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

The Tim Heale Podcasts S4 E14 Tim's Rant's

November 02, 2021 Tim Heale Season 4 Episode 14
Ordinary people's extraordinary stories & Everyday Conversations Regarding Mental Health
The Tim Heale Podcasts S4 E14 Tim's Rant's
Show Notes Transcript

In this episode I have a serious look at COP-26 and what man can actually do to change the climate and the just how ridicules the French claim to British Waters is.

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

2 (17s):
Welcome to series four of The Tim Heale podcasts 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 chill. If you go. When I listened to me rent, well, you can always tell me Welcome to another Tim's rents. Well, I got something to rant about today. Now, the, the flop 26 just opened yesterday. We've all the big leaders making these massive, great big speeches on the climate and our damaging it and all the rest of it.

2 (1m 3s):
Having just flown in on 400 private jets. And we've Biden's 55 car cavalcade to get him there. Oh, what a, what a joke. Anyway, I'm no climate expert. However, having looked at I'm looking back over history over the last million years, we have had lots and lots of climate change. It happens without us. It happened in the prehistoric age and got rid of all the dinosaurs. Now I'm sure it wasn't down to what the dinosaurs were doing, that the climate changed it's in that new national natural phenomena climate change happens, whatever you do, I'm sorry, but there is, doesn't matter what you do.

2 (2m 1s):
You're going to get some soil climate change. If we just look back a few years to turn the summer of 1976, look at that heat wave that we had joined that summer. Was that pretty awesome? Was that down to a climate change? Look at some of the, the great storms in history that we've had is that Dan, the climate change is that down to what man's done? What about this volcano, Dan in LA Palma, what's that doing to tell the environment, how much is that spewing out carbon dioxide, this net zero fetish that they've got.

2 (2m 48s):
I don't understand if we get net zero carbon emissions, when all the plants die, is that what plants need to do to focus into this, to produce oxygen. So if we get rid of all the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, we're all gonna die. Perhaps that's what I want about. Hmm. I wonder. Anyway, oldest law up in, in Glasgow at the moment, some 25,000 people turned up in Glasgow to search a waffle about climate change.

2 (3m 33s):
That man pretty much has got no control over what so ever just think about it for a minute. Man has not got any control over what the climate does. The Chinese Powerly over the last 10 years have produced so much more carbon monoxide or carbon in the atmosphere than the whole of the UK industrial revolution until now produced.

2 (4m 16s):
Apparently I don't know what the exact phrases were, but I saw a tweet from Tom hardwood of GB news. He said that the UK, since the industrial revolution to now has done about 78 billion, tons of carbon and the Chinese over the last 10 years, I dunno are 87 million tons at a staff. But is that really going to have that much of an impact when you look at the volcanoes and what, how you produce? Look at our one a few years ago in Iceland, went up the grounded planes for mumps and what that spewed out.

2 (5m 2s):
Just one down in the Palmer. What asked don't at the moment, look up for service. When that goes up and then a lot of other volcanoes kicking off around the world. You just don't hear about, but man's got so much control over the environment over climate really let's get serious about it. Shall we? Yes. Try another, a cleaner environment on fully beyond that. When it comes to electric cars. Now there's some big money that they're making us all, all have electric cars, but at the moment, the infrastructure is not in place for everybody to have an electric car.

2 (5m 54s):
We don't have enough power generation to power. All these electric cars, all these electric pumps. We can't produce enough fuel for enough power for that. So all these marvelous heat pumps are a complete and utter waste of time because they don't generate, you know, more to all your ass say, oh, David Bellamy, he got it spawn. He said that the, the man couldn't control the climate and he's right, but he was shut down. He was ostracized for it.

2 (6m 36s):
But then you've got the likes of old graph. Underberg how many she's she spent all her time playing hooky from school. And Ashley's a climate expert as you figure that one out. And has she come become such an expert when she didn't even go to bloody school, she spent half her time out in Australia with a banner ad. Does that give you any education that you need? So she's a real climate expert. Yeah. Why would you listen to her now? Boris, I believe H jumped on the wrong bandwagon, or I think this is going to cost him.

2 (7m 18s):
If you ask the average Joe in the street, what what's their main priority. And a lot of people will say illegal, illegal immigration and many people sort of, oh, I'm scared to death with the climate change rule. Good. A toy. We ain't going to die. Is it warming up or is it calling down? You take a few years ago and it really bad winter are we add who's at Dana climate change? Or is that just down a climate look at a summer? We've just had, it's been a bit of a damn one. It's not been a brilliant summer, but last year I'm in the summer we had in the south, they had a heatwave, a moment.

2 (8m 6s):
We were going around the UK and my red Scotland. We had rain every day and it was cold. So as that change in employment, you get wherever it happens, let's get over it. But I think Boris has got us a single biggest problem here, net zero, whichever way you look at it, isn't achievable. It doesn't matter what you do. Somebody's going to be producing carbon somewhere to give you the stuff that you need more thinking on. This is that you, you go, you do where you can, but don't inflict all this onto people.

2 (8m 53s):
They don't want it. People do not want the extra added costs of trying to make net zero and, and change the climate man cannot change the climate. Now climate happens regardless. We've had four ice ages. One of them took out all the dinosaurs. If we have another ice age, we'll deal with it. We've got the technology to keep us warm. Nowadays. What are dying from the heat pumps, pumps at a job.

