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tv   Headliners  GB News  April 20, 2024 2:00am-3:01am BST

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age with a disability or health condition that's more than our entire schools budget , more than entire schools budget, more than our transport budget, more than our transport budget, more than our policing budget and spending on personal independence payments alone. it's forecast to increase by more than 50% over the next four years, and the met police has apologised for causing further offence with an earlier apology about an officer's use of the terms. >> openly jewish to an anti—semitism campaigner who is near a pro—palestine march , a near a pro—palestine march, a video clip posted on social media showed the moment gideon falter was threatened with arrest by police . arrest by police. >> you are quite openly jewish. this is a pro—palestinian march. i'm not accusing you of anything, but i'm worried about the reaction to your presence. >> the chief executive of campaign against anti—semitism was wearing a kippah skullcap when he was stopped from crossing a road near the demonstration in london last saturday. an earlier apology
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suggested opponents of the marches must know their presence is provocative , but the force is provocative, but the force have now issued another statement apologising for the further offence. this earlier apology caused . and for the apology caused. and for the latest story, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. common alerts. now it's time for headliners as. >> hello and welcome to headliners. >> i'm nik dixon , taking you >> i'm nik dixon, taking you through tomorrow's top stories for the next hour, and i'm joined by josh howie vie. there he look at that. he is. look at that. >> damian slash who have >> and damian slash who have both stuck to the strict maximum hair allowance on the show. >> i didn't want it all this week. >> haven't you. >> haven't you. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> that's bald as him and i don't. >> i don't like that. do you know what.7 >> i don't even like it. i had no joke tonight.
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>> and josh said go with the hair thing. >> w- w— e me, but he sort >> it's not like me, but he sort of lit it. of green lit it. >> said it was okay. i assume >> i said it was okay. i assume that you. >> so you've done what.7 >> so you've done what.7 >> i not enough to do. >> i am not brave enough to do. you've you've shaved it you've gone. you've shaved it all i'm. not even all off. yeah. i'm. i'm not even clinging it's just sad. i've clinging on. it's just sad. i've just the truth, just admitted the truth, you know? >> w a w- w a lot of truth. >> but you get a lot of truth. >> but you get a lot of truth. >> i'm a liar. i'm pretending yours is sleek. >> josh gets lot of acting >> josh gets a lot of acting roles sort of divorced men. roles as sort of divorced men. >> stars is roles as sort of divorced men. >> i'm stars is roles as sort of divorced men. >> i'm thinking. stars is what i'm thinking. >> did used to. i went >> i mean, i did used to. i went for this look for a couple of years. the camera off my head. how dare you? is how dare you? that is discrimination. oh my i'm discrimination. oh my gosh, i'm calling this. calling hr after this. i'm actually for it, actually a fan. i went for it, but looked bit like the guy but i looked a bit like the guy from really wild with from the really wild show with a with long wispy bits out of with the long wispy bits out of the side. you know what? the side. but you know what? i don't it worked. i think don't know, it worked. i think it you get, it it works. the older you get, it does work it does start to work more. it looks because you've looks good because you've got you've given up hope. >> you like bruce willis in heyday. >> let's, let's crack on and have a quick look at saturday's front then. front pages then. >> daily mail has >> and the daily mail has benefits be axed year benefits to be axed after year on the dole. >> times goes with tory's >> the times goes with tory's plan. cut the mirror. plan. stamp duty cut the mirror. now on iran. the
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now the world waits on iran. the telegraph. are openly now the world waits on iran. the telegra|we'll are openly now the world waits on iran. the telegra|we'll arintoanly now the world waits on iran. the telegra|we'll arinto that jewish. we'll get into that story a minute. the express story in a minute. the express 200,000 esther gets 200,000 demand. dame esther gets her . and the daily her dying wish. and the daily star zilla, which about star rat zilla, which is about large were the large rats. so those were the front . okay, so let's front pages. okay, so let's start with the telegraph . and a start with the telegraph. and a met police officer has accused a man of being openly jewish. why couldn't he just hide it like you, john? yeah. so, yeah , you you, john? yeah. so, yeah, you are openly jewish now, i'm jewish. i haven't jewish. i obviously i haven't really talked about it much. no. before i found out today , i just before i found out today, i just told you we were standing next told you we were standing next to each other in the cubicle. but so this is a clip of, but but i. so this is a clip of, of a jewish man walking through central london, walking past the march, wanting to walk through the march , as is his right as the march, as is his right as a human being, as a londoner, and being stopped by a policeman who's basically like, look, you're open, you're jewish, they'll see you're jewish. and that could well sort of antagonise the protests here.
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now, we've been told for six months that these protests, they're peace marches and everybody's welcome. and it's got nothing. they're not anti—semitic at all, even though they're being these horrible placards and chants for the genocide of jews. and yet the police are jewish. person rocks up basically just wearing a yarmulke and suddenly surrounded by going, no, no, you by police going, no, no, no, you can't because you might can't go here because you might provoke being openly provoke people being openly jewish. we've got jewish. yeah. and we've got a little clip. yeah. you are quite openly jewish. >> this is a pro—palestinian march, right? i'm not accusing you of anything, but i'm worried about to your about the reaction to your presence . presence. >> presence. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i mean, you know, you're not living in a kind of multicultural utopia where you have to arrest jewish people to keep safe. mean, keep them safe. yeah. i mean, something's there. something's not adding up there. and it and the whole thing just. it just looks like a bit of a mess. i almost feel sorry for the police being in the position they are being, you know, paid virtually nothing to the point where i mean, they've got where they. i mean, they've got top orders to , you know, do top down orders to, you know, do certain they've ended certain things and they've ended up this up getting themselves into this hideous optic situation. >> more optics ,
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>> but it's more than optics, isn't it? to me, it's another branch of anarcho tyranny. it's punishing the innocent because i saw a previous example where they of wrestling they were kind of wrestling a guy floor saying, guy to the floor saying, you'll be good. be arrested for your own good. and that's completely and i said, that's completely wrong. say to me, no, wrong. and people say to me, no, nick, about pragmatism. nick, it's about pragmatism. they arrest they can't possibly arrest everyone. no, no. if everyone. i'm like, no, no. if you're arresting the innocent instead of the criminals or potential the potential criminals in case the violent attack them , that's violent mob attack them, that's obviously and now is obviously wrong. and now this is another it it another level of it where it becomes you . you look jewish, becomes you. you look jewish, so you're antagonise you're going to it's antagonise a baying mob. well, you wait for it. what can you do? i suppose the argument is, do you just wait for to commit a crime wait for them to commit a crime and and attack maybe and try and attack him? maybe you to. maybe he is. he you have to. maybe he is. he is taking risk. this is the taking a risk. this is the thing. there other. there thing. there are other. there are. are people in that thing. there are other. there are. beingre people in that thing. there are other. there are. being threatening that video being threatening towards jews just do jews and the police just do nothing that jewish guy. and nothing to that jewish guy. and there are people there going, oh, police are not oh, you and the police are not going person, oh, you and the police are not going if person, oh, you and the police are not going if they person, oh, you and the police are not going if they diderson, oh, you and the police are not going if they did that, they because if they did that, they would rest of the mob would have the rest of the mob on of them, and they just on top of them, and they just want get to the end of the want to get to the end of the day. i get that. but they have a responsibility to protect people, to protect innocent
