legitimate fear, he should have asked legitimate fear, he should have asked for legitimate fear, he should have asked for help. legitimate fear, he should have asked for help. he legitimate fear, he should have asked for help. he never- legitimate fear, he should have asked for help. he never did. . legitimate fear, he should have asked for help. he never did. ifj legitimate fear, he should have - asked for help. he never did. if you felt that asked for help. he never did. if you felt that he asked for help. he never did. if you felt that he could asked for help. he never did. if you felt that he could not asked for help. he never did. if you felt that he could not trust - asked for help. he never did. if you felt that he could not trust his- asked for help. he never did. if you felt that he could not trust his ownl felt that he could not trust his own security felt that he could not trust his own security forces, felt that he could not trust his own security forces, w
here and in france. we “ust got back from france and h here and in france. we “ust got back from france and not here and in france. we just got back from france and not one here and in france. we just got back from france and not one restaurantl from france and not one restaurant or metro from france and not one restaurant or rnetro train from france and not one restaurant or metro train did from france and not one restaurant or metro train did we from france and not one restaurant or metro train did we see from france and not one restaurant or metro train did we see an - or metro train did we see an unmasked or metro train did we see an unmasked person, - or metro train did we see an unmasked person, imaginel or metro train did we see an - unmasked person, imagine that there was one unmasked person, imagine that there was one moment unmasked person, imagine that there was one moment when unmasked person, imagine that there was one moment when something - unmas
so my messages please get vaccinated once your turn comes, please do it for your appointment. once your turn comes, please do it for your appointment. thank you very much, professor for your appointment. thank you very much, professor primary for your appointment. thank you very much, professor primary care - for your appointment. thank you very much, professor primary care publicl much, professor primary care public health at imperial college london. now it s time for a look at the weather with tomasz schafernaker. here. laughter. you were looking the wrong way! it s pretty quiet on the weather front for the next few days. high pressure is centred across this part of the country here but around it we have got clouds of streaming into northwest parts of scotland, so it has been pretty wet. that s how it has been pretty wet. that s how it will stay for the course of the night and into tomorrow where as towards the south it is clear, in fact quite a mild evening, really. but this is
not happen again. the engineer that made not happen again. the engineer that made this not happen again. the engineer that made this change - not happen again. the engineer that made this change will - that made this change will never repeat that mistake in his or her life. suffice to say this is a wake up call for us all. inasmuch as we depend on the internet there are these old ridiculous protocols that were never designed to support the sort of things, the criticality of the internet makes all too clear every day for us and that s not something that facebook by itself can resist although their processes are old. a , resist although their processes are old. , , resist although their processes areold. , , ., , are old. many people initially thou~ht are old. many people initially thought facebook are old. many people initially thought facebook had - are old. many people initially thought facebook had been l thought facebook had been hacked, this is part of another actor trying to
narratives, and i think- despite the intense media - coverage of all these irregular contracts and david cameron s behaviour, i think the tory - address about how they are changing the way that - governance works in the uk to the benefit of the publicl is actually cutting through. thank you all very much. the bbc used to make a tv programme called snog, marry, avoid. it was supposed to make audiences think again about what constitutes beauty. well, ourforeign policy version considers whether foreign powers should intervene so we ve called it engage, disengage, avoid . let s begin, in reverse order with avoid . sebastian, lebanon people will remember the big explosion back in the summer of last year which devastated huge parts of the city, but it seems as if somebody has almost detonated a bomb under both the financial and political systems of the country itself. it s a country that was so much shaped by the intervention, meddling, however you want to put it, of other countries.