2 (9m 35s):
So for, for the UK, I think our way forward for clean energy is yes, invest in a bit of solar and a bit of wind power. But when it dies, what happens, we at the real long gas or coal or nuclear, and I think nuclear is probably the way to go. We have a British company rolls Royce that produce these modular nuclear fusion. Dewberries that? I'm sure it's the same thing that they put on the nuclear submarines on. One of those is enough to power, a big city and a bit more.

2 (10m 21s):
We should be investing in that technology. That's the way forward that will give us enough energy for our needs for centuries to come. So let's invest in nuclear and a bit of solar and a bit of wind and a bell wave. That's the way forward. Let's not stick ridiculous net zero targets on ourselves. Let's not make everybody after invest in an electric car that the infrastructure they're not to be able to.

2 (11m 10s):
So to, to power, basically, if everybody down one street plugs in their electric car overnight, it will kill the grid. There's not enough power to feed 10, right? And here's all you do is give yourself power cuts because everybody's overloaded the circuit. So let's be sensible about all of this. Let's get away from this stupid climate caper up in Scotland. And this flop 26 malarkey it's, it's ridiculous. It is really ridiculous. What I doing, tell me, look at how many twenty-five thousand people often turned up in private yet.

2 (11m 54s):
I know an a and they're trying to tell us, so we reduced the amount of flying around. We do really calm. We'll get with the program. Roy, I'm now just going to turn my attention slightly over to this, this rail, over the fishing malarkey, the frogs have gone beyond. Now. Now they're taking absolute liberties with good nature. They said that it's not about a fishing is all about punishing us for leaving new. You. It's all about the cash cow. There's walk to way, but we ain't quite finished giving them money every and we were still paying them billions and billions every week or every month now expecting another 40 million or 40 billion.

2 (12m 45s):
It's ridiculous. It's now time to say enough is enough you've whilst on the trade deal, you've made an absolute mockery of our fishing industry. And let's just, just, just look at this sensibly. The French are demanding access to British waters. They are demanding. They have access to British waters. What if we demanded access to French yards our day react.

2 (13m 25s):
If we said, right, we want access to your Vinyasa. We want 90% of ordered the grapes that you produce so we can produce our own wine. It's exactly the assignment. It British waters, not French waters. They've over, they've over fished their waters, and now they want to ripe powers. It's ridiculous. Just put on your mind how ridiculous it actually sounds demanding access to our waters.

2 (14m 7s):
It goes beyond belief And a Northern Ireland protocol. They're using that to punish Northern Ireland, low diverse frost. Now is a time to invoke article 16, less get rid of that stupid thing. If d'you want to put up a barrier across Northern Southern Ireland lamb. Most of the staff that we send into Northern Ireland is for Northern Ireland. Anyway, there's always been trade across the border, let it happen.

2 (14m 50s):
He's not going to filter down the EU and Tammy's day their economy let's look at it, sensibly. It just, just beggars belief, what some people are looking at. So my way of looking at things is Boris. If he's not careful, he's going to get his fingers burnt and come the next general election. You can say an awful lot of people turn into away from the stories.

2 (15m 31s):
And I certainly ain't going to be walking towards labor because they are even worse than the tourists. Let's face it. I haven't got sensible policy in them, Keir. Starmer, he's, he's great at hindsight, but what does he stand for? And if I kick him out, you're going to end up with Angela Riner and we own chaise. So I think one of the only alternatives is to look at a two Richard Tice and reform UK, the party that is common sense.

2 (16m 15s):
They're looking at all of this and their policies just exude common sense. And I think once that message gets out there, I think the British public will look at this and they say, let's go for common sense because we ain't getting at all worries at the moment. I think the Charles Lou's budget last week, he missed out one very, very important area. And that was pensioners.

2 (16m 55s):
What did he actually give pensioners on their pensions? I don't think he's given them anything. Yes. She's given about 8 million people in the public sector, a pay rise of some sort. And I'm happy with that because that, that gives me maybe a 1% or something on my pension, but they'll probably take back in tax anyway, cause I'm having to pay tax on my pension, which yeah, I'm not happy with, but that's a fact of life. Hey, they give it where one end and take back twice as much where we ever, so who do you do?

2 (17m 38s):
But Hey, go. Hopefully it has given you something to think about. If you think that or reform your car, you know, you won't get a single MP. Well, have a look at their policies. Don't decimate before you've looked at what I stand for, do your research. Don't just be sheep and vote for, for whoever you vote for without doing some sort of research. If you're not happy with what we've got, use your vote to change it. They work for us, not us work for them where you put them in power.

2 (18m 23s):
Remember that your vote counts. If we don't use your vote, you've got no right to complain when things go wrong. Anyway, I'll think I'll round on quite enough. This morning. We've got another two weeks of this climate. Okay. I just, just beggars belief. What I coming out with. But at the end of it, it all mean absolutely nothing. They'll all leave on their private jets and I will carry on their lifestyles while trying to dictate to us. Don't we need to pay for it all.

2 (19m 6s):
Let's not give them that opportunity. Let's vote with our feet. Let's send a clear message though. We've ID enough. Thank you for your time. And thanks 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. 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.

2 (19m 48s):
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 meat timheale@hotmail.com. That's timheale@hotmail.com. I thank you for your time and thank you for listening.