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Nov. 29, 2024 - The Delingpod - James Delingpole
01:32:33
Eamonn Blaney

James chats with Irish entrepreneur, and long-time delingpod sponsor, Eamonn Blaney. As the Covid data emerged, it became clear that the vast majority of those hospitalised or who had died had chronically low levels of vitamin D. This was the lightbulb moment that led to the launch of Nutrahealth365.www.nutrahealth365.com↓ ↓ ↓ Buy James a Coffee at:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/jamesdelingpole The official website of James Delingpole:https://jamesdelingpole.co.uk x

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Welcome to the DellingPod with me, James DellingPod.
And I know I always say I'm excited about this week's special guest.
And I don't even need to leave that special gap for the advert because...
Eamon, my guest today, is the advert.
You're a living advert, aren't you, Eamon?
I mean, you've been one of my most loyal sponsors and you are behind Nutra Health 365, among other popular supplements.
But, I mean, I'm not really having you on to that.
I'm kind of more interested...
You can tell me your story anyway, but...
Sure.
I'm interested in...
Your story about how, for one thing, you've escaped Ireland, the tyranny of...
It's one of the craziest places in the world right now.
And you're right now, you're not sitting on a beach because it's dark, but we wouldn't be able to see it anyway.
But you bastard, you're in Thailand...
And I... Can you see behind me?
Oh, I can't see behind you.
I certainly can't.
I didn't shave today because I wanted to sort of pile on the sympathy for myself.
It snowed mysteriously in the night, and I'm past the stage where I look at the winter wonderland outside my house and go, isn't that great?
Isn't that lovely?
I can go, I just think, what a pain.
Will I be able to get the car up the drive?
But none of this, it's not that that bothers me so much.
It's that I know that none of the weather we get I'm sure that the reason we've got snow today, although this will be out of date by the time this podcast goes out, I'm sure the reason we've got snow today is because the farmers have gone to London today to protest about the new tax regime, which means they're going to have all their properties effectively confiscated by the state and so it goes on.
It's so depressing.
Tell me, what was the weather like today in whatever beach resort?
It's not a resort, it's just a small fishing village in the southeast of Thailand.
Small village, probably maybe one and a half thousand people, but a working fishing village.
So I was just coming up the Up the beach road there earlier on this evening and seeing all the boats out in the bay.
A big line of green lights that you see as far as the eye can see as they're all out fishing.
Whatever methodology they're using to fish.
But it's just a nice civilised part of the world.
And very different and needless to say there's a general election has been called in Ireland.
I won't be there for that.
And I'm pretty glad I won't be there for that because it'll probably do no end of...
Benefits to my mental health by not having to listen to the absolute nonsense that I hear.
Basically, I heard one of the party leaders talking today and they said, well, you know, I read the two main parties' manifestos and it kind of looks like a list of all the things they didn't do while they've been in government for the last nine years.
Not unlike the UK. This is what they're all going to do, but when they're there, they didn't do it.
And I think Camilla Harris did exactly the same.
Oh, we're going to do this and we're going to do that.
Hold on.
You've been in government and you've done nothing.
I'll tell you what.
I've noticed this in some of the...
We had a conservative leadership...
I heard.
And all the candidates were suddenly really robust on the subject of all the green nonsense.
They weren't having it.
Just no more.
Enough already.
But weirdly, when they were in government, which wasn't so long ago, so we can still remember, they were pushing the green agenda like they were Greta Thunberg.
It was extraordinary.
Yes.
Well, I think what's going on at the moment is that the WEF are having its wings clipped, as are the WHO. And I think they've realized that they kind of shot their load too soon with the COVID scam.
And people are beginning to ask very serious questions about how they've been governed over the last three or four years.
And I think they're beginning to retreat somewhat to reconsider How do they push through with their new world order, their one world government agenda, now that Trump is in the driving seat?
Because he's having none of this climate nonsense.
Absolutely none of it.
I'm sorry.
I'm going to call you out there.
That's a very normie take.
Or it's a kind of...
It's between...
Somewhere between total normie and where I am.
It's all...
Right.
Yeah.
Don't forget, I've been fighting the climate wars for...
When did I bring out watermelons?
2011. And I'd been researching it before that.
And I remember going through this phase where I thought, hmm, it won't be long now until all these killer facts, these killer arguments that we skeptics have gone on our side...
They're going to come out and the public's going to go, what?
I can't believe it.
Global warming isn't real.
It's a scam.
The scientists are cooking the books and fiddling with the data.
The politicians are in on it and the IPCC is corrupt.
They literally alter the temperature records.
They don't even bother to hide it anymore.
I was thinking, they're never going to survive that.
But that's not how it works.
And don't forget, there's more, 50-60% more polar bears now than there was 10 years after they were supposed to be extinct.
The sea level, as far as the last time I checked, hadn't risen three foot anywhere around the UK. Every single catastrophic prediction they came up with.
And when I see that feckin' clown, Al Gore, he was a cop Cop Out 29 or whatever they call it.
Is he still with us?
He's still making millions out of it, James.
Still making millions out of it.
And I just listened to the bullshit he was coming out with and I was going, you know you're lying.
We know you know you're lying.
But you're continuing to lie because, as you say, the normies are buying it and the media, more importantly, are willing to print it.
The absolute bullshit and lies that comes out of Cop 20, whatever the feck it is.
These people are They've nowhere left to go because they can't admit to being wrong.
That's their game over.
So they have to keep doubling down on the lie.
Just like they did with lockdowns and poison jabs.
All of that.
They just keep doubling down because they are completely incapable of accepting that they're wrong.
And I have met a number, as I know you have, a number of people, very senior people in government over the years.
And the one thing you've...
I would say about probably most of them, if not all of them, they're some of the most intelligent people you'll ever come across.
They are invariably quite charismatic.
They're very convincing.
But the one thing they are never is wrong.
They just don't do wrong.
And that's really the problem.
And likewise then, if you want a scoop and you work in a major newspaper, like the Telegraph for example, if you want something to print on your front page about politics, Well, you better not have a go at the politicians.
Because you're not going to be brought to the press conferences.
You're just persona non grata.
So the media is controlling the messaging.
The politicians are being controlled by the EU and the WEF. And any clown can see, when you look around our society today, it's falling asunder.
So on any metric you want to give it health, education, infrastructure, anything, everything is worse now than it was 20 years ago.
So the question has to be asked.
If you were employed by me, which I think in theory you're meant to be as a politician, you've made an absolute feck and hames of it.
But you've got a couple of million quid in salary over the time.
And everybody goes out to vote again.
The same old carry-on.
Nothing changes.
Because the changes I see at the moment, there is a lady in the States, her name, Vanny, I think is her name.
She's the food guru, I think she's called.
Something like that.
But she started this sort of One woman campaigned against Kellogg's because of the fact that they're adulterating the foods in the United States with colourings, preservatives, etc., etc., which are proven carcinogenics.
And metal filings, I think somebody showed me the other day.
Whatever it takes.
Magnetic.
Put a magnet in your cornflakes or similar and you...
Yeah, if you sieve your cornflakes or sieve your Alpen or one of those muesli-type things, just sieve it and see what you're left with.
But the point is, she started this campaign...
And it's getting really serious traction.
And as Del Bigtree made a comment recently, he said, you know, we can say, oh, all is good.
JFK Jr's in the White House are going to be in the White House.
This will change everything.
And his attitude was, well, quite honestly, the biggest, strongest, most effective form of protest is to simply withdraw your money from the corporations.
Nothing will make them operate faster.
No amount of legislation will be as effective As everybody deciding to boycott particular companies.
And I think people are beginning to realize that they have this power.
That collectively we can actually make huge differences.
Great example being in Britain at the moment with the farmers.
If the British government, the British Labour government or the deep state permanent civil service think that this is going to be easier to deal with than the miners strike.
They're grossly mistaken.
I lived in farming communities most of my life.
And they're just not people you want to mess with.
You really don't want to.
They have assets.
They have machines.
They are mobile.
They are very hardworking.
They're afraid of nothing.
And they're the wrong people to mess with.
And it's not like they're all, you know, living in the lap of luxury.
