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From NHS Paramedic to Truth Warrior w/ Matt Taylor image

From NHS Paramedic to Truth Warrior w/ Matt Taylor

Connecting Minds
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205 Plays1 year ago

Matt is a former paramedic who left the NHS because of the mandates. He shares his story with us today.

Twitter: https://twitter.com/medicmatt090

NHS100K: https://twitter.com/NHS100k

Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nhs100k-podcast/id1624937779

Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-2080190


Christian's links:

Health Consulting (book your free 15-min session with me): https://christianyordanov.com/health-consulting/

Children's health consulting (autism, ADHD, gut dysfunction etc.): https://christianyordanov.com/childrens-health-consulting/

Pregnancy preparation and recovery health consulting: https://christianyordanov.com/pregnancy-preparation-and-recovery/

Get my book Autism Wellbeing Plan: How to Get Your Child Healthy:  https://amzn.to/43ah6yD

Use this link to get a discount on my Detox Workshop: https://members.christianyordanov.com/detox-workshop?coupon=CM25


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Transcript

Introduction and Background

00:00:00
Speaker
Welcome back to the Connecting Minds podcast, Christian Jourdanoff. Here today's guest is Matt Taylor.
00:00:07
Speaker
Matt is the host of the NHS 100K podcast. He is a former paramedic that left the NHS after the scam vid 19, the whole scam of the pandemic happened. So we're going to hear his story in his words without me butchering it.

Public Mistakes and Media Experiences

00:00:32
Speaker
So Matt, thanks for coming on, brother. Thanks for having me, mate. You're right.
00:00:36
Speaker
Yeah, I think that that introduction was pales in comparison to the one you gave me for you on your slow roll. Well mate, you properly stopped because you thought I was asking you what your gender was, weren't you? I was listening back to that. It's just the British accent sometimes, you know, like it cuts out. So I thought you asked me, should I tell them what you are?
00:01:02
Speaker
uh yeah yeah yeah where i'm like i just misheard and like i thought i like where am i where am i in my transition journey there was about 10 second pause because i was like what and you were like what like
00:01:18
Speaker
Should we start again? I thought, no, no, no, leave it in, man. Leave it in, man. Yeah, I felt like an absolute jabroni listening back to that. But you know, you have to own it. You have to own it. Sometimes you try to make a joke and then you fall flat on your face and everybody laughs at you. You go home, you cry yourself to sleep. And the next day, you know, you dust yourself off and continue on, right? Yeah, man.
00:01:45
Speaker
But I've not had an intro to a podcast like that. So you definitely got the crown for that one, mate. Definitely 100%.

COVID-19 Mandates and NHS 100K Movement

00:01:51
Speaker
Eye-catching. So tell the listeners who you are and a little bit about your story, please. Okay. So yeah, you are right. I was a paramedic. I'm not anymore now, but we'll go into that later. But yeah, I was a paramedic in the NHS.
00:02:06
Speaker
for 12 years and I gave it all up for the, after the mandate. So for those of you that weren't aware, we had a mandate for all healthcare workers over in the UK that was due to come in on a certain day. I think it was April 20, I'm not going to say the year because between 2020 and 2023, it's all just like one long, horrendous year. So I won't try and yeah, but months and timeframe. So I think it was anyway, so, um,
00:02:35
Speaker
And so yes, I didn't want to take the jab for obvious reasons. We don't need to go down that rabbit hole, but I didn't want to take it at the time. And yeah, they were mandating it in care homes, which was making it difficult to do my job. And then they were looking to mandate it for the NHS workers, which is where the NHS 100K come from because
00:02:56
Speaker
As we were drawing towards the deadline for having to be jabbed, or at least have the first jab, there was a news article that came out there. They said that there was roughly between 100 and 110,000 NHS workers that were refusing to take the jab. Out of how many?
00:03:12
Speaker
Uh, do you know, that's a good point. I don't know how much the, but I think the NHS is more than that, mate. I think I can find out for you. Bear with me a second. No, we know it's a lot. The largest employer in the UK, basically, I think off the top of my head. So, um, so there's a few, but so that's what we were like, hang on a minute. That doesn't sound right. And then when we dug a little deeper, we found out it was sort of between, it was 120,000 plus. Wow.
00:03:37
Speaker
which is where the whole NHS 100K kind of thing came from. And that initially was a group that was set up by a few girls that were working in healthcare and at the time who obviously were against the mandates and they created a group that was fighting back and, you know, templating letters for them to send to their CEOs of the ambulance trust and the hospital trust not to mandate the masks. And they were doing their own sort of version of fighting back.
00:04:01
Speaker
And then I linked up with them because I was doing my own version of fighting back on my own. And then what basically brought us together was I posted the email that my employer sent me on, I think it was Christmas Eve or two days before the Christmas holidays, basically saying if I didn't have my first job by the 1st of February, I would have no job essentially on the 1st of April. So the idea was you took the first one on the 1st of February, that gave you the however long they wanted you to have between each dose. So then you can have your second one on the 1st of April. If you didn't have it by the 1st of April, then that was it.
00:04:32
Speaker
So I posted it on Twitter because I was raging. I was furious. So I posted it on Twitter and it kind of blew up a little bit. And then it put me in touch with loads of other people that were speaking out and loads of other organizations and stuff. And then I just went on a bit of a media tour. I think I ended up becoming a bit of a
00:04:51
Speaker
I hate talking about myself in this kind of environment, but I end up being a bit of a spokesperson for the ambulance service or the paramedics and some nurses and stuff, because there wasn't many people speaking out in England. A few doctors, but when they did speak out, they got the treatment that everyone else did. Everyone knows what the British people are like. We're quite reserved, aren't we? I want us to get a bit angrier sometimes, but bloody annoying, but that's the Italian blood on me.
00:05:19
Speaker
Are you Italian? Half Italian. Half Italian. I'm 2% Italian, bro. 2% Italian. We're related. We're related. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I gave my dad a ton. I gave him a...
00:05:34
Speaker
I gave my freaking DNA to Google so they can clone me into a slave to build out the infrastructure on Mars when Elon colonizes it, just so I can find out I'm 2% Italian and probably relate it to you, buddy. Yes, well, we all came from the same place, didn't we, apparently so. Yeah. Anyway, sorry to derail. No, no, no, no. It's fine. It's fine. It's funny.
00:06:02
Speaker
Yeah, so I ended up going on a few podcasts and then ended up going on the news and ended up going on a few bigger platforms and having more interviews with larger people and not necessarily commercial TVs, but BBC radio interviews. And then, you know, just as soon as you get behind the right sort of media company, they put you in front of everybody to speak a message. And there was three of us. There was me, a paramedic, a midwife and a doctor.
00:06:28
Speaker
And they just rinsed us, like tried to put us in front of loads of different people all the time. And it was good, but it was hard work. It's anyone who's done media stuff, you get like little anxiety and you tell me every time they're going to be like, right, we're live. And then you go, right, don't swear.
00:06:44
Speaker
Don't make jokes about transitioning genders. Oh, mate, honestly, my brain sometimes it segues all over the place. So it was really hard for me to just stay on one topic when I would speak to them. I think I've got some sort of, you know, anyway, we've all got some sort of weird thing going on. So I did that for ages and obviously got and then from that went and then the mandate got overturned.