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people. jews are, believe or people. jews are, believe it or not, human we should be not, human as well. we should be allowed walk around city allowed to walk around our city in saturday. jews and in peace next saturday. jews and allies. to be putting allies. i'm going to be putting on my yarmulke when i go to synagogue. i put on my yarmulke for the day. going put it for the day. i'm going to put it on. going to go. going on. i'm going to go. i'm going to have walk through the city to have a walk through the city as jews it's a as many jews are. it's not a protest. it's a march. it's protest. it's not a march. it's just proving a point that we should exist in the should be able to exist in the city that i was born, my home, and safe and that is the and be safe and that is the police to their job to police to their job is to protect us, not to protect people calling violence people calling for violence against us or even committing. exactly. well, you'll be arrested for your own good, josh. that's the bizarre, bizarre and you to bizarre thing. and you have to ask question. saying ask a question. i'm not saying ban marches, if they believe ban marches, but if they believe that people these marches that the people on these marches will violent the point will be violent to the point where saying we're going where they're saying we're going to to protect to have to rescue, to protect you, that does sort of raise a question nature of the question about the nature of the marches, it? mean, question about the nature of the marciies, it? mean, question about the nature of the marcii mean, it? mean, question about the nature of the marcii mean, thist? mean, question about the nature of the marcii mean, this guymean, question about the nature of the marcii mean, this guy should well, i mean, this guy should have allowed to go have just been allowed to go about freely, and if about his life freely, and if anyone violent anyone was violent or did anything moving towards that, then been arrested. >> i mean, that's how it works. you know, people their
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you know, people go about their lives. breaks the lives. if anyone breaks the rules, arrest them. you rules, you arrest them. you don't arrest everyone on rules, you arrest them. you don precautions: everyone on rules, you arrest them. you don precautions ,averyone on rules, you arrest them. you don precautions , varne. |e on the precautions, varne. otherwise, why don't we just. we'd to arrest everybody. we'd have to arrest everybody. it be risk some kind it might be at risk of some kind of other people. of triggering other people. >> weird minority >> be some weird minority report. i suppose you report. well, i suppose you could you mentioned could say you mentioned optics, that worried that police are worried about the optics jewish guy the optics of a jewish guy getting a march, but getting attacked at a march, but maybe maybe he maybe i don't know, but maybe he has he's taking that chance. maybe i don't know, but maybe he hdon't he's taking that chance. maybe i don't know, but maybe he hdon't know, aking that chance. maybe i don't know, but maybe he hdon't know, iking that chance. maybe i don't know, but maybe he hdon't know, i don't1at chance. maybe i don't know, but maybe he hdon't know, i don't know ance. maybe i don't know, but maybe he hdon't know, i don't know to :e. i don't know, i don't know to what do. well, he's just trying to city. he's just to exist in the city. he's just being synagogue. he was being synagogue. and he was walking the walking through town. the crazy thing that police have even thing is that police have even crazier put out crazier is that they put out a statement that statement today that was incredibly and had incredibly offensive and had to have that, put have deleted that, and now put out to apologise out a statement to apologise for that really strategy, doesn't >> they really strategy, doesn't it? do something it? it's like, just do something terrible infringe on terrible and infringe on people's of people's rights to kind of protect yourselves from this mob and then apologise for it afterwards. that seems to the afterwards. that seems to be the strategy afterwards. that seems to be the stréally well, it's >> all right. well, it's a shocking we've got to shocking story. we've got to move though. what the move on, though. what is on the mirror, damian? >> on the mirror. have now . >> on the mirror. we have now. the iran, calls the world waits on iran, calls for as israel revenge for calm as israel revenge strike sparks fears of all out war. this is a about war. and this is a story about israel essentially escalating a
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little further by striking little bit further by striking back at iran for the recent attack on them by iran, which was in fact a response to the attack on the what, syrian, the consulate in syria. so but this one consulate, it was the building next door, but the building next door, but the building next door, but the building next door. right. well, either way, suppose it's like, either way, i suppose it's like, this seem to be more of this does seem to be more of a to me, a theatrical strike that was probably deliberately designed not to cause too much damage , but, you know, kind of damage, but, you know, kind of let off that safety valve and essentially de—escalate while escalating, which is , i guess, escalating, which is, i guess, good for all of us if it means that world war iii can be put on pause for another few months, that would be nice. >> do you agree? just i mean, when live in the studio when it broke live in the studio the night and to i had cover it the night and to i had cover it the attack, know, the other attack, you know, with the other attack, you know, with the drones, it it felt like the drones, it was it felt like world war iii then it seemed. oh, overblown. oh, maybe it was overblown. maybe was saving face. maybe iran was just saving face. but obviously but it is obviously i don't know. it wasn't drones. know. but it wasn't just drones. the what started it. the drones were what started it. and missiles, ballistic and then the missiles, ballistic missiles on top of and missiles on top of that, and a seven year old, child was injured that the injured in israel. that was the
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only but the difference only injury. but the difference is here. those were to attacking civilians was indiscriminately. and if they had fallen and hit their target, you know, potentially hundreds of thousands of people could have been killed. israel. retaliation was targeted attack on a was a targeted attack on a military base. there's the difference between the two, and then iran has said , oh, no, it then iran has said, oh, no, it didn't. nothing really happened. nothing got through. but there's footage that has emerged now of just explosion on a just a big explosion on a military so obviously the military base. so obviously the proof the pudding, so proof is in the pudding, so to speak, israel wanted to speak, in that israel wanted to 90, speak, in that israel wanted to go, you know what? you attack us with 300, missiles and nothing really happens apart from obviously the child being hurt, but we'll attack you with three and we'll blow up your base. so okay, but are they. is netanyahu going a bit rogue here? because the us have even said we were not in any offensive not involved in any offensive operations. want to. operations. they almost want to. it they're it sounds like they're distancing he sort distancing themselves as he sort of ahead of what even of getting ahead of what even the want, would want the us would want, would want them well, he has to them to do. well, he has to because , first of he has because, first of all, he has to. the middle east. it's a
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to. it's the middle east. it's a different about different mentality. it's about a there is a show of strength. if there is no then it's an no retaliation, then it's an embodiment bullies. iran embodiment of bullies. iran here. the other thing is here. but the other thing is that, first of all, america has can say whatever it wants. and, you know, to the public what they're saying behind closed doors something different. doors is something different. and not and the threat is not existential to america. the threat from the from iran is existential to israel. >> israel could have. absolutely. i mean, they could have gone much further than this. yeah. >> no, no, it was, but this could be the first step of proof. but the other thing you want to say is that the enemy is not the iranian people, it is the islamic republic. that's the big difference. okay. we go so we're to move on and we're going to move on and quickly do sorry. we've to quickly do sorry. we've got to quickly do sorry. we've got to quickly times before the quickly do the times before the break, plan, break, josh? okay. tory's plan, stamp is, in the, stamp duty cut. this is, in the, the treasury has drawn up plans for the autumn statement , and for the autumn statement, and this is going to be the big bribe to the british people to say, please vote tories, please. or some of us or at least vote. some of us keep few of us around and keep a few of us around and, and their plan to do that is by,
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their plan is to do that is by, cutting stamp duty from 250,000 to £300,000 properties. that's not going to affect anybody inside the m25. so this true, you won't find a house for that inside or a flat or really anything. but it does seem as if the tories are kind of maybe doing a u—turn on their, you know, zero seats policy. they've been out for so far. been going going out for so far. >> do you think this will be the winning thing, the duty winning thing, the stamp duty policy back from 14 policy will pull it back from 14 years. there was no years. well, there was no time from last, from from the from the last, from the from the spring. budget statement. there was nothing. there was nothing. yeah. there was there was they didn't see a bounce back from anything there. so it really is it's too little too late. and they've still got too late. and they've still got to build and do something about immigration. it's not really going to much. all right. going to do much. all right. that front page is that is the front page is dealt with. coming up is anxiety with. but coming up is anxiety a disability. halal mortgages are
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welcome back to headliners i'm
