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Daily Show with Andrew Pierce: Was Caroline Flack's court case a 'show trial'?

Mar 11, 2024
Hello, I'm Andrew Pierce, this is the

daily

newsroom program for the Daily Mail. There's an uproar in Oxford because some students are unhappy because Virgil's classics maybe some of Virgil's classics are being removed from the syllabus Dame Jenny Marie, the great presenter of Woman's Our, came up with 50 things to do before you're 50 and she'll tell us all about it. There is a plague of potholes in England and Wales. More than 500,000. The chants are under enormous pressure to do something about it in

case

we are raising babies. Just the ongoing dispute over Caroline Flack, should the Crown Prosecution Service really press ahead with a prosecution when the boyfriend said no, but first a war of words about Brexit, yes Brexit, went back in history in a war of words with EU negotiators, does it sound like that? family after Michelle Barney, the lead negotiator, took a Canada-style trade deal off the table.
daily show with andrew pierce was caroline flack s court case a show trial
No 10 was quick to point out that it is exactly the kind of deal the EU had previously said was possible. Now Michel Barnier says the EU will not budge on his insistence on that. horrible cliché they like to use a level playing field on environmental protection and workers' rights say they cannot accept any deal that gives the UK free rein to diverge from European standards Brussels also upped the ante by saying that the Elgin marbles, For God's sake, they have to be returned to Greece as a condition of a free trade agreement. The British Museum has already said there is no way it will join me now.
daily show with andrew pierce was caroline flack s court case a show trial

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daily show with andrew pierce was caroline flack s court case a show trial...

Emmett is a professor of accounting at the University of Essex. Professor of prize seeker. Can you explain in simple terms what a Canada-style trade agreement is? Overall, it is an agreement that would not apply to everything that is traded and would give the United Kingdom some autonomy like Canada has, but of course Canada is very far physically from the European Union, so it has more autonomy. Let's say because it also trades with other neighbors such as the United States and Mexico substantially, while the United Kingdom is obviously part of the European continent. Donna tells me that ministers are watering down some of the autoworkers' and other rights, which we don't know Britain would do.
daily show with andrew pierce was caroline flack s court case a show trial
That's what we do and that's just what Mr. Bernier says it could happen if they agree to a trade deal because we, if we move away from European rights, Britain, the British government tells me that some of the things we do now are already more advanced and better than the norm in the EU. Well, the government. Ministers have said that they will not necessarily follow EU legal rules at the moment our laws are in sync with the EU, so we are in line with them. I don't think we are ahead because as members of the EU we have to be aligned as part of a single market, but if we are going to leave the European Union, haven't you understood correctly, Professor, that we actually want to set our own rules and guidelines and we want to diverge from them?
daily show with andrew pierce was caroline flack s court case a show trial
I think the difficulties if you are going to trade with either Canada, the US or the European Union there has to be some alignment, there is no complete autonomy for any country because, first of all, no country wants its own comparative competition and their trade position will be undermined in some way so they will insist on some alignments and rules and around 44% of our trade is with the EU and we have aligned ourselves with it so it is not really surprising that if we want to continue trading to the same extent with the European Union then in a sense we will have to align with them and there is a bigger bloc than any of the others, okay if I can ask you finally, I mean I know you can't speak for Michel Barnier, but Downing Street has received a great Glee and is proud and pleased to produce a slide that he used at the beginning.
Michel Barnier negotiations where he said that Yi plans to make a Canada-style trade deal now that Boris Johnson has been re-elected with a large majority, we are leaving the European Union, has he changed his mind, why do you think he has changed his mind ? Well, I think here The position has also changed on the UK side, if you remember that Boris Johnson in the previous incarnation never imagined that we would deviate from alignment with the EU because that was the best interest of British businesses, so that in some sense both sides probably had a different look at their position and are actually reciting it, but there is also a game of chess in which both parties play in their favor.
Okay, that's Prem. Look, he's emeritus professor of accounting at the University of Essex. Now tell your speaker Alexis to play the Daily Mail news and you'll get the latest Dayton news live from Mel plus and at 5:00 of course you'll hear the latest Daily Show now the cps, the Public Prosecution Service Crown, under heavy criticism, representatives of Caroline Flack's family and friends have accused The Crown Prosecution Services are pushing for a

