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The Richie Allen Show Wednesday January 25th 2023

The Richie Allen Show Wednesday January 25th 2023

Released Wednesday, 25th January 2023
Good episode? Give it some love!
The Richie Allen Show Wednesday January 25th 2023

The Richie Allen Show Wednesday January 25th 2023

The Richie Allen Show Wednesday January 25th 2023

The Richie Allen Show Wednesday January 25th 2023

Wednesday, 25th January 2023
Good episode? Give it some love!
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Episode Transcript

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0:01

Welcome to Wednesday's Richie Allen Show.

0:03

How are you doing? It's five o'clock. What

0:05

other time could it possibly be? I'm

0:08

Richie Allen. I've got a terrific guest

0:10

for you this hour to talk about

0:12

some very important things, including the NHS

0:15

perennial crisis. Why does

0:17

it happen? What's going on?

0:20

Tell you more about the guest in a moment. A little

0:22

bit later on after that. I'll be

0:24

taking your telephone calls and your

0:26

Skype. It is the twenty fifth of January

0:28

twenty twenty three. Welcome.

0:32

Unsensored, unfiltered. You're

0:35

listening to Richie Allen. On the

0:37

world's most popular independent news

0:40

radio show,

0:46

It's the Ritchie Allen show, broadcasting

0:49

live on ritchiello dot co dot

0:51

u k in multiple platforms

0:53

around the world. And now,

0:56

use your host Ritchie

0:58

Allen. Yes. The National Health

1:00

Service here in the UK facing its worst

1:02

crisis of all time wide. Accidents

1:05

and emergency waits and ambulance delays

1:08

at their worst levels on record.

1:11

Striking staff, striking

1:13

for pay, and conditions. Is

1:16

it the COVID flu pandemic? Does that

1:18

even exist? Is it people living longer?

1:21

What's going on? Well, you don't want miss

1:23

doctor Bob Gill. Bob will join the program a

1:25

little bit later on this hour to talk

1:27

about that. And I will also be asking

1:29

him about claims that the M0NA

1:32

COVID jumps should be suspended because

1:34

they are causing harm or harm.

1:36

So we speak to doctor Bob Gill. This is

1:38

a little bit later on, then I've already

1:41

said, you will get your return. I will be

1:43

throwing it over to you to chat with

1:45

me about the issues maybe did come up

1:47

during my conversation. With doctor

1:49

Gil. As I said, Wednesday's Ritchie Allen

1:51

program, if you don't want to talk to

1:53

me in person, you can do so or you

1:55

can talk to me anyway via the website pritchard

1:57

Allan dot co dot u k. Life

1:59

comment or comment live. I'm

2:02

always happy, genuinely happy.

2:04

To hear, not just hear from you, but to

2:06

read your opinions on

2:08

these issues. Okeydoke

2:11

then. So we'll start off with Ukraine. Why

2:13

not? So Germany's chancellor,

2:16

the the top the top man if you

2:18

believe that Olaf shots has

2:20

confirmed that Germany will send

2:22

powerful powerful even leopard

2:25

two tanks to Ukraine, but

2:27

will also allow other countries

2:30

to send theirs to. Spoke

2:32

about this briefly yesterday. The

2:34

Germans sell these tanks, but the

2:37

recipient country

2:39

cannot pass the tanks

2:41

onto a third country without

2:44

a license from Germany. Apparently,

2:46

it's going to happen. He spoke to

2:48

MPs, did will have shorts in

2:50

the in the Bundestag, and

2:52

he orged Germans who

2:55

were worried about the move to him

2:57

insisting the decision was

3:00

the right one. I think it's madness,

3:02

but I won't get into that because

3:04

I had a lot to say on it yesterday

3:06

afternoon to another

3:08

matter. To a north. No.

3:10

No. No. No. No. No. God. No. No.

3:12

Staying with Ukraine and

3:14

tanks. Vaudeville is

3:17

a term you've heard me use quite

3:19

often over the last three years

3:21

in particular. Vaud, if

3:23

you look it up, if you don't know what it means,

3:25

but I'm sure you do. You're very bright. You

3:27

know? Do you know who broke

3:29

the news to the

3:31

Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky,

3:34

that he was getting the tanks that

3:37

the German chancellor capitulated

3:39

to pressure from NATO and from

3:42

the United States which

3:44

is NATO. I suppose, who do

3:46

you think told Volodymyr

3:48

Zelensky that you're

3:50

getting your tanks man Isn't

3:52

that great? Well, it

3:54

was only News,

3:56

Ginger Ninja breakfast presenter

3:59

extraordinaire, Kay Burley.

4:01

Yes. Apparently, Sky

4:03

News has revived an old Saturday

4:06

night television program from my TV.

4:08

It was called surprise surprise.

4:11

A show once hosted by Ms. Silla

4:13

Blanc, you might remember. Well,

4:16

Skye's re rejected and revamped

4:18

it, and Kaye Birdie is now fronting it

4:20

seemingly. You think I'm lying,

4:22

don't you? That is I'm making this up.

4:24

She traveled to Kiev to

4:26

surprise Volodymyr Zelensky with

4:29

the news. I'm not joking.

4:31

So Sky is repackaged the program.

4:34

Rejig did revamp did re introduced

4:36

it or introduced it to the

4:38

millennial. I don't know

4:40

viewers, television viewers. But

4:43

they've kept but most importantly,

4:45

they've kept the legendary

4:48

theme tune, which is now sung Boy

4:50

Skoying News presenter, Kaye Burley.

5:00

You think this is a guy, don't you? The

5:05

surprise you

5:06

see. Price, price. You

5:08

think this is a guy. No. No.

5:11

No. No. No. Sarah Jane me. The

5:13

Ukraine has said it is extremely

5:15

grateful. Moscow has warned that

5:17

the decision takes the conflict to a

5:19

new level. The skies came

5:21

early was actually interviewing Ukraine's

5:23

president, Vladimir Zelensky. At the very

5:25

moment, he found out the more

5:27

Western tanks were on their way. Two

5:29

tanks are coming from Europe.

5:32

You must be relieved. Fantastic.

5:36

Kaye was there to tell him the news.

5:39

Leopard two tanks are on their way.

5:41

You must be relieved. Then

5:44

you know, the round of applause and all the tears and

5:46

all of that. Zelensky

5:53

is very emotional with his wife, the brandy,

5:56

wife, Maria. And

6:00

then Kay closes out this episode

6:02

of surprise surprise with the closing

6:04

sign. He's

6:08

happy he's getting his tanks It

6:15

actually sounds a bit like, actually, silver

6:17

black. Okay. That's terrible. It's terrible

6:19

to begin with, but you need to be born

6:21

in the nineteen seventies to get it even though

6:23

it's absolutely terrible. But you haven't already said it

6:25

to him. Yeah. You're getting your

6:27

tanks to know that. Be happy. You're delighted.

6:30

Delightedly is is Zalensky. Danny

6:34

Abraham, writing for the BBC

6:36

World Service, has

6:39

has had this to say in the last couple

6:41

of hours. This move by

6:43

Germany to send leopard two tanks

6:45

to Ukraine follows months of intense

6:47

lobbying by Kyiv or Kyiv,

6:50

which wants three hundred of these

6:52

advanced battle tanks. Commitments

6:54

in the days ahead will indicate just how many

6:56

it's going to get countries that

6:58

have shown willingness to provide German made

7:00

tanks, include Poland, Finland,

7:02

Spain, and the Netherlands. Britain

7:05

has already committed fourteen of its own

7:07

tanks welcomed this decision.

7:09

And he goes on to say that

7:12

Jens Stalin broke the head of NATO

7:14

says the tanks will help Ukraine prevail

7:17

as an independent nation. Russia

7:20

reacted angrily allegedly

7:22

its embassy in Berlin warned

7:25

that the escalation creates

7:27

or has caused irreparable damage

7:30

to already deployable bilateral

7:33

relations. That was the Russian

7:35

response, the embassy in Berlin.

7:38

Eight minutes past the year. We might talk more about

7:40

this later on. We might not. We'll see.

7:42

This is obviously making

7:45

Everybody's talking about this by

7:47

everybody, I mean, the legacy media.

7:50

They're talking about Ayla Bryson.

7:52

Who the hell is Ayla?

7:55

Bryson. When Eira Bryson is a man,

7:57

previously known as Adam Graeme,

8:00

who committed terrible sexual offenses

8:03

raped two women. Before

8:05

deciding to change gender and

8:07

become Euler Bryson. And

8:09

the amazing thing about this story, and you've

8:11

probably come across this on social

8:13

media in the last couple of days is

8:15

that when this came to

8:17

court, Eyla Bryson

8:20

who committed these crimes as Adam

8:22

Graham was was

8:24

tried as a woman. And

8:26

the the jury was instructed

8:29

to not the jury, the

8:31

council, the solicitor's

8:34

barracers were were instructed to

8:36

refer to this man as she threw

8:38

out this particular trial. It

8:40

was presided over by George George George

8:43

Lord Scott. And

8:47

So this bison person, this

8:49

person who used to be Adam Graham, is

8:51

now going to a women's prison in

8:53

Sterling. In Scotland port

8:55

apparently won't be held

8:57

alongside the jail's general

8:59

population, but that hasn't stopped

9:01

people. Losing their

9:03

rags massively. Today,

9:06

particularly. It's an absolutely crazy story.

9:08

This guy raped two women. Disgusting.

9:10

Right? Going to get a very significant custodial

9:14

sentence when the sentencing is carried

9:16

out. But the trial,

9:18

turned up to the trial basically dressed in

9:20

drag and claimed to be Euler Bryson.

9:22

Found guilty now off to

9:25

a women's prison, Puiguen, Nemos

9:27

mentioned. Unlikely to be in the general

9:29

population, at least that's what they're saying

9:31

now. Let's listen to

9:33

talk radio or talk

9:36

TV's Julia Hartley Brewer who

9:38

had plenty to say on this earlier

9:39

today. Isla Bryson began

9:41

life as Adam Graham and as Adam

9:44

Graham. Just a few years ago,

9:46

Shaven headed Adam Graham with a

9:48

Mike Tyson style face tattoo

9:50

carried out violent sex attacks on

9:52

two women in twenty sixteen and twenty

9:54

nineteen since being charged

9:56

with those rates in twenty twenty,

9:59

quite coincident so deadly, Adam

10:01

Graham decided that actually, he'd always

10:03

wanted to dish to transition to

10:05

live as a trans woman. And

10:07

he was treated in court as if he was a

10:10

woman despite the fact the crimes that he

10:12

was charged with can only be

10:14

committed by a man because

10:16

last I looked. Women

10:18

don't have penises. Let me have

10:20

a look down there. No. Still

10:22

no penis. No penis.

10:24

For Julia Hartley Brewer, she goes on.

10:26

And yet, the court required that everyone

10:29

referred to him as

10:31

her and she. He

10:33

had a lawyer who claimed that he shouldn't

10:35

even be convicted because

10:37

he was now a she.

10:39

Well, he was now a she. Is

10:42

actually now convicted as a rapist

10:44

and will go to jail. But

10:46

extraordinarily, despite as you

10:48

can see on that picture, we're showing you right

10:50

now in his leggings, completely fully

10:52

intact, he will be going to

10:54

a woman's prison. Exactly.

10:56

The Nicholas Sturgeon, the

10:58

Scottish first minister, told wouldn't

11:01

happen, wasn't happening. We were

11:03

all scare mongering to say would

11:05

happen, is happening. And it's happening.

11:07

It's got and that's where this case was

11:09

and is happening across the

11:11

United Kingdom because we are

11:13

playing a law with this madness trans people,

11:15

people who wish to live their life. Yeah. She goes

11:17

on to say that trans people who want to live

11:19

their life and just get along should be

11:21

respected, blah, blah, blah. By the way, you've just

11:23

heard the difference. Between a real

11:25

journalist, me, and a

11:27

hack like Julia Hartley Brewer.

11:30

Brewer must have known this morning.

11:32

That it was stated clearly that

11:34

this price and character would not be

11:36

in the general population. But

11:39

brewer decided to omit it because

11:41

it takes away slightly from

11:43

her rant. That

11:45

is in journalism. You've got to make the

11:47

point that they've said this person

11:49

will not be in the general population.

11:51

That's but this is the

11:53

media. Isn't it? Annie

11:55

who? Miriam Katz, right, is a

11:57

conservative party, MP. She's

12:00

had plenty to say on this issue as

12:01

well. She was on times

12:04

radio and had this to say. I

12:06

think just imagine it was a female relative

12:08

of yours who was in prison

12:10

for whatever reason and then potentially

12:12

could come into contact with a male

12:14

rapist. You know, the

12:16

danger that that puts her in is just, you know,

12:18

it's it's appalling that that should happen in a

12:20

civilized

12:20

society. Is there

12:23

not a case for saying that, actually, there

12:25

were lots of men who in male

12:28

male prisons. With male

12:30

rapists who may have raped other men that

12:32

actually this is this is

12:34

a problem for the criminal

12:36

justice system. That's rapists

12:40

are put in prison and actually men

12:42

have to serve their time in prison

12:44

with rapists as well. Why would he

12:46

even make that point Obviously,

12:48

there is a huge problem in prisons with

12:50

with respect to male rape, obviously.

12:53

That is male on male sexual violence

12:55

in prisons, but it was not relevant.

12:57

To the point at hand that men

12:59

can identify as women. Go

13:02

into not have any surgery because

13:04

these are not people going through gender

13:06

dysphoria. These are not people with any genuine

13:08

issues. Not a Thursday go

13:10

into prison in drag. With

13:12

women, many of whom, will have

13:14

been subjected to

13:16

physical or sexual violence

13:18

in relationships with men.

13:20

It's a stupid thing for him to say.

13:22

Or to even ask, what did Miriam

13:24

Kate say to that?

13:25

Yes, that's true. But I don't think

13:28

we should confuse the issues here.

13:30

Of course, individual prison governors

13:32

and prison officers need to make

13:34

provision to keep prisoners safe. That is, of course,

13:36

an important general point And no

13:38

one thinks that men men's prisons are

13:40

particularly safe places, clearly, and not

13:42

a lot of safeguards need to be

13:44

taken. But that is a separate issue from

13:46

saying should a male

13:48

sex offender be allowed to be put

13:50

in a women's prison simply because he

13:52

says he is a woman, and that's a

13:54

different issue.