Transition from NHS to Podcasting

00:07:05
Speaker
So they revoked the mandate. So we didn't end up having to do it. And then all of a sudden everybody just kind of went back
00:07:11
Speaker
normal life, if you will, because they were like, right, yeah, just to say, so we just went back. So all the donations stopped, all the support kind of stopped and sort of fizzled out. And then we were just kind of left, you know, in the sea with a boat with no sort of current to go anywhere, if you know what I mean? So that's when I, I sort of reached out to the girls and I know, spoke to them and sort of, you know, shared stuff and, you know, on that kind of battleground. And that's when I said, look, I want to do a podcast. I'm not anybody.
00:07:37
Speaker
I haven't got a large platform or anything. But I know a lot of people and doctors that we could get on, it'd be good to have a conversation. Anyway, so that's how the podcast kind of came about. And then I've been doing that ever since. And I think that kind of brings us up to speed really, I think, really with other bits and pieces because it got to the point where
00:07:57
Speaker
after after the mandate was revoked in the April, I then stayed in the NHS then to the July. And that was it. I had to get out because I was at the mindset, right, I'm going to leave when I want to leave. I've decided I was going to leave because I knew they would bring the mandate in because they couldn't do it. They couldn't afford to lose that many medical professionals in the NHS. They couldn't afford to do it. So we knew that they weren't going to do it. And it was just a bit of a scaremongering tactic, which worked for a lot of people because a lot of people did buckle.
00:08:23
Speaker
unfortunately. But it was the side of people that I've worked with for a long time and not a long time, new colleagues and old colleagues. And just the way it's all, the NHS from the inside out, the mandates, the difference of opinions, the pro mask, the non mask, whereas trying to, and then I got friends who used to work in, who still work in hospital, they were telling me about how they were trying to do their best.
00:08:51
Speaker
So it's a really difficult situation to be in because I've got friends who are saying people are coming in and dying. And then you've got other people when you're on the, you know, the Tivvall Hutt conspiracy realist brigade who are like, you know, they're killing everybody, you know, they're not doing anything. They're letting people die. And it's like my friends are not letting people die. And they're covered up real. And so it was I was kind of like stuck in the middle.
00:09:10
Speaker
And that was why, you know, that was the inspiration for God, you know, I can't, I can't keep doing this anymore, because it was getting difficult to work. I was telling that I was telling patients, you know, all about the job and not in a bad way, but just when they'd ask, I tell them and I was getting complaints from the families of the patients because they then refused. So it just became really difficult because they were telling me I was spreading misinformation. But then when I said to them what was misinformation, they couldn't tell me.
00:09:35
Speaker
So I was like, well, I've got responsibility as a clinician. When a patient asks me, what do you think? I would say to them, do you want the answer that they want me to tell you? Or do you want the answer that I would like to tell you? So the smart ones would say both. And then the guy would say, you know, what do you think? And that's when I would say, look, I'm not saying don't get it, but
00:09:55
Speaker
I'm certainly thinking it loudly. Bro, you were definitely breaching the community guidelines there, brother. Well, no, because you have a duty of care. This is where it got difficult. Right. So I'm not your average clinician, as I'm sure you guys can tell. I look more like a plumber than a paramedic. But, you know, I did my degrees, I went to uni and I did all that and I was a good paramedic.
00:10:20
Speaker
But I was always I always tried to not dumb stuff down, but I was trying to remain level headed. And I think that's because I was in the military as well. So I would I would never really be that proud to be a paramedic like some of them were.
00:10:31
Speaker
To me it was just a job, but some people were like, I'm a paramedic when I work. And with massive egos and big capes flowing in the wind with their underpants and the outside of their trousers, I'm a superhero and you were listening to what I say. And I just couldn't be like that. So I would just be normal with people which usually got a better reception, but would come across as more unprofessional.
00:10:53
Speaker
So it was it was a kind of thing. I'd have wicked reports and brilliant reports from patients. But then some people would be like, oh, well, you know, you need to be a bit more professional. You can't say this and you can't say that. It's just it was really difficult just to be myself. Yeah. And then after the obviously the mandate was revoked. You saw everyone's true colours. You know, I had no support from any of my colleagues when I was going through what I was going through. It was just
00:11:21
Speaker
I don't know, I had two people that weren't clinicians telling me as a clinician that my choice was wrong. Right? Which choice that you're not getting the vaccine? So I'll finish this bit and then I'll go back to the meeting that I had with them. So after that, after seeing everyone's true sort of colours and identity and sort of motivations and loyalties and all that kind of stuff, I realised that the NHS was filled with narcissistic arseholes who were backstabber bastards. And there's a lot of egos and there's a lot of people with issues.
00:11:51
Speaker
And I can't work with people like that. So I just thought, you know, I'm done with this. And that's when I decided to leave the NHS. It wasn't an easy decision to make because I felt like I was and I've said this before, I felt like I was kind of leaving the battleground a little bit. But, you know, one man can't fight an army and I was getting tired and stressed out and angry and coming home angry, which when I was working as a normal paramedic,
00:12:16
Speaker
I never really got angry that much, but then when this was all happening, I was coming home and it wasn't the jobs I was going to, it was the working environment that was getting me so agitated and stressed out.
00:12:25
Speaker
So it was just a sheer ignorance of people just sleepwalking into what was going on without even just asking any questions. It was just like Jesus, you know, but painful to watch. Pardon. It's painful to watch that. It is, it is, especially when you generally care about people, although otherwise I wouldn't have got into medicine in the first place. You know, especially a paramedic, it's not a job that you do for the glamour, the glitz and
00:12:48
Speaker
and the kudos because very quickly you realise that most of the time you're just a mobile taxi that picks up piss heads all the time and you get abused from drug addicts when you bring them out of their fucking near-death experience. So it ain't as glamorous as what the telly makes it out. But it's given me comfort, ability to... I've got transferable skills for the military and as a paramedic. I'm handy to have around in a crisis. That's why I wasn't really bothered about leaving. You're all set. Ain't gonna leave me.
00:13:12
Speaker
ever. I still know how to speak to people and keep them calm and help people and, you know, stop bleeding and do that. So I'm handy to have on the zombie apocalypse team, for sure. I was just thinking that if shit ever goes down, you're the kind of guy I want to have as a friend. And that's about the kung fu as well. But you've got to make yourself useful. You've got to make yourself useful. So yeah, so that's when I decided to leave the NHS. And then I went and I got a job as an apprentice greenkeeper on a golf course.
00:13:42
Speaker
How's that going? Yeah, so it's going great, mate, if I'm honest. It was a 20,000 pounds a year pay cut. So I went from being on about 40. So you're in euros, aren't you? So I probably would have been about 45,000 euros maybe a year.
00:13:57
Speaker
right the way down to what we have in England, which is a national minimum wage, which is the minimum amount companies can pay you. So I'm on about 18, 19 grand now. Not even that, I don't think. But you're probably less stressed and more happier. So happier, mate. But it allowed me then to start up my business, like I said to you before, with some other lads where we're doing a gardening business where if it goes, you know, hopefully be doing that full time next year in the spring. So it's allowed me to leave the NHS from one institution to then just be independent and realize I don't ever want to work for anybody ever again. Really.
00:14:27
Speaker
And that has been my dream since a very young age to be independent and I think freedom, what people give away for a big paycheck is freedom. But if anything, if we've learned anything through the COVID fiasco is people
00:14:46
Speaker
don't mind living in chains as long as their chains are nice and maybe made of gold instead of iron. If their sale is nice and plushy with the big screen TV and maybe they're allowed to go here and there with their Mercedes, they will give up a lot of freedom to have that. That's because