show

trial

which they say contributed to the suicide of beloved Island presenter Caroline Flack. Her boyfriend, former tennis champion, Lewis Burton has disputed the claims in the CPS account of the night despite it being my new report in which we reported the assault.
When police arrived at her home in a now unpublished social media post shared by her family, she said she had been suffering some type of emotional crisis for a long time and wrote that she was not a domestic abuser at all. the publication. was written just two weeks before her death, she was encouraged not to share it according to her parents who now join me is dr. Charlotte, a proud man who is a human rights lawyer, a doctor, a proud man and the CPS say that the mental state or potentially of someone accused of a crime is not necessarily something they should take into account.
They are very interested in involving more victims of domestic violence.

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so that people who commit domestic violence are prosecuted. Yes it's correct. I mean, from my point of view, it is unfortunate that the CPS does not take mental health into account, even more so when it affects the complainants and also the accused, especially considering this

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where we know that she was suffering from problems mental health at the time of the alleged incident and then of course while awaiting

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and subsequently potentially having a significant impact on her taking her own life, so no doubt you know that understanding people's mental health and providing for their well-being is so important within the criminal justice system because the entire process can be incredibly anxiety-provoking, especially when you are waiting, as in the case of Caroline Black, weeks or even months for a trial date.
Do you think, however, despite all that, dr. Brown meant that if the accused person were a 40-year-old male celebrity who had been accused of assaulting his 27-year-old girlfriend, there would be something like the uproar there has been so far. I mean, look at the CPS, they're wrong and we Know what I mean, there was a story today about the CPS defending the decision to stop attacking Nikki Bott, Nikki, but being a footballer who, as you may remember, was accused of having assaulted to his partner and said, "I think that was an accident." and then, as I understand it, the CPS dropped that case and yet within the Caroline Flack case, obviously, in my opinion, they seemed to want to make an example of her, so I think it's right when people say whether this It's a question mark over the judgment and I think that what we're seeing seems to point in the direction that it is and I say that for two reasons: one, I think VPS certainly wanted to set an example, but they are taking the cases of domestic abuse and the way they were. reported in the media with the blood on the bed on top, it looked like a serious case of domestic abuse from afar and I think secondly, of course, that this is quite unusual because we have the domestic violence complaint of being a man and the alleged perpetrator is a Woman so I am sending a strong message that they will take these complaints seriously and no doubt CPS was concerned.
You know, if we don't do something about it, if we don't process, then what will happen? What will be the consequences? Gradually, eventually. um, it occurred to me when we started reading about this all the time, her boyfriend didn't want to press charges, he questioned her version of events that night, you could argue that it was just, I'm not saying, just underestimating the seriousness of the violence. or whatever, but it was domestic, that's what we would call domestic, and was she really a threat to members of the public, almost certainly not, so why did they feel the need to bring this woman in for a call?
I think you obviously mean this as a domestic thing. I don't like to use those kinds of words because I think it can lessen the impact of domestic violence, which can range from battery to bodily harm. It can be a felony rule, so it doesn't diminish the seriousness of domestic violence in any way, and I think it's important that we have victimless prosecutions, particularly when we're looking at a pattern of coercive control or serious abuse, however that seems to me. the case of Caroline Flack. To be an outlier, it doesn't seem to me that this is a woman who needed to effectively make sure that the public was protected from her, if at all, and who needed to protect herself from herself and who needed a lot of support, didn't need to lock her up.
I then asked her what the public interest was in pursuing this, given the report we subsequently saw and the heartbreaking message she left shortly before in the screening posted on Instagram when it clearly