13:55

At this time's radio presenter won't

13:58

give up though. Are there any circumstances

14:00

you could accept where

14:02

a trans woman could be

14:04

placed in a woman's

14:05

prison. He hasn't been listening as

14:07

he. I don't think

14:10

so. No. I think there should be

14:12

trans wings I think that's absolutely

14:14

acceptable. I think transpacement, prisoners

14:16

should be treated with exactly the same

14:18

rights, the same care, the same a

14:20

safeguarding protections as any other

14:22

prisoners. But that doesn't include

14:25

allowing a mountain to identify as a woman

14:27

and being putting a woman's

14:28

prison. I don't think that's appropriate, but

14:30

I don't, you know, I don't have a father. What about

14:32

what about if if If what about if a trans

14:34

woman? If if there's someone who

14:37

who has been

14:39

living as a woman for twenty

14:41

years and is corps

14:43

fiddling there by no tax

14:45

done for fraud. There's so there's there's

14:47

no sexual element to it. You you still think

14:49

that person should be put in a trans wing

14:52

and not it's in a standard

14:54

woman's prison serving alongside a woman

14:56

who's been done before. It's still a

14:58

man, dipstick. It is still a

15:00

man even if he has been living as a

15:02

woman for twenty years. It is

15:04

a man. That's the

15:06

fundamentals that doesn't change.

15:08

God. Well, these these

15:11

decisions are made on a case by case

15:13

basis and they are risk assessed

15:15

individually. But I think this

15:17

highlights the difficulties and the complexities of

15:19

the arguments and why perhaps

15:21

ten or fifteen years ago, I

15:23

think the position of society was

15:25

that there are a small number of people

15:27

who have such intense gender

15:29

dysphoria, that the best thing for

15:31

them under medical supervision,

15:34

under advice, under counseling, under as

15:36

much support as possible, they

15:38

decide to live as the opposite sex to get

15:40

on with their lives to, you know, to the responsibility

15:42

of society, not to discriminate, to be

15:44

kind, etcetera. And I think

15:46

society accepted that position, and it would have

15:48

been acceptable therefore,

15:50

for a a trans woman to use a

15:52

woman's changing maybe

15:54

prison facilities, etcetera. The

15:56

problem is now I get she

15:58

might be a bit confused there because

16:00

transsexual woman, that's a woman

16:02

who has had surgery, is a completely

16:04

different thing as we've gotten into on

16:06

this particular program in the past sixteen

16:08

minutes past the hour.

16:10

I can't this on the end of a Sky

16:13

News bulletin today. What

16:15

are we? We are the twenty fifth of

16:17

January. Right? We we

16:19

haven't quite we're we're more than

16:21

halfway through. Right? We're nearly two thirds

16:24

of the way through the winter. The

16:26

NHS is in crisis. We'll talk about that

16:28

with doctor Bob Gilles soon.

16:30

This from Sky News late this

16:32

afternoon, Sarah Jamey. How does officials say that

16:34

people at high risk of severe COVID should be

16:36

given a booster job in the autumn.

16:38

The joint committee on vaccination and

16:40

immunization say those who are older or

16:43

who are immunosuppressed should also

16:45

get an extra dose in the spring. It

16:47

says emergency responses could be

16:49

needed if a variant of the virus

16:51

emerges. Wow. So the JCVI has

16:53

said that those at risk or

16:55

most at risk from severe

16:57

COVID which I I don't imagine

16:59

there were too many people, at risk from

17:01

severe cold that should get a a booster

17:03

in the autumn and in the spring.

17:05

Now the people she's referring to

17:08

in that

17:08

report, they must have had three or four of these

17:11

jobs already. Yeah.

17:13

We'll talk about this a little bit later on.

17:15

And this is doing the rounds of

17:17

Twitter today. I can say, for

17:19

certain, it is Bill Gates. When

17:22

this was recorded, I have no idea, but

17:24

it's showing up everywhere today.

17:26

It's Gates talking about

17:28

a drug that can be inhaled

17:30

a future drug, a

17:33

blocker, an inhaled blocker

17:36

that would prevent somebody from

17:38

becoming infected from

17:40

a virus or from an

17:41

epidemic. Just have a listen to this. We think we

17:44

can also have very early in an

17:46

epidemic. The thing you

17:48

can heal THAT WILL

17:50

MEAN THAT YOU CAN'T BE INFECTED. A

17:53

BLOCKER. A BLOCKER, SOMETHING THAT YOU

17:55

CAN INHAIL. So they'll presumably

17:57

in the future say we've

17:59

identified some respiratory pathogen. It's

18:01

nasty. It's coming airway. We've

18:04

got something that you can inhale. A little

18:06

bit more from Bill. An inhaled blocker.

18:08

Inhaled blocker. We also need to fix

18:10

the three problems of vaccines. That current

18:12

vaccines are not infection blocking. They're

18:15

not infection blocking. Imagine

18:17

all the times you said they were

18:19

get the vaccine, protect yourself, protect

18:22

others. They're not broad,

18:24

so when new variants come up, you lose

18:26

protection. You find that funny. This

18:28

is a strange fruit disguise and

18:31

the giggles and sneakers a lot doesn't need this

18:33

guy. Finds that funny. Maybe

18:35

that's a nervous giggles. Maybe he's

18:37

thinking, believe I'm getting away with this.

18:39

Fraud. So when new variants come

18:40

up, you lose protection. And

18:42

they have very short duration,

18:44

particularly in the people who matter.

18:46

Which are old people. And every one of

18:49

those things is is

18:51

fixable. In fact, doing

18:53

that work is going to help

18:55

vaccination very, very

18:57

broadly. Another little giggled there doing

18:59

that work, the devil's work. Some

19:01

would say, not me. I I

19:03

don't know anything about that. But that's Bill Gates, of course,

19:06

in the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

19:08

talking about inhaled blockers. Gates

19:11

has been on has gone on the record in the past.

19:13

It's talking about needing to

19:15

do something about antivacitors.

19:18

Refuse Nick's give give it any name

19:20

you want. People like me, for

19:22

example. I've never

19:24

been in my life really

19:27

against the principle of that the

19:29

nation. I'm not a medic. I'm not a doctor. I don't know

19:31

anything about it. I've refused

19:33

the flu job every year it's been

19:35

offered to me because I know

19:37

the government has acknowledged that

19:40

it very rarely works. It it

19:42

it's often the wrong strain.

19:45

They they they often give you a

19:47

job which which doesn't correlate

19:50

with the current strain of flu or that

19:52

winter strain of flu. So they get

19:54

it wrong a lot. And number two, as

19:56

a non smoking, fit healthy

19:58

guy, I think I let my

20:00

own immune system deal with

20:02

anything that comes my way. So

20:04

I not not taking jobs. I definitely

20:06

got a malaria shot years ago

20:09

before I headed off to Costa

20:11

Rica. I can't remember whether I took tablets or

20:13

whether I got a shot strangely. You

20:15

think I would remember that. But the

20:17

principle of it over the years that we were brought up

20:19

to believe these things you

20:21

know, take the measles job and all of that. We'll

20:23

get rid of measles. We'll get rid of polio.

20:25

So I've never had until recent

20:28

years. I've never had any real

20:30

chip on my shoulder about vaccines.

20:32

But I wouldn't take I wouldn't take

20:34

the offer of a Thornton's chocolate

20:36

from Bill Gates if he offered it

20:38

to me. I I wouldn't take a pack

20:40

of potato crisps and a bottle of t

20:42

k red lemonade from Bill Gates,

20:44

and those happen to be my two favorite things in the

20:46

entire world. an Irish childhood

20:48

right there. Your parents taking you to the pub

20:50

where they sat and got pissed for

20:52

hours and hours. And you had to

20:54

contend with a packet of potato cheese

20:56

and onion. And a bottle of Teekay red lemonade, or if you're

20:58

a lucky side owner. I wouldn't take

21:00

any of those things from Bill Gates. The

21:02

question is, Gates has been the

21:04

point is, then the question, the point being Gates

21:06

has said repeatedly, something

21:08

needs to be done about those who

21:10

refuse these jobs. Because

21:12

they're letting humanity down,

21:14

and they're letting herd immunity down.

21:16

He's talked about putting vaccines in

21:18

food, hasn't he? Or is that is

21:20

that misinformation? I think he has. Well, what

21:23

what I what I wonder is if he if

21:25

they can put something together,

21:28

that one would inhale

21:30

in order to try and, you

21:32

know, to fight off some incoming virus.

21:35

What would stop them or could

21:37

stop them for from dumping that

21:39

in the atmosphere? Just

21:42

a thought. An inhaled blocker, he

21:44

said. You know, we will make one of these things.

21:46

We we we know this as a virus

21:48

coming. It's coming across the

21:50

Atlantic or It's coming down from the

21:52

north or wherever. We've

21:54

managed to isolate it. And we think we've

21:56

got a product that if you

21:58

inhale it, the virus won't be able to get

22:00

into your system. We think we can also

22:02

have very early in an

22:04

epidemic. The thing you can heal

22:07

that will mean that you can't be infected,

22:09

a blocker, an inhaled

22:12

blocker. What do you think,

22:14

richiella dot co dot uk? Maybe we'll talk

22:16

about this. A little bit later on. I

22:18

will ask Raj if he's listening. I don't know

22:20

if he is to put the

22:22

meme with the contact details.

22:24

For the program on Facebook.

22:27

I will try and do it for Twitter.

22:29

And then shortly after six o'clock,

22:31

We'll get as many calls as we can through,

22:34

but the details are pretty straightforward.

22:37

Here they are. It's

22:39

your call. Skype. Chat

22:42

with Ritchie or call 01618182018.

22:47

If

22:47

you're calling from overseas, it's 441618182018.

22:53

Go to Richie now. Lovely. It

22:55

is your Richie Aren't you broadcasting

22:57

live on Rich alan dot co dot

22:59

u k. On on as

23:02

well. Fab radio two in

23:04

Manchester and the program, of course, is on

23:06

the tune in app, doctor Bob

23:08

Gill. Will be with me in about six or seven minutes

23:10

time. Is that promises to be interesting

23:12

and educational? Hi

23:13

there. It's Eamon here from ImmunoX three

23:16

sixty five and I just want to give you a quick update for the

23:18

new year. We are now in the depths of winter and

23:20

due to the lack of adequate sunlight, it is

23:22

all to the time and those of living

23:24

in the northern hemisphere have the lowest levels of vitamin d in

23:26

our bodies. If there is ever a time to give your

23:28

immune system a boost, it is probably now.

23:32

Also, I'm really happy to be able to tell you

23:34

that not only have we been able to

23:36

substantially reduce the price of Immunex three sixty

23:38

five since we launched in October last but we

23:40

can now supply directly to Ireland.

23:42

For details of how each of the supplements in

23:44

immune x three sixty five are formulated to

23:46

work together and protect you

23:48

from cold flu and other respiratory diseases this

23:49

winter, just head over to immunics

23:52

three sixty five dot co dot UKI

23:55

am going to be at comedy

23:57

podcast live from the twenty

24:00

seventh to the twenty ninth of

24:02

January at the Kegworth Hotel

24:05

in Darby. It'll be me and a bunch

24:07

of other brilliant free

24:09

speakers who think what they want to

24:11

25th, say, what they think, and really

24:13

don't give too what anyone else has got to say about it.

24:16

So do come along and join us.

24:18

Phil Zimmerman will be there. And

24:20

Lawrence, Alastair Williams, Wright

24:22

said read, I can promise you a few things.

24:24

You will laugh, you will feel

24:26

better, and you will realize that you're not

24:28

alone. So do grab your tickets comedy

24:31

podcast live dot com, and I'm better very

24:33

much. Look forward to spending time with

24:35

you there. Comedy

24:37

podcast live dot com. That's on Friday,

24:39

and Charlotte Dins from Burnley has had

24:41

a lot to do with that twenty

24:44

five minutes past the

24:44

era. It's the BBC. Not

24:47

in the BBC. This is

24:49

your richie Allen show live from

24:51

the magnificent city of Selwyn. It is time

24:53

for a tune. And then

24:56

just after that, I will be speaking

24:58

with doctor Bob Gill. Do

25:00

not miss that your calls a bit later on,

25:02

it's the lemonheads. Isn't

25:04

it? It's the lemonheads.

25:07

Hit go on go on third times the charm.

25:11

Yeah. I'm gonna take an axe to

25:13

this brand new barkly

25:16

entertainment systemy thingamie jig this

25:18

studio. If it

25:21

doesn't start doing what I tell it

25:23

to do, That

25:28

is the lemonheads cover of missus

25:30

Robinson, of course, by Simon and Garfunkel,

25:32

is twenty eight and a half minutes past the

25:34

year, the Ritchie Allen Show for Wednesday, the

25:37

twenty fifth of January. Before we

25:39

welcome doctor Abam Gill to

25:41

the program, Let me read you this from the BBC

25:43

Health correspondent Nick Trigle. It's

25:45

very brief. The NHS is in the

25:47

middle of its worst winter in

25:49

a generation. With senior

25:51

doctors warning that hospitals are facing

25:53

intolerable pressures that are costing

25:55

lives. A and d waits

25:57

and ambulance delays are at

25:59

their worst levels on

26:01

record. The health service was already under

26:03

pressure. The result of long

26:05

standing problems put their COVID flu and

26:07

now strike action by

26:09

staff have all added to the sense of

26:11

crisis this winter. How did

26:13

it get to this point? Is

26:15

it a recent thing? Is it something that's been

26:17

happening over a long period of

26:19

time? What about the the

26:21

the so called slash

26:23

flu pandemic. What about people living

26:25

longer than ever before? Let's

26:28

talk about some of these issues with my guess

26:30

this error. He is an NHS

26:33

doctor, an experienced doctor, and he's

26:35

also a documentary and he was

26:37

involved in writing and

26:39

producing a documentary on this subject

26:41

called the great NHS hoist. So it's a pleasure

26:43

to welcome doctor Bob Gill to

26:45

her program. Bob, thank you for taking the

26:47

call. How are you? Very

26:50

well. Thank you. Thanks for inviting me on, Richie. It's a

26:52

real pleasure, Bob. Thank you. So

26:55

just on trigle's point,

26:58

the the the the issues according

27:00

to him are a and d waits

27:02

and ambulance delays, pressures

27:05

because the service became

27:08

to to a large extent, a COVID

27:10

service during the

27:12

the pandemic. The strike action

27:15

now factor into that people

27:17

living longer. Is he right to Nick Trigler? These

27:19

are the answers. Is this what is responsible

27:21

for the the crisis? What

27:25

you will notice is the BBC

27:28

consistently overlook

27:30

active government policy

27:32

decisions, which have contributed to

27:34

the current chaos we are seeing. He

27:37

totally avoids discussion

27:39

about the fact we had twenty

27:41

five thousand beds cut

27:44

over the last decade. We

27:46

have a workforce crisis,

27:49

ten thousand fewer doctors

27:51

in

27:51

we we need forty thousand nurse vacancies,

27:54

and that was before the pandemic. The film

27:56

I made was in twenty nineteen.