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nick dixon, still here with josh howie. there he is . and looking howie. there he is. and looking good again. and damian slash. all right, let's get. you know, i was just i was i was admiring damian's sort of hat. i'm going to try. it was a sort of royal, have you got, have you got bald envy, i don't know. you're looking pretty good. you're looking. there it is again. get that camera away . don't put that that camera away. don't put that as a preset. oh, turned as a preset. oh, it's turned into like. yeah they said they said that saved it, which is good. we've got that good. we've got we've got that now. we've now. josh just so you know we've always ready. obviously always got that ready. obviously my watching my wife's not watching so she won't never won't notice. yeah she never watches. let's time watches. let's let's do the time . and it turns out anxiety may not qualify as a disability. there goes my parking space. josh. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> anxiety may not qualify for disability benefits in rishi sunaks reforms. so this is a really big story. this is, something that would have to be deau something that would have to be dealt with by any government. and i just have to say, let's not make it about tories and labour or anybody, because we have a big problem here. we are spending billion a year on spending $50 billion a year on sickness . that's going
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sickness benefits. that's going to another billion to rise another 20 billion by the the decade . and a lot the end of the decade. and a lot of that increase is mental health issues. how we the what rishi sunak is talking about is how we, are going to basically judge whether who, who genuinely has it and who is playing the system . now, let'sjust has it and who is playing the system . now, let's just be real system. now, let's just be real here. i'm a comic. i've been out there for many years now. i've got lots of mates in different strata of life, and some people i know play the system . okay, i know play the system. okay, now that's not everybody, that's just some people. and there are loopholes . and of people loopholes. and a lot of people have realised that they can have realised now that they can get and say, i'm get away and say, oh, i'm feeling bit depressed get feeling a bit depressed and get money life paid money and get their life paid for. and yeah, that's, that's a reality. schaffer reality. yeah. lewis schaffer yeah , i mean, yeah, i mean there yeah, i mean, yeah, i mean there is in that. mean, if is something in that. i mean, if i didn't it when i was i didn't come to it when i was anxious or depressed, i'd stay at day. what at home every day. what do you think, at home every day. what do you thirwell, exactly. i mean, >> well, well exactly. i mean, i was wondering existential >> well, well exactly. i mean, i was wcame ng existential >> well, well exactly. i mean, i was wcame underexistential >> well, well exactly. i mean, i was wcame under ennui tial >> well, well exactly. i mean, i was wcame under ennui because, dread came under ennui because, i absolutely i mean, it's absolutely terrifying so, terrifying even being alive. so, i how can not be i mean, how can you not be anxious? so, i mean, we have to
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kind of the distinction kind of draw the distinction between existing between the terror of existing and you know, maybe and of course, you know, maybe being anxious that you can't being so anxious that you can't actually yeah, mean, actually work. but yeah, i mean, there's we've got there's no doubt that we've got very kind of blase with getting people medication . there are people on medication. there are financial incentives to do that, which i think are driving it. and, you know, it's probably good to draw some kind of line between, you know, who is too anxious to work and who is anxious to work and who is anxious and say, doesn't feel like it. but, you know, i, i do think it's ironic coming from rishi sunak, who basically shut down the entire economy for two years and told everyone to stay at home and, you know, overmedicated the population in a whole host of other ways to now be rolling it back. i mean, it's a little bit ironic. >> yes. we've had lockdowns, we're over medicalised . we have we're over medicalised. we have a lack of meaning, a of a lack of meaning, a lack of incentives to work, many factors causing this. i think there's a quite strange bit from sunak quite a strange bit from sunak here. says there is nothing here. he says there is nothing compassionate about leaving a generation people generation of young people to sit in dark before sit alone in the dark before a flickering watching as flickering screen, watching as their further from their dreams slip further from
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reach passing sounds their dreams slip further from reacj.g. passing sounds their dreams slip further from reacj.g. ballard ;ing sounds their dreams slip further from reacj.g. ballard or] sounds their dreams slip further from reacj.g. ballard or something.is like j.g. ballard or something. or blade runner weirdly poetic. that's the way they're trying to sort of frame it is. we're doing it for your own good. we've got to you out of this. like to get you out of this. like you've truculent you've got that truculent teenagerin you've got that truculent teenager in their but also teenager in their room. but also he's we've run out of he's saying, we've run out of money. it's a moral mission. let's, it's not let's, you know, let's it's not a mission. there is a a moral mission. it's there is a fairness about the people fairness here about the people who system and who pay into the system and people from the system. people who take from the system. but financial but really, it's a financial mission. it we mission. that's what it is. we have a limited of money. have a limited amount of money. the fear is that now when i think of disabled people, i think of disabled people, i think of disabled people, i think of people with who are born disabilities born with disabilities or have had accidents in their life, physical the physical disabilities and the fear would be that those people would not be, allowed the benefits that they need and deserve to help them. and it's going to people with these , what going to people with these, what you could call anxiety. so that's why i want to make sure that's why i want to make sure that people are cared for and, you know, otherwise just and you could have proper, obviously mental conditions, but not, like you say, mild anxiety and so on. all right, let's do the guardian
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. and rishi sunak has rejected an offer. i didn't read an eu offer. i didn't even read the i'm like get in damian. >> well this is yeah. rishi sunak basically said no sunak has basically said no to the offer this, the eu's offer to offer this, youth mobility scheme, which essentially would be a kind of, open borders for certain students who want to kind of, you know, swap places with some british students. and, i mean, the point should be made that labour also turned this down as well, because it just it's just probably a look to have probably not a good look to have a of mini mini a kind of mini eu. yeah, mini brexit reversal. while the kind of like migration thing is completely out of control. >> let's get rid of free movement. but got youth movement. but we've got youth mobility. it's like back under another say. but you mobility. it's like back under anoit's say. but you mobility. it's like back under anoit's not say. but you mobility. it's like back under anoit's not a say. but you mobility. it's like back under anoit's not a gooday. but you mobility. it's like back under anoit's not a good look. |t you mobility. it's like back under anoit's not a good look. that's say it's not a good look. that's the thing. it's just a look that's the actual reality of that's not the actual reality of it. reality would it's it. the reality would be it's a limited by it involves visas. it has. people have to prove income and ability. so it isn't an actual open border thing at all. and it's sad because it having this scheme where young people can go to other countries and, and earn it benefits us as
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benefits. it benefits our youth going abroad, it benefits our economy. importing people coming over who could well contribute to society. >> and that's true. and i think the, the point they go on to make both labour and the conservatives is that, well , you conservatives is that, well, you know, we're just saying no to the eu's offer and actually we're still going go to all we're still going to go to all the we want and offer the countries we want and offer this individually as this to them individually as sovereign which of sovereign nations, which of course can always course is what we can always do whenever want anyway. the whenever we want anyway. and the eu tried to eu has essentially tried to front run , you know, people front run, you know, people doing it individually as they always yeah always do. yeah >> well, josh, you're in favour. but even a senior labour has but even a senior labour mp has said it's sugar rush, a fast said it's a sugar rush, a fast fix solution that would be helpful. but an incoming labour government be hard wean government would be hard to wean off apparently. well you know. yeah, that's yeah, but that's that's sometimes you need a sugar fix. well that's true labour also labour also said that, you know, this would be good because you could get workers in that they need for their green revolution . need for their green revolution. >> and again they're saying, >> and so again they're saying, oh we can some