show

s that the CPS prosecution was actually one of the main factors that They led her to take her own life, that's Dr. Charlotte is researching who is a human rights lawyer now. If you enjoy the Daily Show, please subscribe, leave us a review on an Apple, Google, or Spotify podcast, and get in touch by emailing Daily Show at Plus kodachi Kate email or following email.
Furthermore, the upcoming Oxford University students, at least, are very angry about removing key technologies from the classical syllabus proposal to take Homer and Virg Virgil's Iliad. I do not know its pronunciation. A help may be an optional text in the oldest program of the university to try to modernize the course modernizing a course called classics is not a contradiction in terms now academic stress no decision has been made yet but students say that These texts are vital to understanding the subject and petitions have been started to keep the material as a key part of the course syllabus.
Joining me now is author, historian and editor of the Greek culture magazine Arg Daisy Done, who also graduated from the classics course Daisy, you will tell me that I pronounced it wrong, how do you pronounce it correctly? You were very close in the middle. And yet, why, in your opinion, is it important that these texts remain in the curriculum? Well, the Iliad and its needs, as well as the Odyssey, these are the key texts of the classics, there are fundamental texts from which so much literature is derived, I think if you think about Greek tragedies, we are going to see Greek plays in the theater , also derived from ideas and stories in these epic works, seems absolutely absurd, choose two facts, these key works from part of your syllabus and yes, I find it.
It is very difficult to know why anyone at Oxford thinks it is necessary to modernize a field that celebrates the classics. I think in this state it's very, very difficult to see what they're trying to do, what's really driving this decision that, as you say, hasn't been fully made yet, as far as I can see. It has something to do with trying to open it up to a wider range of pupils, which is why very few study Greek, for example, at school, although it seems to be about making those Abused. I've left emphasis on the study of Greek texts, for example, the concrete estimation of a very important part of the classics, well, they are, but I think the point is that I think for some years and years people have been going to Oxford without having studied much Greek. and who does a wonderful job teaching you that Greek from scratch very often you have classes every day to teach you the Greek language so you can read at home, you can read all these other great works of literature, so it's perfectly capable. to get you up to those standards to be able to read these works, so it seems like a very, very peculiar idea to try to remove this from the first part of the course, if I couldn't use it, eventually they say modernize, I would say maybe.
I'm wrong, they're simplifying it, well, you don't realize, I mean, I think what they're trying to emphasize is that they're not removing them, so to speak, from the course, they're trying to put them back. So if you study Virgil and you study Homer in the early years of the course, in preparation for the second year exams, which they seem to be saying, you won't actually start doing that, so you'll start them in the third and fourth years, so it's more of aapproach than a delay, but I think that puts you at a disadvantage when you try to study it with these other tanks that I don't know and how you can really get familiar with them.
Those moments without really absorbing Homer and Virgil from a very early point in the course, I just feel like it brought the students back rather than giving them a head start, which seems to be the main criteria for making this fascinating, that's what Daisy did , she is to the northeast. or in an editor of the Greek culture magazine Arg, now the plague of potholes is coming and does it need a man? We started this to apparently not have a baby, but first it's time to find out what's on TV tonight with Claudia Connell. Thanks Sandra for the first episode. of Tyson Fury, the gypsy king, was very well played as a kind of big personality, whether it's this amazing, colorful life and the second episode airs tonight on ITV and that won't disappoint in this episode either, Fury is celebrating in style after of win.
They get into a big fight in Las Vegas and that gets him in trouble with his wife Paris and to make peace he takes the family on vacation to Marbella, I mean, for all the cash in her jewelry, I mean, I loved it last week. with Tyson's wife, Paris, debating whether she should take the Ferrari or the roller to the hair salon, but for all their wealth and all their glitz, they actually seem like a kind of nice, loving family, and tonight you'll find out who wins the title of Britain's best. home cook on BBC One, we all know that schedules are simply washed out with cooking shows and I'm not sure this is particularly deserved.