27:59

Prior to the pandemic affecting

28:02

us. So he is

28:04

wrong just to point to

28:06

the pandemic or the flu season.

28:09

And he's letting the government totally

28:11

off the hook, which is, of course, the

28:13

BBC's role

28:16

to help construct a narrative to present.

28:18

This has some sort of act

28:20

of God or natural disaster. But

28:23

this is deliver a consequence of

28:25

deliberate successive political

28:26

policy, which has

28:29

rendered the NHS in

28:31

an

28:31

engineered crisis.

28:35

You mentioned there are ten

28:37

thousand fewer beds or more

28:39

in the last decade. I

28:41

think, in thirty years

28:43

from the late eighties up until twenty

28:46

nineteen, half the beds disappeared. Off

28:48

awards around the country. Now

28:50

when I've made that point on social

28:52

media, polite people,

28:54

academics come back and say,

28:57

Ritchie, the beds were reduced

28:59

with the bed numbers because

29:01

of advances in science and in

29:04

medicine and that leading to us not needing so

29:06

many beds. Is there any truth in

29:08

that?

29:09

There's there's a degree of truth in that,

29:12

but what what actually that is

29:14

masking, that's a bit simplistic.

29:15

We've had an asset grab. They

29:18

started with the mental

29:20

health services where they sold off asylums and

29:23

sold them off to property developers.

29:25

So you had a shift

29:26

of asset ownership out of

29:29

public hands into private

29:31

hands.

29:31

Under the Blair Brown administration,

29:33

we had the private finance

29:36

initiative, which

29:38

effectively put the taxpayer on

29:40

the hook for expensive borrowing

29:42

to build public

29:44

infrastructure. So they borrowed eleven billion

29:46

and we're going to pay back over

29:49

eighty billion pounds to build one

29:51

hundred new hospitals. But

29:53

each of these hospitals had a third

29:55

less beds. So in fact, you

29:57

had a you had a

29:59

millstone. At the same time, you had

30:01

a forced bed contraction

30:03

and transfer of ownership.

30:06

So that that PFI toxicity we are still

30:08

paying the price for because

30:10

debt servicing for the NHS

30:12

takes precedence over paying staff or

30:14

looking after

30:15

patients. So

30:17

in order to cause the

30:19

NHS to fail, you

30:21

have to reduce capacity. You

30:23

have to drive down the service provision. You

30:25

have to reduce public's faith

30:28

and the the staff trust in

30:31

the service. How else can you persuade them to take

30:33

out top up insurance and

30:35

to give up on the NHS? You have to

30:37

first destroy its

30:38

reputation. And that's what the foreclosure

30:41

program has contributed to. We'll

30:43

come back to that in a moment, Bob.

30:45

Doctor Bob Gill is our guest this

30:47

hour. By the way, you

30:49

also mentioned a big shortage in doctors,

30:51

and I don't doubt that

30:53

you're right. I don't doubt that.

30:56

And I've I've had doctors on this program in the past

30:58

and going back years, I've had doctors come

31:00

on who'd been in practice for only

31:02

five or six years. And I'd said they'd

31:04

had enough and they were going to go and do something else. But I read

31:06

something extra ordering in the Sunday Times

31:08

or yesterday's times, I can't remember.

31:10

Maybe it was Mondelez. But it was to do

31:13

with universities being encouraged

31:15

to kind of to not give

31:17

away so many medical degrees.

31:19

I I can't get my head around that. Did you see

31:21

that a call for universities

31:24

to, you know,

31:27

make their their their their their

31:29

medical programs, their their medical

31:31

courses to make them smaller. Did

31:33

you read that? And why would that happen if

31:35

there's a shortage of doctors?

31:38

Well, yeah. Exactly. So if you if you

31:40

want to analyze this using

31:42

logic and rationality, it doesn't

31:45

make

31:45

sense. But until and unless

31:47

you understand the government's

31:49

agenda, then you it really is

31:52

confusing. Their agenda is

31:54

a process of down skilling.

31:57

So using the cheapest, least

31:59

qualified staff to provide care is a

32:01

race to the bottom. And

32:04

we've had a active program of

32:07

replacing doctors with nurses, nurses

32:09

with healthcare assistance, and in due course,

32:12

healthcare assistance with volunteers. So you

32:14

can see what's

32:15

happening. In

32:18

twenty nine team, there was a new GP

32:20

contract where there was a specific

32:22

very generous fund made

32:24

available ring fenced. You couldn't spend

32:26

it for anything else. All

32:28

it could be spent on is employing non

32:31

doctor, non medical staff.

32:34

Now how does that make

32:36

sense? We know that for general

32:39

practice, continuity of care is

32:41

good for the

32:41

patient, good for the doctor, reduced

32:44

mortality, reduced error

32:45

rate, yet all government policies

32:48

to reduce the headcount of doctors per

32:50

head of population and to

32:52

replace doctors with less

32:54

qualified people. So the government

32:56

policies to keep the wage bill

32:58

down and, in

33:00

fact, give not any

33:02

consideration to patient safety, which

33:04

is why I came into the

33:06

profession is to provide the

33:07

safest, highest quality care, but that does

33:10

not fit in with government policy.

33:12

Thanks for saying that about the kind

33:14

of turnover of doctors at

33:16

GP surgeries. Because I hear

33:18

that a lot from people who write

33:20

into this program. say the frustrating

33:23

thing is they're often emailing me on

33:25

behalf of a of an elder an

33:27

elder relative, and they say, you know,

33:29

my mom doesn't see the

33:31

same GP And this is

33:33

strange to me, Bob, I grew up in Waterford

33:35

City in Ireland. We had a family

33:37

doctor, and she was her doctor for years.

33:39

And you very eloquently explained why

33:41

that's so important, that trust,

33:43

and that, you know, understanding, that

33:45

relationship that that you build up, doctor

33:47

Bob Gill, is their guest.

33:49

And what what do you say

33:51

to those listening to this who say,

33:54

okay, I hear what doctor Bob Gill

33:56

is saying, but they've been

33:58

throwing billions and

34:00

billions of pounds at the Health Service

34:02

year in year out. The NHS

34:05

budget raises point an average of four

34:07

percent above inflation each year. Now I know you're

34:09

gonna jump down my throat and say that this

34:11

has changed since two thousand and

34:13

ten. the average annual rate of increase has been

34:15

half that. But it seems, Bob, when

34:18

you switch on Sky or the BBC or

34:20

you listen

34:22

to BBC, you know, twice or three times a year, billions

34:24

are announced for the NHS. Where is it

34:26

going, Bob?

34:28

Well, that is the key question. So

34:31

as the

34:32

NHS got more and more privatized and more

34:35

and more managerial and bureaucratic,

34:38

we've seen

34:40

a huge banking in the amount of money being siphoned away from

34:42

patient care and into

34:44

running the bureaucracy. So I'll give you

34:47

a figure. In

34:48

Matt Margaret Hatcher's time, the overhead, the running

34:50

cost of the NHS was four

34:53

percent Now

34:53

by the

34:54

mid-2000s, the University of

34:57

York, research,

34:58

which showed that had risen to about fourteen

35:01

percent

35:01

Now the

35:02

American model we're following spends

35:06

one in every three dollars on administration

35:08

management profit and shareholder

35:11

dividend. This

35:13

is not about efficiency. Government

35:16

policy has made the NHS less

35:18

and less

35:19

efficient. Neither

35:20

is it about saving money because the

35:22

more money that goes in the

35:24

more opportunities provided for corporations to

35:27

siphon money away, the better.

35:29

Let's just look at pandemic

35:31

response, the test and trace system. What did the government

35:34

do? They didn't invest

35:36

in public capacity. They

35:39

hired an accountancy firm. Called

35:42

Deloitte and an outsourcing giant called

35:44

Circle with no medical

35:46

experience to run the world's

35:48

most expensive and least

35:50

effective pandemic test and trace

35:51

system at the cost

35:53

of thirty

35:53

seven billion eye

35:56

watering money.

35:57

Now if somebody's going to argue, let's

36:00

pour more money down that

36:02

bottomless pit, that's

36:03

a disaster. So

36:06

the privatization

36:06

lobby, our politicians like to

36:08

keep throwing

36:09

out this narrative about more money, you

36:11

know, does it it needs more money?

36:13

No, it doesn't.

36:15

You need

36:15

to stem the flow of money

36:18

away, which is going away from patient care

36:20

into the market

36:21

bureaucracy. That's one problem.

36:23

And the other big problem is servicing

36:26

private finance initiative debt.

36:28

These

36:29

are two deliberate so sabotage that the government and the

36:31

media never want to discuss. Imagine and

36:34

I I read this today, the statistic

36:37

you threw out. About under

36:40

thatcher four percent spent

36:42

on bureaucracy and, say,

36:46

non treatment. Things provision. Right? Non treatment

36:48

provision. And that's gone up to

36:50

one in every three

36:51

pounds. And and you've touched on this,

36:53

Bob? No. That

36:56

that will be – that is the American

36:58

system, the direction we are heading in. But by the mid-2000s,

37:00

there was an additional

37:03

ten percent being

37:06

leached out in running the market that part privatized NHS.

37:08

And you've mentioned already, the public at

37:10

large are unaware of this. They are

37:14

completely unaware of what I

37:16

think what you've called publicly kind of privatization by stealth, is

37:18

it can't it be put simplistically?

37:22

That this is a deliberate agenda

37:24

to to to to kinda

37:26

create a problem reaction solution situation

37:30

whereby you wrecked the

37:32

health service deliberately to create

37:34

such an outrage that the public

37:37

will take, you know, something

37:39

they would have never taken to before

37:41

they take that that, you know,

37:43

privatization. And they they won't

37:45

scream bloody murder when former health

37:47

secretary Sajid Javid

37:50

says, You know, you might have to pay to see your GP, and you might

37:52

need to pay sixty six pounds

37:54

to go to accident and emergency.

37:57

Is that what we're seeing here for for for a decade

37:59

or two? Problem. Reaction,

38:01

solution, destroy, create the panic, and

38:03

then bring in the solution you had

38:05

desired all

38:06

along. Absolutely. That's spot on. So you just have

38:08

to look at the legislation. This is in speculation.

38:10

So in the nineteen nineties,

38:13

you had the Croatia of

38:15

an internal market. In the early

38:18

two thousands, you had the outsourcing

38:20

of medical care for the first time

38:22

in

38:23

the NHS' In

38:24

two thousand and twelve, you had new

38:25

legislation which made the

38:28

internal market a compulsory

38:30

external market

38:32

And in July of last year, under the cover of the pandemic,

38:34

we had another Health and

38:36

Care Act, which has in legal terms

38:40

broken up the NHS into forty two new

38:43

public private partnerships, which

38:45

will be run along the

38:47

lines of American Managed

38:49

Care So this is not some theory. This has

38:52

happened.

38:52

The changes have happened in law. It's

38:54

just that nobody is bothered to tell

38:56

the public and certainly

38:59

the corporate media and the BBC will never

39:01

explain this.

39:02

They have to keep the

39:05

public under confusion and

39:08

misdirection and nudging us.

39:10

And in fact, I would put it as strongly

39:12

as if the significant

39:16

amount

39:16

of catastrophic failure

39:16

we're seeing within the NHS now, the

39:19

preventable deaths and the harm on

39:21

a mass scale

39:23

is the the

39:25

fuel to destroy public trust.

39:27

Our politicians are quite willing

39:29

to let thousands

39:31

of people die in order to

39:34

achieve their political objective,

39:36

which is an American style

39:38

insurance

39:40

based system. Well, you you couldn't have put it any more

39:42

strongly, Bob. The the the problem I have on

39:44

and we have on programs like this is

39:47

is, of course, getting them to talk about these things. I

39:49

will inevitably tomorrow contact

39:52

the the Department of Health and

39:55

say that I've been speaking to yourself as I've

39:57

done with every other doctors who's come on this

39:59

program over the years and the silence

40:01

would be deafening. They they won't come

40:03

on programs like this. They don't get asked

40:05

these questions, as you said, on the BBC, on channel four, on ITV. They're not going to

40:07

come on programs like this. Now you mentioned

40:10

excess deaths, doctor

40:12

Bob Gill. Is our guest

40:14

folks, please follow him on Twitter, get over

40:16

there. And it's very simple. It's

40:18

at D0R for doctor at d o

40:20

or Bob Gill. Follow Bob there

40:22

and there are links to where you can see

40:24

the great NHS reset

40:26

where where where they cover but but

40:28

the film that Bob made, which covers most of

40:31

we've been talking about thus far. So at

40:33

the moment, about two thousand

40:36

eight hundred excess deaths

40:38

a week since the beginning of the year.

40:40

Marie, excuse me, Esther McVeigh, asked a

40:43

health ministry yesterday afternoon, I think

40:45

it was Maria Colfield. Would

40:47

the government launch an urgent investigation into

40:50

this? In her question,

40:52

Bob, Esther

40:54

McVeigh said, that she was

40:56

confused because the chief

40:58

medical officer Chris Witty was

41:00

blaming this partly or

41:02

largely, I think partly. On people

41:04

not getting access to statins and blood

41:06

pressure medication and stuff like that. But

41:08

when she investigated, she found out that

41:10

there was no real drop in people. Getting

41:13

access to that medicine. And she wonders

41:15

if something else going on. Is

41:18

something else going on, Bob? Why are

41:20

three thousand people a week

41:22

doing more? Than we would ordinarily

41:23

expect? Yes. So there's

41:26

no simple answer to this. We have

41:28

the problem of lack of capacity.

41:31

We know studies have shown that

41:33

for every eighty people

41:36

waiting more than twelve hours in an A and E

41:38

department having

41:39

that had the decision made to admit them

41:41

for every eighty, waiting more than twelve

41:43

hours, there's one preventable

41:45

death. Now in over alone, we had forty

41:47

four thousand people waiting more than twelve hours. So you can do the math.

41:49

There's quite a lot of people waiting

41:52

for care.