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oh great, we can get some workers and you know, why not? why we train the people why don't we train the people here do those instead of here to do those jobs instead of getting them from the eu? getting them in from the eu? >> why don't have really >> okay. why don't have a really strong opinion that one? strong opinion on that one? because too boring. let's because it was too boring. let's do the mail now. even though it's with story it's important with a story about mortgages, i think about halal mortgages, i think quite convert just quite a few people convert just to a house at point, to get a house at this point, but unfortunately it's in canada. but unfortunately it's in canadayeah, trudeau >> oh yeah, this is trudeau announcing halal mortgages to help canadians help muslim canadians get onto the property ladder. that's the property ladder. and that's that's kind of crux that's really the kind of crux of that there are of the story that there are these halal mortgages, which are mortgages a different form mortgages in a different form that involve interest , that don't involve interest, whereby you can say you buy into the property with the bank and then you rent to them, thereby paying then you rent to them, thereby paying off the property over time without the sounds like a mortgage, it's a lot. it's actually a lot like a mortgage. it just doesn't have the word interest in it. so yeah, it's a it's a, it's a kind of way of making it halal, i suppose. but this does already exist and you can already do this. i mean , any can already do this. i mean, any all three of us could get a halal mortgage tomorrow if we wanted. i mean, anyone could do
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it. i didn't know about it, and i quite want one. actually, it sounds i personally, sounds like a i personally, i don't see doing don't see josh doing it personally, but yeah, maybe. >> if the deal >> would you do it if the deal was good enough? that's how was good enough? that's not how many stereotypes are going to go for yeah . for here. well, multiple, yeah. fair they actually fair enough. but they actually work be expensive. work out to be more expensive. or can work more or they can work out to be more expensive are expensive because they are riskier. the riskier. so this is the government essentially giving a guarantee like do guarantee like they do in america with, with their system there. but but the problem is , there. but but the problem is, when you start doing those acting, when the government acts as a guarantor, it can drive up pnces as a guarantor, it can drive up prices because then people will take make bigger risks. yeah, i always thought this one of the best things about islam was the lack of interest . but yeah, when lack of interest. but yeah, when i read up on this, i was like, hang on. so effectively renders the saddles the buyer a tenant or saddles them they have them with debt because they have a own model . it's a rent to own model. so it's actually no better, you say, actually no better, as you say, it's a different structure it's just a different structure for the same thing. so now for doing the same thing. so now i'm convinced not be i'm less convinced might not be a muslim well, i'm an a muslim anymore. well, i'm an andrew going split andrew tate are going to split on this are yeah i'm on this issue. are you. yeah i'm finding fallout with andrew. finding a fallout with andrew. yeah. with old
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yeah. sticking with the old christianity but christianity thing. but i wouldn't a house as i wouldn't mind a house as well. i mean, i think you've got a house. you're all right. it'll never flat. all never come up flat. let's all calm down. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i don't know if the interest rates things change rates on these things can change drastically or not, but right now, taking a mortgage now, i mean, taking a mortgage out, never know what's out, you just never know what's going happen. know going to happen. you don't know if mortgage, you know, your if your mortgage, you know, your interest going interest rates are going to shoot randomly given time. >> that is true. >> that is true. >> it's it sounds a little bit more i mean, i am more secure to me. i mean, i am thinking converting just to thinking of converting just to get of these, right. and get one of these, all right. and you actually have to. you don't actually have to. >> not converting >> so see josh not converting you called balance you are. it's called balance guys. regulated. guys. we're perfectly regulated. do yeah. do you watch us ofcom. yeah. checkit do you watch us ofcom. yeah. check it out. ofcom let's do the guardian then. and women have been filled against their will on there's on nights out. now if there's one women hate, one thing women hate, it's attention. i'm sorry about attention. josh i'm sorry about that apologise the that joke. i apologise to the nation. well women are nation. well look, women are urged police over urged to contact police over manchester online manchester nightlife online videos. so these videos have drunk young women scantily clad. am i allowed to say that nowadays ? yeah, falling about nowadays? yeah, falling about outside of nightclubs and they're being secretly filmed, and these videos are going online, and it's a tricky one
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because they're obviously in that state in public in the first place. i'm not trying to. i guess i am victim blaming here. yeah, you are, i am victim. but but the point is that they're also they're young and we all do stupid things when we're young. and i'm just thinking now, if i had a, if i, if i'd been filmed being drunk and every stupid thing i did when i was drunk, i would not, i'd be here. we've got we've got some footage, actually, we're not deploying it. we're saving the that. the idea the idea that. yes. so the idea that in their moment of that them in their moment of being mates , abandoned, being revelry mates, abandoned, doing crazy things is somehow that's an indictment on them. it's like, no, you're young and you're stupid and you should be allowed to do that and get away with it and not have it recorded and to criticised the and sent to be criticised by the incels the world. incels of the world. >> i i've seen these >> yeah. i mean, i've seen these videos on tiktok many times, videos on on tiktok many times, and are all over and i mean, they are all over tiktok right now. this tiktok right now. i mean, this this claims you don't have this story claims you don't have to those accounts. that's to follow those accounts. that's what there's many what i'm saying. there's so many of right? of them, right? >> the ubiquitous possible to
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avoid >> okay. >> okay. >> and type in young >> and when you type in young girls well i mean it's just the thing comes up. thing that comes up. >> i mean, i am a tiktok of myself and tiktok have claimed they've got rid of this stuff. >> are you sure you want to admit well, admit that in public, well, i mean, the old mean, he's smashing the old models have have collapsed, i'm afraid. are the future . afraid. and we are the future. but no, they're still all over tiktok . you can go and search tiktok. you can go and search for them right now. they've done nothing. they're still there. and it is . i mean, there's just and it is. i mean, there's just really. no, there's no kind of like standing this. like standing up, for this. it is voyeurism . is just. it's just voyeurism. it's shot by one guy. it's all super voyeuristic. they are all drunk , and it's totally. it is drunk, and it's totally. it is completely inappropriate by any standard. know, it's creepy. standard. you know, it's creepy. it's creepy. and i, i mean, it's just creepy. and i, i mean, this guy's probably going to go to jail , to be honest. to jail, to be honest. >> yes, i agree, it is creepy. anything like this, upskirting all that kind of thing. voyeurism. disgusting. yes. there's a slight point. josh is saying that should they, is it ideal go and get ideal to go out and get absolutely hammered and be in a kind state? probably not. but kind of state? probably not. but then the separate
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then again, the separate issue is issue. yeah. is a separate issue. yeah. >> mean like, yeah, sure. >> i mean it's like, yeah, sure. i mean, if i went out wearing a thong you i sort thong and, you know, i was sort of a gutter lying on of in a, in a gutter lying on a kebab if, you know , josh would kebab if, you know, josh would film it. >> yeah, e yeah, mean p“ >> yeah, yeah, i mean it. >> yeah, yeah, i mean it. >> you know, friends >> fine. you know, if my friends were filming it or if a random person in life, person was filming it, in life, it's different someone's it's different if someone's literally set up a camera outside to me in my thong, outside to catch me in my thong, and his whole channel. and that's his whole channel. >> just creepy. that's and that's his whole channel. >> creepy. st creepy. that's and that's his whole channel. >> creepy. damien]. that's and that's his whole channel. >> creepy. damien thong s very creepy. damien thong channel. yeah. channel. yeah, yeah. >> i think i'm i'm >> so, yeah, i think i'm on. i'm on the side of the ladies in this one, i agree. >> feminist. >> all right. i'm a feminist. now is part two now let's that is part two pretty done. but coming pretty much done. but coming up unilever the unilever ditches the woke nonsense. charlotte was nonsense. queen charlotte was apparently colour nonsense. queen charlotte was app'cambridge colour nonsense. queen charlotte was app'cambridge university.our nonsense. queen charlotte was app'cambridge university is|r and cambridge university is favouring pupils. favouring private school pupils. surprise! that last one
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welcome back to headliners. let's get straight into it with the guardian. and unilever is set to scale back its environmental and social pledges in favour of wait for it actually making money. >> daniel, i know they're kind