Societal Observations and Challenges

00:15:07
Speaker
people think they're free anyway. They're not aware they're giving up their freedom with their willing slaves, aren't they? Someone says to you, right, here's your money.
00:15:15
Speaker
all the shit you can buy with your money and you're like brilliant but I want that yeah but you can't afford that I know yeah well look what if I give it to you and then you you pay me a little bit each month how about that and you're like what I can have it now yeah and then I mean what idiot wouldn't do that do you know what I mean but then what they know that we get completely taken over with dopamine you're going in there to buy something anyway so they know they've got your kind of hook line and sinker and all that and it's
00:15:42
Speaker
And it's ego, you know, all about this makes ego ego wants you to go out and buy the 50 grand BMW. I mean, I'd like a 50 grand BMW, but my ego, my, my reality receptors in my brain go fucking buy a car that's 50 grand, bro. You know, I'm not begrudging those people that can afford it. And that's, that's the thing. But then they're not aware that that money that they're spending on the car yet. It's a status symbol, mate. You could save that 50 grand. Do something better with it. No one cares whether you're driving a Beamer, only you.
00:16:10
Speaker
Yeah, that's that's one thing I think and I'm not talking about cars now or anything just
00:16:16
Speaker
people think that other people think about them. And at the end of the day, people are pretty obsessed with themselves and they're like very, maybe small circle of people, but mostly about themselves. Most of us are like that. So if I see someone, like there's an older dude here that he drives some weird, awesome car. I don't know, is it a Ferrari? Is it a Mustang? It's awesome. But I looked at it the first time and now when he drives by,
00:16:45
Speaker
It's like any other car and I can see him like looking, looking around, are people looking at me and stuff like, bro, no one gives a shit. Don't give a shit. Enjoy your car. But don't, don't care what other people think of you because they don't, they're not, they're not interested in you. Everybody we're, unfortunately, maybe it's a part of this society we're in, but people are just obsessed with themselves, man.
00:17:10
Speaker
But that's how we've been kind of, not programmed, but that's how things have been, right. So you've got the fact that we have to have a good Samaritan act, right? Because people have helped people in the past and then been sued, right, for trying to help people. Not in all countries, but you know, that's the mentality of certain people. Now, in my opinion, if you go to help someone, and if, granted, if you chop their leg off when they've just fallen over, then fair enough. But if you've generally gone over there as a good Samaritan to try and help someone,
00:17:39
Speaker
What kind of person then sues that person for going out their way and putting themselves at risk of trying to help you? So that just shows that the mentality that some of us have got, not everybody, but we only ever hear of the douchebag stories and we don't hear of the, you know, but then, you know, you've got millionaires. I think I've heard something the other day that say, when you can get to the point where you truly do not care what anyone's like, that is true freedom. That's true bliss. When you genuinely don't care because we all
00:18:04
Speaker
a lot of us project it, I don't care what anyone says, I don't care. And then someone goes, mate, you see that tweet? Someone said about what tweet? Who's that? And then you go and read it. And then you'll be like,
00:18:14
Speaker
I've been getting lots of people doing like memes of me wearing tinfoil hats and stuff and I don't say it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I used to say to everybody, don't engage with the trolls because they only exist when you engage with them, right? Because then you're creating a dialogue between you and that douchebag. And that douchebag, all he's got all day is last words and stuff to just, that's literally his job is to piss you off.
00:18:36
Speaker
You're just throwing fuel on the fire. And I've said to a few of my friends recently, just don't engage. I know it's hard. I know it's hard to not have the last word. But if you don't say anything, they just, what can they say? But then you leave it there for everyone else to see. And then everyone's just like, who's this dickhead?
00:18:53
Speaker
I find myself as wasted energy. I've tried and tested myself and I've told friends who have got larger accounts and I've told friends who have woken up and I said, don't engage with the trolls. The more noise you make, the more trolls you'll attract and you'll be diverted and distracted from dealing with what you're trying to do, dealing with all these trolls that will just happily waste and sap your energy.
00:19:15
Speaker
and they will always want the last word so it's I know it's hard but I've always tried to say to use social media as the battleground it's designed to be so don't go out there like hammer cards you go look at all these studies you're all waggers yeah and then you get strikes and then banned it's like what good are you you're like the first bloke over the thing in Normandy it's never private right it's around straight away you know I mean it's like you've been no help
00:19:37
Speaker
I've always tried to say it's your battleground, it's like 5G warfare, you know, it's psychological, you know, that's how they get at you. So use the platforms and the tools that they use against you, against them, or at least to try and spread the word out. But it's difficult because everyone's at different stages of waking up. So you know yourself, there's that really passionate stage where you just want to shout to everybody and want to save everybody. And then you realize, I'll tell you with my book, so I was very careful
00:20:07
Speaker
to word things related to vaccines in a very sort of careful way. So I never said anything against vaccines. I just went out on the section about aluminum. I said, aluminum is found in these things, food products, cosmetics, et cetera, et cetera, and vaccines. And then I quoted a study
00:20:28
Speaker
where the researchers said they were questioning the use of aluminum in vaccines. And the researchers themselves were, given what we know about the neurotoxic effects of aluminum, how can we allow our children to be knowingly to be injected with this stuff? So I just left that there. And then I just said something like, I'm glad at least some researchers are questioning the use of aluminum as an adjuvant in vaccines.
00:20:56
Speaker
that was three and a half years ago where i was not in the public light in any way shape or form so i didn't want to ruffle any feathers i didn't want to
00:21:12
Speaker
alienate the people that I could help and I didn't want to you know get too many trolls because we know they're really good at brainwashing people to to do their job but like to to to kind of so people self-police but now three and a half years down the line especially after what we've been through with this pandemic scan scandemic
00:21:32
Speaker
I don't even care anymore, bro. I respect people's choices because they didn't know. But if you ask me, let's say it's some guest on my other podcast Children's Health, and they vaccinated their kids, and then they ask me, what's my opinion? I will no longer say, well, if you thought that's the right thing, I'm like, no, I think that's genuinely a very bad decision. I'm not saying it's your fault. You didn't know at the time.
00:22:01
Speaker
but here is a bunch of information and here's a bunch of fraud perpetrated by these companies that have the government agencies in their back pockets. I don't care anymore. I'm just saying the truth, what I believe is the truth and that's it. Mate, when I was speaking out on the interviews on the news platforms, I rarely get any
00:22:23
Speaker
any trolls at all because they can't say that you know you're lying essentially when you were there you've seen it you know all that kind of well they can say but you know i know i'm not lying about anything that's one thing i try and say to people don't lie because the amount of time to talk about it there's people out there that will stitch stuff together and will highlight any mistakes you've made so don't lie and i've always tried to remain honest i am an honest person anyway hence why i did what i did anyway so i just couldn't handle in that environment anymore but it was it was the
00:22:55
Speaker
It was working with a bunch of people that are in an environment where they're supposed to care about people, but they so lacked care, if you know what I mean? It was kind of like, I work in the NHS, there's this and they'd be really nice to an old lady and this, that and the other, but then anything to do with that side of things, they just didn't care.
00:23:14
Speaker
so it was it was just you try and speak to them about it they didn't want to know and it was just they're just mentally blocking everything out and that's what got me really angry because i was like guys you're just you're clinicians you're supposed to critically think and none of you are critically thinking but you get an anger remix i'm telling you stuff you don't want to hear and i'm being that annoying person but but you're right about the whole you know not caring about what you say because i think it gets to the point where even when you try not to hurt people's feelings sometimes you do so i think
00:23:44
Speaker
There's a lot more people that are open to discussion about what's happened over the last three years now than there was back then. But I think it wasn't a decent environment to be in. And I remember just sitting, thinking to myself, I didn't know what to do. I had other friends who were doctors and stuff that you'd link up with and obviously having the same opinions and exchange stories and everything else. But the public have no idea about half the stuff that went on.
00:24:10
Speaker
because there were people that were dying in hospital that were being killed by the staff trying to save them, if that makes sense. And that's by their own admission as well, because they didn't know how to deal with it, because it was a pandemic, you know what I mean? And in the hospitals it was.
00:24:26
Speaker
So they didn't know about ventilating patients until Italy started pronating the patients and putting them on their front and all this kind of stuff. So everybody was learning all at the same time. So what was frustrating is where people said, well, they're all in on it. My friends and I weren't in on it. I can't see yet. We didn't know what was going on. We were just getting told, you need a test, you need to do this, you need to do that. And I was a specialist paramedic. So my job at the time was going to patient's houses and doing doctor's visits.
00:24:50
Speaker
on behalf of the doctor. So I worked for all of the doctor's surgeries in my local area, and I would go and do all the home visits in each of those surgeries. So you do quite a few home visits a day. But especially during COVID, they weren't going out and seeing patients, they weren't. So I was the team of us were doing the visits when they weren't sick. Yeah. So there were times when I was the only clinician on the whole service that was that was round here, because the rest of them were sick.
00:25:17
Speaker
So, and we were having to test three times. Well, yeah, well, no, no, because that wasn't there, was it? That had gone away. Yeah, exactly. And we were testing and, you know, so I wasn't, but there were times that I would go into patients' houses and take off my mask because they couldn't hear me and stuff like that. And then sometimes finally come and say, why not wear any mask?
00:25:38
Speaker
And it's like, your nan's deaf, so it's like, you can't hear me, so I'll take, you know what I mean? And it was just, it was ridiculous. I was just like, this is ridiculous. And I was starting to get angry with patients, if you know what I mean? Like angry with patients because of their,
00:25:52
Speaker
And then you're going out and seeing the same patients because the doctor's not been out to see the patient when you ask the doctor to go see the patient to review something. And they're getting worse and worse and worse over a few weeks. And then they have to go into hospital. And then you don't want to send them into hospital because you know they're already frail now because they've not had this thing treated. Because you know they're probably going to die and not come out.
00:26:09
Speaker
So then we couldn't refer into hospital anymore. They just shut the referral process down. So if you call an ambulance, it could be anywhere between sort of an hour and nine hours, you know what I mean? And you were like, what? So it was like trying to stop a dam breaking with a sieve, if you know what I mean? It weren't going to happen.
00:26:30
Speaker
And it was just, so I get a bit, I get a bit protective of certain people or get a bit frustrated people. I don't know whether COVID is real or not. All right. And I know other people don't either. They read stuff and they formulate opinions, but we really don't know. But something was making people sick, whether it was 5G radiation, whether it was, you know, whatever it was, there was a bunch of people that were sick with horrendous chest X-rays that were riddled with pneumonia that no one had ever seen before.
00:26:58
Speaker
and symptoms that no one had ever seen before. So whether people think COVID was real or not, there were people presenting with symptoms that weren't, they weren't able to manage in the previous ways of managing and having more severe symptoms as well that weren't responding to the normal treatments. Most ICU places, intensive care units in English hospitals only have about four or five.
00:27:21
Speaker
ITU beds because there really isn't, there's only a handful of people that need to go to ITU. Do you know what I mean? So it's car crashes, sudden strokes, you know, all this kind of stuff. But so when people, they used to say things like, you know, the ICU is full. So, well, yeah, because they've only got 12 beds.
00:27:34
Speaker
Yeah, but but people didn't know that. Because, you know, most of the time, there's not that many people on ventilators and needing ICU treatment. So there's not a demand for for that many beds as there is in wards. So there's a whole load of stuff that was being mixed around that people who didn't work in medicine could cherry pick the bits that sounded worse. And then at one point, it was the public against the NHS. And it still is.
00:27:56
Speaker
like that you know and it was it was hard and I get the publics I get the public I understand all I try and do is defend the people that were actually on the ground doing their best you know for relatives and you know expect two of my friends both their wives were pregnant at the same time while it was going on they were going in and treating patients who were COVID positive
00:28:18
Speaker
Picking out the tubes, which can create the aerosol-generated procedure that can spread COVID even more. They didn't have PPE. One of them was under a sheet doing it. You know what I mean? And they were doing it for the patients. So they didn't even think about the fact that they might get COVID, take that home to their pregnant wife, and then give it to their family.
00:28:40
Speaker
So I think sometimes... Oh, it was the guys doing it, not the... I thought you said that the pregnant... No, no, no. My friends were doing it and they were going... Yeah, that is... Wow. These are the unsung heroes. Yeah, exactly. That is dedication, bro. It is. And that is what most of the NHS frontline staff are like.
00:29:02
Speaker
And they will just, no matter how many people come through that A&E door, they will just keep treating them, keep treating them nonstop until their shift finishes. And that's, that's what it's like. Cause that's what they do. That's what we do. So it was, it was frustrating because I think deep down people knew what was going on was not right, but it wasn't that obvious because they were so busy just trying to float and swim in what was going on that they didn't have time.
00:29:26
Speaker
look into it as well as they could and you know I'm not sticking up for them here I'm just giving them a you know an inside perspective on not everybody was aware of what's going on I'm not saying people in the NHS weren't aware but we certainly weren't you know and people died who worked in the hospitals of Covid from treating people with Covid so it was you know there's got to be a lot to unpack