41:54

Added to that, you've got the the lockdowns and

41:56

the shutdown of medical service

41:59

provision through the

42:00

pandemic. Contributes

42:02

to people presenting later. So

42:04

their

42:04

disease isn't

42:05

treated early enough, so that might be contributing

42:07

to the excess

42:10

From

42:10

some of

42:11

the the reading and listing I've been

42:14

doing, we know

42:16

that the excess deaths are not

42:18

comprised of COVID

42:19

deaths. It's largely a non COVID related

42:22

deaths. And there's a growing

42:24

concern

42:25

about whether there's an

42:28

impact from the mRNA short

42:30

rollout? And whether that's contributing

42:32

to the excess test? Because The

42:36

excess best problem isn't just in the

42:38

UK. It's it's across the

42:40

world is being

42:42

seen. So I agree there needs to be an urgent investigation into

42:43

this. There are some

42:46

respected medical voices who

42:48

are very concerned.

42:48

Could there be side effects from

42:52

The vaccine, we know that Pfizer

42:54

was very reluctant and secretive about

42:56

their raw data being looked at.

42:59

A

42:59

reanalysis

43:00

of the raw data has shown

43:02

a risk of one in eight

43:04

hundred of severe adverse

43:06

effects of the vaccine. Now

43:09

that wasn't made clear to people at the beginning. We were also

43:11

told that it would stop transmission

43:13

and get your vaccine to protect your grandmother

43:15

and all the rest

43:18

of

43:18

it. But for Chris Witty to

43:20

blame

43:20

lack of statins providing, a

43:23

provisional statins is

43:26

deeply troubling. Because

43:28

it shows that our chief medical officer doesn't

43:30

understand how these statin drugs

43:33

work. They work over

43:36

many years And

43:36

the effect of the set in drugs is

43:38

marginal to say the least. I'll

43:40

give you a statistic which should

43:43

bring this home.

43:44

If you are

43:45

a high risk of heart disease, let's say you've

43:46

already had a heart attack or a

43:49

stroke, your high risk, you take

43:51

a statin for five years and

43:54

that will extend your expectancy by

43:57

a

43:57

staggering four days.

44:01

So if Chris Whitney thinks that's going to

44:03

have an effect, not taking a statin, it's

44:05

going to have an effect on

44:08

this excess mortality

44:10

we're

44:10

seeing. He's living in in a different universe to most of

44:12

us. That is that's well,

44:14

if you if you're right and he doesn't understand

44:16

that, it it it pegs

44:20

Pega's belief, really, that he holds the position

44:22

he holds in in

44:24

UK medicine. Doctor Bob

44:26

Gill is our guest. SUVALVE

44:29

LOOK JUST TO REPEAT WHERE DOCTOR ASINEL

44:32

HUNTER, THE CARDIOLOGIST AND THERE ARE MANY

44:34

OLDER DOCTORS

44:36

WHO trained at prestigious

44:38

universities and have held, you know, have

44:40

held down pretty good jobs over the

44:42

years. They're calling for an immediate cessation

44:45

of the program of the mRNA program. We

44:47

we know Andrew Bridgien, who since

44:49

lost the Tory whipp for asking

44:51

questions about this, is saying

44:53

that these jobs until Moore is

44:55

known, these jobs should be suspended. Is that something you support

44:57

at the moment? I

44:59

do. Yes. I read doctor

45:01

Mahhotra's paper. He produced

45:03

early on, and I supported his call for

45:06

suspension. I'm also very

45:08

worried about how people

45:10

raising concerns are smeared and,

45:14

you know, customize and

45:16

and de platforms. This is

45:18

not normal

45:18

behavior. This is not what

45:20

we should be having in

45:22

civilized society that supposedly

45:24

values free speech and discourse.

45:26

So the reaction to

45:28

people speaking up and raising concerns

45:31

is itself deeply

45:34

troubling? We can only

45:36

speculate maybe,

45:38

but the the data,

45:40

the Pfizer data that you

45:43

explained perfectly. And the,

45:45

you know, the the fair the

45:47

fairies is a word you know, towards towards this is

45:49

not the behavior you would expect of Avani Corporation.

45:51

Let alone a corporation

45:53

that's putting medicines. In the

45:55

market, you know, hiding data or not being

45:58

fully not not

46:00

disclosing fully as the data.

46:02

Now the government must

46:04

know this. So are you surprised that they

46:06

haven't suspended the mRNA

46:08

jobs? And can can we

46:10

speculate as to why that is? Why would they not say,

46:12

okay, let's up and let's have a

46:14

look. Well,

46:16

just before I deal with that, let's let's

46:18

have a look at what the government's own

46:20

advisers are saying. They were saying

46:23

very early on that a vaccine

46:25

should be targeted at the

46:27

highest risk groups, the elderly

46:29

and people with pre existing chronic conditions. Now that

46:31

made rational sense because we have no

46:34

long term safety data on

46:36

this new

46:38

intervention. made sense.

46:40

But the government chose to expand

46:42

and roll out almost

46:46

indiscriminately to the

46:47

point that they're now advocating

46:50

injecting the lowest risk group

46:52

children who are close

46:55

to zero

46:56

from dying of COVID, unless they

46:58

have some other serious medical

47:00

condition. Now,

47:01

rationally, that makes absolutely

47:04

no sense to give a

47:06

medical intervention to somebody

47:08

who's fit and well and

47:09

you have

47:09

no long term data. That

47:12

is very

47:14

worrying indeed. Why are

47:15

the government not taking the concerns on board?

47:17

Well, I'm afraid it could be that they're

47:19

just doubling down

47:21

on their mistakes. There's also the question

47:24

of money. What are the

47:26

money links between

47:29

Pfizer investment firms and

47:31

this government, we know we we hear

47:33

we read recently that Rishi

47:36

Sunak has is

47:38

part of a private equity

47:39

firm, which has significant Shareholdings

47:42

in Moderna, which is the

47:44

other company producing

47:47

mRNA shots. To what degree

47:50

is government policy being decided by financial self

47:52

interest? And, you know, we

47:54

have the we have the

47:59

MP recently in trouble for forgetting to

48:02

pay and declare four million

48:04

pounds in

48:06

tax. So

48:08

the class, the integrity,

48:10

the conflicts of interest

48:13

of our leaders

48:15

of this country need to be really heavily

48:17

scrutinized, and then we can maybe

48:20

understand why they're making some of the decisions

48:22

they are. You sound to

48:24

me. I I came across you.

48:26

We we we bumped into each other on

48:28

social media, and I came

48:30

across you on

48:32

GB news. And tell me to

48:34

to to to jog on if you like and

48:36

Dr. Ababa. You sound

48:38

shell shocked to me. Like, you can't

48:40

believe that

48:42

these things are happening. These, you know, inexplicable

48:46

decisions being made, things that may be pre

48:48

twenty twenty.

48:50

You'd never have imagined, you know, the censorship and urging parents

48:53

to give these shots to babies

48:55

who who don't need

48:56

them. It it's Shell shocked to fare.

49:00

Assessment of where

49:01

you are? I'm I'm

49:04

more

49:04

shocked that they're getting away

49:06

with it. I'm

49:08

shocked that there's so much

49:10

complicity within the media

49:12

and with supposedly the

49:15

political opposition So

49:18

that that what that's what shocks me the most.

49:20

The fact they will they

49:22

have the various intent doesn't

49:24

shock me because

49:25

I've been following they're deliberate running down of the health service over

49:27

a decade. So that that doesn't

49:30

surprise me that these

49:32

are people

49:33

who are acting in a sociopathic way.

49:36

But the fact that the harm they

49:38

are inducing on

49:40

the population is now so big and they

49:42

still get

49:42

away with it. That that's what shocks

49:44

me. I'll give you one example.

49:47

So Matt Hancock,

49:49

And NHS England were responsible for

49:52

the decision

49:54

to discharge potentially infected

49:56

people back into nursing homes during

49:59

the early part of

50:00

the pandemic,

50:01

setting off a second wave of infection

50:03

in nursing homes, claiming up to twenty

50:05

five thousand lives.

50:07

Now nobody's

50:07

been held account for that

50:10

decision. And, you know, we

50:11

have Matt Hancock

50:14

going

50:14

on to celebrity television programs to lo under

50:17

his reputation. You know,

50:18

this is beyond

50:19

belief. We

50:22

are brought up

50:24

to think we live in a democracy where

50:26

everything's accountable and the media

50:28

will scrutinize

50:29

what's going on. But it's absolutely nothing of the sort. And in

50:31

fact, if you raise concerns, you are

50:34

pilloried, you are smeared, you are

50:35

shutdown. That's more

50:38

like living in an

50:40

authoritarian dictatorship

50:41

than the

50:42

image that we paint for ourselves of this country.

50:44

And I've only got a couple of more

50:46

quick questions for you. Doctor Bob Gill.

50:50

Bob, knowing what what you

50:52

know, does it make it difficult

50:54

for you to enjoy your

50:56

job? I I would imagine. I I went to Uni. I didn't have the

50:58

brain. I didn't have the

51:00

the the intellectual capacity for

51:02

medicine, to

51:04

be honest. But I've often imagined it must be a lovely job, you know,

51:06

to see people when they're a bit down and out,

51:08

and they're a bit on well, and to look

51:10

after them and send them on

51:12

their way and knowing that

51:14

they'll improve and you've made a difference in their

51:16

lives. Is it difficult

51:18

for you now and doctors like you knowing

51:20

what you know? Is it a tougher job now?

51:22

It's definitely

51:24

tougher.

51:24

The the job satisfaction,

51:28

when you help somebody is

51:30

still there, But when you're

51:32

dealing with this bureaucracy, when

51:34

you're dealing with people languishing

51:36

on waiting lists, when you know they need

51:38

treatment that they're

51:40

not getting, when you see people being discharged prematurely out of

51:42

hospital, still

51:44

sick because there's lack of bed

51:46

capacity. That

51:48

is infuriating. And

51:49

I know, unfortunately, that it's all

51:52

being done

51:54

deliberately. That makes it very

51:56

difficult to swallow. So, you know,

51:58

I've taken the decision at

52:01

potentially professional risk to speak

52:03

out about these things because One

52:06

thing I didn't realize when I was

52:08

doing medicine and studying at

52:09

university, I thought all doctors would

52:11

be similarly outraged.

52:13

If their system health system

52:15

was being crushed. But I seem to

52:17

be in a a minority, I'm

52:19

afraid. I think unfortunately, maybe medics are

52:22

conditioned to listen to

52:23

authority, do as a toll, keep their

52:26

head down. always

52:27

fear of professional

52:30

damage, and that seems to

52:31

be

52:31

keeping the vast majority

52:34

of people will fully

52:36

blind, deaf and dumb, I'm

52:37

afraid, on a lot of issues, which we

52:39

should all collectively be

52:42

resisting. Final question,

52:44

Bob, plan. Can it

52:46

be reversed this totalitarian tiptoe or totalitarian

52:48

stampede with respect to the privatization?

52:53

Of the the the Americanization

52:55

of the health service, you

52:57

know, and delaying the the hiding

52:59

the data, giving mRNA

53:01

jobs to people. That that may

53:03

not need them. Is there a somewhere? Can this be reversed by

53:06

people?

53:07

Absolutely. It takes a simple act

53:10

of renationalization in

53:13

parliament. The is there's no political will, and there will not be

53:15

any political will until there's

53:17

mass public awareness. How

53:20

can people resist something they're totally unaware of? So that that's

53:22

where I come in and, you know, any

53:25

opportunity I get to

53:28

speak to the more people, the

53:30

better, that's our only

53:32

way. Unfortunately, the BBC

53:34

and the other mainstream channels

53:36

they actively censor voices like myself. I've experienced

53:38

it on the BBC. I got shut

53:40

down when I was on a live

53:44

program Toria Darbyshire show a few years ago during the junior doctor dispute.

53:46

I was an invited guest on

53:48

a panel show on ITV, and I was

53:50

the only one of the six invited

53:54

guests to get edited out. So

53:56

there is a very

54:00

overarching

54:01

censorship and they are

54:04

very worried that people will find out. So

54:06

we must try our hardest

54:08

to let as many people

54:10

know as possible what's going on because that's our only only

54:12

way to push

54:13

back. Knowledge is power. Find doctor

54:15

Bob Gill on Twitter. You'll

54:17

find him on there at

54:19

great NHS hoist at the door,

54:22

Bob. Gail Bob, thanks for taking the

54:24

time out to speak to us today. It's massively

54:26

important, as you said, I'll be following you

54:28

on to it. I'll be watching what you're up to and just

54:30

guard speed with it all the very

54:32

best. Thank

54:32

you very much, Ritchie. You've very kind

54:35

doctor Bob Gill live on Wednesday's Rickey Allen Radio

54:37

Show. Lots of comments on that have

54:39

come through the website and

54:42

on I'll get to those in a moment.

54:46

Another JP calling for the

54:48

immediate suspension.

54:50

Of the MRNA job program.

54:53

Wow. Yeah. And loads of

54:55

commerce, let me get to them

54:58

straight away. Okeydoke. Steve says

55:01

Moderna equals mod, if

55:03

IED or

55:06

n a. And

55:08

someone called Oreo says, Richie, this

55:10

government likes private corporations because

55:12

they don't have to deal with any balancing of the

55:14

books later. It is just

55:16

one big public show of huge borrowing before

55:18

the privatization, and then

55:20

forget about everything later. And the

55:22

banking lobby is elevating on

55:24

their next because they get

55:26

a new ponzi bubble funded by the public money. That's audio there.

55:28

Thank you for that. says

55:32

Itchy Knutsach is a corporate

55:34

tour just like the other six hundred and

55:36

forty nine Corpus. Corporal Atis

55:40

in parliament, fascism on steroids. He

55:42

says Samus says does this going

55:44

out realized there was no public health

55:46

emergency in twenty twenty? And

55:49

old people were murdered by this government. He he

55:51

says says Thomas, he mentions Medazzolam there, which

55:53

he's spoken about on

55:55

this program before. And then

55:57

Thomas says that viruses do not

56:00

exist. Pathogenic viruses do not exist

56:02

as Thomas. Proveth Thomas.

56:04

Ah, that's right. You can't. difference

56:06

between a medicine and a poison?

56:08

How they are used?

56:10

Digitales from the fox globe

56:13

has long been used for heart problems, but

56:15

too much will kill, therefore,

56:17

making it a poison.

56:20

Brian says I read, there is

56:22

a three hundred percent increase in managers in the NHS. I read something

56:26

similar. of

56:28

the protege newspapers recently.

56:30

Bramble says doctor Gil

56:33

is a magnificent

56:35

spot on investigator of the determined

56:38

destruction of our NHS.

56:40

Yeah. What has been signally silent

56:42

on the potentially important role of the

56:44

jobs in the he's of all caused mortality.