Farming is an incredibly difficult, incredibly hard job to do.
Most of them are basically on at or below the average industrial wage.
And yet they have to work seven days a week.
365 days a year without exception.
No excuses.
There is a few guys who are milking it.
They've got colossal, dare I mention, the royal family.
They're very, very large estates.
I'm sorry to see Princess Anne won't be able to bypass this inheritance.
In fact, she doesn't qualify for some reason.
But at the end of the day, if the people realise, and I believe they're beginning to realise, we, the ballot box, the talking to your local MP, Petitioning the council.
They don't give a shit.
They do whatever the hell they want.
Look at all the number of 5G antenna that were erected during COVID. In the height of COVID, when everything was locked down, there were banging of 5G masks all over the country.
Yeah, but on whose land?
Probably on the land of these farmers that you're...
But even public land.
Like, all along, the trees were all cut down in lots of towns and cities throughout Britain.
And they erected these masks...
There's never been an environmental impact study done, ever, in terms of radiation and EMF emissions from these.
None.
There'll be no studies done at all.
I'm totally with you on a lot of this stuff, but look, let's just take a step back.
You say that you don't mess with the farmers, and I agree.
I mean, farmers are...
Without farming, we'd all die.
Because none of us, you know, any of us who's tried to grow their own food quickly realises that it's a...
It's not easy.
It's a thankless task.
So I get that.
But we've had protests for the last...
Year, two years in the Netherlands, which is one of the world's, certainly I think Europe's biggest agriculture.
The most productive land in the world, far enough.
That didn't shift the regime.
All you had was a new regime Which pretended to be Interested in the farmers But actually had been co-opted by the mainstream You know, anyone who knows anything about Dutch politics Will tell you that this is not real resistance And you say you don't want to mess with the farmers And I think, yeah, go farmers But then I think people would have said that about the miners You don't mess with the miners.
They're hardworking, they're strong, they're a tight community, and yet Look what Margaret Thatcher did.
She managed to destroy the miners, take out the miners' unions and bypass what had been one of the bedrocks of British, literally the bedrocks of British industry.
Yes, it was the bedrock of British industry, no question about it.
So I would suspect that Labour, who are obviously just the latest of a series of puppet governments, they're just the same as the Conservatives, they're just following orders and the orders are you confiscate private property by pretending that it's tax justice,
you wage war on the British people by Cutting down their food supply, making them more vulnerable.
You enable weather manipulation to keep going on, which means that the farmers can't plant their fields anymore.
I mean, somebody around me, this is just one example.
He's got 600 acres and he's been able to plant 60 of them.
Because of the weather.
So a tenth of his acres he's been able to plant.
Well, he's going to lose a fortune over the next year.
That's the long and the short of it.
And farmers are being bribed to give up their land for rewilding or whatever.
Solar farms.
Solar farms.
Wind farms.
What is it?
Diversity rewilding.
All this nonsense.
It's absolute.
Bollocks, is what it is.
And I don't see, I think that what happened over the years is where, in the case of the miners' strike, I think, and it's a long while back, but things were much more controlled from a central perspective, but nobody in the public realised that they didn't realise how controlled it was behind the scenes.
Now people do.
Now people look at the mainstream media and And they question a lot more.
People like us.
There's a lot more than there was five years ago.
That's for certain, sure.
That's certainly true.
So what was the thing that woke you up?
When I started waking up, I was more than well aware of the corruption in the deep state ever since my father was charged as a government minister and fired from the government.
Tell me about that, if it's not too personal.
Well, it was a period in Irish politics when things were getting completely out of hand in the six counties of Northern Ireland.
And things were basically, you know, there was a pogrom, basically, against Catholics, and they were being burnt out of their homes, literally, while the police, the Be Specials, stood by and watched.
And it was because of the violence against the nationalists by the indigenous Unionists, let's say, with the full support of the state, it got to the point where the British government decided to send in the army to protect the nationals.
That's why they were in there in the first place.
Are you talking about the Troubles, about the 1970s?
Yes, the Troubles, yes.
That's how it all kicked off.
I remember this.
Yeah.
So my father was a minister in the government at the time, and he, being from the north of Ireland, he and others were entrusted covertly.
by the government and the Prime Minister at the time, Jack Lynch, his Minister of Defense, Jim Gibbons and they were entrusted to covertly see could they source arms from Europe because they couldn't take the risk of the Irish state army going across the border because then it would become a very large international incident and at the time 74% of all our trade was with Britain If Britain closed the door to us,
we were completely destroyed.
So he was one of the three people who were picked by the Prime Minister to see could they find a way to help the nationalists in the six counties defend themselves by supplying them with arms.
So this is news to me.
So who's giving this order?
The British government is giving it?
The cabinet.
The majority of the Fianna Fáil cabinet at the time had discussed Discussed among themselves quietly, we need to do something.
Our fellow Irish citizens are being basically burnt out of their houses and we have to do something.
So there are only two choices.
Do you send the army across the border, the Irish army, or do you enable the people in the six counties and nationalists to defend themselves?
And it was decided that sending the army across the border was just too risky for too many reasons.
So if we could find a way to get them covertly supplied with arms so they could defend themselves, then that would be cool.
So what happened was that there was a British spy, at least one British spy in the Irish cabinet, who then informed the British ambassador in Dublin.
And then on a certain morning, the Prime Minister was asked to come and see the British ambassador.
The British ambassador said, listen, we just found out that you guys are trying to bring arms in.
Covertly.
And we're not having this.
So he went back into the Dáil, which is our Parliament, and basically said that this terrible thing had happened.
He knew nothing of it.
His Minister of Defence knew nothing of it.
And by definition, because of the fact that my father and Charles Hawley and Jim Gibbons were named as being the people behind this covert scheme, and all the members of the Cabinet denied any knowledge of it, Immediately, that made their actions utterly illegal.
So they tried to charge my father with illegal importation of arms or something like that.
They had no evidence.
They had no proof.
They had nothing.
And needless to say, he didn't even stand trial.
I mean, he didn't even get as far as trial because they had nothing on him.
Charlie Hoy, who was then minister, he went to trial and he was acquitted straight away as well.
But I don't know how we even get on to this subject.
No, it's interesting.
You're telling me about how you became aware.
Well, how I woke up.
How I woke up.
How you woke up.
Look, I knew at sort of, I'd say, seven or eight years of age when there was two big oafs of special branch men sitting at the bottom of the stairs in my house waiting for my father.
I was about seven at the time, waiting for my father to finish shaving to take him away to jail.
And I knew there was something absolutely wrong about this.
And my father didn't give a toss because as far as he's concerned, he's nothing to apologize for or to hide.
And I knew then, like I knew around that time that our house was under surveillance.
I knew that my mother, God Rester, used to be on the phone and always have code words for different ministers because we knew the phones were being tapped.
So I knew of seven years of age, the state is a dangerous piece of equipment in the wrong hands.
And I have never had any reason to change that since.
Then the final, I sort of Let that sleep in the back of my head for many a year until 9-11.
And as soon as I seen that second plane going into the terrors, I went, I know what's going on here.
I know exactly what's going on here.
And then when I saw the NIST report, the NIST report of the National Institute of, what was it?
I can't remember what it is.
The American, they delayed the investigation for about three years, four years.
They spent less money on it than they did investigating 9-11 than they did on Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky.
So they had less money looking at the 9-11.
And when they finished, they said, we found in relation to Building 7, there wasn't a mention of it at all.
And when it came to the possibility of explosives, they said, and I quote reasonably accurately, we found no evidence whatsoever of nanothermite or any other explosives.
Now, that's a completely true statement.
They didn't.
Because you have to look for it.
Before you find it.
They didn't even look for it.
They shipped all the steel immediately to China.
China, funny enough.
And it was all smelted down.
This was evidence from one of the biggest crimes in American soil ever.
All the evidence was destroyed within weeks.
It smelt to high heaven.
And then you look at JFK in 63, all the rest of it.
I mean, you know, I often say to people, James, they didn't stop making pole pots.
Adolf Hitler's.
Winston Churchill's.
Joseph Stalin's.
Humanity didn't stop making people like that.
I like the way you bracketed Winston Churchill with Pol Pot and Stalin.