Global Health Trends and Privacy Concerns

00:29:50
Speaker
in COVID about all of this sort of stuff. But I think it kind of got to the point where it was really frustrating and it was, I was getting angry. And then I was, you know, and then I just took to Twitter, really, I think. And that was a bit of a godsend. And then America is quite ahead of the curve with certain things. You know, England's, we're bloody about two years behind. It's frustrating, to be honest.
00:30:13
Speaker
In what way do you mean? So I think America's a lot more, no, I'm not saying they're right about this, but their truth of community, whatever you want to call it, is a lot more, it's a lot larger than most places. I don't know whether that's because they've got obviously a large population, but
00:30:30
Speaker
and whether it's because their politics is on display so much. I probably know more about American politics and what's going on in America than I do in my own day. Which frustrates me again because I'm like, can people just start finding... I know we've had the bloody online safety bill just passed in the UK.
00:30:49
Speaker
yesterday or the day before, which basically gives the government powers to control what goes on the internet. So if anything is they deem to be criticizing the government anyway, then they can delete your account. And you can be arrested and jailed for up to five years. So nothing says that really does it.
00:31:08
Speaker
Yeah. Clown world, bro. Clown world. And it's all scare tactics. You know, we know they can't pull. It's like when I was in Singapore for a work trip. I remember one of the guys that was living there said don't because we were so like terrified because apparently if you spit your chewing gum out or you throw your cigarette butt, you could go to prison. And like I heard a story that these
00:31:35
Speaker
I think they were teenagers, they were backpacking and they, I think they cut a hole in a fence and spray painted graffiti inside like train station or tram station or something. And then they went to Malaysia on their backpacking trip and they caught them, they tracked them down, repatriated them and then they were served months in prison and they both got like a few lashes because there you get lashes
00:32:02
Speaker
on your raw buttocks. Like you get like the skin, you get lashes, bro. Old school. Yeah, old school, bro. And apparently the doctor, this is told to me by a person from Singapore there, the doctor checks your vital signs after every lashing to make sure you can continue getting them. And usually after one, the skin is broken. So the doctor has to
00:32:27
Speaker
halted so you can go and heal in your prison cell or jail cell. And then another day that's picked at random so you never know the date will happen. So straight up fucking psychological torture bro.
00:32:41
Speaker
You know, and then they have the death penalty as well on top of that. But anyway, sorry, that was a bit of a diversion. Jesus Christ, I forgot what we were even talking about. That crime's low over there, though, to be honest with you. Yeah, it's like Disneyland with the death penalty that you say. But yeah, so so but oh, yeah, sorry. My point was that the after, you know, you make a show of these things or especially if you have the propaganda machine, the TV media, you can use these care tactics and people, as we know, the
00:33:09
Speaker
the uk and the irish popular because i've lived in ireland 14 years they're very
00:33:16
Speaker
docile, I suppose, they're quite compliant. The Irish should be like, I should grant, I should get a couple of jabs, like, all right, like, I'll go and get a couple of jabs, go back to work, it's gonna be grand. Go for a few points. Sorry, didn't wanna offend any Irish people, but half of you are like that, come on. At least a third. Love you though, love you. But, so like, yeah, and I guess the Americans, they have a bit more, some of them at least,
00:33:42
Speaker
have a bit more of this no why why would we do that because they have the whole thing with the guns they know a lot of this stuff won't fly i think the the american public has like i think 400 million guns like it's not going to be that easy to just start taking their rights away
00:34:02
Speaker
So they're a little bit more up and at them when it comes to these things. But the Irish and the English, they've just been systematically, it's like the Japanese and the Chinese, no, like the Asian cultures, for centuries they've been systematically sort of indoctrinated into being servile, right? So a similar thing I believe is happening kind of in the Western world. Definitely in Portugal where I'm living now, the people are
00:34:27
Speaker
for the most part, very compliant. I think Portugal had the highest vaccination rate in the whole world, if not Europe. I think it was one of the two. Yeah, you and Israel. You and Israel were pretty much... The whole world, yeah. Yeah, you and Israel, I think, were pretty much 99%. And Ireland, maybe, I think. But you've got smaller populations, though. Unintentionally, you ended up being control groups.
00:34:52
Speaker
Interesting fact about Israel, and this has been known for decades now, but there's a thing called the Israeli paradox. And apparently they have the highest or one of the highest consumption of omega six polyunsaturated fats, but they also have one of the highest or a much higher incidence of cancer and heart disease. And those things were supposed to be protective against heart disease. So that's purely surely got to be an environmental thing then potentially.
00:35:23
Speaker
Or just a coincidence, probably. Aye, dude, come on. You and I both know there's no such thing as coincidences, mate. Don't talk rubbish. But you're right. You're right in what you're saying. I try to say this to my friends as well, because this is what we need is balance, because a lot of this stuff is all, they're going to come for your children, and they're coming for your dogs right now. They're going to come for your freedom of speech online. Then they're going to come around your house, and then you're going to be in a FEMA camp. And then you're going to say, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
00:35:53
Speaker
They're only saying this. This is no different than me going, next week, I'm going to punch you in the face, right? That doesn't necessarily mean it's going to happen. But the guy I say it to will be shitting his pants whole week. I'm going to smack him in the face. So that's what I try and say to them, just because they say, we're going to bring in a digital currency. We're going to do all this up. And they're making noises. They're fluffing papers. That's their job. You know what I mean? To make it look like they're busy doing stuff, but they're busy doing nothing because they know in reality to try and do that sort of stuff.
00:36:18
Speaker
no matter how many people they try and begin the countries who are from illegal immigrants or whatever.
00:36:24
Speaker
How many of them are they going to get to? Because this is one thing I want to tell people as well, from being in the army days, they will never use your own army against you. All right. They will never do that because your own army wouldn't do that. All right. And speak of them experienced as well. That's why we used to go piss everyone else off in their other country and not do it here because it was easier for us psychologically. We didn't even know that, but it's easier if it's a foreign place because it's not your house. You know what I mean? You're not going to run into somebody or it's not familiar.
00:36:52
Speaker
the thought of actually having a firefight in England. I don't even know where it would be, but going to Kosovo, Bosnia and Afghanistan and all that, it was just, that's where you got to go. That's what you destroyed. That was it. You didn't even think about it. So it's a similar sort of thing in regards to that as well.
00:37:09
Speaker
with this problem that we're having with this dissolving of borders at the moment that seems to be happening in various parts of the world. And I know there's a rumor going around that they have the UN army and they're going to put them in barracks in our country in England. They've put them in old army barracks, which I was just like, oh my God. It's like you realize there's an army barracks. You can train an army and an army barracks. You know what I mean? You've got everything you need in there to train people.
00:37:32
Speaker
not just accommodation, you've got indoor ranges, you've got outdoor ranges, you've got gyms, you've got racetracks, you've got space, you've got drills, you've got loads of stuff and accommodation blocks, if you know what I mean? So they don't do anything to help dispel the rumours that we're having these problems and the same thing's going on in the States and everything else.
00:37:53
Speaker
It's really difficult to manage people's fear and expectations when they've got on one side, they've got this immigration problem and the threat of that. And then you've got all this other stuff going on. So like I try and say to people, don't worry about it too much because there's nothing you can do about it at the moment. And just try and prepare as best you can for yourself mentally, physically, and educate yourself in skills that you haven't got. That's a good thing. But don't think, don't sit there and think.
00:38:19
Speaker
all of the stuff they're telling you, they're politicians, man. Their job is literally just to chat shit. That is literally their job, is a chief shit chatter. You know what I mean? That's it. And we've been good at it being British, right? Because we've been doing it for hundreds and hundreds of years. We've gone around everywhere else in the world and shoved our bloody pompous noses and go, no, no, no, you must do this for the crown.
00:38:42
Speaker
Oh, we will destroy you. You know what I mean? And then from then on, you know, we go, right, you must give us money. And this is why, you know, people say the crown is the center of everything and all and all. And you can't argue with it. I mean, we've had problems with you guys in the past because you guys used to have a badass Navy Portuguese. I'm not Portuguese. Oh.
00:39:00
Speaker
I'm Bulgarian. We never had any altercations or run-ins with y'all. But you're important. We're too far. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Right. Okay. Well, take it, mate. All right. Because, you know, I mean, that wasn't bad for me for being British, you know? Bulgaria. I've never had no trouble with you guys, actually. Your women are beautiful as well. Okay. Well,
00:39:24
Speaker
we can sell we can sell you some good ones that we can arrange that yeah yeah yeah but but yeah it's it's one of them it's you know this we are i think because we're an older civilization we're more because we look at the americans as like excitable children if you know what i mean it's like oh look at you guys you got so much space land and money you don't know what to do with it
00:39:45
Speaker
So, you know, they're just running and gunning and running the gunning. You know, we love the Americas, but we're all Americans. You know, I mean, I'm not, obviously, but I mean, that's that's the way the British because they're very sorry. It's so loud. Chill out, mate. Calm down.
00:39:59
Speaker
But they're only a few hundred years old, where we've been doing this for a lot longer, so we're a lot more like, you know, yes, yes, we understand where you are in your journey of adolescence, you know? So you don't think totalitarianism is going to ensue? No, I don't think it will. I think what we're seeing, so they've tried to install what we call EULEZ zones in Britain and 15-minute cities, probably heard about the 15-minute cities, but EULEZ is ultra-low emission zones.
00:40:29
Speaker
which is basically where they have cameras set up. And it's mainly predominantly around cities, but mainly the capital of London. They've got these cameras set up everywhere and they're trying to reduce emissions to save the planet. And if you go closer to the center of London, you go the more they'll charge you. And there's like a ring fence around the areas where you have to pay a charge to go into that area in a vehicle. And it depends on the emissions of your vehicle. So they snap a photograph of your number plate and then, you know, you get a fine.