56:46

Well, he did speak about that. Even

56:48

from Mars, the truth should be apparent to him,

56:50

but he did speak about it. He's called

56:53

for an investigation. And he's called for

56:55

the jobs to be suspended. He's called for

56:58

for an immediate investigation into whether

57:00

there's a connection between the excess

57:02

mortality numbers.

57:04

And the jobs. But that's as much as you can

57:06

ask from a GP, really. Nicholas

57:08

says I've watched the great NHS hoist

57:10

and it's an excellent, very informative watch.

57:13

I highly recommend it. Thanks so much for that.

57:16

Nicolas, Davey says, man,

57:18

after my own heart, Richie, tears with cheese, an onion,

57:20

I live in northern Ireland, and I like

57:22

the ones. You can get down

57:24

south. Did you know there were two brands of Tayto? Both are fantastic.

57:26

Better than the crisps,

57:29

that the overpaid football pondered advertisers.

57:31

You're you're you're referencing Walkers

57:34

and Gary Lineker. Y'all take Taylor cheese

57:36

and onion. All

57:38

day and twice on Sunday. I

57:40

did show public who says Gates is

57:42

equally as trustworthy as Boris Johnson and

57:46

Tony Blair. Leanne says, I don't suppose there are mentally deficient

57:48

political class in Europe

57:50

understand that they have been drawn. They have

57:52

drawn targets on every

57:54

major city. This Russia

57:56

and Ukraine. I watched the last Moscow

57:58

military parade. The new weaponry

58:00

in Russia's possession is years ahead

58:02

of what they produce in the west

58:05

as Diane. Russian arms, makers, don't trade

58:07

for profit. So all the funds go into

58:09

the developments as Diane, that's a

58:11

very interesting comment. Absolutely

58:14

right. On this nasal

58:16

blocker type spray that

58:18

Gates has been talking about, a

58:22

beard says, that it's probably a new type of

58:25

is it povidone

58:28

iodine? Salt type

58:31

disinfectant spray. A

58:33

Paovodone, iodine, salt

58:35

type disinfectant spray. Might be.

58:37

I'm sure we'll be hearing more about it in the

58:40

coming weeks and months. Hi,

58:42

Tinelli. Thank you for the kind words about

58:44

Caroline. I'll talk more about that a bit

58:46

later on. If I have time, Jenny says if they put it in

58:48

the atmosphere, everyone breathes it

58:50

in. Whereas if they put it in food,

58:52

they can avoid that

58:54

food. That's vaccines

58:56

for the unwilling or

58:58

the refu or the refuse next.

59:01

Right. I will open the Skype and

59:03

phone lines in a moment. Here are the

59:05

contact details. Do get in touch with me. If you get in touch with me recently,

59:07

don't do it today,

59:10

please. And I

59:12

will ask you might have done it. I don't know. I've not been on the Facebook

59:14

page, but I'll ask old Raj

59:17

there to post the meme to

59:19

the Facebook page, and I'll try

59:21

and find a time to post

59:23

it on my Twitter page. Okay. Here are the details

59:25

in any

59:25

case. It's your goal.

59:28

Skype, chat with Ritchie, call

59:32

01618182018.

59:34

If you're calling from overseas, it's

59:37

plus 441618182018.

59:42

Total Ricky now. Marvelous.

59:46

This is Bruce Springsteen and his

59:48

version of the sun ain't gonna shine

59:52

anymore. Yeah.

59:54

That is an album of covers or

59:56

that song is taken from an

59:59

album of covers, called only

1:00:02

the strong, survived Bruce Springsteen, which

1:00:04

I know Marmite from any.

1:00:06

Sonya people can't understand they

1:00:09

just willfully do not want to understand I

1:00:12

love the man. I don't

1:00:14

care about you know, III

1:00:16

separate the good from the bad.

1:00:19

And I I think everybody's got something

1:00:21

in the

1:00:21

bank, and he certainly does. Listen

1:00:24

here are the details one last time before I

1:00:26

go straight to

1:00:28

the phones. It's your

1:00:29

call. Skype. Chat with Richie.

1:00:31

Or call 01618182018.

1:00:37

If you're calling from overseas, it's plus

1:00:39

441618182018.

1:00:43

So do Ricky now.

1:00:46

Let's see. Can we get through as many as possible between zero and seven o'clock

1:00:48

caller? Welcome to the program. Who have

1:00:50

I

1:00:50

got? Oh, my god. Betsy. How

1:00:52

you doing, mate? It's Marcus. I I

1:00:55

know I'm not pissed, by the way. Dude, my mark is because if

1:00:57

you were, I would just dump your ride out

1:00:59

back on your backside. Listen,

1:01:01

you must have apologized

1:01:03

for my last appearance on on your shelf. You've been in you've

1:01:05

been in purgatory for for six

1:01:08

months? A year. Just for

1:01:10

the year. Now Camille and I

1:01:12

tell you, I am genuinely getting

1:01:14

hammered already with calls. I'm gonna move it along

1:01:16

nicely. It's Wednesday. I've got I've got

1:01:17

I'm I'm just gonna get straight through

1:01:20

it. Okay? Bob. What's an amazing

1:01:22

character? This is doctor Bob Kim. We've

1:01:24

just had

1:01:24

on the program for a second. Just be

1:01:26

listening

1:01:27

to him. Amazing character. Is

1:01:29

right on it, right trends. Okay?

1:01:32

What the fuck is that all about?

1:01:34

I don't know. You know, III

1:01:37

don't give a shit about people but

1:01:39

we're getting straight aware about

1:01:42

- there's an agenda

1:01:44

which is going on, which is a bit of a nightmare.

1:01:46

So we're not - we're just going to put

1:01:48

that one to this side. All

1:01:50

I'm going to say is I love

1:01:52

you and there's nothing you can do about it and

1:01:55

that's it. I'm going to put the phone down. Okay, Marcus.

1:01:57

That was quick. Marcus, thank you for the call. Appreciate that. It is

1:01:59

01618182018.

1:02:01

It's chat with Richie

1:02:04

on Skype. That

1:02:06

trans thing, that particular

1:02:08

story we covered at the beginning of the

1:02:10

program, a judge

1:02:12

instructing council or the

1:02:14

barsters to refer to this man who raped

1:02:16

two women as horror

1:02:18

during the proceed the proceedings.

1:02:20

And it was stated several

1:02:24

times during the evidence, horror

1:02:26

painous. You you couldn't

1:02:28

make it up. It's coming up for nine

1:02:31

minutes past. As the R01618182018,

1:02:34

and it is a chat with Ritchie. Let me go

1:02:36

back to the comments on the website which

1:02:38

I neglect. From time to time.

1:02:40

I can't get on the website now. For some reason, I'm struggling

1:02:42

to get on the website again. We've been

1:02:44

working on this for a long time now.

1:02:48

Dealing with the traffic. The traffic is

1:02:50

getting more and more busy

1:02:52

on the website. We we thought,

1:02:54

hey, didn't hear it to myself.

1:02:57

We thought he'd been hewitt and

1:03:00

myself. We thought that

1:03:02

maybe late last year that

1:03:05

we'd reach some sort of some sort of plateau

1:03:07

in terms of listening numbers. It's alright

1:03:09

we can cope with

1:03:12

this. It's This sounds like bragging

1:03:14

now, but it isn't. But it's gone upwards again, and it's just

1:03:16

problematic. Ah, no. We're off

1:03:18

to Connecticut now. Good evening, Connecticut.

1:03:22

Or good

1:03:23

afternoon, I should say, or good morning. It's Tory. How

1:03:26

are you? And

1:03:29

she can't hear me. Gotta

1:03:32

unmute that microphone there. We'll

1:03:34

try that again in a moment. We

1:03:37

we have these teasing problems sometimes at the beginning

1:03:39

of the of the phone ins. But we'll

1:03:42

get Dory back in a second. It's 01618182018.

1:03:46

That'll cost

1:03:48

you only a couple of pence a minute, put chat with Richie on

1:03:50

Skype won't cost you anymore. You

1:03:52

pay for your Internet of course, but

1:03:54

it won't cost you any. More

1:03:56

than that. Let's go back to the comments. Let's see. Can we get Tori back before

1:03:58

we do that? Tori welcome. Hello.

1:04:03

Not there. Okay. We're not going

1:04:05

to keep doing that now.

1:04:08

Thanks, Craig, for the link. Alan says I was going to

1:04:10

call in but I called in

1:04:12

in December. Good man. So get your

1:04:14

Skype on or call if you never have

1:04:16

says, Alan Bridges says John

1:04:18

Pildure, the dirty war on

1:04:20

the NHS aired back in December twenty

1:04:22

nineteen. It did indeed, didn't

1:04:24

it. It did indeed. That's

1:04:26

right. Yes. Michael

1:04:28

came back to say, Richard, you always ask for people

1:04:30

to prove a negative. The burden of

1:04:32

proof was on those who say something exists,

1:04:34

not the other way around. Your

1:04:37

lack of evidence proves it falls to

1:04:39

Michael, meaning viruses. Now I just

1:04:41

lived experience Michael. I bet you

1:04:43

don't like that. That's something we laugh at. We laugh out

1:04:45

loud when people talk about their lived experience, told

1:04:48

me, particularly when it comes to racism

1:04:50

and stuff like that. But my lived

1:04:52

experience, my

1:04:54

experiences of coming down with respiratory viruses

1:04:56

over the years. You see? That's why

1:04:58

I say, what what it is I say?

1:05:01

Potsani Way caller welcome to the

1:05:03

program. Who am I speaking with?

1:05:06

Hello? You're through.

1:05:06

You're live on here. Who's

1:05:09

this? Oh, it's pepper. You know it, Richie. How are you

1:05:11

doing? Are you doing pepper on very well? Good to

1:05:13

have you back. Good to get it. Sorry. I

1:05:15

didn't I didn't basically, I heard you you're

1:05:17

on the baby. I was like,

1:05:18

oh, my be a loop and stuff and

1:05:19

then went silent.

1:05:20

Yeah. Good to speak to me. I'm just speaking with on

1:05:22

my work, but at the moment, but I was just

1:05:25

a a quick

1:05:25

one about about the whole guy transing and stuff about it. Just give my two cents

1:05:28

if that's okay? You can do. But just before you

1:05:30

give your two cents, I mean, is

1:05:32

it just

1:05:34

me? I mean, it's a Frank Grimes moment for people who don't know Frank

1:05:36

Grimes is a character in the Simpsons,

1:05:38

and he was a pretty straight laced man.

1:05:41

And he got a job at he got a job at the nuclear power plant, and

1:05:43

he went and he

1:05:46

couldn't believe the

1:05:48

organized idiocy. And the

1:05:50

lunacy of how people were carrying on in

1:05:52

the nuclear plant, which is putting

1:05:54

people's lives at risk, so he eventually had a

1:05:56

nervous breakdown. I sometimes feel like that when I hear things like judges

1:05:58

telling people refer to horror

1:06:00

penis. It's it's it's

1:06:02

organized insanity. Go ahead, Pepe.

1:06:04

What what I

1:06:06

wanna say? I I completely agree with you. From

1:06:08

my my point of the well, from my

1:06:10

perspective, I feel like the whole

1:06:12

depopulation of the planet thing is

1:06:14

based on

1:06:16

they can convince everyone to be gay and trans workers and stuff, then you're delaying,

1:06:18

then you're taking the ability to reproduce

1:06:20

out of the hundreds of people. sense.

1:06:24

So -- Yeah. -- now with all the technology that

1:06:26

you can make, babies and test use and

1:06:28

stuff. And there's one thing putting stuff in the

1:06:30

food to sterilize people and all that kind of

1:06:33

stuff, but convinced people psychologically

1:06:36

to not reproduce. And I

1:06:38

think that's

1:06:39

really, like, the bottom line of all

1:06:41

this trans craziness when when

1:06:43

I like, break it it's kind of like that's

1:06:45

why I mean, I I understand the

1:06:47

craziness of posed judges and the laws and all that kind

1:06:49

of stuff. Yeah. If I

1:06:52

Yeah. You're you're talking about the the the you're talking about the

1:06:54

reason, the overarching reason. These

1:06:56

are symptoms, underscoring symptoms, which

1:06:59

is foolish really. It's it's maddening, but it's foolish. There's

1:07:01

there's a woman called Jennifer Bylick who was going to

1:07:04

come on and talk to us about this. He's goes

1:07:06

deep into the woods. She

1:07:09

would agree depopulation. And doesn't it pepper

1:07:11

kind of marry with the green

1:07:14

agenda? Because we're hearing from a lot of, well,

1:07:16

look, I don't want to exaggerate. But it's been said

1:07:18

quite often in the last twelve months,

1:07:20

boy activists who've gone on

1:07:22

television and radio. Young activist

1:07:24

saying, well, I'm not going to have

1:07:26

a child. Because it's bad for the virus. Yeah. Yeah.

1:07:27

I hear that. I mean, I I can't be too much paperwork

1:07:29

or not because I also I don't have any children

1:07:32

and and the way the

1:07:34

world's

1:07:34

going. That I

1:07:35

feel like it I don't think I could have children then I have to be be

1:07:37

a constant war on, like,

1:07:39

as far

1:07:41

as what like, when they get to a certain age, then, essentially, the states try

1:07:43

to end up gay. And then, like, again,

1:07:45

nothing

1:07:45

against gay folk. But then when the state's so

1:07:48

involved with your child, like, the the -- Yeah. -- at the

1:07:50

story of

1:07:52

the day, where there's so one's on the run because they might not want their kid back

1:07:54

from it. Give me, like, a throw. That's crazy to me. Like,

1:07:56

isn't that that insane. So the idea that now,

1:07:58

not only have

1:08:00

you got like, you gotta protect yourself mentally, but the idea that

1:08:02

you be a kid in this world, I wouldn't know what to

1:08:04

tell them, protecting myself. Like, I

1:08:06

wouldn't know Let's

1:08:08

throw that out to the listeners. Is is that

1:08:10

is anybody young enough? I mean, there must be people

1:08:12

listening to us who are young enough to

1:08:15

to have children. I mean, we my

1:08:17

missus and and and I don't

1:08:19

have. But but we don't

1:08:21

take precautions when we

1:08:24

have relations. She might be burning

1:08:26

a crimson red note listening to me say that because because we I think we probably

1:08:28

still even though I'm

1:08:30

getting a bit old for it.

1:08:33

But I wonder if there are others

1:08:35

who are still of childbearing age who would make

1:08:38

the same decision as

1:08:40

you say I'm not

1:08:42

going to have a child because this is

1:08:44

a lunatic asylum. Who would want to bring a child into this?