Nice one.
Well, look at his record in Africa.
Oh, no, listen, you don't need...
You're preaching to the choir here.
I'm not being selective, but I'm just saying that we didn't...
Humanity didn't stop producing psychopathic, dangerous, evil people.
They're just among us now, and they wear suits And they wear little SDG badges from the United Nations.
Or they go and visit Davos.
They're equally evil.
And they're doing as much damage as any of those people ever did.
They're just doing it by economics.
I'm particularly interested, because I can talk about 9-11 with anyone.
But what's interesting about you is you've got this interesting family history.
Well, yeah.
It reminds me a bit of the situation in the Donbass before Putin went in.
So in the same way, Putin's argument for going into the Donbass was that the Russian-speaking community were being protected.
But...
Putin could get away with it because he's got quite a big army.
Did it never occur to the Irish cabinet when your dad was there?
Did it not occur that They were bound to be bugged by British intelligence.
I mean, we're talking about the country that ran the empire, that brought about the potato famine, that killed how many of your population?
Well, certainly killed two million and another two million left.
Half the population, basically.
But we never trusted them.
No disrespect.
Never trusted them.
Never trusted them.
And I'll go one further.
But my father got dressed up.
You see, my father wasn't...
He wasn't an educated man in the sense that he went to school for a long time.
He left school very young, like everybody who was poor back in the day, and himself and his 11 brothers and sisters.
And he was supporting them.
And I remember when I was also very young, probably eight or nine years of age, there was an airport in Knock, which is the very west coast of Ireland.
Are you familiar with it?
Yeah, I've heard of it.
Isn't it where the Pope flew in once or something?
That's right, that's right.
Well, here's the thing.
As a child, I mean, we used to have very, very, very robust conversations around the dinner table because we would see our father maybe on television that day talking nonsense in the Dáil or supporting somebody talking nonsense because he was in the government.
And he'd come home and he'd face a barrage of abuse from me and my six siblings, like big time.
And one time, and I mean all my brothers and sisters remember this clearly because my young man lost the rag, we had discovered among ourselves, and we're all 10 or 11 or 12 or something, we discovered that there was going to be an extension made to the runway at Nock Airport.
Now, you sort of go, well, how much of an extension?
Oh, it's about, say, two miles long.
What for?
It's only to bring pilgrims into Nock to pray.
And then it transpired that It was going to be the only runway on the western seaboard of Europe that was capable of landing a fully laden B-52 bomber on its way from the States to Europe.
Well, that's handy.
And not only was it handy, but all of this airport and its extension was paid for by donations to Father Horn's collection fundraisers in America.
It all came in little brain envelopes.
And we're meant to believe that.
So we said this to the DA. So listen, the Yanks...
Have funded a runway on the west coast of Ireland to facilitate their bombers.
And he just couldn't accept that this could be true.
He just couldn't accept it.
Because it was like too far beyond the pale.
That, you know, to be a conspiracy theorist.
Because he was very idealistic.
He was a very, very idealistic man.
But, you know, when push came to shove, he was fairly handy at what he had to do.
And did it.
But so, all of that sort of led me and my family.
Like I was out knocking on doors, canvassing when I was 10 years of age.
And probably in every election ever since.
And, you know, it's something that was so intrinsic to our family that we never could...
Like, for example, I know practically we, as a family, we have no newspaper cuttings.
We have no recordings.
We have no videos.
We have nothing of my father's 50 years in Irish politics.
And the reason was because we took it so much for granted that there was nothing special about being in the newspaper.
So, in one sense, it means that you can step so far back from it.
You just go...
I can see the nonsense that it is because I've seen it firsthand.
I think you've got the making there.
If you've got time on your beach in Thailand, you should write a comedy series about this.
Because A, people love series set in the past in Ireland before it all went wrong.
And they love a bit of Irish comedy.
They like the accents and they like the characters.
And I know how vicious children can be when criticizing their father because I get it all the time in my house.
There you go.
And I'm thinking, so you've got this naive, innocent, likable politician character.
Government minister.
Government minister.
Government minister who thinks he's doing the right thing and making the world a better place.
And then you've got these horrible little urchins like you.
Ungrave little brats.
Yeah, who can see it all right through it.
Yeah, why does Nock, why does Nock, this tiny shrine...
Yes, yeah.
What is the shrine at Nock, anyway?
What's supposed to happen?
Oh, there was a...
Our lady appeared there in 1850 or something, whatever, yeah, she was on holidays or whatever, and so she showed up, and a lot of people...
It's kind of like Lourdes and Medjugorje.
It's one of these places where it's a really important place For Catholics or for Christians.
And it is to this day.
But they don't need a two-mile runway to get in and out of there.
It is so, so sad what has happened to your country.
It's been destroyed.
When I was a journalist, I made a few trips to Ireland.
I'd say in the late 80s, early 90s, And I just caught the tail end of Ireland as it was.
And there was still a sense that, you know, this was the land of Cahullan.
Is that how you pronounce it?
Cahullan?
Cahullan?
What?
Cahullan.
Well, you know, I'm sure Yates talked about him.
And, you know, I'd read my Yates and I'd read my Joyce.
And I knew about Easter 1916 and stuff like this.
So there was that.
There was the kind of the fighting off the English yoke element to Ireland.
There's also this rich Celtic tradition, you know, or the Book of Kells and stuff.
This sort of parallel version of Christianity.
And to put it simply, we hadn't got an arse in our trousers, but we were very proud to be Irish.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
You had the crack, you had the...
We had the crack and welcomed wherever we went in the world.
Farmers, you had Guinness, you had pubs where you could smoke.
We had good drink and good food and good crack.
You could smoke.
What more do you want?
You could, of course.
And you had a population which was largely Irish, white Irish.
It was.
Because that's who you were.
Yeah.
And...
How did you let it happen?
Given that you knew For example, what colonial oppression looks like.
You know what it's like to be shat on by a bigger power.
So, how on earth did you not see the European Union coming?
How did you allow yourselves to be colonised and destroyed?
I mean, utterly destroyed, in the way that you have been.
My father, Godress, campaigned vigorously.
Against joining the European Economic Community, EEC, as it was known then back in 1973. And the reason why he was so against it was because he knew that we were being shafted.
We have, Ireland has a 200 mile limit off our coast.
Everybody else has 12, right?
We go right out into the deep Atlantic.
And as part of the deal for us joining the EEC, we gave up our fishing rights.
This would be the same as Germany, Giving up all its oil fields or coal fields to join the European Union.
They gave up damn all.
We gave up.
In the last 35 years or so, we have had approximately 200 billion euros worth of fish taken from our territorial waters.
And we've got bugger all back in return.
You've got some lovely roads.
Lovely, fast roads.
Yes, well, 75 billion is the net amount of fish.
That we've received from the European community.
But we've given them over 200 billion.
We're down 135 billion because of the EU. And then they say, oh well because of the EU, look how buoyant your economy is.
And you've got Google and Facebook and Pfizer and this.
And I'm going, yes we do.
They don't pay no tax.
They take up all the prime real estate.
They put a demand on housing because they collectively employ 200,000 foreign nationals.
You know, there's a checks and balances here, which is completely ignored.
The purpose of the EU, and I think Britain, I genuinely believe Britain made the right decision to get out, regardless of how he came to that decision.
But you will see in five years' time, you are going to be so much better off than Europe.
Europe is going to go down the fucking tubes.
Excuse the language.
It'll go down the tubes, because Germany, the price of energy, when you aid and abet the blowing up of your own gas pipeline...
What's that about, guys?
It just increases the price of energy.
America, with Trump involved, he's going to start pumping oil like the Saudis.
And they're going to have the cheapest energy.
The Middle East is the cheapest energy.
Europe is going to have the most expensive energy.
And Russia has got more gas than the whole bloody lot put together.
Europe is going to be left with no competitive industry at all.
And the purpose of it is that Europe is just like a bloc, just like South America, just like The Five Eyes, just like the United States.
They're all coalescing together, whether it's Russia and America, Russia, China, Iran, the whole lot of them.
It's all part of the One World Plan.
And there's a bunch of psychotic nutcases who are in charge.
They're charismatic.