It's the place, I mean, the last time we met, people were cooking meals with canned tuna and before, when they were making omelettes, I mean. It's not MasterChef, but Maryberry is one of the judges and it's always lovely to see her on TV and you know it's not just a surfeit of cooking shows on TV, there are over-the-top, quirky documentaries about hospitals. Well, Hospital, which was filmed at Aintree and the Royal Liverpool University Hospital, is on BBC Two tonight, at least it gives the viewer the chance to see the NHS at work at its best tonight.
A young man is the victim of a stab wound and was airlifted to Aintree Hospital. I will see a medical team of 15 people assembled trying to save his life. Thank you very much Claudia, now it's time for our regular city update with Route Sunland's business editor at the Daily Mail, nominated for a major award. I am still in good company with much of my colleagues, yes 22 of us, my eyes go straight to you, how are you not good, good, not too good, so the Lords still suffer from PPI now that we all know About the PPI, has everyone had those annoying phone calls that some of us have even handled successfully? to complain about being mis-sold, so this is still going on.
Lloyds has said that they have had to pay another 2.5 billion in PPI, so in total they have paid more than twenty billion pounds. for instructing his staff to sell this, these policies, to the people, more than that, it's all about knowing, you know, you might as well ask, has anyone been adequately punished for something with the bank? I mean, I think the most that's really happened is that you know, Fred. Goodwin is not Sir Fred, yes, but he is still a very rich man, but he still receives a huge pension, so you know he is not and I mean, if you look at Antonia, what is Soria like, by the way, and by the way, I'm not winning. comparison or say it's like Freddy, don't you know, Antonio has put Lloyds back together, made it a much safer and stronger bank, having said that he has taken home a huge amount of money, £56m since 2011 , now his pace has dropped this year, oh, but he still has 47 million pounds, it's not that bad, how is he going to manage?
We just don't know how much they lost, it was a third or something like that. Yes, profits are down quite a bit and now they are also concerned that the mortgage market is so competitive that that could affect their profitability roots. Anton, business editor at The Daily Mail. Sports editor Mark Paget is here with the latest from United. How much are they offering for Pogba? So Puck Bars, their star player, reportedly paid a record £89m. For him, I think it was a long time ago, now they're trying to whip him, now they want a hundred and eighty million for him, well this fight, the fact that he's basically been useless for the last few years, I didn't even know he was still playing.
Four million have also been injured a lot these days, so Real Madrid say we're the number one suitors for him, but he's injured and basically useless, so we'll give you fifty million for them, so it's only a hundred. and thirty million difference by the time some arts in Samuel discuss whether they come close to that, he says it should be a statue of Edward Wood for his negotiating skills, but you could absolutely build a hospital with that and with someone to who to remember in all this. is the management described as elite, she is the agent Mena Raiola, who is not just Mr. 10%, she is close to Mr. 50%, so if someone is going to get the money up to one hundred and fifty million euros or pounds, it is this guy and they are whipping him because now he is useless.
Basically it's been horrible, it's been so off, but he'll still do 50 loads, how's that going for our friend? Do you want to keep going for a while so the big fire is Saturday night? Yes, and Jeff is taking different techniques. They are the man Jeff Powell. he's the legendary Jeff the legendary Jeff you've been in this role decades decades it's just covered the world 66 caught fire so he looked at what describes the top 10 heavyweight punches of all time not just heavyweight who punches stronger and has almost always been a Mike Tyson man, but now it's not up to Tyson to put Deontay Wilder, this guy, wow, they're at number one, there's a Brit in the top ten.
Lennox Lewis arrives at number 10 and there is no place for Muhammad Ali. Absolutely great debate. yeah, how about smoking Joe Frazier? Joe Frazee at the time I think George Foreman is. I don't think Joe Frazier is that good, so it's a great debate, but I think Jeff's argument about the power of concussion isn't really the downfall of Muhammad Ali. Can everyone take George Foreman seriously? There are three products from those grills where my mother fought. We were at Christmas and it was quite strange. I thought this is this big 14 million stone boxer. He never ever quite fit the image of him everywhere.
He must have turned him into a lawyer by now. finally Amy Jones is talking about England versus France England like Ireland is wrong. I love her, she introduces England to Ireland at the weekend, but she got into trouble against France a couple of weeks ago when she started talking about brutality and violence in things about that. It didn't go well at all in France, where they've lost people on the rugby field in recent years, it really was a concussive nature of the sport, yeah, so it's completely gone this week; He himself took care of all the press conferences. he said nothing has been monosyllabic, very good for you, so we know it's not good for us, although we managed to get a little out of him today, so they're basically talking about us stopping this weekend.
