundation think tank is revealed that, while unemployment has fallen sharply, the number of benefit claimants out of work due to ill health has surged from 1.2 million in 20 13 to 2.3 million last year. so basically, people have moved from being unemployed aid into into being on long term sick pay- into being on long term sick pay. and this is going to cost 86 billion a year by 2028, which is a huge amount of money, although funnily enough, less than if, if they hadn't moved to universal credit system, but this basically this system incentivises people to be sick to, you know, you get an extra up to, you know, you get an extra up to an extra five grand, if you're if you're on long terms sick as opposed to just unemployed. so, yeah, there's an i know people, people i went to school with the see the benefit system as a almost as a career
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to be gamed, to work out how you get the most out of it. that is tragic. you know, anyone of your age or even, you know, maybe i'm 58, you know? >> it is horrible when >> yeah, it is horrible when people start to see, you know, terrible incentives like that distorted incentives that reduce them from working. >> but i'm also very concerned that there are people there'll be people in their mid to late 50s who will just see an off ramp at this point just ramp at this point and just think, you know, having been off work a couple years under work for a couple of years under covid work for a couple of years under covm got work for a couple of years under covid got of the covid probably got a bit of the old long covid, you know, not i'm not feeling 100% just kind of just want to sort of, you know, see out their shift now really on sofa . and this is really on the sofa. and this is a significant part the a significant part of the workforce. we're talking workforce. i mean, we're talking about country that's probably workforce. i mean, we're talking about to country that's probably workforce. i mean, we're talking about to havery that's probably workforce. i mean, we're talking about to have to that's probably workforce. i mean, we're talking about to have to that's the)ably going to have to push the retirement at some retirement age back at some point. and the de facto age point. and yet the de facto age is maybe mid now, one thing is maybe mid 50s. now, one thing that's grimly amusing that that's grimly amusing is that a universal is the final universal credit is in the final stages being phased in, but stages of being phased in, but now has to be phased yeah, now has to be phased out. yeah, they've phased into 2013, they've been phased into 2013, but got to because but now it's got to go because it doesn't anymore. maybe
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it doesn't work anymore. maybe we javier milei . we could phase in javier milei. i vote for that. we're i would vote for that. we're halfway through after the break we have salman wants to return to his spawning ground, the race card. and now to play it and the drug law lottery. we'll
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and welcome back to headliners so arts news now, nick. and this will be devastating to donald trump. he has lost salman rushdie. yes. as big as fans say, salman rushdie unleashed donald trump will drive me back to britain. this is quite shocking. in his memoir, knife meditations after an attempted murder , he says that a return murder, he says that a return for the former us president scares him more than the attack that almost killed him. at least that's the way the times are phrasing, and that's not a direct quote, it seems. but there direct where he there are direct quotes where he talks about choosing between a post—brexit second post—brexit britain and a second trump presidency. he calls it choosing the lesser of two evils, one evil, meaning evils, but one evil, meaning britain family it. so
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britain has my family in it. so it's of the liberal mindset it's kind of the liberal mindset that's so extreme that, you know, doesn't matter what know, it doesn't matter what happens you still sort happens to you. you still sort of cyber liberal because you could course, that, could argue, of course, that, you liberalism allows you know, liberalism allows things like the attacks that happen. you argue, happen. now, you could argue, of course, government course, the british government protected years. protected him for ten years. maybe he kind of ties in the maybe he has kind of ties in the sort of neoliberal world. he maybe world and maybe in the bush world and clinton, know, maybe sort of clinton, you know, maybe sort of anti for reasons. anti trump for those reasons. but it did incredibly but it did seem incredibly strange, considering, but it did seem incredibly s mean, considering, but it did seem incredibly s mean, his considering, but it did seem incredibly smean, his glory considering, but it did seem incredibly s mean, his glory yearsidering, but it did seem incredibly s mean, his glory years when g, but it did seem incredibly s mean, his glory years when he i mean, his glory years when he was in the same set as martin amis and christopher hitchens andian amis and christopher hitchens and ian mcewan, they were all the young things the the bright young things of the london literary scene was london literary scene that was under thatcher's britain. i mean, whatever we maybe we were still in the eu or whatever it was at that point, it was called at that point, but it was called at that point, but it was definitely harder, right? more more brutal to more divisive, more brutal to community and so on. it was undergoing a more vicious neoliberal revolution than anything that's happened under, like, rishi sunak or is certainly going to happen under keir starmer or any of the communists that we've had. yeah, exactly. yeah. yeah. it shows