They own the media.
They bought it.
And the majority of people simply believe it.
And that is one of the reasons, James, and I know it's a bit of a segue, But one of the primary reasons why in Neutral Health 365, when we set up, when we started the business...
That was a very neat segue there.
I come from a political background, James.
Don't worry about it.
But the reason, one of the very first things we did in Neutral Health 365, the very first direct debits we ever set up, were to people like yourself and other independent journalists.
Because I realised very early on that...
If everybody knew what you knew and what I knew, at least we would begin to have the conversations that need to be had before these psychopaths destroy our societies irreparably.
Because the demographic makeup of my country and your country is getting to the point now where it cannot be reversed.
There's nothing can be done.
And it's not unlike the situation in the West Bank in Palestine.
Whereby people talk about the two-state solution like it's going to fix things.
It's not.
It's a one-state solution.
Everybody's equal or nothing.
That's it.
And this idea that the West Bank has gone so far under the colonial boot of Israel that you can't just pick 200,000 people out of their houses, just like, unless they were Palestinians, of course.
But you can't do that to Israelis.
You can't throw 200,000 of them out and give the housing to the Arabs.
So that situation, and I think...
We're kind of like nearly in that situation now within our own countries, where our demographics are changing, our culture is changing, our society is changing, the values are changing, demands are changing, and we can't unravel this.
But we're not even allowed to talk about it because you're racist.
So, would I be right in thinking that basically the reason that the Irish allowed this to happen to themselves was money?
They were just...
It's worse than money.
It's worse than money.
What the Irish have allowed themselves to do is they've allowed themselves to be infiltrated by the WEF. I believe that Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael and Sinn Féin, funny enough, the Irish Nationalist Party, as they call themselves, who are so open to our policy, it's staggering.
And the bottom line is they're all in this together.
And it's about, you see, the thing about it is, money's not enough for some people.
Look at George Soros.
You think he's happy that what he's got are Bill Gates?
No.
They just keep making more money because they just want to have control.
It's all about controlling people.
Because the last thing is controlling people like they're cattle.
And that's the people who get...
I was...
Like when my father was an MEP, I was out in Strasbourg and Brussels and all the rest of it, and saw firsthand how seductive it is when you are...
One of the top dogs in a place like that.
You're treated unbelievably.
Cars here, cars there, best restaurants, tables, flights, no tax.
Loads of money, giving money all day, every day for doing nothing.
And it's like, well, I'm going to say nothing about this because this is working.
So there's a huge number of people that go in there.
And they're told all day, every day by sycophants, paid sycophants and lobbyists, how good they are.
And they end up believing it.
And if I asked the Prime Minister of Ireland, or the then, the most recent Prime Minister of Ireland, like, do you really think you're doing a good job?
He would put his hand on the Bible and swear that there's no more could be done than he's presently doing.
Except I might say to him, but you're an incompetent fool.
And you're really bad at what you're doing.
Oh, no, no, no.
Because all the people around him, like the Senior Civil Service, tell him how good a job he's doing.
And they're all equally incompetent.
Or they're working for the WEF. I mean, I know there's a push within Ireland.
To pass certain laws, which I cannot talk about at the moment, or certain things that are coming down the track.
I know that they're unconstitutional.
I practically lost my job over there.
Why can't you talk about them?
Because I lost my job over the head of that.
It's partly the reason why I was a senior civil servant and I'm no longer a senior civil servant.
Oh, and is there a gagging clause?
Well, there's a case pending.
Okay.
Okay.
Though I can't talk about it at all.
But I'll tell you this, James.
As soon as the case is over, I'd be delighted to tell you everything I know.
Okay.
So you've got inside information, inside understanding at least of what's been going on.
I've also been working with banking whistleblowers for years.
I try not to look at Ireland too often because I get so depressed about what's being done to you.
But occasionally you'll see stories of villages in the back of beyond which are having imposed on them.
Immigrants from heaven knows where, people with no cultural connection to Ireland or its language or its traditions or anything.
And the locals are just like...
The locals are being shafted.
WTF? It's a little town on the west coast of Clare, County Clare, which is as west of Ireland as you can possibly get.
Small fishing village, 400 people.
One of the places, if you wanted to send somebody...
To go and see what the real Ireland was like.
You'd send them there and they'd go and have their Guinness and their pints and their oysters and their crabs and whatever else.
And everything would be great.
They've just doubled the population of the village with 400 male migrants.
With nothing to do all day and nothing in common with the people in the area.
So that town will be irreparably damaged.
Did you see the John Waters and Michael Yon podcast?
I didn't.
Nope.
You almost don't want to watch it.
Michael Yon is a veteran war correspondent.
I had my doubts about him.
I mean, before, I thought he was too kind of...
At this stage, we have our doubts about everybody.
...to establishment.
Well, that's certainly true.
I trust Waters.
He's your man.
He's one of the first people we've ever sponsored, and we still sponsor John.
He's fantastic.
He really is absolutely cast iron or whatever the solid gold or copper bottle or something like that.
He's solid.
Michael Yon's analysis...
Was that you are now under occupation by the UN imported army, which is one day going to destroy you and massacre you.
That's the next plan.
And the positioning of these fighting age men is such that they've got a stranglehold over Dublin.
They can move in at any time.
They can cut off all the supply routes.
That's it.
Yeah, really?
Does that ring true at all to you?
No.
Look, I see what's going on.
You can count the numbers, you can count whatever, that's a percentage of the population, blah, blah, blah, and they're all potentially a forward sort of army of the UN, one world government thing.
I'm just going, listen lads, good luck with that, okay?
You're in Ireland now.
If you think for one minute that these guys are suddenly going to be handed arms, rise up and take the Irish, Well, I'd suggest they go over and talk to the English first, because it took them 800 years.
We will not.
We will not roll over.
We will not allow our country to be subjugated.
Well, you will, because you've backed it off to Thailand.
Oh, no, no, no.
I'm only here temporarily.
But make no mistake about it, if the revolution starts in the morning, I'll be in the first plane back to Ireland.
Right.
I'm waiting for people to wake up.
I'm waiting for them to realise.
I want really to see the results of this election, because...
The results of this election will determine, have the people learnt anything, or are they going to elect the same bunch of incompetent fools who've destroyed the place?
I can answer that.
That's the question.
I can answer that.
I'd be fairly confident, yes, they will elect exactly the same bunch of fools.
Because, whether it's I'm all right, Jack, or they're ignorant, or they believe RTE, you know, our BBC basically just handed €750 million from the government So that they can stay afloat and basically be the government's propaganda mouthpiece.
Yeah, I love your RTE. It reminds me, like the ABC in Australia, which is also common.
I suffered under the delusion for years that the BBC was what it told us to be, the impartial, and I used to go on it a lot.
So did I. But...
But I was never under any illusion when I went to Ireland and did interviews with RTE or when I went to Australia and did the ABC. And it was a very entertaining experience.
When you go in there and you totally hate and despise them, you know that you've got no...
Oh, I'm on the BBC now.
I'd better be on my best behaviour.
RTE, yeah.
I don't know who these people are.
So if they come...
There's no...
There's nobody to impress me, to make me feel small, so I'm just like, yeah, who are you and what is this?
So I enjoyed that.
But, Aaron, I'd completely forgotten that you were in the civil service.
I mean, that's kind of an interesting thing.
So, had you not taken steps, in fact, had you not had the blessing of losing your job, Can you tell me why you lost your job?
Is that...
It's not interesting enough.
Okay, fine.
Let's just say a difference of opinion and we'll leave it at that for the time being.
But, you know, I had a number of years.
I started working there when it was just after COVID kicked off.
It was actually in May 2020. I was blessed.
I got a job with the Irish Revenue Commissioners and wonderful job, wonderful people.
Very, very smart people.
I was really, really impressed that these civil servants were not just competent, they were incredibly competent.
Oh, really?
Yeah, incredibly professional.
So what does that department do?
It's the Revenue Commissioners, HRMC, same as.
So you were a tax man?
I was basically an auditor for the large corporate division, which looked after all the multinationals, anything over 200 million a year turnover.
Just to audit their books in terms of imports, exports.
