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everything s changing so quickly. before the xfinity 10g network, we didn t have internet that let us play all at once. every device? in every room? why are you up here? when i was your age, we couldn t stream a movie when the power went out. you re only a year older than me. you have no idea how good you ve got it. huh? what a time to be alive. introducing the next generation 10g network. only from xfinity. the future starts now. [ engines revving ] fire em up! [ cheering ] you ready? let s do it. ready. i know you re ready. let s race. boom. and so, i think that s where introducing the 10g network only from xfinity. the conversations going. it seems like there was much more universal concern about privacy in the committee. i think all of us should be concerned that we re gonna have young people who are using a platform that so many lawmakers, in no, don t really quite understand. i ve been on tiktok before, i under ....
talking to people about how they are coping with rising prices. join they are coping with rising prices. us at 9.30 at the we join us at 9.30 at the fire station. we have an audience full of fascinating people from all walks of life who will be talking about the cost of living crisis and how it is affecting people who work and live in the city. join us at 9.30. and i m annita mcveigh at westminster where at 12 o clock, liz truss will face questions from mps in the house of commons for the first time since the almost complete reversal of her economic plan. and as inflation hits double figures, downing street refuses to commit to increasing state pensions in line with prices, which would be breaking a manifesto pledge. obviously we take manifesto commitments incredibly seriously. the chancellor will be making a statement in just over a week s time, where he will set out all the plans for taxation and expenditure and government budgets. hello and welcome to bbc news, wit ....
so that is year on year. covid 19 had a massive impact. by default, a lot of people who are volunteers are somewhat grey around the gills because that is life s experiences led to that. it s really difficult for the voluntary sector is to bring volunteers back into the voluntary sector is to do more work, so you have a catch 22. you have all of covid, all the worries of the world. you have found that as well. yes. covid, all the worries of the world. you have found that as well. yes, in the voluntary you have found that as well. yes, in the voluntary sector you have found that as well. yes, in the voluntary sector there you have found that as well. yes, in the voluntary sector there is - you have found that as well. yes, in the voluntary sector there is an - the voluntary sector there is an increasing the voluntary sector there is an increasing demand for the services on the increasing demand for the services on the front line because of a reduction ....
the united kingdom of great britain the united kingdom of great britain and northern ireland? i solemnly promise so to do. she was anointed, blessed and consecrated. choir sings zadok the priest by handel she took possession of a 1,200 year old throne. she knew that it was a role from which only death could release her and yet, when she was born, no one had thought that it would be her destiny. elizabeth alexandra mary windsor was born on 21 april, 1926. she was the first child of the then king s second son, the duke of york. she cried at her christening perhaps the only time in her life that she made a public scene. she was a happy child with occasionally a child of make sense of mystery. mischief. this was the young princess elizabeth at the age of four and three quarters, visiting a photographic studio in london. her life then was comparatively carefree. a politician called winston churchill noted she had an air of authority that was astonishing in an infant. fa ....
an amazing woman. just a very sombre mood in windsor, really. what did she represent to people of your generation? a guiding light, a moral code, how to conduct yourself, - how to act, what is - right and what s wrong. here on the streets of royal windsor, the sense of a an epoch having passed is palpable. there is the sense of mourning, shared with the entire nation. but something else. for these people have lost a neighbour, a queen who was part of their daily lives. amir bukhari was getting calls from relatives in pakistan, who had heard the news. he runs a cafe besides windsor castle. no words to express my emotions. it is really sad. what did she mean to you? not only me but everyone in the world. everybody feels very sad, very down. for us, she was a neighbour. and we feel more. no matter how long anticipated, the end has crystallised loss. the passing of a monarch, who symbolised to people the best of their nation, of themselves. fergal keane, bbc news, windsor. ....