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of you turning on their esg mandates, but yes , unilever is mandates, but yes, unilever is scaling back environmental and social pledges and basically saying unleash the plastic because their profits haven't been so good. they're firing workers. you know, they need to get growth and everything they make basically it comes in plastic. i mean, they make bleach, they make dove, they make surf. and you can't put bleach in a in a brown paper bag. and they also speak for yourself . well, you can try it. yourself. well, you can try it. but they also make ben& jerry's, which is absolutely amazing. i didn't know that. and of course, ben and jerry's is the most woke, yes, food product in existence, constantly, you existence, which constantly, you know, goes on about the environment and it turns out, you know, they're are you know, they're they are essentially by the one of essentially owned by the one of the biggest plastic producers in the biggest plastic producers in the world. so nothing they say has any leg to stand on as usual. yeah. >> and jerry's are the most >> ben and jerry's are the most insufferable. it's let's insufferable. it's like, let's talk about it's like, talk about israel. it's like, no, just eat. i'm no, i'm trying to just eat. i'm trying to have escapism and become want become obese. i don't want to think about politics. they're awful. interesting,
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awful. but it's so interesting, josh, there's a guy josh, that. so there's a guy called, parvini who called, doctor neema parvini who believes that the woke being believes that the woke is being put that kind believes that the woke is being pu regime, that kind believes that the woke is being pu regime, whatever:hat kind believes that the woke is being pu regime, whatever you kind believes that the woke is being pu regime, whatever you call
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yeah, it's a tricky. so they're still to the plastic . still going to cut the plastic. but look i think less plastic i think can agree a good think we can agree is a good thing. yeah i mean and they are going to be cutting more. >> literally everybody >> yeah. literally everybody hates plastic don't they. i mean >> yeah. literally everybody hwant3lastic don't they. i mean >> yeah. literally everybody hwant more: don't they. i mean >> yeah. literally everybody hwant more plastic. hey. i mean i want more plastic. climate deniers sorry hate plastic. i want more plastic. climate derlzrs sorry hate plastic. i want more plastic. climate deri want sorry hate plastic. i want more plastic. climate deri want morery hate plastic. i want more plastic. climate deri want more because lastic. i want more plastic. climate deri want more because i'mic. i want more plastic. climate deri want more because i'm so >> i want more because i'm so like beaten down by the like i'm so beaten down by the annoying capitalism. just annoying woke capitalism. i just want now. just want more plastic now. just loads plastic loads of plastic. plastic straws. on. straws straws. come on. paper straws don't work. >> yeah, i mean, let's get >> yeah, i mean, the. let's get into nest of vipers of into that nest of vipers of plastic straws. i've been talking for three but talking for three hours, but it's similar happened it's similar to what happened with boeing with, you with boeing recently with, you know, kind of know, boeing essentially kind of had u—turn a lot of had also had to u—turn a lot of their esg initiatives , which had their esg initiatives, which had degraded company degraded the company to such an extent. ended up , degraded the company to such an extent. ended up, you degraded the company to such an extent. ended up , you know, extent. they ended up, you know, selling some of ip to selling some of their ip to china. yeah and it's happening in a lot of companies. and i think lot of them are seeing think a lot of them are seeing that the esg mandates and the dei that have come dei policies that have come down from, davos stakeholder from, say, davos and stakeholder capitalism just are destroying western productivity and companies. yeah. and it's you're seeing it across the board . and seeing it across the board. and yes, they are going to put the
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work away for that reason because maybe it served its purpose i don't know. but for whatever everything's whatever reason, everything's shifting from that now, shifting away from that now, yeah, it doesn't work. yeah, i agree it doesn't work. they're getting rid of it. let's do the times and turns out gender dysphoria and autism might knew? might be linked. who knew? except everyone on this except for everyone on this channel. josh. yes. for a long, long our autism and gender long time, our autism and gender dysphoria linked. this professor thinks defessa is thinks so. this defessa is called professor michael craig, he sat in at various sessions going on at the tavistock clinic, which is now closed, which was the main gender treatment centre in the uk. and, basically he as he was in these sessions because he also specialises in autism. he was like, wait a minute, about 40, 50% of these people who are being treated here look like they are also displaying the same symptoms of autism. so this has this connection has been made for a long time. it's also been highlighted recently in the cas report. more specifically, an and their what this article
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is getting into is more some of the reasons why there's a bit of a chicken and the egg situation going on where they're like, we're talking about neurological differences, is that is that connected to the neurological differences of thinking that you're a different sex, but it might also be identified as certainly young with young girls. and that's gone up sort of , i think girls. and that's gone up sort of, i think 100 fold in the last ten years of people of young girls identifying as trans, 5,000, 5000. yeah, it's crazy. well, 50 up to 5000. yeah. anyway, it's, it's pretty incredible. but what that might suggest is that if they, if there's a good chunk of those that contingent is autistic, it's because of being able the reaction to puberty and the and the change that comes with that can be very difficult for particularly for autistic young teenage girls to deal with. and so that might push them into this idea that, oh, i'm actually a different. yes. and, and
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there's more social acceptance with and gone, well, i was with it. and gone, well, i was just going to say it kind of seems common sense really. seems like common sense really. >> like, there are. so >> it's like, there are. so we're not computers, right? there nuances in how there are so many nuances in how our develop, our our brains develop, our personalities develop, how our psyches develop, and everyone has the potential to have some neuro spiciness to, to some degree. and so whether it's autism or something else, it's like, surely it's the job of any medical professional or psychological professional to explore all of those things. before you get to my eight year old is absolutely right, and i need to do what they say. >> yeah. that's insane. and another strange thing is this this guy, doctor lawson here, who says claims that people who says he claims that people with less compulsion with autism feel less compulsion to societal norms. to conform to societal norms. this us to connect more this frees us up to connect more readily our gender, readily with our true gender, which reading of which is a ludicrous reading of it. far more likely is it. what's far more likely is they feel disassociated from their is their actual body. that is a separate this is a different professor that who says that? yeah, is transgender yeah, that is transgender themselves. obviously yeah, that is transgender themsthees. obviously yeah, that is transgender themsthe they obviously yeah, that is transgender themsthe they are obviously yeah, that is transgender themsthe they are acknowledging using the they are acknowledging this connection to autism. but
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they're to sort of push they're trying to sort of push it in their direction to push their ideology . but continuing their ideology. but continuing on what you were saying, damian, is, yes, the difference is that these children and these autistic people went in and as the first professor says, michael craig, is that they were automatically just assumed to be trans instead of dealing with these symptoms of autism. and that led, of course, to puberty blockers and medicalisation . blockers and medicalisation. >> and that is just astonishing. and that's why it's the, you know, the biggest medical scandal for 100 years, because, you know , if even one child who you know, if even one child who had autism ended up being you know, treated with hormone, sorry, puberty blockers or something, that's an absolute travesty. you know, it's terrible . absolutely. terrible. absolutely. >> agreed. all right. let's do the times. and cambridge university accidentally university is accidentally favouring school pupils. favouring private school pupils. that a blow them. that must be a blow for them. damian >> yes, n damian >> yes, i mean, >> yes, indeed. i mean, cambridge university is a wider access scheme has been aiding private pupils instead of private school pupils instead of what you would assume it would be helping, which would be, say, you know, from, working you know, kids from, working
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class or from state class backgrounds or from state schools. but it turns out that they've some people have been kind of playing the system. and so of the schools on the so some of the schools on the outreach email list or the kind of list they were outreaching to turn out to be some of the, you know, poshest and most privileged schools in existence, including a school that they literally there horses . literally ride there on horses. >> so that could be how poor they are. that could be in sort of, can't put a car right? right yeah. be an island. yeah. >> that's the horseshoe theory, isn't it? i mean, oh yeah. so rich, eventually become poor rich, you eventually become poor again. yeah. included again. yeah. but yeah. included gordonstoun, the king's alma mater and an online school set up mater and an online school set ”p by mater and an online school set up by harrow and a cambridge actually aren't apologising for this. and it seems like it's kind of a hack. it's like they don't really want to outreach that much. again, a kind of u—turn from a more esg type thinking and a return to no. we actually do just want the absolute most , elite and actually do just want the absolute most, elite and highly trained children we can source.