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the i mean, like nick was saying, shows the sort of saying, it shows the sort of insane ideology of left insane ideology of the left that, know, guy's been that, you know, this guy's been hunted you know, hunted by islamists. you know, since fatwa was was imposed since the fatwa was was imposed on and which, if anything, on him. and which, if anything, is one thing that britain does have a lot more of now, of course. yeah, maybe he doesn't want that, but he's want to say that, but he's saying post—brexit. yeah, saying it's post—brexit. yeah, i don't know if he's trying to like, attackers like, cosy up to his attackers to stop another attack, to try and stop another attack, because you could argue as well that isolationist that trump sort of isolationist policies likely to lead policies are less likely to lead to you know, to retribution, you know, than many there's many others. so there's different you could argue different ways you could argue it, i'm saying makes it, which i'm saying that makes the point again. yeah. but the same point again. yeah. but there's strange idea there's this, this strange idea that to much that trump's going to be much worse he's unleashed. worse when he's unleashed. i don't that don't believe this idea that trump love but don't trump i'd love it, but i don't believe this idea that trump's going unleashed his going to be unleashed in his second tum just to do what he wants. i think people like rushdie reason rushdie a bit. he's got reason to some to be paranoid about some things, not so about trump. to be paranoid about some thi|you not so about trump. to be paranoid about some thi|you ki'iow) about trump. to be paranoid about some thi|you know what, about trump. to be paranoid about some thi|you know what, though?rump. to be paranoid about some thi|you know what, though? trump? do you know what, though? trump? i is absolutely the i mean, he is absolutely the demographic found trump demographic that found trump a real shock, like a personal outrage, like niro outrage, an affront like de niro clearly did. you know, because they regarded themselves as being, you know, part of a the liberal elite is one way of
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talking about it. but actually they really thought they were like the figureheads of america . like the figureheads of america. everyone them. they were everyone loved them. they were what were proud what americans were proud of. and went, and sadly, americans went, no, we you bit annoying when we find you a bit annoying when we find you a bit annoying when we guy anyway. daily we want this guy anyway. daily mail leo, one of the least mail now leo, one of the least fruity scandals to engulf the grenadier guards . so suggesting grenadier guards. so suggesting someone playing the race card someone is playing the race card if they complain about how they've been treated at work is racist, an employment tribunal has ruled. so this ruling came in the case of british army musician dwight pyle grey, which is quite a white sounding name. it's got it sounds like a it sounds like an actual colour you get in dulux for a very, a very just off off white or a carpet. yeah yeah, yeah, who successfully sued the ministry of defence for racial discrimination, harassment and victimisation ? so he's a black victimisation? so he's a black rastafarian, french horn player and lance sergeant in the grenadier guards, he took legal action after after he was denied entry to his barracks while wearing civilian clothes by a guard who did not believe. at first he was a soldier. i mean, isn't that what a guard is
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supposed to do? it's like, oh, you look like a soldier. supposed to do? it's like, oh, you look like a soldier . yeah, you look like a soldier. yeah, yeah. come on. in you go. this is just going to result in, you know, people waving, waving through people into into areas that they shouldn't be in, as happenedin that they shouldn't be in, as happened in the manchester arena. sadly, the security guard was afraid of looking racist if he stopped the. that's true. i mean, the grenadier guards must be a target to at some point. it sounds like they were slightly like snippy language was was traded . but yeah, but imagine traded. but yeah, but imagine the abuses lead to. the abuses this will lead to. not in the way leo says but not just in the way leo says but in any you