00:40:57
Speaker
But there's these guys called the Blade Runners, and they've been going around chopping down all of the cameras with steel saws. Wow. Hundreds of them. Thousands, I think, to the point where only something like 3% of all the cameras that are in London are working. So they've been going around. Yeah, yeah. Well, people have been revolting, mate, so they're expanding foam in the things and chopping the thing. And no one's stopping them because no one wants it. In fact, people are just standing there foaming it and then giving them a high five or waving or going,
00:41:25
Speaker
Why haven't I heard about this on the BBC in my nightly broadcast? That's a weird oversight. Yeah, well, you know, well, Sadiq Khan, he's one of them anyway, he's the Mayor of London. So, you know, it's his idea to do this. And he's been met with, it's just been a car crash, an absolute car crash.
00:41:43
Speaker
But I think it's, and the same thing happened in Oxford when they tried to do the 15 minute cities where basically, I don't want to insult anyone's intelligence, if you know this, they want to keep you in a 15 minute radius. And the idea is to put everything within 15 minutes of where you are, to keep you free range humans. Free range, free range.
00:42:04
Speaker
So the idea was to keep them in a sort of 15 minute sitting. They put bollards across certain streets and shut certain streets down, but then ambulances couldn't get down. And then the next couple of days, the residents were just setting them all on fire or pulling them out of the ground or just completely destroying them.
00:42:21
Speaker
So they stopped it. And that's the British. Imagine if this was Eastern Europe or some crazy part of the USA. Exactly. But the difference is, I've always said this, it's fine for other people to have it happen to them until it lands in your back garden. And that's what Covid was like.
00:42:37
Speaker
Everyone just conformed, stayed at home, and they were fine. Whereas this 15-minute cities and digital banking and currencies and all the other stuff, you can't hide from that. You can't comply with that. Well, you can, but you can't at the end of the day. And I think people have started to see the physical installations of the cameras and the borders, and they've got, hang on a minute, and then they've reacted to it. So I think we are very much
00:43:00
Speaker
Unfortunately, the majority of people don't have foresight until they see it. And then they're like, hang on a minute, I don't want this. I don't want to lose all my cash. Even though we've been telling you for years that they're trying to come after your cash, it's only when you start physically seeing it happen, you know, that they start getting better late than never. Well, that's actually what the psychopaths doing these things are banking on is by the time people understand what's happening,
00:43:27
Speaker
It's too late very often. It's like a bank run. It's like when when the Titanic hits the iceberg, you know, you might see the iceberg and you're a mile away, but it might be way too late. You're still on course. Yeah. And that's what they're banking on. That's why that's why it's always the distractions, you know, with never mind entertainment and music and the drugs and all the other stuff. But like big spectacles, like
00:43:51
Speaker
Ukraine and Putin is gonna nuke us all and he's Satan incarnate and whatnot all of these spectacles it's like look over here while we lay down the infrastructure for your slavery right there plebs yeah and I think the problem we've got is the majority of people are still looking at this through the lenses of them
00:44:11
Speaker
So they're like, oh, they wouldn't do that. No, you wouldn't do that. But these motherfuckers, you know, I mean, psychopaths do not just exist in Dexter or psycho, the movie psychopaths live in all echelons of society, including
00:44:27
Speaker
politicians and people with rich, you know, there will be psychopaths who've got lots of money, not all psychopaths are poor. So, you know, and to want to be in that kind of position as a politician, and they all say, Oh, yeah, it's gonna make a difference. It's not it's because you love the power and you've got a massive ego. That's all. Because none of you actually make a difference in politics. So it tracks certain types of people anyway, which I always say you should give the power to somebody says I don't want it. So there you go. You have it, mate.
00:44:56
Speaker
you hit it right on the head. Basically you should, how do you know if someone should be a politician? You ask them, do you want to be a politician? And if they say yes, that person should not be a politician because they're probably scumbag. I mean, there's got to be something there, but I mean, I do think there may have been a time, I mean, I don't understand why you need to go to like the Tavistock Institute and stuff and almost be groomed to be a politician, especially in Britain.
00:45:24
Speaker
It's like they churn them out. Same with America and all these candidates come out of nowhere and you're like, who the fuck is this guy? It's like they've just made him in a factory like the Eminem Slim Shady video and they're just pushing them out and just changing the exterior, if you know what I mean.
00:45:38
Speaker
Yeah, which, well, like it's, it's not even a conspiracy theory to think that nowadays. If you look at, for example, look at Bill Clinton, dude, like if you look at the, the story of a lot of these people, he was filed on the side of a freaking railway or something.
00:45:57
Speaker
Like, bro, like these people would just, uh, if you look at Obama's past, who were his parents, you know, that kind of way. So I wouldn't, I would not be surprised if, if they are indeed, there's some type of operation to, to, to create the types of.
00:46:16
Speaker
you know, easily controllable puppets that you can install in strategic places. And you don't need all of them. It's like anyone that says, oh, they have to all be in on it. And I think someone was saying they were analyzing a country the size of Australia to do what they did that coordinated all the locking down and all the new laws that were kind of enacted and all that stuff. You need a thousand
00:46:41
Speaker
people strategically placed in the right institutions and in government. And that is more than enough to do what they did in the last three and a half years. Mate, we had, you're right. And we in England, I don't know if your listeners or viewers will know that we had a unit, we had a unit called SAGE. I can't, I can't remember what it means off the top of my strategic something, something, but it's a
00:47:05
Speaker
a posh name for a bunch of boffins that are supposed to sort stuff out. And inside that unit, they've got a unit called the Nudge Unit, right? And it's in a book by Laura Duckworth, I think, called The State of Fear. And she talks about it. And basically, the Nudge Unit is a bunch of psychiatrists or the guys that, you know, psychologists, psychiatrists, psychologists.
00:47:25
Speaker
And their job is to nudge public opinion in a way that they want it to go. And that means press media and nudging your opinion to get the outcome that they want. So they've got training in this and they know what we're like. They've gathered data. I mean, even the guys that make
00:47:47
Speaker
the software on your phone. Psychologists were like, you need to make the notifications red because it plays something with your mind that you have to press it. Because if it was blue, you wouldn't care, right? Yeah. You know, not everybody gets on that, but some people are saying, you know, and even down to the software, the apps and the buttons and the sounds and the colours, it's all down, it's all designed to get into your red.
00:48:07
Speaker
And you've got to think to yourself, why do they want to know what the fuck we're doing all the time so much? I don't get it. And it purely must be a means of being able to control us. So you've got to look at TikTok, right? I mean, the fact that America took TikTok to court for doing pretty much what the American platforms were doing, I just thought was hilarious. Because I remember they got on TikTok sitting there, and they're like, so can they connect to your phone using the internet while using TikTok? And he's like, well, fuck it. Yeah, because that's how it works, douchebag.
00:48:35
Speaker
And you could just see it on the Chinese guy's face. He's like, we're just doing what you're doing. We've just done it better. You know what I mean? And that's basically what it is. And there was like, oh my God, TikTok is Chinese? What do you think? The moment you signed up to even my space, bruv, right? As far back as that and started slapping all your stuff all over the walls. They had you anyway, mate. And then as soon as you got your mobile phone, so I don't, you know, it's people get like, you know, I'm not going to use Facebook. So if you've got a phone.
00:49:01
Speaker
You're in it anyway. So don't accept me, bro, because my phone, I don't use Android. I don't use Apple. And I keep harping to people on about it. Go and get graph graphene. Always. It's free. It's open source. And if you're too lazy like me to actually figure out how to install it on your Android phone, just there's a company in Germany that you buy it from them. They send you the phone pre-installed.
00:49:30
Speaker
and you can actually you can pay it's more for like journalists and stuff like that right you can pay more money and they can physically take the camera and the microphone out of the phone if you're that if you're like an Edward Snowden type
00:49:46
Speaker
50 I think 50 bucks extra each for to take the you know, whatever else and they do like Laptops that are hardened. So it's Linux Yeah, it's very it's very difficult to kind of hack into and it's like it's okay It was 500 euro this phone, but most people they get on the plan that cost like 15
00:50:07
Speaker
Let's say 15, 20 Euro, 30 Euro a month and it's a two-year plan with Vodafone or whatever else. And over that two-year period, you're easily paying 800, maybe 1000 Euro. So you can just pay that money and get a phone. It looks like Android, the operating system.
00:50:27
Speaker
And you can even install if you want to install instagram or whatever other crap app you want to install you can still do that through a special sort of store but those apps are sandbox so it's in a sandbox yet when when you have like instagram or facebook it's kind of.
00:50:47
Speaker
putting its tentacles all around to see, you know, your contacts and this and that. And with this, it doesn't have it's isolated from the other apps. So it can steal info from other apps and whatnot. So I can mean their solutions are out there. It's just people are too damn lazy.
00:51:04
Speaker
But yeah, but I mean, Duke, you've only got to see it with the progression of technology, because first of all, it was a phone, right? Then it was, you can't be asked putting your passwords in because you keep forgetting, so we'll just use your face. And then it was like, I can't even be asked getting the phone out of my pocket, so I'll put it on my wrist, right?
00:51:22
Speaker
Just stick it up my ass and then beam it into my head. And soon it'll be, do you know what, I can't even be off lifting my wrist to look at a text message. So just put the chip in my brain. So then it will just come up here on my HUD display in my right eye. So they're breeding us to be lazy. I mean, you look at, I mean, I'm not massively old. I don't know how you are, mate, probably about 18.
00:51:42
Speaker
But back in the day, we weren't playing technology for it. But because there was a technology, we had no choice but to go out and find something to do. That's why when I was a kid, we were out doing this. Yeah, because there was fuck all to do. So you had to, because your parents were like, get out of the house because you're doing the editing.

