Ordinary people's extraordinary stories & Everyday Conversations Regarding Mental Health

The Tim Heale Podcasts S4 E6 More Tim's Rants

September 22, 2021 Tim Heale Season 4 Episode 6
Ordinary people's extraordinary stories & Everyday Conversations Regarding Mental Health
The Tim Heale Podcasts S4 E6 More Tim's Rants
Show Notes Transcript

In this episode I comment on PMQs (Prime Ministers Questions) without the PM or Leader of the Opposition but the Deputy Prime Minister and the Shadow Leader of the Opposition, the fiasco of the mass email sent out by the MOD (Ministry of Defence) and the effects of mass immigration over the last 30 years.

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0 (1s):
The Tim Heale podcasts, ordinary people's extraordinary stories.

2 (18s):
Welcome to series four episode six of the Tim Heale podcast, in this series. It's Tim having to rent that’s me. So if you enjoy me having a bit of a rant and going on about what's going on in today's society, stay tuned. If you don't want to listen to me, rant, well, you can always tell me off, welcome to series four, episode six of the Tim Heale podcasts. In this episode, I'm going to have another bit of a rent today. I listened to the prime minister's question time without the prime minister or the leader of the opposition.

2 (1m 3s):
So today the deputy prime minister, who is Dominic rub and the deputy shadow prime minister is Angela Riner. Now, Dominique rod held his own. However, the stupid questions that Angela Reiner came out with just beggars belief, how can I actually be a credible or position? They just can't hold the government to account, which I believe is damaging to this country where we haven't got a proper shadow government or shadow cabinet that can't hold this government to account is damaging the country.

2 (1m 56s):
The government can do what ever they want without fear of being held to account for it. Just look at what's happened over the last two years since borrowers came in, yes, Boris came in with an 80 seat majority and yes, they have been able to push through some very serious policies. Had it not been for Boris Ashley, pulling the right strains, getting us out of Brexit and actually finally leaving and being able to call our own shots.

2 (2m 37s):
Had we stayed in Europe, like the labor party would have kept us had Jeremy Corbyn or Keir. Starmer go into power. We would have been in serious trouble. We wouldn't had the vaccines for one. We wouldn't have the rollout that you've had with the vaccines. We wouldn't have had to trade deals that we've got we've leased trust who has done an absolute Sterling job of going around the world and getting these deals outside of the EU. Had we stayed in the, you, you, we just wouldn't have been able to get these, these trade deals.

2 (3m 19s):
And, and now looking forward, we've got a new bunch of try deals coming with possibly America. Yes. Boris she's meeting with Joe Biden today was a little bit bizarre halfway through Boris's opening gambit. I think it was, they ushered out the, the journalists can't understand quite what was going on there, or haven't seen the full four outcome and what was going on. But, but it was it just bogus belief and Joe Biden just doesn't understand what's going on in Northern Ireland.

2 (4m 4s):
He thinks that the Northern Ireland protocol is the be all and end all of protecting Northern Ireland. It's got nothing to do with protecting Northern Ireland. It's got everything to do with protecting the use single market and them holding some sort of hold over us where they can dictate what happens in Northern Ireland. They dictate a border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK, which is totally, totally unacceptable. And I think the sooner Boris pulls out the card and in folks, article 16, the better get rid of the, the protocol and just get on with trading with Northern Ireland.

2 (4m 56s):
The way we always have done the Irish border will sort itself out 99% of the stuff that we send into Northern Ireland is for Northern Ireland. It's not for Southern Ireland. Yes. I suppose people from the south come up to the north to do their shopping, but people do that across the world. Anyway, people go from, from England into Scotland or England into Wales to do their shopping. What's the difference of people coming from the Republic into Northern Ireland or people from the Northern Ireland, going into the Republic during the shopping, it makes no detriments.

2 (5m 35s):
So from that point of view, yes, article 16 needs to be invoked and we need to get out is this stupid protocol that the EU are using as a beating stick as for trade, we've got enough. Tricon on with the rest of the world to be able to help us out. And if the French want to be really funny about it, then we won't deal with them. We'll stop buying French goods. We'll stop buying German goods. We'll stop importing stuff from the rest of the Europe at the present moment in time, we can probably just about hold our own.

2 (6m 18s):
We've the deals we've got with the rest of the world. Yes. We might see one or two shortages of, of maybe French wine or, or now, and have difficulty again in some, some German cars and stuff like that, that business will sort itself out. Anyway, coming on to the other fiasco that kicked off the other day, absolutely saving about this email mass email sent out by the ministry of defense to all those poor buggers. There was about 250 interpreters left behind in Afghanistan. And this mass email, it only takes one to be able to identify the rest of them.