know, he was in terms of any you know, he was playing card basically. playing the race card basically. so you're perfectly entitled to say the too say that it's like the me too movement. believe all women. obviously if obviously absurd idea. if you if no one's allowed the no one's allowed to say the phrase you're playing the race card, you just can card, then you can just you can just that and abuse it even just use that and abuse it even more. right and of course, white people to do that. more. right and of course, white people if to do that. more. right and of course, white people if white to do that. more. right and of course, white people if white people io that. more. right and of course, white people if white people did1at. more. right and of course, white people if white people did play i mean, if white people did play the race card, no cares the race card, no one cares anyway. say, yeah, the race card, no one cares anyhate say, yeah, the race card, no one cares anyhate you. say, yeah, the race card, no one cares anyhate you. so say, yeah, the race card, no one cares anyhate you. so what ay, yeah, the race card, no one cares anyhate you. so what are (eah, the race card, no one cares anyhate you. so what are we? we hate you. so what are we? what are you? so it doesn't seem very fair. i'm going to say something might me very fair. i'm going to say som trouble, might me very fair. i'm going to say som trouble, but might me very fair. i'm going to say som trouble, but what ight me very fair. i'm going to say som trouble, but what ijht me very fair. i'm going to say som trouble, but what i find me
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into trouble, but what i find surprising subtextually here is that rastafarian french that a black rastafarian french horn grenadier horn player in the grenadier guards memorable guards was not memorable enough that guards i that the that the guards did. i mean, would would mean, you would think he would be guy you would be the one guy you would remember, there was remember, right? there was another picture them all. another picture of them all. martin bearskins, martin with the bearskins, except one who's a sikh and has a on, and i personally a turban on, and i personally don't with that don't have a problem with that at i would, i would at all, but i would, i would imagine would one of imagine that he would be one of the memorable again, if the more memorable again, if you. is you. but anyway, maybe there is some pale grey some amongst all the pale grey people. people face people. yeah. young people face restrictions their driving. restrictions on their driving. nick licenses to nick with graduated licenses to prevent designated drivers. yes, it's banned new drivers from having passengers their age to cut deaths as aa, and the idea is they shouldn't be able to have a passenger their age for up to six months after passing to cut down all these needless deaths. apparently nearly 5000 people are killed or seriously injured in crashes involving at least one young every least one young driver every yeah least one young driver every year. so sympathise. i mean year. so i do sympathise. i mean , i'm torn. the whole point of driving when you're young is to give your friends a lift and take them back from school and mess something. mess about or something. it's fun. some the fun. yeah, and it's some of the most times you'll have. at
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most fun times you'll have. at the time, people also the same time, people also getting crashes at school and getting crashes at my school and got injured and got permanently injured and quite nasty stuff. yeah, because obviously they're young people. they're idiots. no prefrontal cortex, and they shouldn't be driving way. so i'm driving in another way. so i'm kind is it safe kind of torn. is it is it safe theism and the front of theism and ruining the front of stone you stone blockers? maybe before you can they've can drive. yeah, well, they've all those now anyway, so as all got those now anyway, so as long as you got your puberty blockers, you're all right. i mean, yeah, i agree with you. it is harsh deny them that fun, is harsh to deny them that fun, that thrill. and that great thrill. and i remember having a couple of mates who could drive. i couldn't until i was 22, couldn't drive until i was 22, i think, but, but yeah. horrific. one bad, one bad night. that's it would have taken away the beach boys entire oeuvre. i mean, if you can't drive , well, mean, if you can't drive, well, surfing would still have been left. imagine if you couldn't. you and you know, it's half of songs and stuff you're young and stuff when you're young and american driving. american songs about driving. yeah, is. it's . yeah, yeah, but it is. it's. setting. i mean, my son is going to turn 17 at the end of july and he'll obviously want to learn to drive, and i just know it's going to be a disappointment to him because,
