To members in that crowd. And there were some very interesting moments. Is that right . What can you tell us . Reporter certainly, jim, some very, very interesting moments. Certainly people who believe that this insurrection just didnt exist, that this was just people trespassing, people who just dont believe that when have seen before their very eyes. I had the opportunity to talk to one of the attendees, and he was talking about how no officers were assaulted, how this was a bunch of people who were just trying to go in and essentially protest, and asking him all sorts of questions, you could just tell he was living in his own kind of reality, take a listen to some of what i asked him. Its a public building. I mean people out there, people are in this town all the time and i think the most severe charge they have is trespassing. Destroying property, assaulting an officer . You dont believe the video . On video, there is assaulting of a police officer. You dont think show me that vide
Now on Bbc News for you, its dateline london. Hello and welcome to dateline london. Im martine croxall. This week our discussion is all about money. Here in the uk the government has announced the biggest set of Tax Rises since the second world war. The imf, the World Bank and in fact banks everywhere Are trying to decide whether they will release afghanistans frozen assets and thereby try to avoid humanitarian disaster. Our guests this week. The Guardian Columnist polly toynbee, Mina Al 0raibi, the editor in chief of the gulf based the national newspaper, and still suitably distanced, here in the studio with me is the bbc s business editor simonjack. Welcome to you all. So to begin with, borisjohnson s government has announced the largest Tax Increases in the uk for decades to try to fix the nhs and the Social CAre sector. Some say that the £36 billion it will raise over three years wont solve the crisis. 0ther critics say that the Tax Rises Are unfairly distributed. Lets begin this
now on bbc news, it s time for the media show. hello. last week s attack in liverpool leads our conversation today. how do you report responsibly on an incident like that? when is the right moment to use the word terrorism ? and is the doorstep morally wrong? also on the media show a new streaming service launched on sky this week. can the traditional tv stations claw back an audience from netflix and disney? let s start by introducing today s guests. simon walker is chief executive at marquee tv. and simon, for listeners who don t know, what exactly is marquee tv? thank you, katie, good to be here. marquee tv is netflix for the performing arts but, as i think we ll discuss, that shorthand doesn t work any more when netflix has eaten the world. so i like to think of us as the ultimate arts companion in this niche of lovers of performing arts and culture. thanks, we ll talk about that later. julia alexander, you are a senior strategy analyst at parrot analytics, welcome.
reality future. so what exactly is the metaverse? and how soon before we are all living in it? well, joining me to discuss all of that is my panel of guests. nicola millard is a presenter, writer and principal innovation partner at bt. nicola, what is a principal innovation partner and why does bt need one? good question, well, i used to be bt s futurologist and i got very tired of the crystal balljokes. i do have one, it doesn t work. but my role is i am part of bt s innovation team. i am here to innovate with and for our customers. very good. lauren goode is a senior writer at wired. lauren, you host the get wired podcast. what sort of thing does that cover? the get wired podcast, we highlight some of wired s most impactful stories and we kind of explore the intersection of technology and humanity. that s the best way i would describe it. we will hear a bit more from you and nicola slightly later on in the show. also with us today is madhumita murgia. european tech correspo
ballot bombshell. the special counsel argues that former president trump does not have immunity. mr. trump was engaged in that insurrection. would the supreme court buy that argument. former january 6th committee member jamie raskin is here, and closing in. two weeks until iowa and nikki haley is still cleaning up comments about the civil war. her allies say her opponents disagree. new hampshire is seeing the slippery, slick nikki haley. how will she fare in new hampshire? governor chris sununu joins me exclusively. plus, american epidemic. this holiday season, there s a new public health crisis, isolation. people are feeling more lonely. why and how can we fix it? senator chris murphy is here ahead. hello, i m dana bash in washington, where the state of our union is finishing a wild 2023, and looking ahead to a pivotal 2024. we are 15 days from the iowa caucuses, closing out a seismic week in an already extraordinary republican primary. in a new filing last n