2 (7m 2s):
And, and then we've got a mass problem. We're going to tell him, man already have got an awful lot of biometric information on everybody in Afghanistan because of their voting system. They had this voting system in Afghanistan where people had their fingerprints taken. So they could prove who they were because at the time, sort of 20 years ago, when they had their first true elections, they got everybody that was able to register to vote and they had their biometrics done. So the government of Afghanistan had all recalled, everybody that was entitled to vote and they've got their details.

2 (7m 48s):
But these emails telling guys what to do on where and where they could go and how to stay safe and what the government was doing to try and get these guys out now is a possibility that the Taliban had forgot all that information. Yes. The email was recalled shortly after it was sent out, but he's besides a point, it shouldn't have gone out in the first place. Now looking at it cynically, maybe somebody in the, in the ministry of defense where the email sent out from maybe has got a grudge, maybe, maybe working for the Taliban.

2 (8m 40s):
You don't know it's, it's one of those things. Maybe used it to be able to identify those that did work for us. I'm sure the Taliban's already got a lot of that information, but it goes in, gives the Taliban a bit more of a heads up and are able to go around and take these guys out. We owed these guys. I couldn't have done my job in Afghanistan on the three tours or I did without the interpreters. They were my ears and my speech on the ground. My whole, all three tours. My job was working with locals and my past to my diary, isn't up to conversation.

2 (9m 29s):
I can donate the no more hellos and thank thank-you's, but that's about as far as it goes without these guys, we couldn't have done our job. And over the last 20 years, these guys have put a lawyers on the line for a hundred dollars a month, and I'd done a Sterling job for us. It's our duty to look after these guys now not to get them slotted because it's the easiest way of not being able to deal with a problem of immigration. What the government should be done on the immigration front is rounding up. All those that have applied for asylum that have been turned down for asylum and return them to where they came from.

2 (10m 16s):
All the economic migrants that's climbing into the two dinkies on a daily basis, coming from Sub-Saharan Africa, looking for a better life because they can't be bothered to make our own countries good and prosperous coming here illegally. And if somebody arrives in this country illegally, then they should be removed legally, immediately without ceremony. If they arrive on the beach in a thingy, taken over, stick them on a ferry, stick them straight back to France, or find out exactly where they're from.

2 (11m 0s):
Stick them on an airplane, back to where they came from. If they're filed asylum seekers in other European countries, it's time to send them back to where they came from. If they haven't got asylum in one country and they're trying to get in another country, then they should be sent back to where they came from. If they're not entitled to refugee status, it's as simple as that, the problem that we've had in this country over the last 20, 30, 40 years is we've had an influx of people to the tune of around about 300,000 people.

2 (11m 43s):
Every single year, coming into the country, moved in, trying to now resources. We haven't got the infrastructure to be able to cope with that many people. If you take an average area where you've had a large migrant population, look at the infrastructure that they are taken up in the schools, in the doctor surgeries, and then you've got the black market where a lot of these people are working because they can't get the right paperwork to, to work in this country illegally. Legally they've come in illegally.

2 (12m 24s):
So they're then working illegally all the black economy and with the money I do govern what they, they're not spending on living costs here. They're sending him back to where they came from. So draining our coffers. So sending him money out of the country anyway, enough of a ramp for today, if you've enjoyed my rent, want me to carry on doing a few more rents? And the reason I started doing these rents in series four is because at the moment of either I haven't dried up with people for series three is just because people aren't available at a moment.

2 (13m 13s):
I've got some fascinating guests coming up in a future. I've got some really interesting people that I'm going to be interviewing to continue series three. So if you liked what I do, please give it a like subscribe. If you can and share it with your friends is what I'm trying to do is to grow this channel and to tell other people's stories. There's a lot of fascinating people out there and it's a legacy for them and their families and to the general population to see what's happened in the past, I've been interviewing some fascinate people.

2 (13m 56s):
I've got somebody coming in a 99 year old, he's been around for almost 99 years. And he's stories as going to be fascinating. He has some brilliant sales that he tells, and hopefully we're going to capture an awful lot of that for you guys. So in the meantime, like share, subscribe, and thank you for listening. Thanks for listening. I look forward to the next one. Thank you for listening to my podcasts. If you have enjoyed them and your podcast app allows, please leave a comment and share it with your friends.

2 (14m 40s):
The reason I got into this podcast malarkey is so I could leave a legacy for my children and my grandchildren in the years to come. So they will know what I did with my life. I wish my grandparents had done the same for me. Unfortunately they didn't in my latest series on giving people the opportunity to leave their own legacy for their children and families for the future. If you have any criticism, positive or negative, and you wish to get in touch with me direct, you can email me at timheale@hotmail.com That's timheale@hotmail.com.

2 (15m 25s):
I thank you for your time and thank you for listening.