It must have been galling knowing that they're not going to pay any tax on all this stuff.
Well, my job was to make sure that they did pay whatever was due to be paid.
Which is what?
Which is probably not an awful lot.
But there you go.
I don't write the rules.
My job was just simply to implement them.
But they were fantastic people.
Then I moved to the Department of Transport.
The minister at the time was Mr. Eamon Ryan, who was the Green Party leader.
And that didn't go so well.
They didn't seem to be very receptive to ideas about maybe if you are serious about CO2, maybe retrofitting engines into older cars instead of having to scrap them after 20 years.
They wouldn't even hear that.
Wouldn't even listen to it.
Because if it's anything to do with fossil fuels, we're not interested.
I was told that off the record by people, very senior people in that department.
And I'm just going, well then this isn't about the science then, is it?
Even if you believe the CO2 nonsense.
It's not about that, is it?
No, you are purposely making sure that you drive, give the pun, you drive everybody off the road, that there will be no personal mobility.
That's what this is all about.
Make no mistake about it.
They do not want people moving about.
They do not want them congregating.
They do not want them traveling wherever they please.
That's why they're talking about, like, look at the SDG goals from the United Nations in relation to Britain and its airports.
By 2035, there should be three left.
One in Glasgow, One in, I think, Manchester and Heathrow.
That's it.
There should be no other airports.
Now, they want us to stop travel.
They want to control us like animals.
And I'm just going, good luck with that, lads.
I'm not having it.
I'm not having it.
And as I'll segue back to Noose of Health 365, one of the reasons, the primary reason why I started the business was during COVID, I saw that 86% of people who were in ICU were vitamin D deficient.
And I'm going, but that's dirt cheap.
Why can't...
Why can't we just give everybody vitamin D? And the more I saw about the censorship, about the fact that anything that might be of any use, the people were just annihilated publicly and treated like bloody criminals and conspiracy theorists.
And I thought, hold on, this is ridiculous.
This is ridiculous.
So I decided, okay, the more I looked into it, and I said, okay, this is the thing.
Because I had ran for election myself, general election, in 2011. I did very well, but didn't do as well as I needed to get elected.
But on reflection after that, I realized that if I had been elected, how much influence could I possibly have?
Because I'd be one person in a chamber shouting against 166 others, most of who are aligned to big parties, most of who I wouldn't get any airtime.
I'd get nothing.
I'd get nowhere, right?
I wouldn't change jack shit, basically.
And then what I got to thinking was, well, as I said earlier on, if people knew what you and I knew, and they were healthy, Then we've some chance of a fight.
Then we've some chance of making a change.
And it's only when people are healthy, happy.
I mean, vitamin D is so good at reducing mental health issues.
55% reduction in suicidal ideation in a study of 1 million people.
And that was white people.
The black people in the study were 72% reduction in suicidal ideation.
Right?
So vitamin D can help your mental health.
It'll help your physical health.
It's just a miracle.
That's what I consider it.
And I just felt, right, I can start a company.
I'm going to support independent media to get the truth out.
And I'm going to develop a range of products that will help people to have a better quality of life.
Because when the time comes and the shit hits the fan and we need to stand up, we'll be in a position to do so.
Now, they might be weird ideas, weird reasons for starting a business.
Because I was, I had a job at the time, you know.
But that is how passionate I feel about it.
It's how can you make a difference?
What way can you make a difference?
And if everybody asks that question, everybody can play a little part.
And if it is just annoying your friends occasionally, or being known as that crackpot with the mad ideas, you know, they all thought I was mad as a bag of frogs, but they don't think I'm as mad now.
And they're asking me about protocols for treatment after having the vaccines.
What should I do?
Where should I go for information?
They want to know that now.
They didn't want to know three years ago.
That's for certain, sure.
I was a pariah.
An absolute pride.
I never wore a mask.
I never took part in any of that.
This was when you were in the civil service?
Yep.
I was working remotely.
See, it was brilliant.
It was brilliant.
I was working remotely.
Fantastic.
Were you the only one?
No, there was one or two others and I won't say where out of respect for them, but there was one or two others and they know who they are and it was always very encouraging because We all knew it was nonsense.
We all knew it was nonsense.
Well, you ought to have had inside knowledge that it was nonsense.
Well, let's say HRMC or the Revenue Commissioners, you have a very specific function to do, and that is simply to implement the rules of taxation as they exist.
Other departments, for example, the Department of Health, I could say a lot about the Department of Health and who's been appointed to run it and where they came from and what they've done in the past.
But I can suffice to say there was a huge data breach about two years ago.
They lost a huge amount of records.
Terribly coincidental altogether.
And a lot of them had to do with COVID policy.
Strange, eh?
So what happened to it?
Oh, it was some ransomware attack from somebody from somewhere far away.
And they wanted loads of money or else we're not going to give you back your data.
Never such a load of nonsense that I hear in my old goddamn life.
Absolute nonsense.
That was a setup.
I have no doubt about that at all.
And if anybody in the Department of Health wants to come after me for that, well, let's do it.
I'm being thick here.
Are you saying that a bit like NASA lost all the telemetry data for the moon landings?
Of course.
So they can't go back.
Exactly the same.
There's too much.
Because the truth.
Were it to be told, would be the end of every single politician's career overnight.
And maybe someday we might get to hear, but look it, we're still waiting on the JFK files, and that's 78 years later.
I haven't looked at the figures for Ireland, sort of post-COVID jab deaths.
Yeah, there's a substantial increase in excess mortality, all-cause excess mortality.
And it's ongoing.
And it's been completely ignored.
I mean, totally ignored by the mainstream press.
And by the Department of Health.
And the Department of Health have done nothing about it.
Won't even acknowledge it.
They're affusticating at every possibility.
There is a number of doctors who are still in front of the Irish Medical Council who are struck off and are being persecuted or pursued four years later and not any help from the Irish government or the Irish Department of Health.
They're hanging them out to dry because you didn't play ball with us at the time and you made us look bad and we will nail you to the cross.
That's the type of state we're living in in Ireland and I don't think it's much different than Britain to be honest.
No, I'm sure.
I mean, but that's because ultimately these decisions are not being made at a government level.
Correct.
Correct.
Or indeed at a civil service level.
There's a civil service just implementing this stuff.
Well, the type of people, most of the type of people who work in the civil service, I was promised that, you know, it was all about, as a senior civil service, you'd be required to make a positive input and challenge, robustly challenge accepted Beliefs.
You open your feckin' mouth, you were just told to shut up and get on with it.
And that was it.
That never happened to the Revenue Commission.
It happened to the Department of Transport.
But that's the type of the people who are there.
They don't want to know about rocking the boat.
They are all on gold-plated index-linked pensions, the Senior Civil Service.
They cannot be fired, by the way, as well.
Once you reach three rungs from the top, Assistant Secretary General, or even, I think it's even a principal officer, you can't be fired.
You need two-thirds majority of both the upper and lower houses of parliament before you can be dismissed from your job.
So they don't have to give it down.
At all.
So they can take and have meetings with whoever they wish in Europe or in Davos or anywhere else for that matter.
And they could be offered conferences discussing important things.
But what they're really discussing is this is what we want implemented in your country.
You need to get on with it.
That's the end of it.
And because of the European Union, 75 plus percent of all the laws Or legislation that passes in Ireland is of European origin.
And if you look into the legislation itself, you'll find that about 80% of the legislation was written verbatim by the lobbyists and handed to them and said, here's a good starting point.
Of course, civil servants were going to go, oh, that saves us a load of hassle.
Thanks very much.
The whole system is, and it's not Ireland and England, it's Ireland and England, the US, the entire Western society.
At least, you know, when I was living in the Middle East, You had benign dictators and sheikhs running the show.
You knew exactly where you stood.
End of story.
There was no need for subterfuge.
If one of the government ministers or somebody was getting particular favoritism, you could see the color of the Rolls Royce.
Do you know what I mean?
They didn't hide it.
You knew where you stood.
Whereas here, it's like, we're all the same.
We're all on the same boat together.
We're all working hard for the future.
No, you're not.
No, you're absolutely not.
And that's just the truth of it.
Can we just have a brief pause second, Eamon?
I'm worried.