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you suddenly realise disappointment to him because, you bus suddenly realise disappointment to him because, you bus lanesenly realise disappointment to him because, you bus lanes there aalise disappointment to him because, you bus lanes there are ;e disappointment to him because, you bus lanes there are and disappointment to him because, you many,bus lanes there are and disappointment to him because, you many,bus lmany,1ere are and disappointment to him because, you many,bus lmany,1ere know, d how many, how many, you know, box he'll lose his box junctions. he'll lose his license year, sure, license in a year, i'm sure, without having those without having not that those adverts they go around adverts where they go around those know what those mountains, you know what i mean? driving fun mean? yeah. driving is not fun anymore. i up in a, you anymore. no. i grew up in a, you know, rural scotland. and nick grew in and yeah, grew up in cumbria and yeah, kids died kids at my school died in car crash. i think was the crash. i think it was the leading cause death by far. leading cause of death by far. it it was insane. was in it was, it was insane. i was in a and me and my mate were a crash and me and my mate were egging mate to go egging my other mate to go faster. you know, because egging my other mate to go fasterlike, you know, because egging my other mate to go fasterlike, 15.| know, because egging my other mate to go fasterlike, 15. was w, because egging my other mate to go fasterlike, 15. was w, bethe se egging my other mate to go fasterlike, 15. was w, bethe one we're like, 15. was that the one when had your leg crushed? when you had your leg crushed? no, that that was no, no, that was that was a different one. okay emerges. so basically, we're up for basically, yeah, we're up for it. independent. basically, yeah, we're up for it. appearance independent. basically, yeah, we're up for it. appearance now3endent. basically, yeah, we're up for it. appearance now3endermore and an appearance now liam. more and more people feel it's safe to state obvious. yeah state the bleeding obvious. yeah so gender has so nhs gender care has been taken secrecy and taken over by secrecy and ideology. secretary ideology. the health secretary claims atkins. claims this is victoria atkins. she said that the myth, this myth that for children and young people grappling with adolescence who are questioning people grappling with adoleidentitynho are questioning people grappling with adoleidentity ,ho are questioning people grappling with adoleidentity , their; questioning people grappling with adoleidentity , their sexuality|ing their identity, their sexuality or their path in life, that the answer their questions was answer to their questions was inevitably gender, inevitably to change gender, to solve of unease , solve their feelings of unease, discomfort or distress, she says. that's ridiculous. and
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she's right. i mean, the whole idea behind gender treatment in this country and in america and across much of the west has been , you know, people have said, oh, it's evidence based, when in fact evidence based at fact it's not evidence based at all. that are being all. the drugs that are being prescribed prescribed prescribed are being prescribed off haven't been off label. they haven't been trialled that, that trialled for that, for that purpose. doctors say, oh, puberty blockers reversible. puberty blockers are reversible. they're . they're not. they leave they're. they're not. they leave they often leave kids with with long term, issues such as sterility, vie, inability to have an orgasm and like have an orgasm and things like that, when they're that, when the, when they're older, say , you know, older, and they say, you know, the, the gender ideologists have said, it's best for said, but it's the best for kids, you know, we're saving lives because if they don't transition, going be transition, they're going to be unhappy. and anyone who themselves. and anyone who questions extreme, far questions it is an extreme, far right bigot, including people like jk rowling, who obviously isn't. they say that that phrase, getting phrase, which is getting challenged which i'm challenged more now, which i'm pleased would you pleased to see, is would you rather a daughter or rather have a live daughter or a dead about the suicide dead son about the suicide thing? whereas the reality is, suicide an issue, it suicide is an issue, but it doesn't decline after after
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transition . they continue be transition. they continue to be very to yeah very vulnerable to it. yeah exactly. as i said earlier, more and more people are coming out now and saying this terrible now and saying this is terrible and come now. and it's easy to come out now. i compared it to supporting man city, but it's better late than neven city, but it's better late than never. other people going never. other people are going the just saw andrew the other way. i just saw andrew doyle, our great leader on x, posting about novara media, who are very much they're doubling down, saying the cash review has been torn shreds. so some been torn to shreds. so some some dug and they'll some are too dug in and they'll criticise cash report. yeah, criticise the cash report. yeah, but will sort but normal