Parenting and Technology

00:51:56
Speaker
And you'd go out and just cause mischief and do all sorts of stuff that you probably should have been supervised doing.
00:52:03
Speaker
But, you know, so we can't sell technologies to blame. It's like, well, no, because you don't have to give your kid the tablet to sit and play on for hours or whatever. But if you break it up and, you know, you don't want them to be a technophobe because technology is a key factor in our society when it's used right and correctly, especially with the kids, you know.
00:52:23
Speaker
But parenting is changed and life's changed, but we don't have to allow it, not so much allow it to happen, but you could say, okay, right, the kids aren't going to be out as much as what we were when we were kids, because to be honest, if we had tablets and PlayStation 5s, we wouldn't have gone out either.
00:52:38
Speaker
Um, so, so we can't say, Oh, it's this and that, but what you got to do as a parent is not just use it as another babysitter, you know, with that technology and be like, right. So when he's been on it for a couple of hours, it's like, right, put it down. We're going to go do something called go out or whatever and try and break it up. It's not hard, man. You know, but I think because what's happening is because the parents are in their phones. They can't stop the kids being in their phones because the parents are in their phones. So this goes full circle right back to when you need to work on yourself.
00:53:07
Speaker
and give yourself skills and, you know, and that includes things like I'm probably on my phone too much. Yeah. I should read books, which is what I'm trying to do now. I'm trying to put my phone down and sit and read books, which is odd with a six year old when you've got a tablet next year and then bloody bluey on the TV.
00:53:24
Speaker
Daddy, daddy would be great, but you know, it's like, so you don't get, and then when you do get time, you're too tired to read anything. So, you know, that's the, that's the cycle I'm in at the minute. So I'm trying to, trying to break it. Like I, I actually, now I try. Excuse me.
00:53:40
Speaker
I wake up like today I woke up. We did have over the last week, we definitely had a cough with my wife. We were run down a bit. So it's, it's, I'm willing to concede that it's possible that viruses may exist.
00:54:01
Speaker
But not in my case. I think that was just a seasonal detox with the change of the seasons. But yeah, bro, I'm waking up at five now and my morning routine is to read a book because after that is just when my when my daughter wakes up and then my wife goes to work or whatever. It's just you're not going to get the time or like I'll take her to the to the cafe. We can have like an orange juice or something and I'll take her books and I'll take my book.
00:54:30
Speaker
And I'm trying to read my book and then she's like, oh, let me read your book. What is this? What is this? And so I'm not getting any reading time right. But I think it's important, man. I think if we can teach our kids the love of reading at an early age, if you don't get that chance,
00:54:48
Speaker
man, it's just these other things are so much more attractive with their colors and their sounds and their interactivity. It's unless you do it at an early stage, that's why I love books because my granddad was an example. All my parents, everybody was reading books back in the day because, you know, back in the day we had black and white TV when I was kind of born and growing up. We didn't even get color TV until like Jesus, maybe the mid 90s in Bulgaria.
00:55:15
Speaker
And yeah, I remember, dude, I remember my, my granddad, I'd be his remote control. He's telling me, uh, there was like three channels at one point. He's like, change the channel. I'm like, I get up. It's like changing the changes to the next one. Yeah.
00:55:31
Speaker
go back to that one and turn it up tell my grandma shut up i'm trying to watch it and then later bro when he got the remote he'd be the same except he'd be fucking doing it himself he's just changing
00:55:46
Speaker
even a one thing guy. Yeah, but yeah, point is, we have to we have to be an example. I completely agree with you. And that's 100% right. And that for me was what was my motivation was, was for my boy was basically I want to be able to look him in the eye when I was when he's older.
00:56:03
Speaker
And if there is any looking back at this and he says, you know, what did you do? Then I can show him all the stuff and talk to him about it and look at him with pride and confidence in myself that I held my convictions and everything else and teach him to be like that as well and not be afraid to to ask questions. But we need to be the role models that we want our kids to have, because instead of sitting again, the kids have got shit role models because they have you got to take and you got all these other twats and these guys are dripping with girls and chains. And it's just such the such the wrong
00:56:33
Speaker
models to have, if you know what I mean, instead of moaning about it, be better and try and be the role models you can. And I've read something, I can't remember if they read it or someone told me, but they said, be mindful of the parents that your kids hang around with because your kids will listen to them more than they'll listen to you.
00:56:52
Speaker
because you'll listen to other people's, it's like that kind of paradox where you'll go around, you know, there'll be a dickhead around their own house, but then they'll go around their mates house and they're like, yeah, thank you very much. I'll see that effect to the parents. And they're always really polite, but to their own parents are like, fuck you, mum.
00:57:05
Speaker
So it's a similar sort of thing. It's, it's, you know, because they'll listen to the advice from other parents. So you need to be mindful of what they're hearing from other people's parents because then they come home and go, oh, so-and-so starts says this. And you'll be like, Oh, does he? So then you'll be like, get him around here. And then rather than trying to chat to your kid, chat to his mate.
00:57:25
Speaker
because then he'll go and be like, oh, so-and-so style says this. And then you and your kid, so your kid and him will end up talking about it without you having to speak to your kid, because your kids don't listen to you because your parents and you don't know nothing, do you?
00:57:38
Speaker
Yeah, exactly. Apparently. That's a very interesting way to use psychology. Now, I've been trying to use psychology with my kid. She just turned two and it's damn, bro. It's getting hard. You've just got to survive, mate. That's all you've got to do for the first two. When they're two years old, you've just got to survive, mate. That's it. Yeah. We've been in survival mode for a while now. I'm touched with them hoping to
00:58:06
Speaker
Start get out of it, but it was so easy earlier on like a year ago. We'd be outside walking Oh, maybe it's eight months ago with the outside walking and I could lure she wouldn't want to go home
00:58:18
Speaker
And the only way I could do her home, I'm like, come, let's go home and see mama. I said, mama, mama, mama. Then a couple of months ago, it would be like, let's go home and have some yogurt, yogurt, yogurt, then milk. And now even cheese is very difficult to bribe her. It's very hard to like, she has to be like after like an hour outside in the sun, she's very thirsty. Like, I want to go here. I want to go here. I'm like, let's go home, have some milk. Okay.
00:58:48
Speaker
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's it. But it's getting hard, brother. I don't know how. I'm going to have to become a kid psychologist by, you know, well, in the next few years with kids. It's about what the stuff I've looked at and read. I'm by no means an expert, but.
00:59:04
Speaker
It's about giving kids the choice. So whenever you try and get them to do something or want them to get to do something, you've got to kind of present it in a choice and then they