1:08:46

I I know a couple of my friends who

1:08:50

speak to that, like, about this comment that she's mentioned about,

1:08:52

and they agree that it's just, like I feel I

1:08:54

mean, I think I'd be I feel I'd make

1:08:56

a pretty good day. Like, in theory, like, mean, I think I'd

1:08:58

I'd I'd like to give it a go, but the way

1:09:00

the world's going, the trajectory is going,

1:09:02

it just it just and the thing

1:09:05

that obviously, having kids in expenses, it means it's not cheap having a kid

1:09:07

in all cancer. So so I feel like that's part of the thing that they're making it more expensive to

1:09:12

have children. They're making it to a point where even

1:09:14

if you do have children, then if you're awake, you're not gonna really want them. It's not like

1:09:16

they're not gonna want

1:09:16

them, but you you

1:09:17

understand that you have them, it's gonna be it's not gonna

1:09:20

be easy. And

1:09:22

and if you're not awake, then you have

1:09:24

them, but they'll just inject them with whatever they

1:09:26

inject them with to do whatever they do in

1:09:28

the schools or kind of stuff

1:09:30

anyway. It's kind of like a catch train theory. Like, it's kind

1:09:32

of like a you can't really win that way, doing

1:09:34

it. So this is

1:09:34

my opinion, by the way. I said, I don't think it

1:09:37

Yeah. I wanted to it's a it's a very valid opinion.

1:09:39

On on kind of turning people gay and trans. I think

1:09:41

you're onto something, but I don't think

1:09:43

it's they they

1:09:45

specifically want to turn people gay. And trans I

1:09:47

think they want to take all the joy out

1:09:49

of procreation. Completely all the joy

1:09:52

all the all the the physical

1:09:54

side of that physical attraction. But

1:09:56

using youngsters with respect to their gender.

1:09:59

And then they won't meet with people

1:10:03

and I think you'll see a fall in everything. I think you'll see a fall

1:10:05

off in couplings, whether it's gay or straight

1:10:07

couplings. I really do. And I think

1:10:09

a lot of that would be environmental

1:10:12

as well. Know, in

1:10:14

terms of the world where people are drinking. But, again, I could be wrong. It's it's my opinion. And I'm not virtue signaling

1:10:16

signaling to gay people. That's just say,

1:10:18

oh, I see it. Go ahead, Trevor.

1:10:22

The well, it's just a couple of years ago when I was

1:10:24

a promoter and I was a promoter not just for

1:10:26

a bit. I I noticed that being gay went

1:10:29

from awareness to promotion, like, I I

1:10:31

was as a marketer, I can see

1:10:33

the signs of, like, when you're given, like, a awareness campaign --

1:10:35

Yeah. -- and it includes an awareness campaign and a promotion campaign. And

1:10:36

the thing that clicked me onto is

1:10:38

when I saw, like, the rainbow

1:10:42

tax in banks.

1:10:43

And I was like, like, more years ago now.

1:10:45

I was like, just why? Like, isn't, like,

1:10:47

realistically, the question that the bank's tab is, have you

1:10:49

got money or not? We hear your fucking shit, but

1:10:51

have no regard to anything. Absolutely.

1:10:53

Yeah. When sorry. Say again?

1:10:56

No. No. I'm saying absolutely. Yeah. When

1:10:58

you start thinking slags and banks, it's still

1:11:00

It's a so I'm thinking and then and then

1:11:02

it just went from like, it slowly went from, like, again, this gay people, this people who

1:11:04

are trans I mean, these people exist,

1:11:06

but they are a in the minority.

1:11:09

Otherwise, we wouldn't exist as a species.

1:11:11

If everyone was gay, no one would be here. So, realistically, the idea that, do you mean,

1:11:14

everyone's gay now? It doesn't

1:11:16

really psychologically

1:11:18

make any sense, like, as in if that was true, then

1:11:21

the human race wouldn't really survive. But because

1:11:23

we've got technology now and we can do

1:11:25

things in

1:11:26

labs and we can, again, make test

1:11:28

it's kind of now people forgotten that actually

1:11:30

the natural way is the preferred way because that's just how the you mean, that's how

1:11:33

we got here.

1:11:36

So what what I like I said, what I

1:11:38

had to what

1:11:38

something, like, didn't quite fit right with me when I was looking at

1:11:40

Stephanie and I honed it. Let me try

1:11:42

to change the rules. I was

1:11:44

like, nature. Like, they're

1:11:46

trying to make it seem

1:11:47

like they went from, like, say, awareness

1:11:47

of paid people to promoting it as preferred

1:11:48

lifestyle. And

1:11:48

and again, if you do that and you

1:11:50

get enough if you get

1:11:55

it that's turning from a a minority to a majority and you

1:11:57

get the majority of people being gay, then the

1:11:59

human race will

1:12:01

die out. Like, it just will. Like, it

1:12:03

messes like, it like, oh, it'll be really, like, you have to pay for

1:12:05

a baby. That's all genetically engineered for you with

1:12:07

blue eyes, blood hair,

1:12:10

whatever. It'll be, like, Imagine that happens. Yeah. I

1:12:12

mean no. I'm saying imagine that happened.

1:12:14

We we have pepper on just just

1:12:16

before I move on and take

1:12:19

another cold pepper. That's him. Yeah, that

1:12:21

that promotional aspect, there there was definitely a campaign at

1:12:23

one stage. And this is fairly recent

1:12:26

as well. Like, it's

1:12:28

cool, to be gay.

1:12:30

And I used to think at the time, I could understand rainbow

1:12:32

flags popping up in the

1:12:34

post office in the bank I

1:12:38

could understand it if there was

1:12:40

genuine oppression. If there

1:12:42

was a serious target on

1:12:44

the backs of gay men and women, but

1:12:46

there wasn't. That war had been won. And and and and I couldn't understand that. Quick final word

1:12:49

from you before I take another call. Good

1:12:51

to hear from you again. Hey.

1:12:54

Good to see you. Good to hear. Again, and so this is one

1:12:56

thing that's nothing to do with the the case. It's an about

1:12:58

five g thing. So I was having a

1:13:01

conversation with my colleague, Yodie, about five g. And I point out

1:13:03

I am I I've read a couple things online and I'm not sure what I noticed, but, you

1:13:05

know, everyone's in the everyone's in the witchcraft these

1:13:07

days. So, like, there seems

1:13:10

to be some sort of another trend happening along with LTV thing

1:13:11

happening in this, like, people in the witchcraft weekend. Again, I'm not I

1:13:14

do I'm not I don't I don't hate to criticize

1:13:17

what I know believes and all that stuff, but it was point out to

1:13:19

me pentagram five g is essentially penta penta

1:13:22

penta means five and then g means

1:13:24

ground. So this that could

1:13:26

point out to me. that we had never

1:13:28

thought about

1:13:29

that for.

1:13:29

Mhmm. But then when you

1:13:30

see, like, the rituals that get done, like, on TV or using WiFi

1:13:32

and all those stuff, it's

1:13:35

like a bit

1:13:36

weird. And then on top of that, there is

1:13:38

one there's one more thing. Sorry. I'm I'm I'm

1:13:39

gonna work on my brains at racing right now. And you're under

1:13:41

a brake. That meant it's not

1:13:43

that yeah. Right. A

1:13:46

gift. You know what I'm saying? Alright. The one thing. I I

1:13:47

don't remember right

1:13:47

now. But, yeah, it's in there. If you if you've got a chance, I've

1:13:47

like, a written, like, notes

1:13:50

of, like, all things I've, like,

1:13:53

know if if you got a chance, I'd like to share them

1:13:56

with you some time. I'll drop them an email sometime. You like it with you. Drop an email, Andrew.

1:13:58

Yeah. Look, I'll let you get back to work anyway. I'll let you get back to work

1:14:00

again. Good

1:14:02

to hear from you, mate. I've talked to you, mate. Thanks, Deborah. That's

1:14:05

that was funny that him having to

1:14:07

to kind of whisper there

1:14:09

so that work colleagues can't hear what he's saying, is there

1:14:11

a promotion of witchcraft? It does seem to me

1:14:13

that on Netflix and on Amazon. I I

1:14:16

shamefully have Netflix

1:14:18

and I have Amazon,

1:14:20

shamefully. But there I

1:14:22

I do. I can't name them off the top of my head, and I don't have access in the studio

1:14:24

to my Netflix account. But,

1:14:26

yeah, I do see these fantasy

1:14:31

type shows being aimed at definitely a

1:14:33

younger audience. By fantasy, I mean,

1:14:36

stuff with Warlocks and witches and

1:14:38

stuff. I have seen a bit of

1:14:40

that. Is that just the trend? Is that

1:14:42

just something that's trending? You know, where writers are writing about this stuff,

1:14:44

or is there

1:14:47

something else going on? I I don't know.

1:14:49

Maybe maybe pepper is right. I think the agenda if

1:14:51

there is an agenda and I

1:14:53

think there is, right, it's

1:14:55

just my

1:14:56

opinion. Definitely to kind of

1:14:58

promote asexuality. I really do believe that to to turn

1:15:03

people off, sex. Now you might

1:15:06

say that's nonsense, Paulie. We we see violent porn pornography being pushed

1:15:08

on people, children,

1:15:11

boys and girls. So

1:15:14

you might be wrong on

1:15:17

on on on that count. But

1:15:19

yeah. I mean, first of all,

1:15:22

to distance people. I mean, increasingly people are, you

1:15:24

know, having relationships with

1:15:27

people online. I I heard

1:15:29

on a breakfast television program

1:15:31

the other day. Very interesting thing. It

1:15:34

was about how people are increasingly meeting up on Zoom.

1:15:38

For a date, and then maybe on second date

1:15:41

to determine if there's

1:15:43

compatibility, to then have

1:15:46

a physical date later on.

1:15:48

Crazy to me. Twenty two minutes past the year.

1:15:50

We might have Dory. Now Dory, are you there? No.

1:15:53

I'm gonna give

1:15:55

up on that. I think she's

1:15:57

trying to get back in touch with us from connect to kit there, ironically.

1:15:59

Connect to kit. Here are

1:16:02

the contact details I

1:16:04

have. Managed to get a

1:16:06

meme on Twitter, and Raj did get one on Facebook contact details for me and time.

1:16:08

Is that a premium so

1:16:10

you better call me soon? It's

1:16:15

your call, Skype, chat with

1:16:17

Richie. Or call 01618182018.

1:16:23

If you're calling from o receives, it's

1:16:25

plus 441618182018.

1:16:28

You can imagine that meeting

1:16:30

on

1:16:31

Zoom. Imagine asking somebody out

1:16:34

and then coming to an agreement

1:16:36

that you would

1:16:38

have a Zoom meeting. You

1:16:41

know, I remember the object terror of asking

1:16:43

girls out knowing that in all likelihood

1:16:45

I was going to be

1:16:48

turned down. Turned

1:16:50

down. No, thank you. But

1:16:52

it it didn't happen every time to

1:16:54

be fair. But the absolute terror of

1:16:56

that And then if you on the

1:16:58

rare occasion, when you did get to go to the pictures with a girl who to go to the

1:17:01

pictures, remember I stayed in Amsterdam

1:17:03

one time with a friend, and

1:17:07

I met a girl there called Evelyn, and she was

1:17:09

lovely. And I was in Amsterdam for

1:17:11

a week. And only on the last

1:17:13

day that I have the courage

1:17:15

to ask this this girl to to come and

1:17:17

meet me in Waterford, and she agreed. I remember the terror. It's about seventeen at the

1:17:19

time of waiting around the

1:17:22

corner from the sentiment to

1:17:24

major. This will be lost

1:17:26

on generations with their Zoom. It's back to the telephone's caller welcome to

1:17:29

the program. Who am

1:17:31

I speaking with? Hello?

1:17:36

They're always good my end. I don't

1:17:38

know what's happening this afternoon. Good evening,

1:17:40

caller. Welcome to the program.

1:17:42

Who am I speaking with? Hello? Hello

1:17:45

there. We we connected in

1:17:47

the

1:17:47

end. Who am

1:17:51

I talking to?

1:17:52

Hi, Ritchie. Hi. It's Heather

1:17:54

in UAE in in Georgia. Heather

1:17:56

in the UAE, and that

1:17:58

might explain a little delay there.

1:18:01

On the call. Heather, you're very welcome. What the hell are

1:18:03

you doing in the UAE? I I'm living I'm living here and

1:18:05

I'm living your program. Listen

1:18:08

to it. Quite

1:18:10

regularly. Believe me. But it's difficult because we're four hours ahead, so it's always, like, lead

1:18:12

through it, mate. Well,

1:18:15

I can hear you. But

1:18:17

anyway, I wanted to talk to

1:18:20

you today about the the Japanese doctor that

1:18:22

was very concerned about the population decline in

1:18:24

Japan. Well

1:18:26

said, Heather, first of all, thanks for your kind words and thanks

1:18:29

for listening to the program. Yes, I read

1:18:31

this on the BBC the other

1:18:34

day. This doctor effectively said, that the Japanese are becoming

1:18:36

extinct. Explain, Heather. I'm gonna bring the

1:18:38

story up while you talk about

1:18:41

it. Go ahead. What

1:18:43

did he say? No. I I remember it.

1:18:46

Right? She basically said that the population declined. Just the the Japanese weren't

1:18:48

propry

1:18:51

propreating enough. That's leading to a mass

1:18:54

population decline and that very soon they wouldn't be

1:18:55

able to sustain themselves. Now,

1:18:58

Ritchie, I remember about

1:19:01

fifteen to twenty years

1:19:03

ago watching

1:19:03

a documentary about population decline in Japan

1:19:06

because basically the use of

1:19:08

Japan

1:19:11

time had nothing much to

1:19:12

live for because they could never have it

1:19:15

as good as the parents had

1:19:18

had. And this is basically what they

1:19:20

were saying. They could have

1:19:22

little apartments, but they couldn't have

1:19:26

the hoses and

1:19:28

the living standards that the

1:19:30

parents had had because the living

1:19:33

standards had contracted somewhat

1:19:34

So their parents have had the great life through the

1:19:37

70s, 80s and to the

1:19:39

90s. And the younger

1:19:41

generation that we're coming through just didn't

1:19:43

have, you know, that that that

1:19:46

wealth of, you know,

1:19:51

the benefit

1:19:51

of their education.