people will sort of wake up and go, okay, this is this that ever this is insane that this ever happened. see, like happened. you can even see, like stonewall and the guardian trying to a sort of reverse trying to do a sort of reverse ferret say, oh, we were ferret to say, oh, no, we were always always critical always we were always critical and it. and the and questioning it. and the harry woman in the, in harry potter woman in the, in the house of lords who used to run stonewall. she's been trying to cover her tracks. what's her name? wizard, lord name? lord lord, wizard, lord hunt. sorry, baroness hunt. not lord. sorry, baroness hunt. not lord. sorry, baroness hunt. not lord. sorry, baroness hunt . right. have to try and hunt. right. i have to try and remember it's interesting . remember this. it's interesting. novara media, though. i think they're verge of they're on the verge of splitting. some. there's
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splitting. there's some. there's some deep divisions between there. i think bastani may come over to the dark side and by pete brown just had to do a tweet, you know, she obviously had a solicitors yeah . had a solicitors letter. yeah. but anyway, over to the telegraph. nick. last story of this half. i think class a drugs are the new burglary. yeah. hard drugs legalised by stealth as more a third of offenders more than a third of offenders avoid prosecution. 39.2% of avoid prosecution. so 39.2% of people drugs people caught with hard drugs avoided record and avoided a criminal record and were community were said handed community resolutions, which means they have apologise up have to apologise or pick up some or something . i some litter or something. i mean, five fold mean, there's a five fold increase so these increase since 2016, so these communities with a lot of these things, you can just emit guilt and these so—called and apologise. these so—called community it's community resolutions. and it's a a it's ludicrous. a bit of a it's ludicrous. i mean, this is the continued decline the country. decline of the country. now, i do understand in some cases, you know, catch who know, you catch someone who seems right kid with seems like an all right kid with drugs. a party or drugs. it's a party or something. you don't to something. you don't want to destroy with criminal destroy his life with a criminal record , but it can't be the norm record, but it can't be the norm that you're caught with heroin and let off. i mean, and you're let off. i mean, that's insanity. and that's absolute insanity. and sorry. well, they
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sorry. go ahead. well, they don't them the heroin, don't let them keep the heroin, nick. apologise yeah. nick. they just apologise. yeah. so they've sorry they've had a bad right? i mean, yeah, bad day, right? i mean, yeah, i know you're scottish. i'm sorry to discriminate against your people. i want know who these people. i want to know who these people. i want to know who these people because your people are because i take your point. you know, point. and certainly, you know, if a party and if you go to a party and somebody do want some somebody says, do you want some of these, you go, yeah, go on, then that shouldn't your then that shouldn't ruin your life. not not well life. it's not it's not well advised, it's an easy slip. advised, but it's an easy slip. but they wouldn't get arrested in but they in the first place, but they don't scenario in which don't see the scenario in which they found. presumably they get found. presumably you get something get pulled over or something because you are driving erratically. then you erratically. and then do you know very few know what i mean? very few people walking the people are walking around on the streets yeah. or you get collared. yeah. or you get stopped. get stopped. the stopped. you get stopped. the random searches, right? tube stations and stuff like that. oh, they do that. sniffer dogs. okay, outside nightclubs. yeah. sniffer dogs and stuff. i mean, it's got to they hit it's always got to be. they hit for dealers, isn't it? for the dealers, isn't it? that's. the thing. for the dealers, isn't it? thatthe the thing. for the dealers, isn't it? thatthe further the thing. for the dealers, isn't it? thatthe further up the thing. for the dealers, isn't it? thatthe further up the re thing. for the dealers, isn't it? thatthe further up the chain|g. for the dealers, isn't it? thatthe further up the chain you and the further up the chain you can always like the can go. that's always like the plot every movie, it? plot of every movie, isn't it? although dubai and although you know, in dubai and some places, they have some other places, they have really of really effective sort of anti—drugs just by anti—drugs legislation just by absolutely anybody, absolutely nailing anybody, anybody got it. and like,