What kind of...
It's saying you're 0% uploaded so far.
Oh, that's not good.
Well, I'm seeing a little number 98 down here in the bottom right-hand corner.
Oh, are you?
Yeah, 98 it says.
On the top left corner of your picture, it says 65%.
Oh, that's good.
Then maybe it's just my information on mine.
That's brilliant.
Well, it sounds like you've got better Wi-Fi than I've got.
Well, I am in Thailand.
Yeah, I know, I know, I know.
And it's warm.
What?
What makes people go into the civil service?
Because is it naivety about what being in the civil service entails?
Because the reason I ask is that one of my childhood best friends, I went to her 21st birthday party, is now head of Ofcom.
Which I consider one of the most censorious Stalinist institutions, absolutely against free speech, against the British people, against the interests of the British people.
You know, it's unaccountable, it's shadowy, it's authoritarian.
It's so many evils wrapped into one.
And I wonder whether this girl, when we were both at Oxford together, When we were sort of idealistic and maybe, did she really think that if you'd been able to fast forward into the future and Melanie had looked at herself and looked at what her job entailed, would she not be a bit shocked at what she'd become and what her...
No, I would say in all probability.
In all probability.
But the machine is bigger than the individual.
The machine will roll on regardless.
You either take the promotion, Melanie, or don't take the promotion, Melanie.
That's your call.
Resign or take the promotion.
And take the promotion and implement our strategies and our objectives.
End of story.
Or else, retire early.
And maybe you won't get your gold-plated pension for many, many years.
So, everybody has their own personal motivation.
A lot of people I worked with in the Revenue Commission Civil Service were genuinely committed to Ireland.
Genuinely committed to doing the very best they could for the country.
And they were genuine.
They weren't bullshitters.
This was real.
But then I went to the Department of Transport and I met a bunch of...
I saw people who hadn't...
I'll say no more about it, but I wasn't impressed.
Let's just put it like that.
I was not impressed.
And they weren't impressed with me, but that's understandable.
Yeah.
No, I can imagine that there's not much room in the civil service for people who want to go, how about doing it this way?
Here's an idea.
And that's what's actually in the job spec.
It's actually, you know, that you will provide a robust defense to instructions and you're going to be a big part of the decision making.
And I wanted to be a senior civil service because I felt I could actually do some serious good from the inside instead of shouting from the outside in.
I'd be on the inside actually pulling levers and making things happen.
Never worked out that way.
They didn't want any change.
They had their rules.
They had their objectives.
They didn't have any interest whatsoever.
I could prove, because I'd done two years of research into vehicle.
I'm very mad about cars.
So I'd done two years research into the CO2 emissions of the Irish car fleet and the projected reductions in CO2. This is assuming, by the way, and I was given the benefit of the day, assuming CO2 is a problem, which it is not.
It's a food of life, basically.
Yeah.
And we're at the lowest level in God knows how many million years.
And we survived all those other years.
So, you know, anyway, just assuming that I'm on their page, that CO2 is the biggest evil of all time.
Well, then I did my two research into the reduction CO2 from the vehicle fleet and found that I actually, my deliberations would save 33% to 35% more CO2 emissions Than the government's existing policy.
Not a single person in the Department of Transport wanted to know about it.
Not a single person.
I ran around, after one senior person, because I was a senior civil servant, I had the right to go to people of a senior level at any department or any division and ask the questions.
Oh yeah, and I did ask them.
And I took contemporaneous notes.
Did you?
Lots of them.
All, I'm sure, will come to light at some point in the future.
Oh, I hope so.
Oh, don't worry.
I was a very prolific writer before all this started.
How did they fob you off?
I can't go into that.
I was fobbed off in relation to the CO2 project and the retrofitting of engines.
I was fobbed off in that one because, look at it, Eamon, between you and me, anything that promotes or utilises fossil fuels will not be entertained under any circumstance.
And I'm saying, but I can prove Categorically, that this policy that you're pursuing is much more detrimental than what I'm proposing.
It won't make any difference, Eamon.
It uses fossil fuels.
That's when I knew this is completely bent.
This has nothing to do.
They have no interest whatsoever in anything other than implementing whoever's agenda it is, and I don't know whose agenda it really is.
We can, you, me, and everybody else, can speculate who's running the show, what's the end game, what's this about, what's that about.
But you might as well ask, Why did Hitler want to go to Poland?
And you could get one answer from a German guy, and you get one answer from a Polish guy.
Nobody knows what was inside the mind of Hitler.
There's a lot more to it than people are led to believe.
Now, the same goes for the CO2 nonsense.
Who knows?
Who's behind it?
Is it because they want us to replace everything?
I know, but if you think about If you pursue net zero like Britain is doing at present, you inevitably will have to replace every single vehicle.
You will have to replace every single boiler in every house and factory.
You will have to replace every single cooker in every single house.
You will have to replace every refrigerator, every freezer in every single house.
Now, if you were in the business of making stuff that was expensive, wouldn't it be in your interest to get everybody to replace everything?
Seeing your fridge hasn't broken down for 10 or 15 years, either had mine.
Nothing wrong with my old Mercedes.
It was, what, 14 years old, not brand new.
All it needed was a more economical engine.
And I could have got another 10 years easy out of that car, but I had to go to the scrapper.
And somebody went off and bought a three or two and a half ton replacement to bring it into the fleet at a cost of 100,000 quid and About five times more CO2 than my old Mercedes would have played out over the next 10 years.
It's like this is kindergarten school level of mathematics required to understand this.
And when I hear these bullshit scientists calling themselves scientists, climate scientists, there's no such thing as a climate scientist.
The climate is so completely complex and interconnected.
Nobody can get comprehension of exactly all the different parts of it and how they interact.
And I actually do believe that a lot of the weather that we're seeing at the moment, and people are saying it's geoengineering this, and it's on purpose.
I think what's been going on is they have been geoengineering since the late 50s, by the way.
Oh, at least.
Yeah, but what I think is actually after happening is they didn't see or couldn't work out the consequences of what they did, and it could have been 10 years ago.
And now we're seeing it.
Now we're seeing the results of some really, really stupid things that they did, When they upset the climate balance, which had developed over millions and millions of years, and smart mankind came along and decided, I know better.
Really?
Well, check out the weather.
Now, that being said, contrary to popular relief, there has been less deaths from adverse weather events over the last decade than there has in the previous, like, 200. And that's a fact.
But they still think, like, the rain in Spain, Fall Mainz and Leon, Valencia.
And people died.
200 people died.
But they forgot to tell everybody, because of the United Nations protecting biodiversity and habitats, they removed 254 dams around Valencia in the last 15 years.
They never said that bit.
Yes, I agree with all that.
Although I hear from my Valencian followers that they were chemtrailing the hell out of Valencia in the 24 hours before the Well, that's, you know, between that and DEWs...
There were cloud seeding.
Yeah, all that.
Yeah, but if the dams were in place, it probably would have been alright.
That's my point.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because when the water comes down the hill, and when I lived in, for example, I lived in Oman.
Now, if you know Muscat, Muscat is surrounded by very, very tall mountains.
The whole back, like only a mile, let's say, from the coast to the mountains.
And when it rains there, and it rains proper, all of the water from All of the mountains just come flooding down in it.
There was a picture of me on the Muscat Times.
My car up to the roof with water.
I had to climb out the window because it came on just like that.
Because they don't have any dams.
So when it comes down to the mountain, that's it.
There's a river where there was a road.
And now you're in the river.
Literally in the river.
Six foot of water.
This is because they don't manage it as well as they would have done in Spain.
They stopped managing it to facilitate these psychos in the UN. Who have nothing to lose ever by implementing all these stupid rules.
And these are the consequences.
And I think there's an awful lot of committees, civil servants, politicians, non-government organizations that couldn't exist without the money from the government.
Kind of weird.
And all these nutcases who have a vested interest in doing any policy that keeps them in a job.
Whether it's bringing in immigrants, housing immigrants, Taking biodiversity, building windmills, solar farms, taking farmers' land.
There's a whole industry of people whose livelihoods depend on them shutting up, just doing what they've been asked to do and don't question it.
