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

The Tim Heale Podcasts S4 E13 Tim's Rant's

October 28, 2021 Tim Heale Season 4 Episode 13
Ordinary people's extraordinary stories & Everyday Conversations Regarding Mental Health
The Tim Heale Podcasts S4 E13 Tim's Rant's
Show Notes Transcript

This is a Trusty Thursday Rant, I have a pop at COP 26, The Budget, Insult Britain antics and a bit more.

Pre-Roll Post-Roll short version

Pre-Roll Post-Roll

Support the show

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

2 (17s):
Welcome to series four of the Tim Heale podcast in this series. It's Tim having to rent and he's me. So if you enjoy having a bit of a rant and going on about what's going on in today's society, stay tuned. If you go, when I listened to me rent, well, you can always turn. Welcome to another Tim's rents. There's been a thirsty Thursday. I thought I'd ever never go well. There's quite a lot to go on about today in there. All I need is a insult Britain, idiots have now broken into folly, diet, depo, and chained himself to the top of a tower.

2 (1m 8s):
And my answered areas, take the ladder away and leave them up there that would solve that problem. So they're not doing any arm up, they're leaving their crazy people. And did you say the other day? Oh, that was funny. A driver really got the out, but each cases, these insult Britain and went along and squirt them with think, and they're all walking around with Ang splat, fire season clothes and everything off on it. Roll to a museum, say to the police, aren't all very quick off the mark in removing these tow rags out in Ohio.

2 (1m 52s):
And it had been quite a few recently. There's some great shots of people dragging them off, out away and a police desk that just standing and watching. Why are they just standing and watching? I don't know. And then, oh, this weekend, this should be a lot of fun. You've got this cop 26 kicking off. We're not going to be cop 26. Is it because often the real perpetrators of, of generating CO2 and an order of estimate on buffering to come. So the Chinese ain't coming, the Russians ain't coming, the Saudis ain't coming in. The Mexicans, ain't coming all the countries to produce an awful lot of all four gases, which is quite funny, actually, because if you actually put it into perspective, this, this volcano on the Palmer is probably producing a far more CO2 emissions than the whole of the human race put together for the last 10 years.

2 (2m 56s):
Yeah. Climate change. Yeah, it happens is saddened for billions of years. I mean, you just have a look over the last, I don't know how many years we, the earth been here and just look at the impact that climate changes, I don't know, over the years, quite music really. And, and then you've got this graph, Bundaberg. Everybody wants to listen to her. I mean, she's such a, a font of all knowledge on this. Now let's just look at graph Funderburk. She, this is the kid that spent half of her school years playing hooky and sitting outside parliament in, in, in Stockholm.

2 (3m 44s):
So how much has she actually learned? There's a bit more sinister going on behind her. I think you find there's some, there's some people that are pulling her strings, which is yeah. Which is a shame really. I mean, she will be a really nice girl if she hadn't been manipulated so much, but a go. So it is, this is all kicking off in Scotland at the moment or gun's kickoff in Scotland over the weekend in the light of what's going on in, in Glasgow where the bins haven't been emptied, there's rats, running Roy all over the place.

2 (4m 26s):
And some nosy SMP minister decides to blame it all on Margaret Thatcher. Mm good. One. Margaret's Hatcher. Hasn't been in Paul power for at least 30 years to my knowledge. And she died what? 12 years ago? So ours, she had an impact on what's happening in Glasgow now. Hmm. Interesting one that. So what else? Come have a look at it. Just, it just, you just couldn't make this stuff up.

2 (5m 7s):
Are now let's turn our attention to the French hour. This is a good one. Have you seen the latest the French had now just I've impounded a British fishing boat because it didn't have a license to go into their waters. I think it was just gone near to land fish actually. And that the French are now threatened into to block all, all ports to stop goods coming to the UK. Well, as far as I can say, that's just going to damage them more than it's going to damage us.

2 (5m 50s):
Yeah. The French you go wonder would their thinking on this one they've decades and decades of taking liberties. And now they've been asked to, to prove that they've, they've been fishing in their areas legally over the last 30 odd years. And I can't quite do that. And that's the reason that they're not getting the licenses because they can't prove that they were doing it legally to start with. They've been coming into our waters for decades, plundering and over fishing and doing it illegally pretty much all under this common fisheries policy.

2 (6m 35s):
And now it's all gone. And I don't understand why we're still giving them the time of day. Actually I'll tell them a do one, the lot of them. So in parliament, there was a library MP calling for the second of, of law Davis crossed because he's been wined in the French up. Really? Why are they siding with the French on this one? I don't understand it. Lord David Frost has done a Sterling job so far and the auto is a little bit slow at the moment, pulling the pin on article 16.

2 (7m 17s):
Well, hopefully that's going to happen fairly in fairly short order and we can carry on return to some sort of sensible trading with Northern Ireland. I don't understand what the, what do you use jumping up and downfall? Most of the stuff going into Northern Ireland is for, for Northern Ireland. I don't think there's much. That actually goes south of the border from Northern Ireland. There's been trade gone up, but then at border for decades. And if the EU, when a pop of area let them, but we're not going to do it. We don't need to, they just have to take our word for it.

2 (8m 1s):
And if I don't want it tough. So where else are we going? What else we got up a rent about today? Our dunno. Oh, the chancellor's budget. Yes. Well, so lots of people are saying that, oh, it was a bit of a labor budget. Well, it's funny coming from a Tory bean, a Tory budget, it's going to, whichever way you, you rubbed the Singh up the wrong way. It's going to take us decades to get out of this, that the man of debt that the pandemic has caused us.

2 (8m 45s):
I don't know how many trillions that we're in debt for. We've been blowing it off for somebody, somebody who's been given us an awful lot of money. And I won on all for a lot of money back, not for getting a new man of interest that they charge. They might pay a little bit less interesting than you me going to the bank, but I find it quite amusing. If, if you've got savings, you're getting naught point naught, 1% interest on no savings. That's a huge amount of money. If you take a pan on UK nought point nought 1% on it that doesn't even mind one pay does it.

2 (9m 27s):
However, if you got at a bank and you want to borrow some money, they're looking at charging you somewhere about eight or 9% or 9%. And the bank rate is not 0.1. Do me a favor. Why would you want to come borrow money off the bank? Those sort of rates is crazy. I can remember back when my mortgage are going up to 15%, we almost lost the house we were, we were talk about on the bread line. It was costing us almost every fruit.

2 (10m 7s):
We would bring it in everything we were earning just to make the mortgage payments every month. And we struggled from a day to day, just trying to put food on the table and cover the rest of the bills and just trying to get to work by it was a nightmare. But here you go. That's a, as time has gone past, and I can't see it going back to that. I mean, I dunno what mortgages are at the moment three or 4%, but so that's, that's where we are today. So I noticed that the, the chancellor didn't mention pensioners in his, in his speech.

2 (10m 55s):
So I don't know what a pension is it going to get? Probably nothing again. And you know, when I go away and have a couple of years before I get to my pension, my state punch in any way, but my army pension, well, it is, there's a little bit of good news on that. That might get a pay rise. My, I don't know wherever they're talking about giving the military a of rise and that normally reflects on a or my army pension as well. So we've a bit of luck, a little bit, a little bit of, of a pay rise on that. And then no doubt. It'll take it back in tax.

2 (11m 35s):
I normally do. I normally find another way of taking it back off that I given you in it anyway. So that's a last my Thursday, Thursday rent. Thanks for listening. Thanks for listening and 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. 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.

2 (12m 17s):
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. I thank you for your time and thank you for listening.