1:19:53

They didn't have the means

1:19:55

or they didn't have the

1:19:57

-- Yes. -- the reward

1:19:59

the work that they were doing. I've got the story heads or it's

1:20:01

a it's George Royte in

1:20:04

Japan. Japan's

1:20:06

prime minister says the country is on the brink of not being able to function as

1:20:09

a society because of falling birth

1:20:11

rate. Japan, which is a population

1:20:13

of 1251 hundred

1:20:15

and twenty five million, is estimated to have

1:20:17

had fewer than eight hundred thousand births last year in the seventies, Heather, to

1:20:19

echo what you said, that figure was

1:20:22

more than two million. Yeah.

1:20:24

Yeah. And

1:20:26

what they were saying was the

1:20:28

usage of PAMA because they live

1:20:30

in these dinky little flats in 2Q

1:20:33

and what have you they would rather have a

1:20:35

cat or they'd rather have, you know, a

1:20:37

virtual partner because they

1:20:40

have these apps now that they

1:20:42

can have a virtual girlfriend. Yeah. And it's a lot

1:20:44

easier for them than having

1:20:46

a real girlfriend because they

1:20:48

can't share the space. Now that's like

1:20:51

that that's like That's a and

1:20:53

that's like demo that that is demolition,

1:20:55

man. That's the the investor's

1:20:57

still own Wesley's knife

1:20:59

scenario, isn't it? People not having physical

1:21:01

relationships at all. And is it a stretch of the

1:21:04

imagination, Heather, to

1:21:07

imagine that could become similar in the

1:21:09

west. Something similar could

1:21:10

happen. Well, I they're talking about

1:21:14

these fifteen minute cities. And some people are saying, oh, that's wonderful, you

1:21:16

know, because, you know, I've got a fifteen minute

1:21:18

walk, you know, within a fifteen minute walk,

1:21:20

I've got my doctors,

1:21:23

I've got I've got my school,

1:21:25

I've got my whatever. But the thing is, in

1:21:27

order for these establishments to be

1:21:30

viable, you're gonna have tends upon

1:21:33

terms of thousand people in that fifteen minutes environment.

1:21:35

Yeah. And you're basically building gettus. And

1:21:37

I I don't think that's

1:21:39

what people are realizing. They're

1:21:41

thinking about these lovely cities and streets from

1:21:44

the 60s where they can

1:21:46

walk to the doctors and walk

1:21:50

to hear them everywhere. But it's not gonna be like

1:21:52

that. It's gonna be congestion. It's gonna

1:21:54

be like walking in any downtown city.

1:21:57

Metropolis

1:21:57

anywhere in the world. It's going to be a nightmare. And what happens when you want

1:21:59

to go to the seaside? What happens when you want

1:22:02

to go to the mountain

1:22:04

or spend a day

1:22:06

in the countryside. How difficult is that gonna be? How do you think what what will that look like then? So

1:22:08

you're in one of these geckos. You

1:22:10

thought it was going to be utopia.

1:22:15

But it isn't. You're pinging with lots and lots of people in

1:22:17

your fifteen minute city. So you decide that you

1:22:19

do wanna get away

1:22:21

from it. You wanna go to the sea, so do you wanna move

1:22:23

out? What what do you think what what would the

1:22:25

barriers look like at at that point do

1:22:27

you think? Well, I

1:22:29

should think how far are you gonna be from the

1:22:31

seaside or the countryside or whatever.

1:22:34

Because your fifteen minute city

1:22:37

may be

1:22:40

encompassed by tens of other

1:22:41

hundreds of other fifteen minute cities. Yeah. You may have

1:22:43

to travel for days to

1:22:46

get to the seaside. And

1:22:48

there might be a carbon charge on that traveling.

1:22:50

There might be a carbon allowance in the near future that

1:22:52

maybe these kids might have

1:22:55

signed up to because

1:22:57

they genuinely believe that the world is on its last legs because of climate

1:22:59

change. Yeah. So that little green space

1:23:02

in the middle of your fifteen

1:23:04

minute city

1:23:07

that's gonna be used and

1:23:10

utilized by everybody

1:23:12

that, you know, the tens

1:23:14

of thousands of people within your

1:23:16

fifteen minute, town or village, city, whatever

1:23:18

it is. You know, it's it's just gonna be

1:23:21

pockets of hell. It's

1:23:23

gonna be pockets of

1:23:25

hellishness. And you can't, yeah, pockets of hellishness. That that's that's the phrase of the day I'm

1:23:27

giving you that. You've won you've won

1:23:29

the Internet as as the phrase

1:23:32

goes. So you

1:23:35

you cannot explain this. I've tried to explain this

1:23:37

to I won't say teenagers now,

1:23:40

but but early twenty

1:23:42

somethings. I genuinely have in

1:23:44

as in as benign

1:23:46

a way as possible, as friendly. There's no believing this.

1:23:48

You know, the the and I

1:23:50

totally understand why they wouldn't believe it.

1:23:55

That they're basically shutting the doors

1:23:57

of their own prison cell behind

1:23:59

them, and they don't

1:24:02

see that. Yeah. Because everything's so easy for

1:24:04

them. You know, I was talking to

1:24:07

my brother earlier today, and

1:24:09

we were talking about the power cuts

1:24:11

in the early 70s. And

1:24:14

the snowstorms we had

1:24:16

in the 70s and the 80s

1:24:18

and just what it was like to

1:24:20

be called --

1:24:21

Yeah.

1:24:21

-- you know, and not be able to get to the shop and not

1:24:23

be able to order

1:24:27

in Domino's. You know, I mean, we're laughing a bit. But everything now

1:24:29

is so easy and just, you

1:24:31

know, on a fingerprint,

1:24:33

you've got picture a

1:24:36

door, bullet. I never

1:24:38

think about that and I should do because I'm I'm nearly fifty. So remember my

1:24:40

mother giving me a pound, that's a pound

1:24:42

node and telling me to get my back

1:24:47

side up to the chippy, which was a moyler way to get

1:24:49

chips and sausage. You know, nobody delivered

1:24:51

anything. This is pretty Internet.

1:24:53

There were four channels on

1:24:56

the tele And I I don't often enough think about the

1:24:58

laziness of me now. I need a fleek collar for the dog.

1:25:00

I mean, it's embarrassing here. There

1:25:02

isn't it straight on the

1:25:04

phone. Amazon Prime. It'll be

1:25:06

there by seven o'clock. No.

1:25:07

It's wrong. And it's true. And here

1:25:09

in in UAE, you can you

1:25:11

can basically order anything.

1:25:14

You know, I've got cats and I

1:25:16

can get the vet to come to my

1:25:18

house just by, you

1:25:19

know, just ordering

1:25:21

on my phone. You know, that you can

1:25:23

get anything you can get anything delivered

1:25:26

to your house. You can get

1:25:28

any service you want to your house.

1:25:30

Just on your phone.

1:25:31

It's madness. And you can. You can get Annie.

1:25:33

Annie, you know, if I want somebody to come and

1:25:35

clean the place tomorrow, there are apps where I can

1:25:37

reach out to people. And get people coming on. Heather's

1:25:40

in the UAE. Jean Ann has just then

1:25:42

piped up on this. She remembers the three

1:25:44

day week. That's another thing

1:25:46

as well. You know, there will be some people listening to us who will

1:25:48

remember rationing. Yeah. I sometimes worry

1:25:50

about bashing. This is not bashing

1:25:52

youngsters. It's not their fault. This is not

1:25:55

their fault. This has been imposed upon them. But, god, it

1:25:57

must look so different now. You

1:25:59

know, the twenties. Like like,

1:26:01

go ahead. Sorry, Heather. Go

1:26:03

ahead. Go

1:26:04

ahead. But I was thinking about this as

1:26:06

well because when I was a teenager, you know, I I was I thought of myself

1:26:09

as a socialist,

1:26:12

Richie. I supported the miners, you know, in

1:26:14

the early '80s, the miners' strike. And, you know, the German miners' unions, I

1:26:16

I was totally up there with

1:26:18

them, you know, blah blah blah.

1:26:21

We've got to defeat, you know,

1:26:23

the bachelor's, bachelor's, blah, blah,

1:26:23

blah, let's, you know, get this one. And then

1:26:26

on reflection, I'm thinking,

1:26:30

What the hell was that all about?

1:26:32

Because what did it

1:26:34

achieve? It's just

1:26:37

generated generations

1:26:39

of sacred and animosity within communities,

1:26:41

like a huge divide

1:26:43

within communities from the

1:26:45

the strike breakers and

1:26:48

the strikers. And the scabs. III

1:26:50

see this in Waterford City, after Waterford Crystal. Yeah. So industrial action

1:26:52

in the eighties. Yeah. I

1:26:55

see what it does. There

1:26:57

there are a series of defeats for the working man and woman. And you

1:26:59

could even talk about poll tax

1:27:03

and then how Council tax came in,

1:27:05

and these defeats were more debilitating as time went on. I mean, the people never

1:27:08

really won't did they.

1:27:10

I mean, this is the

1:27:12

problem. And we never saw

1:27:14

what it would be like. Yeah. Yeah. The people never No. Nobody won.

1:27:20

This is so cold, this. Tell me this what in the name

1:27:22

of holy God are you doing in the UAE, by the way. You

1:27:25

don't say obviously. You're

1:27:27

gonna tell us where you

1:27:29

originated, Heather. And if you're a woman of color, don't take

1:27:31

offense that I'm joking, by the way. And you're

1:27:35

go ahead. I Hi.

1:27:38

So I'm

1:27:39

from Aberdeen in Scotland. So clearly,

1:27:42

in the winter, I'm happy

1:27:44

to help And in the

1:27:46

summer, I'm blue. That's fine.

1:27:47

But yeah. I I'm I'm married

1:27:49

to an Egyptian guy, and we lived

1:27:52

in Cyprus. For

1:27:55

a while and then I've moved to the UAE to work.

1:27:57

So – and we've been

1:27:59

here for a

1:28:01

couple of years now. And Yeah. We just seem to

1:28:03

be traveling around the world, collecting cats. We've

1:28:05

got five now. You've got five

1:28:08

there. Yeah. Yeah. So

1:28:10

we three from Cypress and we've

1:28:12

adopted two since we've been here. And who knows who we're

1:28:14

gonna get next next day? So how many others were gonna pick

1:28:18

up? It's like, I'm just trying to figure out, Heather, how many cuts

1:28:20

do you need to be

1:28:22

looking after in order to

1:28:24

qualify for crazy cat lady

1:28:26

status? I'm trying to think I

1:28:29

think you might nearly be No. No. No.

1:28:31

No. But can I just say, I'm married, so it doesn't count? No. You are married.

1:28:33

Yes. So, yeah, you divide the cats

1:28:35

up

1:28:35

between two people. But

1:28:40

No. I

1:28:40

also, my my husband's Egyptian, so that

1:28:43

doesn't turn either because he's even

1:28:45

crazier than I am about cats.

1:28:47

Easy. Like, just just done before I before

1:28:49

I move on and thanks so much for

1:28:51

reaching out, Heather. I really

1:28:53

appreciate it. But before I take another

1:28:56

call, your Egyptian husband, would you be on

1:28:58

the same page, you know, when it comes

1:29:00

to how you view what's

1:29:02

been happening in in the world in the last few years.

1:29:04

Oh, yes. Oh,

1:29:07

yes. Absolutely. Absolutely. And as

1:29:11

are many people in

1:29:12

Egypt. So I I don't

1:29:14

know if you're aware of

1:29:17

the the Diago

1:29:19

stuff. That

1:29:19

Diego is how you say it, that the population

1:29:21

report that

1:29:22

came out in the

1:29:24

the Diego, which

1:29:27

was the weapons website.

1:29:28

No. I'm all I'm all ears. I

1:29:30

don't know

1:29:31

anything about this. Okay. So there there's something called DEDEAGLE.

1:29:37

And they predicted the population

1:29:39

declines in twenty twenty five. And

1:29:45

where I'm going with this is

1:29:47

Egypt, just one of the countries

1:29:49

that actually had a population

1:29:52

increase. The reason they have a

1:29:54

population increase is because their vaccination rates

1:29:56

are so low. Is

1:29:58

that right? So

1:30:00

the reason their vaccination rates are so low

1:30:02

is because they have to pay for the

1:30:04

vaccines. You're kidding

1:30:06

me, in Egypt. Yeah. They're asked to fork out for the jobs, so the the the take

1:30:08

up rate is

1:30:11

much lower than. Yes. I

1:30:14

didn't know they allowed something new every day. I bet

1:30:16

they're glad. So many of them, I mean, they

1:30:19

must be aware of these claims

1:30:21

about about injuries and deaths. But

1:30:23

so by is this some

1:30:26

official organization, some governmental

1:30:28

thing? Or

1:30:31

NGO? I do I I don't know what it was. It and

1:30:33

it's he come if you Google it now, try

1:30:35

Google it and

1:30:37

I you probably won't get

1:30:38

it. But a few years ago, and I I hope

1:30:40

some of your listeners will maybe

1:30:42

verify this, hopefully verify this,

1:30:45

that they did

1:30:47

a report about the populations in twenty nineteen, twenty twenty

1:30:49

and what they were going to be in twenty twenty five. And what

1:30:52

they

1:30:54

were saying

1:30:55

was countries like the UK. I think the UK population was

1:30:57

going to be something like

1:30:59

fourteen million in

1:31:01

twenty twenty five. You're kidding me, but it's not going to

1:31:03

be. Is it surely not? Not not until

1:31:05

your time? I don't know because

1:31:07

I can't see into the future,

1:31:09

but this was the Diago stuff. Yeah. I've got it here. I've

1:31:11

got the PDF, so it's global trends

1:31:13

twenty twenty five, a transformed world.

1:31:16

And it is Diagl

1:31:18

or Deagl. But it's Diagl.

1:31:20

Yeah.

1:31:20

Yeah. Diggle or Diagele. Yeah. Whatever. And when I was

1:31:22

looking at the time, I was saying, no.

1:31:23

That's really

1:31:27

interesting about Egypt. Because at the time we were

1:31:30

living in Cypress, and Cypress is going to

1:31:31

have a big hit in their population

1:31:31

according to this report.

1:31:35

And as involved, you

1:31:37

know, there's one common

1:31:38

denominator in all of these things, and

1:31:42

it's to do with the

1:31:45

people that are taking

1:31:47

medical treatments. Yeah. Absolutely.

1:31:49

So

1:31:50

yeah. So in Egypt, the

1:31:54

they know that

1:31:55

it's not what it's

1:31:58

proposed to be. And

1:32:02

my husband certainly knows at

1:32:04

least three or four

1:32:06

people that have been adversely affected affected by the

1:32:11

treatments and he's lost a couple of friends. He's

1:32:13

lost a couple of friends. Oh, that's that's

1:32:15

absolutely tragic that. Yeah.