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anybody who's got it. and like, you sort avoid being you can sort of avoid being like, i think you get torn apart by horses or something unless you go through your phone and say, these also say, yeah, these people also take drugs. it's called deterrence. work. now deterrence. it used to work. now you it's a disease and you think it's a disease and it's about poverty and. absolutely the, the, absolutely singapore. the, the, hilton, three down, one to go in the final section , sexual the final section, sexual discrimination in the lake district. dawn french fearing to speak out and divorce is only
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and welcome back to headliners for our final section. so the daily mail. leo. good luck sustaining the will to live as you elaborate on the details in this one, a woman who used to work in an up—market bed and breakfast has won a sex discrimination case after her male boss refused to help her change bed sheets because he said it was a woman's job. well, he denies saying that. yeah, i
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mean, what he should have said is it's an employee's job. yeah, and so do it or i'm not giving you any money. also you're you any money. and also you're fired. my reading fired. absolutely. my reading i could i read it through twice to see what i'd missed. she was she was telling her boss to make his own bed. yeah, i was like, she'd been. she'd been hired to make bedsin been. she'd been hired to make beds in this hotel. and he. like, he slept in one of the beds. but he's a he's a person. so, you know, he said, well, can you make the bed? i don't know whether he'd end around with the wife and a juice one of the guest rooms and then said, no, you've to that because you've got to fix that because it said, well, it was. and she said, well, maybe make your own it was. and she said, well, mayor make your own it was. and she said, well, mayor i make your own it was. and she said, well, mayor i don't make your own it was. and she said, well, mayor i don't know,iake your own it was. and she said, well, mayor i don't know, but your own bed or i don't know, but i cannot understand. mean, we're cannot understand. i mean, we're covering i guess covering it. so i guess we've fallen into how this fallen into it. how does this story make international newspapers? it should barely be in know, this is in the like. you know, this is about my people, barrow in furness. important . furness. this is important. yeah. grew up yeah. as someone who grew up with running a guest yeah. as someone who grew up with in running a guest yeah. as someone who grew up with in the running a guest yeah. as someone who grew up with in the lake ng a guest yeah. as someone who grew up with in the lake district est yeah. as someone who grew up with in the lake district ,st yeah. as someone who grew up with in the lake district , it's house in the lake district, it's hard to relate to this story about. i didn't choose this. about. no, i didn't choose this. i it. but it is i didn't choose it. but it is exactly about the same exactly about the exact same scenario. but he's just done what done cumbrian what he's done his cumbrian banter. he said, oh , it's banter. yeah. he said, oh, it's
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a it's called banter in a woman. it's called banter in the and doesn't the lakes. and she doesn't realise it's realise that. and she it's discrimination against my people. to have people. we're allowed to have that's mild for, for the lakes, you know. and she's, know, you know. and she's, you know, it's not how in like it's not how you see in like it's not how you see in like it's not how you see in like it's not like the postcards the lakes know, rough lakes is, you know, it's rough banter. yeah. and that's what he's love. and the he's done to his love. and the other thing she's exploiting is it's hard to get staff up it's very hard to get staff up there. exploiting it's very hard to get staff up thereand exploiting it's very hard to get staff up thereand of exploiting it's very hard to get staff up thereand of expinting it's very hard to get staff up thereand of expin my that and sort of saying in my opinion, sure she's very opinion, i'm sure she's very nice, sort of using nice, but she's sort of using the that that the fact that she's got that power can't get anyone power that you can't get anyone to work there anymore. to come and work there anymore. yeah, for them, yeah, i feel bad for them, though. got like 9.8 on airbnb or whatever was four and though. got like 9.8 on airbnb 0|half|tever was four and though. got like 9.8 on airbnb 0|half|tever on was four and though. got like 9.8 on airbnb 0|half|tever on tripadvisor. and though. got like 9.8 on airbnb 0|half|tever on tripadvisor. you a half stars on tripadvisor. you know, these good. these are know, these are good. these are good it's great, good ratings. it's a great, great i think they great bit. you know i think they should supported. now should be supported. and now it's going spiral isn't it. it's going to spiral isn't it. out he's going to be out of control. he's going to be drinking. yeah. there'll be drinking. yeah yeah. there'll be a bottle of glenn's vodka a half a bottle of glenn's vodka found a pillow. found under a pillow. and that'll him star. we that'll get him a low star. we wish him the telegraph. wish him well. the telegraph. now, a story about a much now, nick, a story about a much loved national treasure is loved national treasure who is tempted her chest out tempted to stay in her chest out it's cancel culture, forcing people into a corner of self—censorship , says dawn self—censorship, says dawn french. and she says all french. and she says we're all talking about inclusivity and
