Avsnitt
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Where journalism and comedy meet - round up of the most infuriating stories of the moment, including a comedy take on the week.
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Sophie Corcoran, the claimant in an ongoing case against the Bar Council, explains why she is suing for discrimination after being rejected from a scheme restricted to applicants of particular backgrounds. She argues politicians have failed to act, so she’s taking matters into her own hands.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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'Anyone who is still calling Unite the Kingdom a far-right rally wants it to be a far-right rally.'
'They dragged me around like a ragdoll.'
Influencer and journalist, Based and Bougie joins Josh Howie to share her experiences of attending both Unite the Kingdom and Pro-Palestine marches.
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'Universities have become an echo chamber for left-wing ideologies.'
Journalist Ellie Hodges reports as students in a society dedicated to Reform UK at the University of Sussex face death threats.
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Pauline Hanson, the Australian Senator who wore a burka in the chamber, has been suspended from her role for seven days.
Ms Hanson, 71, wore the garb in the Senate on Monday as she campaigned to Introduce a Bill that would ban full face coverings in Australia.
Her fellow Senators stopped her from formally introducing it - prompting her to storm back into Australia's upper chamber in the veiled clothing.
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Historian Professor Lawrence Goldman discusses documented concerns regarding the BBC’s portrayal of key historical events in its programming between 2020 and 2022. Goldman and fellow historians submitted a detailed report to the BBC outlining inaccuracies, omissions, and ideological bias in historical coverage.
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This week, Sir Joel Bennathan KC overturned the conviction of Hamit Coskun — a Turkish ex-Muslim prosecuted for burning a Quran outside the Turkish consulate.
The judge reminded the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) of a fundamental principle: there is no offence of blasphemy in English law. The CPS had attempted to use public order legislation to punish Coskun for “offending religious feelings” — a move journalist David Shipley describes as an attempt to create a “backdoor blasphemy law.”
Shipley joins Josh Howie to discuss why this case is a pivotal moment for free speech in Britain, how CPS lawyers effectively invented a charge, and why this issue won’t end here unless politicians hold the CPS to account.
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'The cause is always there, but the justifications for introducing it seem to change depending on whatever problem we want to use as an excuse.'
UCL’s Dr Melanie Garson and Academy of Ideas’ Alastair Donald debate digital ID and its impact on our freedom.
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'We've been dominated by elites since the Second World War who have prevented us from speaking our mind and being proud of our country'.
Jake Wallis Simons says Western leaders are trying to prevent people from standing with Israel because 'it represents our older values'.
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A man was arrested for chanting “We love bacon” outside the site of a planned mosque in the Lake District. Writer and broadcaster Andrew Doyle joins Josh Howie to discuss what this case says about the state of free speech in Britain.
Doyle argues that “offensive” is not the same as illegal, and slams the Public Order Act and UK hate speech laws for allowing the state to police feelings rather than actions. He calls for a full rethink — from police training to the role of activist bodies like the College of Policing.
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'If the user and company aren't breaking the law, why is it the government's business?! It's very mafia-style politics...'
Big Brother Watch's Matthew Feeney discusses an apparent Whitehall 'spy unit' monitoring social media, flagging content discussing social issues such as immigration.
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'The idea that random adults would take children to the toilets... It's insane!'
Women's Rights Activist Kellie-Jay Keen shares her outrage at a BBC star's ally badge scheme which has sparked controversy around the safeguarding of children.
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Author and women’s rights advocate Julia Long clashes with athlete Glenique Frank in a fiery debate over new government guidance that will see pupils in England taught the legal distinctions between biological sex and gender identity. The discussion raises deep questions about education, safeguarding, and ideology in the classroom.
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Irish student Jamie O’Mahony sits down to discuss the viral moment he was assaulted and removed from a public event in Limerick for holding up an Israeli flag.
He explains how Ireland’s state-backed anti-Israel rhetoric, media bias, and academic activism have created a hostile environment where peaceful dissent is met with mob aggression — even from former family friends.
From being stripped of student positions to confronting violent double standards, Jamie shares a powerful personal testimony about the erosion of free speech, rising antisemitism, and Ireland’s troubling alignment with terrorist-linked movements.
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The US Supreme Court has upheld Tennessee’s ban on gender transition treatments for minors, ruling 6–3 that such restrictions do not constitute sex discrimination. Lawyer and author Kara Dansky says the decision marks a turning point — rejecting the idea of the “trans child” as incoherent and harmful. With 25 states having similar laws, this could set a national precedent. Dansky also argues the Biden administration is out of step with voters, and that Democrats lost ground in 2024 due to their embrace of gender ideology
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- Visa fler