And it's because people don't have the balls to stand up and say, that's wrong, I'm not doing it.
And a lot of people can't because they're literally caught.
They have no money.
They're living paycheck to paycheck.
They're trying to feed their family.
They're worried about their children, how they've been brought up in this madness.
Of gender ideology and climate scare.
And both parents are working and they're worried about losing their homes.
You're not really in a position to put the fight up.
You really aren't.
And I think that's been engineered.
That's why women are in the workforce.
Or let's say both parents have to work.
It should be a choice.
It should be a choice.
And I'm not saying the woman should stay at home.
I know many a man, I know two men actually, who are house husbands, if you want to call that, by preference.
You're sounding a bit liberal.
I know I'm all on for being a house husband once your children are past 20. I don't know.
Look, I think women have the skill set.
I think they're a downside better than I have, that's for sure.
Yeah, I don't buy into this thing that it's a kind of job that either the husband or wife could do.
Children need mothers.
Mothers have a special relationship.
There's no question about that.
And I mean, I personally, just because I grew up in that paradigm, let's say, And I had the most wonderful wonder I think it would be possible to have.
I couldn't ever see any sense in it being any other way.
But there's a lot of people who grew up with terrible fucking mothers.
So who knows?
But I think there should be the ability to have the choice.
If two teachers, for example, or two police officers get married, shouldn't one salary be enough?
Shouldn't it?
Well, look, I think it's a given that they, whoever they are, have so captured the system that it is now virtually impossible for a family to live comfortably on one income.
That's by design.
That's definitely by design.
Completely by design.
But I was also thinking about what you were saying.
It's very hard.
You and I... Would both have been subject to the kind of brainwashing which teaches you to accept this world and to say things like, you know, I don't think it matters whether it's the man or the woman bringing up the children and stuff like that, because we've been indoctrinated in the same way I used to think.
That abortion was, you know, like something that civilized, advanced societies did.
And all those people in the American Midwest who were fighting this stuff were backward because they were subject to their religious...
Prejudices and so on.
It's amazing how many of us think this way.
Think child murder is legitimate because we've been conditioned to think that.
Absolutely.
The education system has been corrupt for the last 40-50 years.
Totally.
It's a programming.
It's nothing to do with education.
The very fact that you have to defend free speech on a university campus?
Come on, guys.
This is just nonsense.
I mean, it's your job as a student to disagree.
It's your job to tell the proletariat where they're going wrong and to attack the government at every opportunity.
That's your job as a student.
And you're allowed to be as mad as a bag of frogs.
And you can get into the rooms and debate all you want.
But now you're a heretic if you suggest anything that isn't in accordance with the college rules.
And my attitude in college was like, fuck the college.
I'm only here to get an education.
You know, I'm not going to be told by them what I'm thinking under any circumstances.
Teach me how to think.
Teach me how to think and teach me how to find information.
Teach me how to educate myself.
That's their job.
I had a friend who is a teacher at a university and she was saying that The students just, they're so, they want everything done for them now.
It's that generation COVID, the people who had their time in the sixth form blighted by, you know, Zoom classrooms instead of physical lessons and stuff.
And they're very thin-skinned.
And when you set them a task of, say, reading a complete novel or a book of any kind, they complain.
They say, but it's too much.
And she was saying that something like 65%, maybe more of them, Have got themselves registered as some form of disability, usually a mental disability, which means that they can hand their work in a week late.
They get a week's grace.
And she was saying it's impossible to mark now because you've got the idiots who've been foolish enough not to get themselves on the disability register who have to get their stuff in early.
And then you've got the...
It is what it is.
The fact is that it's been corrupted.
If you look at the medical professions education, they've spent half a day in seven years learning about vaccines and then stand over them and their efficacy.
I thought they learned it every day.
I thought every day was a vaccine day in the medical training.
The only training they're given is that you must give them.
But in terms of actually how they operate and everything else about them, they're told, feck off.
Is that right?
And the only solution to every problem is another pharmaceutical intervention.
Look at a third of American children are on pharmaceutical products.
A third!
Like, this is crazy!
So that's two-thirds that the marketers have got work to do, clearly.
Because that's two-thirds of the market.
They need to get the rack together.
They're sharpish.
Yeah.
So I can tell, Eamon, that you must be much happier as an entrepreneur.
Is it working well for you?
Look, I was nearly self-employed nearly all my life, bar a couple of stints.
Self-employment always suited me.
I just like the freedom of it.
And I also think it's a really cool thing that, what am I, I'm 60, I'll be doing 58, 57, 58. And at that age, it didn't even occur to me for a moment that I'd be mad to start a business.
And when I was starting a business, a lot of people said, Jesus, what are you doing?
Why would you be doing this?
And I go, why wouldn't I be doing it?
Why wouldn't I be doing it?
I don't give a fuck what age you am.
Game on.
Let's do it.
If you can, do it.
That's it.
And I just, I love the idea of business.
And I love, I mean, I love our customers.
I love chatting to them on the phone.
And they're always very surprised.
Especially when you ring in the middle of the night.
Oh, yeah.
I know you do get some people ringing at one o'clock in the morning.
I mean, it does happen.
But we try always to just, like, look, I can't survive without my customers.
And I'll do anything I can to make the customers happy.
And when they said to us recently, I was on the Richie Allen show there some while back, And I asked if anybody had any ideas about what they, you know, what would they like us to produce?
Or is there something we should be doing?
We got a huge amount of response from that.
And as a result of that now, I think it's the 29th of November, we're launching a new Junior Immunex 365, which is our best-selling immunity product.
And it's gummies for kids because everybody wants them for their children.
And I'm going, this is starting to make sense.
People are beginning to realize putting sunscreen on every day is not necessarily a good idea.
Maybe you do need to produce some vitamin D in your skin to be healthy.
Like, over half the population of Britain are vitamin D deficient.
And these are the levels, by the way, determined 30 years ago by the NHS or one of the regulatory proud.
And the levels that they are at, recommended for both Ireland and Britain, is the amount required to ensure that children don't get rickets.
That's how much vitamin D you're recommended to take.
No more.
No more.
Now, all the studies say, you can take 10 times that, and it'll do no harm to you whatsoever.
But they never, the medical profession, the NHS, the HSE, none of them will say, yeah, maybe we should run a trial with 4,000 IU a day to see, in, to say, one town in Britain, and to see, is there any change?
Yeah, that would be interesting.
That would be interesting.
If I could afford it, I'd do it.
I would.
I'd just give free fitment to everybody and see, are the doctors less busy?
It's that simple.
And it would cost relatively nothing.
It'll cost them more money to put together a report as to why it shouldn't be done than it would cost to do it in the first place.
But that's the way it rolls, you know?
So I'm just happy that as an entrepreneur, and you see, I had actually gone into, I had been unemployed when I came back, From the Middle East back about 10 years ago.
And during the time I was unemployed, I had a degree in digital technology and design.
And one of the things I found, I set up a company called Social Media Motors.
And my job was I was going to go around my love of cars, my knowledge of social media.
I was going to help garages and automotive people to do social media.
Very first day I went out, got my website built, did everything.
And I had this horrible feeling just when I went into the very first...
Very first garage I walked into, I had this terrible feeling, I can't do this, I just can't, I couldn't figure it out, I nearly had a breakdown.
And I thought about it for a couple of weeks, and I realised, if I became brilliant at that job, really brilliant at that job, I would be persuading people like you to buy shit you don't need.
And that is not a good way to make a living.
Whereas what I'm doing now, with NutriHealth, I'm actually helping people to be happier and healthier.
And I'm also supporting their The independent journalism and learning and access to the truth.
And that is something I can be passionate about.
Because the better I get at it, the better it is for everybody else.
So I'm very happy being the entrepreneur that I am now.
I'm glad you're supporting John Waters.
Who else do you do?
Richie Allen, Ashley O'Loughlin, the UK column.
I know, I know, I know, I know.
I know you and Ashley don't see eye to eye.
You know why?
You know why?
She really fancies me.
And she can't express it because she knows I'm married and unavailable.
Maybe I should give her a ring myself.
She expresses it through...
There have been books, Eamon, there have been books written about this.
It's called negging.
It's a technique.