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favouring difference and all the rest it, and that's all rest of it, and that's all great, which isn't. so that's great, which it isn't. so that's woke. so as you're saying, you say, say the caveat say, you say the woke caveat thing first, but then she says we're quick to blame litigation, trolling, blah, blah, and we're quick to blame litigation, trollirall3lah, blah, and we're quick to blame litigation, trollirall self—censoring. and we're quick to blame litigation, trollirall self—censoring. and we're all self—censoring. and she's she's bad she's done it and she's felt bad about and she's right about it. and so and she's right again. she's the again. but she's late to the parties. celebrities are very scared, especially acting, scared, especially in acting, especially in comedy. and they're things especially in comedy. and they're little things especially in comedy. and they're little noises, things especially in comedy. and they're little noises, they1ings like this little noises, they like, and so on. but like, jk rowling and so on. but they have saying all they should have been saying all this but, well, this much earlier. but, well, she's even saying it. she she's not even saying it. she says was a podcast and says she was on a podcast and they we're not going to they said, we're not going to talk about rowling because talk about jk rowling because she's transphobic. she's whatever, transphobic. and dawn what's dawn french was like, oh, what's happening? and she goes, oh, educate dawn, educate yourself. catch up dawn, come know, and instead educate yourself. catch up dawn, co going, know, and instead educate yourself. catch up dawn, co going, i know, and instead educate yourself. catch up dawn, co going, i think ow, and instead educate yourself. catch up dawn, co going, i think that's d instead educate yourself. catch up dawn, co going, i think that's a instead educate yourself. catch up dawn, co going, i think that's a bittead of going, i think that's a bit harsh to me like that. harsh talking to me like that. she should say, like jk she should say, i like jk rowling. she's she's rowling. she's good. she's a good person. i've known her for years she's, know, kind good person. i've known her for ye did. she's, know, kind good person. i've known her for ye did. ssaid know, kind good person. i've known her for ye did. ssaid that know, kind good person. i've known her for ye did. ssaid that shew, kind good person. i've known her for ye did. ssaid that she knows good person. i've known her for ye didbit ssaid that she knows good person. i've known her for ye didbit 55650 that she knows good person. i've known her for ye didbit $5650 on. she knows good person. i've known her for ye didbit $5650 on. well,:nows good person. i've known her for ye didbit $5650 on. well, she's her a bit and so on. well, she's she's trouble. she's tried to smother with kindness, but smother it with kindness, but you yeah, trouble you know. yeah, the trouble is like, people too much like, people worry way too much about other people think of about what other people think of them. it's like you got them. yeah. it's like you got to just some in
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just have some faith in yourself. have some faith . yourself. have some faith. you've never problem, you've never had that problem, leo, a thing. but leo, which is a great thing. but they french and they used to be dawn french and jennifer used to be the jennifer saunders used to be the most great most. that was their great thing. didn't what thing. they didn't care what people them. they people thought of them. they made themselves. they. made fools of themselves. they. they scenery they bashed into the scenery left, centre. and left, right and centre. and that was it. puritans now that are so quick to point the finger at any little and, you know, little thing and, you know, don't mostly culture we don't mostly as a culture we need be turning around and need to be turning around and like absolutely and like absolutely mocking and destroying these people, the people trying to, you people who are trying to, you know, bring down anybody who's different to them 100, i think this will be our last story, probably the nhs are mocked, leo, for their woke banter. the don't know what you call it like weird little . it's like a car weird little. it's like a car showroom for flags or something. they put up. yeah. so nhs bosses have been criticised after displaying a banner featuring 21 genders and sexualities in a hospital reception. i mean, i'm assuming there it is. there's a banner there. it looks like something at the olympics, but i'm they're being i'm assuming they're being mocked because it doesn't involve it, which involve 483 genders on it, which is a hate crime now in scotland.