England has to win, otherwise all The conversation will return to whether you are a good coach of the England rugby team and we will meet you tomorrow. Mark on your prediction. Yeah, well, I'm going to Deonte while the Windsor team in England wins Smart Padgett rugby, so get it. in touch, email me Daily Show at email Also, kodachi Co, follow us on email Also, now forget about coronavirus, the plague of potholes, well it's here, new research suggests that failing to address the growing problem of potholes in Britain puts motorists and cyclists at risk, have looked We are looking for a five billion pound investment from the Chancellor which he actually committed to in the Conservative manifesto.
How many parties stick to that? Of course, consultancy Zurich has said that resistance to solving this problem could result in difficulties in keeping traffic running and attribute this to the growing problem of government funding and council resources to deal with the magnitude of the problem. The one with me now is Rod Dennis from RAC, breakdown rod, how many do we have, more than half a million potholes, even if they spend a few billion in the next few years. It will reduce the number, but it will never overcome the delay. No, you're absolutely right, Andrew. This is the problem we have in this country.
It's just that for so long we have allowed our local road network to be what it is. cared for by local authorities stagnated and things have gone from bad to worse and worse to worse and now in many parts of the country we are almost at breaking point. The estimate really is around nine billion pounds. five billion pounds would be a huge step forward from where we are today, but unfortunately it is still not enough, according to many independent estimates that exist about what it would really take to get our rose back into being a resource and, again, how do we do it? do?
Actually, I know there are 561,000 potholes. Can you tell me who counted them? This is very difficult information and it is not, as you would not be surprised, an exact science. We have made our own estimates in this regard. "The survey figures that have been reported to me by members of the public on behalf of the companies, but clearly that is also a fraction, but the figures that we believe here probably come from official figures and the councils have potholes that they are aware of. The fact is that they There's also a lot of stuff that councils don't know about because no one ends up reporting it and it can also make the council not realize that for the most part it's their normal kind of maintenance regime, so you know, but I think most drivers listening are probably aware that potholes, depending on where you are in the country, are still a huge problem and also very serious and ultimately it's not just that they can slow down the road. traffic but can cause serious damage to cars, huge problems for cyclists and I imagine potholes are responsible for a number of broken bones, if not potentially fatal, yes there have been cases in London where people he liked to get out of the potholes and that resulted in a death, so yeah, not really fixing these things.
It's a false economy, the problem is getting worse and worse and something needs to be done about it and you are right in terms of damage to the car, the suspension is also distorted, the springs, the wheels, this sort of thing is expensive and frankly unnecessary. things to have 20/20 and that's why the RAC we have been constantly asking for funds set aside for these roads and we hope that by the time the budget finally comes in March there will be some new ideas here that I'm starting to get to the root of the problem okay , that's rotten Dennis from the RSC collapse you've missed your life because journalist Joanie Marie has written a list of things she thinks people should do before the age of 50, she's now approaching 70, she won I don't mind saying that's because she's written about it herself, but she thinks 50 is a landmark age for a woman yesterday, of course, we covered the Sussex Girls' School which lists everything a girl should do before the age of five, so the same logic should be applied. to women approaching the big five.
Oh, joining me now is Jenny Marie, she is of course the BBC women's presenter, our wife, Jenny Marie, and what's the most important one on that list of 50, since you just mentioned letting to lie about alright, have you ever lied about your age? No, actually, I've never seen the point. I've all lied about your age and just be honest about it, so that's one of the things on the list that interests you the most. because this is designed for women, you said it's for people, yes, no, but the number 28 wouldn't do much to master the art of eyeliner for when you go out or try false eyelashes, just the ones that wouldn't do much. for me I think and at ten actually when I was twenty my mother sent me to a department store in Cheltenham to buy coach she had found the perfect bra she is not with us now she said if I were a large busted woman and I had to buy 14 Of them, Jenny, can you imagine the eyebrows that were raised in that store?