1:32:18

Yeah. Especially because

1:32:19

he wouldn't have taken it himself presumably.

1:32:22

And then No. I see they haven't.

1:32:24

Jesus. Ether,

1:32:27

I'm gonna take another call. I'm brilliant to hear from you. I'm gonna

1:32:29

put down I've got a little list of because what

1:32:31

you know, people calling

1:32:34

from different countries. And it's just something I do. So, obviously,

1:32:36

you're you're going on the

1:32:38

list, the correspondent, the Middle

1:32:41

Eastern correspondent for the Ricciardo. His head

1:32:43

or you're you're you're going in the list for him. Thanks for calling

1:32:45

in. You've been an absolute tonic. And do

1:32:47

give your husband a a shout out for

1:32:49

us. What what's your husband's name,

1:32:51

by the way?

1:32:53

So it's Mohammed, but he goes by Momo. Momo, if

1:32:55

you're listening. Godspeed you. God bless

1:33:00

and And thanks Heather for for calling

1:33:02

through today. I really appreciate it. Okay. Cheers,

1:33:03

Richie. Thanks for all you do. Thank you.

1:33:05

Brilliant, Stolff Heather from the

1:33:07

United Arab Emirates. Voya

1:33:10

Aberdeen. Yeah. Voya Aberdeen. I I was going

1:33:12

to mention Aberdeen. Didn't

1:33:15

Aberdeen football club lose? A

1:33:19

cup football match to a team in the

1:33:21

sixth tier of Scottish football the other

1:33:24

evening. I know

1:33:26

this because Jim Goodwin who's a top lad. He's a Waterford

1:33:28

man. His team he's from Tremont and

1:33:30

has had a very good football career

1:33:33

team. He's in management now. Jim was the Aberdeen

1:33:35

manager, and I think he's I think he's

1:33:37

been sacked. So bad news for for Jim

1:33:40

from Waterford, but, hopefully, he'll get a

1:33:42

job real soon, and he'll he'll be

1:33:44

back on top again. Yeah,

1:33:46

Aberdeen. Anyway, back to the telephone lines caller. Good evening. Who am I speaking with?

1:33:52

Hello. Hello? I've got you. Who am I

1:33:54

who must it's Chris? Yes. Chris, how are you? Where

1:33:58

are you calling

1:33:59

from? I'm I'm in crew.

1:33:59

crew? You're not you're not too

1:34:01

far away apart. Chris, you are very welcome, my

1:34:03

friend. What would you like to

1:34:05

say? You had

1:34:07

a call on previously. About

1:34:10

witchcraft. We did. Paper came out today. Yeah. Yeah. I was I was

1:34:11

I'm actually studying in

1:34:14

Cabello at the minute. And

1:34:18

some what? More dramatic kibala. Yeah.

1:34:20

Hang on a second here, Chris. I

1:34:23

know very little about kibala. Only

1:34:25

that madonna was into

1:34:27

it.

1:34:27

What is it? And it's basically based

1:34:30

upon the tree of life, but if if madonna was

1:34:33

like studying

1:34:36

it, then she's probably doing the dark side

1:34:38

of it. Right. Yeah. The bride of Satan herself.

1:34:40

Yeah. That that's all I I

1:34:42

know little about it. Obviously, then it's it's

1:34:45

it's it's not a belief system. It's it's a

1:34:47

it's a it's a way of understanding life, isn't it? And -- Yeah.

1:34:49

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. -- it's all

1:34:51

about because what

1:34:55

they what they believe is that when

1:34:57

you come into manifestation, you're coming

1:34:59

down the tree of

1:35:01

life. Down to the bottom sphere, which

1:35:03

is called

1:35:04

Malcooth, and that's like where we are on Earth.

1:35:06

And the purpose

1:35:06

of well, our purpose and life to

1:35:10

send back up to the source, if

1:35:12

you

1:35:13

like, and become become one

1:35:15

with God. So

1:35:18

And this is so your this

1:35:20

is something you're engaging with at the

1:35:22

moment. Yeah. Yeah. I

1:35:23

mean, you do it through meditation

1:35:26

and and then visualization

1:35:28

and path working and

1:35:29

stuff. So

1:35:30

it's not necessarily a bad thing.

1:35:32

And I think no. I don't

1:35:34

think it is at all. It sounds it

1:35:36

sounds pretty reasonable to me. And how sorry. How

1:35:39

does it affect you then? So I

1:35:41

don't know whether you say practice. I'm a much

1:35:43

more balanced person through and I feel more ease with life and but I don't have it.

1:35:46

I have a purpose now because I

1:35:48

was I

1:35:50

went through the time when I was, like,

1:35:52

struggling, like, what what are we

1:35:54

doing here? What's all this about?

1:35:56

Yeah. You know? And I think

1:35:59

recent events of I think we're going

1:36:03

through a more and more

1:36:05

like another Renaissance age now because during the Renaissance, it

1:36:08

became more

1:36:12

popular. And with like

1:36:14

Alchemy and stuff. So I think with I think recent events have woken

1:36:19

people to this way of thinking, and we're we're

1:36:21

about to go from not to renaissance for each. Oh, that's really positive.

1:36:24

That, Chris. God, we need a

1:36:26

bit of that, a bit of

1:36:28

positivity. So you think something

1:36:30

something illuminating is happening with speedrunning. That's

1:36:32

something. Yeah. I mean, it's a

1:36:34

lot of the math physics, like

1:36:38

David IQ is up about and and

1:36:40

to support that. So This

1:36:42

is so how long have you

1:36:44

been studying then or or looking

1:36:46

into Kibala? I've been doing it about six

1:36:48

months now. So And it's not

1:36:50

too long. It

1:36:51

it takes years

1:36:53

to perfect. So I'm very much on the beginning of

1:36:56

my past. But since I've been doing

1:36:58

it, I've actually become a more balanced

1:37:00

person. A better a

1:37:02

better a better more positive. Sorry. Don't No. I was gonna say and seemingly, it helps you

1:37:05

better negotiate or or

1:37:07

navigate the madness. The

1:37:11

lunacies out. Oh, yeah. Definitely.

1:37:11

We hear every day there.

1:37:13

Yeah. Countries. That's why we

1:37:16

wanted to say

1:37:18

that. So let me ask you. So if somebody listening in the UK,

1:37:20

they wanted to look into kibala, is

1:37:22

it just simply a case of putting

1:37:24

the term into a search

1:37:25

engine? And diving in or other people

1:37:28

you can connect with?

1:37:29

Yeah. Yeah. You can just type

1:37:31

it into BitShoe or be

1:37:33

it alternative. Search engines and there's people that

1:37:36

talk about it. There's books on it. I'm

1:37:38

reading a book at the minute, and I'm

1:37:40

a guy called Mark

1:37:42

Stavish, and the book's called, I'm

1:37:44

just I believe. Because that was for health

1:37:46

and wellness. And it's just there's no magic

1:37:47

in it, like,

1:37:47

my house to Crowley type stuff, but Yeah.

1:37:50

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's not

1:37:52

dark. Get

1:37:54

involved with that. Yeah. No. Of course, you wouldn't

1:37:56

know. But my my my other half

1:37:58

is about to begin producing and

1:38:01

recording a podcast. And these are

1:38:03

the subjects she'll be speaking about almost exclusively. You know, the

1:38:05

meaning of life, where we came

1:38:07

from, and boy, and past

1:38:09

lives, and ancient civilization.

1:38:11

All this sort

1:38:13

stuff. I have no doubt she'll be looking into it.

1:38:15

Chris Pollaire, Craig Pollaire. It's a fascinating subject. What is yeah. Absa, I can't

1:38:17

wait to hear it, to be honest Pollaire. So you're

1:38:19

over there in crew. As

1:38:23

you said, not not not a million miles away. Good

1:38:25

stuff, Chris. But it's funny you

1:38:27

mentioned witchcraft. I am seeing it, aren't

1:38:29

I when I switch on Netflix

1:38:31

and Oh, definitely, there's a lot of

1:38:33

the cult symbolism in TV shows. Yeah. Yeah. More than ever before

1:38:36

maybe. And that's interesting

1:38:38

at this particular time is

1:38:40

where Great to hear from

1:38:42

me, Chris. Thanks for the call, Thank very connection. lovely. Interesting, Kabbalah.

1:38:48

Is that something you know about of you?

1:38:50

Have you I I don't want to say dabbled in it, but have you looked into that? Is it something you've

1:38:56

you've investigated in the past. It is

1:38:58

a quarter two, seven o'clock this Wednesday, the

1:39:00

twenty fifth of

1:39:03

January twenty twenty

1:39:04

three. Let's take another call.

1:39:06

Caller, welcome to the program. Who am I speaking with? Yeah. I it's

1:39:09

not well

1:39:12

into my Australia. How's your day? Not too bad.

1:39:14

Did you say Matt? Yes. Thanks, Matt. No. It's just it's just because

1:39:16

my my headphones went

1:39:18

silent there for a moment. And

1:39:20

you're in Australia, and I'm guessing it is

1:39:22

silly o'clock in the

1:39:23

morning, Matt, wherever you are. It's it's

1:39:25

a quarter of the

1:39:27

five. I'm just in the main

1:39:29

place. Let me just

1:39:31

finish again the

1:39:32

paper. Fine. Did you win?

1:39:34

The PO one. Three of the men out of but not mate.

1:39:36

I love that. The game

1:39:38

won, poker was the winner

1:39:41

in the end. Marcus

1:39:43

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Not not

1:39:45

bad. Not bad. It's brilliant to hear from you,

1:39:47

Paula. What would you like to say? Oh,

1:39:49

not too much

1:39:52

really, but I

1:39:55

do wish a football

1:39:57

business come around quicker

1:40:00

with yours and the NRO.

1:40:02

When the NRO stop, Chris? Next

1:40:09

month in a row. This is Aussie this

1:40:11

is Aussie rule stuff now where you can just absolutely

1:40:16

clutter level. Here

1:40:18

in Queensland, New South Wales, we tend to go to more, you know, towards the Moreon, Rugby

1:40:21

Union side of

1:40:24

things? Royce. Comments

1:40:26

that will happen. December,

1:40:29

I don't doubt from

1:40:31

New

1:40:31

Zealand. Daniel injuries.

1:40:35

He's already flying through the election. There was

1:40:36

a there

1:40:37

was, you know,

1:40:38

he he's like a party, and

1:40:42

then there was

1:40:43

he's you know, fighting against the new injury. Mhmm.

1:40:45

This was an election that

1:40:47

happened about thirty

1:40:51

four months ago. All

1:40:53

all the votes that went to the party against the new lenders went to lay the party

1:40:56

anyway? Right.

1:41:00

Yes. Yeah, mate. Yes.

1:41:03

So it's pretty fraudulent. It

1:41:06

smells it smells Matt.

1:41:09

Look, I I there's not obviously much

1:41:11

I know about that, but can I ask you a couple of questions? I don't by the

1:41:16

way. What it it seemed

1:41:18

from the outside looking in that Australia went full scale

1:41:20

basket case on

1:41:23

COVID restrictions. Was that Was

1:41:26

that your experience where you live?

1:41:28

Were the restrictions

1:41:29

really, really tough? I won the damn day. It's

1:41:31

yours to be fair, mate.

1:41:35

You know, you still see people nowadays from the

1:41:37

trains are in the mouth, like, what was

1:41:39

that new fucking

1:41:43

BCMA COVID variant?

1:41:45

That was getting the swine tour in the past, you know what

1:41:47

happened. Look, I'm never really careful looking at the guy looking at if

1:41:50

I can look to be

1:41:52

fed. How to go

1:41:54

on the

1:41:55

day, like, where we're

1:41:57

going on the day.

1:41:59

Clover restrictions look I'd be a

1:42:02

other a tech strategist, man. Right? You you you went about your daily basis. But it it it

1:42:04

seemed that

1:42:08

your authorities your police were really cracking

1:42:10

down on people even, you know, sensible people like you who knew it was

1:42:12

a scam. I mean, people

1:42:14

getting arrested for not having masks.

1:42:17

You know, they effectively closed the country

1:42:20

down completely. People couldn't get in. But you managed to just kind

1:42:22

of get toy with with with not complying and just carried

1:42:24

on. Pretty

1:42:28

much my idea. Look, I've kept

1:42:30

my head down and I I

1:42:33

traveled,

1:42:34

you know, from

1:42:36

Queensland very native styles and

1:42:38

indivictory node problems. The one's media aware

1:42:41

of mask on the

1:42:43

on the slide there and it's just a simple

1:42:45

refusal. You'd like to keep the

1:42:47

heads down and

1:42:51

Yeah. I'm just not having it. Good, man.

1:42:56

I

1:42:59

Yes. The

1:43:00

best part about what's happened in the last

1:43:02

three years is that people

1:43:04

actually still going to the

1:43:07

top

1:43:07

socializing

1:43:08

getting on another, you know, kiss and hug

1:43:10

and all that sort of shit. Not

1:43:13

not

1:43:14

much social

1:43:15

distancing because well, you know, it's

1:43:18

on email, even to fucking Hang on. So you're saying that you're seeing a kind

1:43:20

of return to

1:43:23

normality. The people are going

1:43:26

back to the pubs that they're going back to doing the things they were doing interesting

1:43:32

because I don't see

1:43:34

that here. Here, pubs are struggling really badly. Footfall is down.

1:43:40

Their takings are down because people are

1:43:42

not going back. People are preferring to drink at home. But you think it's different in Western Australia.

1:43:45

People are returning

1:43:47

to socializing mad. I

1:43:50

guess it's not always

1:43:53

clear. Like, if you

1:43:56

go back back South Australia

1:43:58

in places called like a Larry or West of Queensland

1:44:04

in then

1:44:06

I'd rather, but it is yeah. It's different different

1:44:11

roles for every different place

1:44:14

you go, I guess, like, when they choose on the government line,

1:44:16

you know,

1:44:18

what makes the company Is

1:44:22

that such a distance thing? Is it mask

1:44:23

wearing? What makes the company? What's the we can take at

1:44:26

a good company? You know,

1:44:28

so I

1:44:31

do notice that when I go play

1:44:33

a pull up at the local

1:44:34

pub, it's not too bad up there. It's not going to

1:44:36

do an organization at the

1:44:37

moment. I have to, like, talk to you a

1:44:39

fair few times because it's just like a bit of

1:44:41

a climate on my hands. All of this silliness that

1:44:44

came in I wanna take

1:44:46

another call before I get off the air. I'm off in ten minutes. Great to hear from you in Western Australia,

1:44:48

Matt. Clodging

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