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yes, that's what we should go back to. >> well, yeah. >> well, yeah. >> and of course, in their minds that that that happens to be these schools. i mean, i think it's a bit of a shame to be honest. >> but yeah, independent schools are often likely better. are often likely to be better. isn't as as that? what isn't it as simple as that? what do you think, josh? no. well, the because the the what it is because the system identify schools the what it is because the systenthey identify schools the what it is because the systenthey iderhad schools the what it is because the systenthey iderhad schothan where they have had less than five who to five pupils who went to cambridge. that's the idea. so some public schools, believe it or not, have full of rich people who are quite thick. so i went to one of those schools i didn't want to say. yeah. and so there would be less than five people who'd gone to cambridge . and of who'd gone to cambridge. and of course, we all had a lot of privilege, but we were just stupid. i'm annoyed because i was i went was the opposite. i went to a state comprehensive. i've got the third highest grade the the third highest grade in the country never country history a—level. never talk one said go to talk about it. no one said go to oxbridge and here we now. oxbridge and here we are now. but you're hosting i'm not. but you're hosting and i'm not. so it all worked out. so maybe it all worked out. you've fallen this you've fallen to this level. this i could this is the highest i could possibly go. that's the difference. this. difference. let's do this. telegraph charlotte telegraph and queen charlotte was allegedly person of was allegedly a person of colour. can be proud of
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was allegedly a person of colcwonderfully can be proud of was allegedly a person of colcwonderfully diversee proud of then. >> josh, why? >> josh, why? >> queen charlotte was of >> queen charlotte was person of colour lgbt colour museum claims in lgbt guide . this is the royal museums guide. this is the royal museums in greenwich. the, word there to stress is museum and they've got this kind of history trail and you listen to an audiobook and there's this guy, he's a homosexual historian, self—declared, i should say, christian adore. i don't know if that's his real name. and he, as they walk around, they see a bust of, queen charlotte, and she's like, yeah. the insecure white boys writing history conveniently forgot that, actually, she was the royals first person of colour. and it's just not true. it's all based on on someone who wrote something 50 years after she died and they said, oh, she was born. and she looked when she was born as a baby, she looked like she could be. >> and incidentally, that person happened to be a white boy. >> oh, yeah. >> oh, yeah. >> so just kind of weird. >> so just kind of weird. >> why are using the phrase >> why are they using the phrase insecure boys? who
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insecure white boys? who are these? it are you hiring these? is it are you hiring racist this racist children? this is a museum. you shouldn't hear the phrase insecure white boy in a museum, phrase insecure white boy in a mu yesn, phrase insecure white boy in a mu yes ., >> yes. >> yes. >> this is the museum of idiocy. i'm quite insecure , but it's not i'm quite insecure, but it's not very. i mean, do you really expect to hear. it's not very historical, is it? you you wouldn't hear starkey out wouldn't hear starkey coming out with you? but wouldn't hear starkey coming out witiinteresting you? but wouldn't hear starkey coming out witiinteresting thing you? but wouldn't hear starkey coming out witiinteresting thing later)u? but the interesting thing later on, and they took the same and then they they took the same person talking about the bisexuality james first. bisexuality of james the first. and deliciously stories and it's deliciously gay stories and states that charles the second, and he had a string of mistresses and said, look how progressive he was. he was progressive he was. now he was a player tinder saying, this player on tinder saying, this quy- player on tinder saying, this guy. another way to frame it would he was abused, his would be he was abused, his power to have all these affairs. so there , framing it like, look so there, framing it like, look at him. he was so progressive with his mistresses . at him. he was so progressive with his mistresses. history's andrew feminists with his mistresses. history's andrevgo, feminists with his mistresses. history's andrevgo, here's|inists with his mistresses. history's andrev go, here's a|ists with his mistresses. history's andrevgo, here's a guy would go, well, here's a guy basically picking you every wanted and abusing women. yeah i mean, here's one little irony though about this, which i have to credit toby young with. sadly, it's not mine, which is that want to say these kind that they want to say these kind of people want to of people woke. people want to say, history is terrible. say, our history is terrible. decolonised was evil.