Freedom, Control, and Public Perception

00:59:12
Speaker
can decide. But your kind of ability will be to make the choice so obvious that the bad one is bad and the good one is good. But they still made the choice and then you get the nod of like, okay,
00:59:24
Speaker
And then that helps. Isn't it interesting that that's the exact same shit we are dealing with in the real world? So the choice is you keep your job and you get this jibber jab and then you're safe or you may catch the virus and you may die but at least you go to heaven.
00:59:41
Speaker
Or you lose your job and you're ostracized from society. Or in the case of like your politicians, you know, Hillary or Trump, you know, a psychopath, a murderer or an orange clown man. You know, it's it's kind of crazy, but that's exactly how they do it. You know, it's like Burger King or McDonald's, you know, Pepsi or Coke. It's it seems like everything is a duality, isn't it? Dude, we've had four prime ministers in our country that we've not voted for.
01:00:11
Speaker
Right. I mean, that's, if you'd have told me a few years ago that would happen in Britain, I'd be like, how does that happen? Well. But isn't it also ridiculous that you have the sort of the royalty that are unelected and then you have the theater of elected officials and representatives and they're like, oh, you know, it's, it's too much effort to get the plebs to, to choose the ones we pick. Let's just install one because it's just,
01:00:39
Speaker
They're gonna pick the one we want anyway, you know what I mean? That's how condescending and disrespectful is that they don't even want to give you the illusion of choice anymore. Well, they don't need to. I've said this numerous times to people, if you're stealing from the cookie jar, right, and the person who's looked like cookie jar is looking at you while you're stealing, if they're not telling you to stop stealing from the cookie jar, you're just gonna keep doing it, aren't you? And they say, can you stop making my cookies, please? Because you'll just be saying like this, what are you gonna fucking do about it?
01:01:09
Speaker
Yeah, I know they're good cookies because I made them give them to me. No, no, no, no, no. You know, we're just going to look at them and go, oh, well, they must be doing it for the greater good. And we go, yeah, great. Good, mate. And you just get all the crumbs of the cookies all over the floor. And we've they've done a really good job in us thinking like, you know, all the government. Yep. They've totally got my best interests in art. You know, they really, really care about me. It's just
01:01:32
Speaker
Yeah. Wow. And it's kind of sad to hear somebody that is sort of proud that they pay their taxes and they're contributing to society. What are you contributing to? You're contributing to your own enslavement. And this is the thing. It's a difficult one because the government have done a very good job in tricking us that we need a government to run the country. Right. And I always use this as an example because who's going to build the roads? The people that build the roads now, the same people, because it's not the fucking politicians that build the roads, is it?
01:02:01
Speaker
Private companies. Private companies, because that's all it is. All the politicians do is make you think that they're in control of this sort of stuff when they're not. And if anything, they probably hinder it working properly because they're taking all the money and siphoning it off and doing this and doing that and doing the other. But I think a lot of it, they're keeping everybody so busy, like you say, being willing slaves, going to work, paying for stuff they can't afford. When you say to them, you need to do some research and reading. They're just like, I can barely read TikTok. I can barely read a chapter in my book. Where do you even start in all of this, mate? Yeah.
01:02:30
Speaker
Yeah, it's a big not everybody's meant to wake up and we have to sort of respect the journey people are on is imagine if of all the however billion or million people are on the planet. I don't even believe the true statistics about that. There's 8 billion humans on the planet. I don't even believe that bro. They lie about everything. They're going to tell you the truth about that. Come on. Yeah. More or less.
01:02:58
Speaker
I reckon, oh Jesus, I reckon there's a lot less dude. Yeah. So I was looking at some stuff about India recently. Because they've overtaken China now, isn't there? It's their largest population apparently. But what was interesting is the birth rate. There was something like
01:03:14
Speaker
two per woman, which I don't even think is enough to keep the population level. So if you look at fertility rates, I think it's something like 50% of couples can't achieve a natural pregnancy on their own. Yeah, so to be honest,
01:03:42
Speaker
I don't, the population thing in the truth community, I think we're a little bit behind, we didn't get the memo in many ways that the population agenda has pretty much run its course, now it's in the final stage, and it's not
01:04:02
Speaker
At least I don't think anymore that it's going to be like one massive depopulation event. It can't. But it's been at work for like 130 years or more. And this is the culmination of it. And they're just going to let people die off and there won't be anybody. Look at Japan. They're expecting in the next, I forgot how many decades, maybe two, maybe three decades or by
01:04:26
Speaker
By the end of the century, they're going to lose 20 million people and all of Europe and the USA with these fertility rates right now, this current generation and potentially these jobs and whatnot, people were going to disappear off the face of the earth for all intents and purposes. It's going back the other direction just as fast as it rose.
01:04:49
Speaker
Well, it's funny because my mate who's a doctor who's been speaking out against this whole thing, he wasn't able to get work anywhere near where he lived because of his views. And then he's ended up getting loads of work this last week because all the doctors are off sick.
01:05:03
Speaker
COVID. Interesting. Well, it is that time of year anyway. I think it's also in March, the reason that the pandemic started then or culminated then in the whole lockdown is they know the cycle. These people have been studying psychology and the human
01:05:23
Speaker
condition for potentially thousands of years if not hundreds of years and now they have technology so they understand the cycles and they use astrology and all these other things so they know when everybody's getting sick in or a lot of people getting sick in the springtime
01:05:38
Speaker
They can say, oh, it's this new variant or something new that we discovered. And like they just obfuscate everything using media and propaganda and the institutions and scientific papers that are published. So they can manipulate these things and people will just swallow it hook, line and sinker because the still the average person believes when they turn on the news, it's for the it's there for the benefit of everybody. So people know what's going on and whatnot.
01:06:07
Speaker
Well, yeah, because you can't, if you say it's like Mockingbird Media, isn't it? If you say a lie enough, then, you know, as Hitler said, people will believe it. So if people see it on TV enough. I mean, look, a lot of people are so asleep of what's going on, aren't they? Not even a tiny bit. They'll go, oh, yeah, maybe they shouldn't have done that. Never mind. And they go back to, you know, making daisy chains and stuff like that. So it's
01:06:31
Speaker
You know, it's it's I do think we get into critical mass. I do think we're coming to the point now where there's enough people who awake question in things that they'll take the the rest of the undecided with them, because that's kind of how it works. And the vast majority moves as kind of one. So they'll take the people with them that are on set. I don't think they'll be able to bring the covid restrictions back. And I don't think personally, half as many people are going to take the booster. You don't.
01:07:00
Speaker
not in the UK anyway, the states as well, you know, I think that it's like, it's like, you know, for me, for me once, you know, kind of thing for me to share with me. So I think if people they will get a certain amount and they will highlight those people that you know. But I do think there's a lot more people quietly inside going, no, I ain't having any more, because I think they relied on a lot of people's willingness to help and the greater good.