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but yeah, this is at royal stoke hosphal but yeah, this is at royal stoke hospital. it includes groups hospital. so it includes groups such as gender fluid, which is something that leaks from their underpants. there's people who feel they have more than one gender and gender queer and all this sort of stuff. unfortunately, hospital , unfortunately, the hospital, while they're focusing on creating banner creating a ridiculous banner with made up flags with lots of silly made up flags on they've been of the on it, they've been one of the worst performing, hospitals in the country or nhs in the the country or nhs trusts in the country. ranking 102 out of out of 120. so maybe if they focused on, you know, fixing people. one of my favourites is, demi sexual only feels sexual attraction once bond has been once an emotional bond has been formed. a woman . demi formed. that's a woman. demi romantic feels a romantic romantic only feels a romantic attraction emotional romantic only feels a romantic attraction been emotional romantic only feels a romantic attraction been formed. tional romantic only feels a romantic attraction been formed. that's a bond has been formed. that's a normal person. then have a normal person. then they have a genden normal person. then they have a gender, be gender, which must be a nightmare. say, what you? nightmare. say, what are you? i'm gender. which one? a i'm a gender. which one? a genden i'm a gender. which one? a gender, habit. gender, just like a habit. and costello sketch indefinitely, gender, just like a habit. and costalso sketch indefinitely, gender, just like a habit. and costalso a.etch indefinitely, gender, just like a habit. and costalso a more ndefinitely, gender, just like a habit. and costalso a more seriouslyy, gender, just like a habit. and costalso a more seriously it but also a more seriously it makes maybe all those people feel will make feel included. it will make thousands of people who don't understand is understand what the hell is going excluded. yeah, going on feel excluded. yeah, they feel that hostile they will feel that is a hostile environment to them, sadly. and
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all they want to do is get well. the show is nearly over. let's take another look at take another quick look at tuesday's . daily tuesday's front pages. daily mail banned trans women from mail now banned trans women from female sports. financial times us and europe in frantic diplomacy to deter israel from striking back at iran telegraph ben wallace, west must stand up to iranian bullies i—news britain and us tell netanyahu don't start a world war with iran revenge, metro , this is an iran revenge, metro, this is an outrage. donald trump's latest court case. and finally , the court case. and finally, the daily star tv. vicki, the dog ate my passport. those were your front pages. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, leo kearse and nick dixon. i'll be back tomorrow 11 pm. with be back tomorrow at 11 pm. with a new guests. if you're a couple new guests. if you're watching a.m. tuned watching at 5 am. stay tuned for breakfast. otherwise thank you much for your company. you very much for your company. i and i will i hope you sleep well and i will see good night . see you tomorrow. good night. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on gb news.
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>> hello again. welcome to the latest weather forecast from the met office. it's going to stay blustery over the next 24 hours, but less windy than it has been, and the showers will slowly ease as well. low pressure is pulling away . it's moving as well. low pressure is pulling away. it's moving east. as well. low pressure is pulling away . it's moving east. we've away. it's moving east. we've got high pressure arriving later in the week, but for the time being the weather stays very changeable with showers or longer spells of rain moving through during the evening. many of these showers will actually fade away after midnight, although some will continue down the north sea coast there 1 or 2 for northern ireland, parts of wales and central but wales and central england, but otherwise and otherwise plenty of drier and clearer weather emerging later in the night. a chill in the air first thing tuesday, but too breezy for most for a frost, and there'll be plenty of bright weather. first thing, especially for scotland, northern england, parts of western uk. but further cloud and showers will affect the north sea coast and showers will tend to bubble up elsewhere , particularly for northern ireland. parts of central and
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southern england, wales and northwest scotland. it's going to stay the cold side, but to stay on the cold side, but temperatures a degree or so higher compared with monday's and less windy, so a bit more pleasant out there. another chilly start on wednesday, but again, sunshine first again, plenty of sunshine first thing turning cloudy and damp for northern ireland. showers emerging elsewhere but plenty of bright or at least drier weather in between the showers. and then as we go through the latter half of the week, things do slowly turn drier, more settled and warmer . warmer. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on
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this morning, liz truss is back with a new book she's calling it ten years to save the west, and she tells all about her time in government. >> i hate being told to what do, and i hate the government telling other people what to do and having spent ten years in the government, i can tell you it genuinely doesn't know best. >> well, as you can see, liz truss did not hold back last night. but what will her words mean for rishi sunak? find out more with me very soon. >> suella braverman slams the prime minister for lacking the political will to ditch the echr as the rwanda bill heads back to the house of lords . the house of lords. >> the west calls for restraint as israel vows to respond over iran's weekend attacks , and the iran's weekend attacks, and the pm continues to resist calls to proscribe iran's revolutionary guard . guard. >> a sleepy donald trump becomes the first american president to face a criminal trial over his
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