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decolonised the empire was evil. at same they to at the same time, they want to say history has always been say our history has always been full immigration, full of full of immigration, full of diversity it's like, diversity and lgbt. it's like, well, need well, then we don't need to decolonise already done. well, then we don't need to deco would already done. well, then we don't need to deco would you already done. well, then we don't need to deco would you wanteady done. well, then we don't need to deco would you want toy done. well, then we don't need to deco would you want toy do rid of why would you want to get rid of that beautiful, diverse, rich history? the dilemma? yeah. >> and the only structural racism is idea from racism i see is the idea from the that black person the left that say a black person could not, could not be inspired by or interested in a white person . right? i mean, that to person. right? i mean, that to me is structural racism. if you're if you're rewriting history and ideas in that marxist model, i mean, that's the complete antithesis to what martin luther king talked. great point. >> neo—marxist post—modernism thatis >> neo—marxist post—modernism that is part three obliterated. but coming up in the final section, why men take longer to get over break—ups does fasting actually and would you actually work? and would you give £20 million become give away £20 million to become a obviously see
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welcome back to headliners. for the final section, let's get into it with the metro. and it
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takes men longer than women to get over a break—up. is that because we actually have souls? josh, he took it. you're in a woman what, well , josh, he took it. you're in a woman what, well, i just. woman here. what, well, i just. okay. it officially takes women men longer to get over a break—up. this is a terrifying story from sex expert doctor limor gottlieb , and the gist of limor gottlieb, and the gist of it is, is that men are rubbish and women are, will put up with us for a certain amount of time, and men will think that everything's all fine. and then 60% of women will actually divorce men, and then it's over for us because they're plotting because it wasn't fine. they were planning their escape route. most divorces are initiated i've watched initiated by women. i've watched all on youtube about all the videos on youtube about this. so is damian. this. and so this is damian. what you isn't this this. and so this is damian. whaclassic? isn't this this. and so this is damian. whaclassic? i isn't this this. and so this is damian. whaclassic? i ithe this this. and so this is damian. whaclassic? i ithe men just classic? i mean, the men don't what's them. don't realise what's hit them. they divorced, but the women they get divorced, but the women have it about have been plotting it for about five years something. five years or something. well i you see a lot and i don't you see it a lot and i don't know, i see so many kind of videos, especially again on tiktok , you know, who tiktok of, you know, men who seem completely of
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seem completely incapable of looking themselves. looking after themselves. >> they have this kind of they kind into big babies kind of turn into big babies over and i'm not blaming over time. and i'm not blaming men i mean, men here. i mean, there's a whole host of reasons why it's harder men after a divorce harder for men after a divorce or something, men or something, you know, men don't same to don't get the same access to their kids stuff like that, their kids and stuff like that, right? anyway. but, well, right? and, anyway. but, well, that money. but but my point is, i do i do think men are in our society kind of. they get they get very comfortable. they lose their edge. they forget. they forget to harness and maintain a healthy kind of masculinity within their relationships. and they do end up coming out the other side, i think, very confused and lost seems very anti—man talking about me. >> they're not very seen. yeah, josh feels seen because he doesn't. he's forgotten how to look after himself. but come on men, most of divorces are initiated women, men initiated by women, right? men as terrible custody, as you said, terrible custody, laws stacked against men. they lose money. they can't see their kids. not men's fault, is kids. it's not men's fault, is it? surely? >> well, not saying it's >> well, i'm not saying it's men's i'm just saying men men's fault. i'm just saying men need responsibility. one's no. no one's fault.
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>> no one's no. no one's fault. men step this is men need to step up. this is what need to understand. this what we need to understand. this is here. the last is what it says here. the last thing here. women experience dissatisfaction more profoundly or blokes, or more strongly. so blokes, we're just going to be like, if no to us, no one says anything to us, we're just going be like, oh we're just going to be like, oh yeah, everything's good, we'll accept and yeah, everything's good, we'll acce|your and yeah, everything's good, we'll acce|your wife and yeah, everything's good, we'll acce|your wife turns and yeah, everything's good, we'll acce|your wife turns aroundd yeah, everything's good, we'll acce|your wife turns around to then your wife turns around to you says, oh, been you and says, oh, i've been unhappy months. you're unhappy for months. and you're like, what you did? you know, we'll of life's we'll be like, of course life's miserable . we've accepted a low miserable. we've accepted a low level at all times. level unhappiness at all times. so point is, men so yeah, the point is, any men out there who want to stay out there who who want to stay married, just assume that it is something is wrong and step up your game. precisely. i'm talking to myself here. well, that's my game to you as well. >> exactly what i'm saying. it's like, more attention. yeah, like, pay more attention. yeah, and your edge . make and don't lose your edge. make sure sure you look sure you make sure you look after yourself and take responsibility . and i think you responsibility. and i think you might get different results. and i'm take a little i'm just saying take a little bit more responsibility. edge. i'm just saying take a little bit yeah.responsibility. edge. i'm just saying take a little bit yeah. okay.isibility. edge. i'm just saying take a little bit yeah. okay.isiget:y. edge. i'm just saying take a little bit yeah. okay.isiget allnge. i'm just saying take a little bit yeah. okay.isiget all right. >> yeah. okay. i get all right. let's do the male. and turns out some men are allergic to their own that's about as own orgasms. that's about as unlucky it gets, it, david? >> oh my god , this story. yeah, >> oh my god, this story. yeah, l, >> oh my god, this story. yeah, i, yeah . you. could you be
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i, yeah. you. could you be allergic to your own orgasm? question mark. study finds there's several different types of post—coital flu symptoms that strike men. and it doesn't have to be post—coital . this can also to be post—coital. this can also be, you know, self—love and or in fact, any form of orgasm, including having an orgasm in your sleep , and apparently this your sleep, and apparently this is leaving some men. i mean, when i say some, i mean virtually none over 20 years. we're talking about 60, but these poor 60 men have ended up with terrible flu symptoms, right? aches and and self loathing. >> and the thing we're covering this important story, i mean, i've got a master's in modern literature. josh, one of the symptoms fatigue . i mean, i symptoms is fatigue. i mean, i read this, i was like , i can't read this, i was like, i can't believe i'm one of the 60. yeah, one the symptoms is just difficulty concentrating. that means you're just not listening anymore because you're kind of. yeah happy, one them yeah happy, right? one of them was speech. i mean, was incoherent speech. i mean, this is yeah, i've got it right. i've got it right now. i had a good break. all right. because this goes out at 5 am. let's move on and do the times of
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fasting is not a magical solution for weight loss, as we've noticed. josh. yeah. we've both noticed. josh. yeah. you doing you know. yeah, i've been doing this off for the this fasting on and off for the last years. yo, yo, last two years. yo, yo, the audience have me. audience will have seen me. whoa. it's okay. oh, he whoa. it's josh okay. oh, he definitely against fasting definitely is against fasting diets, magical solution diets, not magical solution for weight study and it weight loss study finds. and it seems but the. so seems so obvious, but the. so the point is, fasting in and of itself isn't going to. and it's obviously a bit of a fad thing. and you've got rishi sunak doing it for 36 hours a week and all of this. that's why use the of this. that's why i use the way it works. why does way around. it works. why does it because you're it work? because you're eating less. simple. so it's less. it's that simple. so it's easier eat nothing than it is easier to eat nothing than it is to sort of weigh up calories and look up to trick yourself to eat less. exactly. but it does. it does apparently have other health mice, so health benefits in mice, so it may other health benefits. may have other health benefits. but talking about but you're talking about pure weight know, blood weight loss, you know, and blood pressure pressure. pressure and blood pressure. >> about >> yes. they're talking about just and of course just weight loss. and of course there a whole host of other there are a whole host of other benefits and i think benefits as well. and i think they're about they're also talking about intermittent fasting rather than just, eating three just, say, not eating for three weeks, definitely just, say, not eating for three weekyou definitely just, say, not eating for three weekyou know, definitely just, say, not eating for three weekyou know, take definitely just, say, not eating for three weekyou know, take some tely just, say, not eating for three weekyou know, take some pounds will, you know, take some pounds off. yes. true. >> but not for everyone. >> and but not for everyone. >> and but not for everyone.