Vaccine Mandates and Personal Choice

01:07:24
Speaker
And obviously if you don't take the vaccine yourself, it's twat and you'll kill your Nana. That's going to motivate a lot of people. And those that don't have Nana's, it's like, we can't go on holiday then. And those that don't go on holiday goes, well, you can't go to the pub then. It's like Jesus Christ. So they slowly squashed that net. You know what I mean? And then it was like, well, then, you know, 18 year olds can't go do this and you can't go to night clubs, can't go to the cinema. So that wasn't because of a virus. That was psychologically trying to weed out everybody so they could vaccinate everybody.
01:07:51
Speaker
who had an excuse and that is why they came down so hard on the NHS because I think soon as it came out that there was at least 100,000 people in the NHS not wanting the jab, everybody in the country went, why not? You know what I mean? And no one asked this apart from our slot that we're trying to speak out and that wasn't very easy.
01:08:10
Speaker
But for most of us, it was about trying to push the choice, the concept of consent and having the choice, because I don't have a bit of a Hippocratic idea because I'm a paramedic, but you know, it was, you know, you don't do any harm and you cannot give a patient a medication if they don't consent to it, even if it's going to kill them if you don't. All right. If they've got capacity to refuse it and I've had to do it.
01:08:31
Speaker
they don't want it. That's their God-given right. That's their body. And forcing people, despite you saying, coercing, forcing, we weren't doing that, putting people in the position where they happen to choose over their bodily autonomy or future income, that's not giving people a choice. And that's eliminating their choice. And when you start eliminating people's choice in medicine,
01:08:51
Speaker
And then people aren't able to control what they put in their own body. We've lost all kind of control then. They don't need to control us with psychological stuff and they can just bully their vaccines into your body and then you just a walk in mess. So that for me was the hill I wanted to darn because if we lose that
01:09:10
Speaker
consent aspect of being able to control what we put in our body, we're fucked, literally fucked, you know? And there's no constitution, because we don't have one here, it's split all over, so many different things, no one even knows what it is. You know, we've got nothing to fall back on apart from pretty much the Human Rights Act, which says you shouldn't be penalized for, you know, refusing any type of medical procedure or vaccine.
01:09:29
Speaker
And we just didn't adhere to that. So we're trying to prove, we're trying to say on one hand, we're being ethical. We've got your best interests at heart. But then on the other hand, we're trying to say, if you don't take this poison, then you're a twat and you're going to lose your job. So I was like, well, how's this ethical, you know? So yeah, that's kind of one of the reasons that kind of did it for me, mate.
01:09:49
Speaker
Man, you know, big respect because I know a lot of people probably are of a similar conviction as yourself in the NHS that didn't have the balls, didn't have the cojones to leave. And there are many are probably stuck in there because of a mortgage or whatever other financial reasons. And you know, my heart goes out to those people because it is really a horrible state of existence.
01:10:17
Speaker
to be in a job like that, that you know, you're almost coerced to do things. So, you know, I don't have animosity towards those people. It's more compassion and empathy because they're kind of put in a position that they, at least they feel like they have no choice. And when you take a person's choice away, that at that point is one that person is a slave, you know?
01:10:47
Speaker
And the vast majority of people don't like conflict, full stop, right? The vast majority of people are people pleasers, so they don't want to go against the grain. The vast majority of people don't like publicly speaking, so don't say anything. So there's only a select few of people that are able to publicly speak or speak well enough and eloquent enough so that they can make a point go across. Try not to do it emotionally, not be intimidated, have the courage to do it, and then accept the ramifications and the shit that you'll get for doing it.
01:11:15
Speaker
It wasn't an easy choice for me to do what I did. I spat and spoke to the wife about it. I needed to make sure financially we could do it. And I built up to it because I was like, no, this is not what I want to do. So you can do it if you want to do it. Sell some of the stuff that you've got. Get rid of the expensive stuff. It can take a year, two years to get to that position, but it doesn't matter if you know you're working towards it. Psychologically, you have no idea how good that feels because you think, oh, I've got an end in sight.
01:11:39
Speaker
And it's an enlightening experience, getting rid of all your expensive shit and stopping by and stuff that I'm only buying it because it's a Nike track

True Freedom and Personal Well-being

01:11:45
Speaker
super. It's 90 quid. It would literally be 25 quid if I bought it without the ticks on it. And it's probably made in the same factory by the same little bloody underage sweatshop kid.
01:11:54
Speaker
just just cut out some some like old t-shirts some freaking like signs and all those brands are close that have got balenciaga slapped on it really massive and all that they're for us to wear all right because we the millionaires they don't need to wear stuff like that they wear a tiny jumper that's 700 pounds
01:12:15
Speaker
which is like Mink from Seal or whatever, you know, they don't need to have the brands all over their stuff because they're minted. You know what I mean? So they laugh at all our slots, spending money on stuff with no new apps all over it. They don't care about that stuff. They don't care how they look. Exactly. Imagine if you have true power. It's like
01:12:36
Speaker
Are you successful if you're so busy not like now it's all this hustle culture busy busy busy no i got meetings i gotta do this and i gotta get interviewed and i mean but you know are you in control of your life is that true freedom no you should be like last week i was not feeling too good.
01:12:53
Speaker
I did too many interviews and my voice was cracked working with clients and whatnot. So I just can't, like for the next week ahead, I canceled all my interviews, all my things. And I just hung out with my, with my kid and read books on the couch. Kind of feeling half feeling sorry for myself, half enjoying the time that I'm just reading my books and, and you know, screw it. And that's freedom. I believe. And you can't put a price on that man. Can't put a salary on that.
01:13:21
Speaker
You can't. And it sounds cliche to say it when you're in it, but when you're in it, it's like, yeah, I don't regret nothing. And I'll do it again in a heartbeat as well. All the shit as well. Yeah.

Conclusion and Reflections

01:13:34
Speaker
Matt, thank you so much for coming on today, bro. This was a pleasure. Thank you, man. Thanks for having me.
01:13:39
Speaker
Can you just before you before we let you go tell the listeners how they can connect with you? Yeah, man. So I'm on Twitter, Medic Matt 090 or Kung Fu Medic. And I'm the podcast NHS 100K podcast. It's on Rumble and Spotify and iTunes and all that. Just search for NHS 100K and have a listen. But as I said to you earlier, I haven't done much in the last couple of months because I'm I'm I'm taking a bit of a hiatus. But this what did we say there was 40 episodes up there so far from previous stuff.
01:14:08
Speaker
forward to you. Yeah. So there's some, cause I started doing this, I think 2022, I think at the beginning. Yeah. So, so it's a lot of older stuff, but I'm going to start re-releasing them on, on Twitter. I think, you know, from the first and just go through them again. Cause it'd be interesting to hear those conversations now, 12, 12 months, two years down the line.
01:14:29
Speaker
I just looked at your June 30th post 2020. In six minutes time I will be handing back my equipment and ID and I'm no longer working with the NHS. I don't want to be part of that organization any longer. Can I tell you you look
01:14:45
Speaker
Healthier to me than you did in your in that card in the picture on that card. Yeah, even though it was two years ago and a bit But you actually you look you look healthier and happier Good. Thank you. Thank you. Yeah, but yeah, yeah, I think the anniversary was not so long ago. So yes
01:15:07
Speaker
Stay true. Yeah, man. This is the kind of role models we need out there. People that are willing to lose their job because of principles that are very important to uphold in the name of freedom, bodily autonomy. And these are the kind of role models we want to
01:15:27
Speaker
to have these are the kind of parents that kids need to have you know we have to and i like what you said earlier you know we have to meet we have and i i'm living by this sort of ethos or whatever
01:15:41
Speaker
I want to be the parent or the dad that I wish I, I had, you know, so it's, you know, you have to, you have to man up, step up and, and, um, good things will happen. Oh, a hundred percent, a hundred percent. I'm not, I'm not, you know, I'm, I'm, I'm finding my faith in regards to that sort of thing. But I do think as soon as you're able to accept the fact that what's going to happen is going to happen and you can't really change it, uh, worrying about it doesn't really help anything, but you can prepare for it. And I think that can stop. So, you know, help alleviate people's anxieties and stuff.
01:16:11
Speaker
Totally, bro. You take care. All right, man. Thank you, brother. Cheers, bro.