She was 19 years old. I kept thinking what the nurse is doing, that skinny teenager who had pimples. I appeared in my first local newspaper in those days, what is it? She's doing it in 14 bras for a large woman, but that's a distraction. I thought the really charming one was number one on your list. Jenny, fall in love and try to stay there, but the key word is try, yes everyone should do that and try to do it. Keep this up if possible, but of course the second one is very interesting if Mr. Right turns out to be Mr.
Right. The estrangementwrong number three was also getting away from mr. he will do it because he left, just make sure you have a secret to know that you have some money because money is what gives you the freedom to leave if you have to. Is there anyone on that list of fifty suitable ones you have? I haven't, no, how would you like to dance with exercise and fun? Well, I like to dance. Whether I exercise a lot and have fun these days is debatable, but I could if I had to and the only one I really don't think.
I can say that I did, I loved sport, oh you know, I'd rather get fit on the dance floor than do any kind of sport. I am reluctant to any type of sport, but you know that some may like it, I work the dogs. are very important, you know, I accept dogs, but unconditional love and a cheerful welcome home guaranteed, very nice and I can actually find out. You are now closer to seventy than fifty. Does life begin at seventy or does life begin at fifty or does life begin whenever? you decide it continues until it doesn't work well anymore, that's Jake's journey, marry the legendary presenter of BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour.
Now new data shows a 360 per cent increase in fertility treatment cycles in single women in the last ten years. increases by over six hundred per cent if you include those using donor samples without the full IVF treatment now creating this huge increase in demand a massive fertility industry worth over three hundred million what does it mean for the NHS in 2011 the London Health Cheese created a policy to only fund fertility treatments for couples living in what they say is a stable relationship, so saying that single women have children would place a greater burden on society. Joining me now is social infertility coach Mel Johnson, well Johnson what is a social imperative coach?
I coach women who are nervous that I will miss out on motherhood due to their age and being single, so they haven't had a partner, there may be one member until they are 30 and they are worried that they will miss out on what is now called social and how many women, of course, much more than when I was a child and I'm involved in their careers and some of these women do you think maybe they should have thought about the children before instead of the career or not? I think there's a real mix, but a real theme that's emerging is that they just couldn't meet each other, so I think a lot of people are getting quite frustrated because people think that doing their career first, people are surely taking advantage of career opportunities. , but the real problem is knowing someone to do this with, yes, and what do you say to those women who say that single women having a child is going to put a bigger burden on society, but how do you respond to that with the people you train and I mean most women?
I am absolutely financially healthy in my own right, so I have good careers. they got money, they're not getting benefits, they're not, you know, they're not a society, so you know if you're choosing to do this and you have the financial means to do it, that's not society and for some of these women who go down this path, whether it's fertility treatment, how much, but could it cost men on average to have that baby? I mean, there's a huge variation because it depends on the treatment and how many things you can start with from around 1,500. it can run into tens of thousands and I guess for some it never works out, it never exactly works out anyway and especially if you've been waiting to meet someone you dumped, it's a little later in life that age may not be on your side. for your fertility, so you have to look into it knowing that it's not a guarantee that it might not work.
I'm just finding out very briefly what you tell women if there's an age at which you really have to decide that you have to do it. Go ahead with this to have the baby, is there an age limit for you or not? No, I mean, there's nothing like I'm not a medical person, so they really need to get advice from the clinic about that 35, it starts out as a complaint, but there are people in their forties who are still conceiving. Well, that's Mel Johnson's impotent social echo. He'd never talked to one of those before, wasn't she nice?
So today we have time to catch the latest news from the Daily Mail. They return every day for briefings at 7am. m., 12 p.m. m. and, of course, at 5 p.m. m. where you can hear me again that's all from me Andrew Pearce from The Daily Show I'll be back tomorrow have a great afternoon and good night

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