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>> okay. should we do this other one yeah. yeah do one quickly? yeah. yeah let's do this quickly. a couple this star quickly. in a couple of away their £20 million of giving away their £20 million fortune become i'm not fortune to become monks, i'm not sure impressed or sure whether to be impressed or kind damien. kind of annoyed. damien. >> you it's more >> well, there you go. it's more of horseshoe theory. they've of our horseshoe theory. they've got that realise got so rich that they realise that actually, really that actually, you don't really need any money. and they became monks their so monks just like their kids. so they're were monks just like their kids. so they'of were monks just like their kids. so they'of monk were monks just like their kids. so they'of monk pilled were monks just like their kids. so they'of monk pilled by'e kind of like monk pilled by their their children. and kind of like monk pilled by their they eir children. and kind of like monk pilled by their they decided ren. and kind of like monk pilled by their they decided to . and kind of like monk pilled by their they decided to literally they, they decided to literally catapult most catapult some of their most pnzed catapult some of their most prized possessions into their community. think that was community. and i think that was how they gave them away. >> they chucked stuff over a bndge >> they chucked stuff over a bridge or something and people were catching i mean, it's were catching it. i mean, it's kind annoying. tv. yeah. were catching it. i mean, it's kind theyioying. tv. yeah. were catching it. i mean, it's kind they my1g. tv. yeah. were catching it. i mean, it's kind they my thought v. yeah. were catching it. i mean, it's kind they my thought v. yethey yeah, they my thought was they better monks better be really good monks because otherwise you've just given minutes. if you're given away 20 minutes. if you're a and you're like, a rubbish monk and you're like, i want the back. and also i want the money back. and also they're they're they're married. they're a married well, so married couple. well, yeah. so they've walk around now they've got to walk around now and have to survive and they, they have to survive off the generosity off the generous generosity of other people. i mean, that's all well and good and like. yeah, giving generosity but like giving away generosity but like keep back. yeah. also keep a million back. yeah. also a million just for rainy day. i bet you i bet you £1 million. >> there's some money
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>> there's, there's some money tucked some. tucked away, some. >> yeah. some assets or something. other thing is if something. the other thing is if you that given away you knew that they'd given away 20 you'd be so annoyed 20 million, you'd be so annoyed i'd help them. 20 million, you'd be so annoyed i'd know help them. 20 million, you'd be so annoyed i'd know what help them. 20 million, you'd be so annoyed i'd know what i help them. 20 million, you'd be so annoyed i'd know what i mean? them. 20 million, you'd be so annoyed i'd know what i mean? theyl. 20 million, you'd be so annoyed i'd know what i mean? they want you know what i mean? they want my just based on sort my largesse just based on sort of goodwill, i'd say. why of my goodwill, i'd say. why didn't give to me? didn't you give some to me? yeah. gb or us yeah. or fun gb news. or give us all money. yeah. all money. well, yeah. >> another monastery. >> build another monastery. i don't >> build another monastery. i doryeah. build up, build a 20 >> yeah. build up, build a 20 million monasteries. right. million monasteries. all right. thanks pretty much thanks guys. show is pretty much oven thanks guys. show is pretty much over. have another over. but let's have another quick saturdays front quick look at saturdays front pages. daily mail has pages. so the daily mail has benefits after year benefits to be axed after year on the dole. the times tories plan stamp duty cut. big election winner there. the mirror now the world waits on a ram. the telegraph has. you are openly jewish. the express 200,000 demand. dame esther gets her dying wish and the star rat zilla, which is a rat story. sadly we didn't get the chance to discuss. that is pretty much it for tonight's show, thanks to josh and damien. headline is back tomorrow at p.m. josh and damien. headline is back tomorrow at pm. with back tomorrow at 11 pm. with me, lewis. and if you're me, leo and lewis. and if you're watching at 5 am, then of course, stay for course, stay tuned for breakfast. but for now it's
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pretty much night all. good pretty much good night all. good morning bless . and also morning and god bless. and also catch on youtube. that's catch us on youtube. that's where watch. where i always watch. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hi there and welcome to the latest update from the met office for gb news skies clearing overnight. most places are fine as we start the weekend with high pressure in charge. that high pressure moving in from the west still still a bit of a chilly breeze from the north, but as high pressure moves in, skies are going to clear . winds moves in, skies are going to clear. winds are going to ease and under lengthy, clear skies and under lengthy, clear skies and with light winds, temperatures will fall away . if temperatures will fall away. if you missed a fog, patches possible for the likes of northern ireland and some frosty conditions as we begin the weekend. so gardeners beware temperatures in urban areas 3 to 5 celsius, but as low as minus
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three for the likes of northern ireland, northwest england and north wales . temperatures, north wales. temperatures, though through saturday morning will quickly rise because of the widespread sunny skies and it stays sunny towards the south and the west for much of the afternoon . however, it tends to afternoon. however, it tends to turn cloudier further north, with some outbreaks of light rain moving into northern scotland, where it will be fairly chilly and we've still got breeze down the north got that breeze down the north sea coast, making it feel on the cool side , warm in the sunshine cool side, warm in the sunshine elsewhere and another sunny day to for northern ireland. to come for northern ireland. parts of southwest scotland, west wales and southwest england on sunday. skies also on sunday. bright skies also into south—east elsewhere, into the south—east elsewhere, increasingly low cloud and some patchy rain and drizzle for northern england and eastern scotland. monday brings further cloudy skies for many, with some patchy rain , but it stays patchy rain, but it stays relatively that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. >> sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> it's 9 pm. this is pat patrick christys tonight with me . ben. leo. >> yeah. look, i think they've probably got to do something similar in europe straight away. >> even let them stay . >> don't even let them stay. >> don't even let them stay. >> prime minister, your time is running time to listen running out. it's time to listen to our aussie friends and turn the boats back. i think if winston churchill came back and led the conservative party, it wouldn't help their wouldn't really help their ratings much . or is it the ratings very much. or is it the case that not even churchill could this lot from oblivion? >> we now spend £69 billion on benefits for people of working age with a disability or health condition. >> the war on sick note britain. are we a nation of wets . and. are we a nation of wets. and. the spanish tell us to do one from the canaries. meanwhile, they've been drowning the country in raw sewage. so should
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taxpayers be saddled with £15 billion worth of debt in a takeover or filth merchants thames water, talking of garbage , did you know, however, there is a gender identity that is unked is a gender identity that is linked to the seasons zero. dear gen z, invent a new gender, this time based on the seasons. tomorrow's newspaper front pages on the way and tonight's top panel are riled and ready to go . panel are riled and ready to go. tonight i'm joined by journalist and author harriet sergeant, former bbc political correspondent john sergeant, and social commentator joana jarjue. strap yourselves in. let's do this. turn the boats back or lose the election. next . election. next. >> good evening. i'm sophia wenzler in the gb newsroom. your
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top story this hour. police in new york say conspiracy theory pamphlets were found near a man who set himself on fire outside the courthouse where former us president donald trump is on trial. the man was in the designated protest area outside the manhattan criminal court. police have identified the man as maxwell azarello from florida, who was in his 30s. he's been taken to hospital and is in a critical condition . the is in a critical condition. the uk and western allies are calling for de—escalation in the middle east after reports that israel launched air strikes against iran, state media says three drones were shot down with explosions heard at an airbase near the city of isfahan. no damage or injuries have been reported in the latest exchange. the strike is thought to be in response to last weekend's attack, when iran fired a barrage of drones and missiles at israel . in other news, the at israel. in other news, the prime minister is promising his rwanda safety bill will be passed on monday. rishi sunak
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couldn't confirm whether asylum flights would get off the ground by his spring deadline, but he did say his intention was to get the legislation through parliament without further delay. mps will be delay. he says mps will be forced to sit in the commons until the job is done . the met until the job is done. the met police has apologised after an officer used the terms openly jewish to an anti—semitism campaigner who was near a pro—palestine march. a video clip posted on social media showed the moment gideon falter was threatened with arrest by police. you are quite openly jewish. >> this is a pro—palestinian march. i'm not accusing you of anything, but i'm worried about the reaction to your presence . the reaction to your presence. >> the chief executive of campaign against anti—semitism was wearing a kippah skullcap when he was stopped from crossing a road near the demonstration in london last saturday. the met police assistant commissioner said the officer's poor choice of words was hugely regrettable . and five was hugely regrettable. and five just stop oil protesters have
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