When you really fancy someone, you diss them publicly.
Right.
And it secretly means...
Well, here's...
I suppose to make it make sense, I will support people in independent journalism even if I don't agree with them.
Because who says I'm right?
What makes me right?
What makes it right is having a sufficient number of diverse voices to help people to find an element of the truth or all of the truth.
You've got to draw the line somewhere there.
I don't think you should be supporting Russell Brand.
No, and I won't be giving any to Tommy Robinson either, for that matter.
No!
Well, exactly!
Tommy Robinson, who's been on the podcast so much.
He can go back to Israel and get it where he got the last one.
You know what I mean?
So, you know, you have to draw the line.
And needless to say, there's no end of people we could be supporting.
And every week I come across somebody and say, jeez, they're brilliant.
I really should throw them a few quid.
But, like, we're a tiny company.
We've only two of us work here.
And we're doing our best.
We don't have the wedge.
Like, you know, we can't even afford to do mad advertising on Facebook like all the rest of them.
No.
Are you registered in Ireland?
No.
The company is neutralhealth365.com.
Limited in England and Wales.
Don't get too technical here, because the answer might be long and boring, but is the UK still a good place to register for business?
It's incredibly efficient.
Better than Ireland, so?
I don't know.
I haven't registered a company in Ireland for a number of years, so I don't really know.
But I found the process incredibly Straightforward.
No big deal.
The biggest problem, and any entrepreneur out there who's trying to start a business, the biggest problem they're going to have is actually opening a bank account.
That's the biggest barrier you will have.
Not opening the company.
The company's easy.
That can be done in a couple of days.
But finding any company that will allow you to have a bank account is the issue.
Hmm.
We could talk about banks all day, James.
Yes, we could.
But there's no point.
There's no point.
Well, they're criminal enterprises, aren't they?
The whole world is a criminal enterprise.
That's the problem.
Yes.
Well, it's designed that way.
And look at the people who are the most highest paid, salaried professions in the world, apart from sports, are people who are in what we call the professions.
Legal profession, the accountancy profession, consultancy profession, banking profession.
These are the people who collectively, collectively form our laws and implement our laws.
And they have been doing it for so many years that every law, every rule, every regulation is designed specifically to enrich them.
And it's been working very well as the middle class have been wiped out, as all the money has moved upwards to the top.
Funnily enough, Eamon, when I was growing up, In the Midlands.
My father is from, his family is originally from Birmingham, and my mother's side is from the black country, as you can tell by my strong accent.
When I was growing up, we knew nobody in the professions.
Okay, so we went to a dentist and stuff, where you wouldn't guess looking at my teeth.
Well, actually, you would, because that's what dentists did in those days.
They made things worse.
Filled you with a mug and filling and stuff.
I know.
People...
Shh!
People in the world I grew up in, you know, all my dad's friends.
My dad ran an engineering business.
His best mate Steve ran a company that made car wheels, you know.
My uncle, nuts and bolts.
Just all of them.
I wish I'd grown up in that environment.
Proper jobs.
Proper jobs, making proper things.
When I went to my fancy university and suddenly met these people from a different world.
When you said profession, in that kind of sneering way, I was thinking about the root derivation of the word profession.
What are you professing?
Because it's a bit like...
When you discover that the word government means mind control, govern, ment, mens, mentis, mind, mind control, govern, mind.
In the same way, profession.
What are you professing?
I think they're professing to a belief in a system that is self-sustaining for them and their peers.
Just like the Freemasons.
It does sound like a Freemason-y world.
I'm just going to look up.
What profession?
But my point, I suppose, in a very simplistic way, James, while you're looking that up, if you consider back in the Midlands when you were growing up, and this man is making nuts and bolts, and somebody else is making wheels, and somebody else is making tools, and people are making things using their hands, their knowledge, their experience, materials, to transform into something very useful.
And there was a middle class.
And people could aspire to being in the middle class and they could actually own their own home and a car and all the rest of it.
Now when you think about it, all the best jobs and both the parents and mother and father or whatever else, both partners are out working in their professions.
They're producing nothing.
No, they're not.
They're called the knowledge economy.
You can't eat knowledge.
You can't drive knowledge.
You know?
And this is where people are wondering, where did the wealth go?
Well, you're swapping your ability to do some sort of mental gymnastics on a computer where somebody else charges an exorbitant amount of money and they're going to keep it and you're going to get very little of it and everybody else can feck off.
So the person who used to be able to mend bicycles or...
Sure, now you couldn't do that because of health and safety.
You haven't got a qualification to mend bicycles.
Oh, you've been doing it 40 years.
Doesn't count.
You need to be qualified.
And you have to get the man with the clipboard to come around and check that you're qualified and then do that exam every year to make sure you're still safe to fix bicycles.
The world has gone bonkers.
I'm with you.
I just want to reveal my long research.
Profession.
Noun circa 1200. Profession.
Vows taken upon entering a religious order from Old French profession and directly from Latin professionem, which comes from public declaration.
And, I don't know, what profession etymology in English?
It means, yeah, it comes from the Latin meaning I declare publicly.
A declaration of belief, faith or of one's opinion, a promise or vow made on entering a religious order, an occupation, trade, especially a job, especially one requiring a high level of skill or training.
But you can see what's going on here.
It is like a kind of...
Well, it's a religion.
A religion.
It's a religion.
I mean, that's what it is.
I mean, you look at all the people who are in accountancy.
I want to be an accountant.
I'm going off to count and do books.
You notice nobody's an accountant anymore.
They're all consultants.
They're all pivoting into consultancy because their profession's about to be wiped out by AI. I mean, theoretically, considering that you have to submit all your tax records to the HRMC and in electronic format, theoretically, there's no reason why there should be any requirement for anybody to count anything.
Because the computers can do it faster than anybody else.
And they can audit it a damn sight quicker without charging you 10,000 quid a year and then putting a line under it saying, well, we're not responsible for what actually is contained in the report because we can only go on the information given to us.
But we still have our 10,000 quid every year, please.
You know, this is professions.
I'm not all cynical, James.
I'm not all cynical.
I've learned a lot.
I've learned a lot from this conversation, Eamon.
The main lesson is, from now on, I'm going to become a consultant.
Because AI could do this job.
No, you see, this is the point, James.
AI cannot do your job.
AI can never do what you're doing now.
It can try, but it can never, ever have the mad...
AI would not have known...
They'll never have the mad plumbing you have inside.
That's still yours.
Nobody would program it that way.
A or I would have shaved.
This is how you can tell it's not AI because I normally shave and I didn't today.
Right.
I am eaten up with self-hatred for reasons I can't explain to you and to reasons which only I would understand.
Right.
So I'm going to go and beat myself up now by having a cigarette.
A bit of self-flagellation.
Highly recommended in any profession.
And I don't know how I'm going to get rid of the self-hatred.
It's going to be really hard.
There's no point.
I always reckon, you know, don't ever beat yourself up, man.
There's enough other people.
Do that for free.
Yes.
It's about...
Leave it to them.
It's about a failure of physical courage.
And do you know, I think it's almost the worst...
In that case, face the machine or face the animal.
That's what I do.
No, but I've just talked myself out of it.
That's the problem.
You can talk yourself back into it.
You can talk yourself back into it.
I don't think there's time.
And then don't worry about it if you can't change it.
Yeah, I suppose that's...
Let it go.
Move on.
I suppose that's it.
Okay.
Thanks.
Thanks, Eamon.
Thanks to my father, Professor.
Eamon, it's been great talking to you.
Eamon Blaney.
of NutriHealth365.
Tell us where we can find your products.
Tell us what else we can buy from you as well.
Well, NutriHealth365, that's NutriHealth365, all one word,.com.
Just go to the website.
Or just Google or search for NutriHealth365, you'll find it.
Our best-selling product is an immunity booster, for lack of a better term.
It has all the stuff in it.
It's the only tablet that we can find on the market here or in the United States that actually has all the vitamin D3 proper levels of it, 4000 IU. And it has vitamin K2 in it, which I heard you mentioning a couple of times previously.
But K2, quercetin, zinc and vitamin C. These together, and there's a lot of research on our website if somebody's interested in that.
All the papers are cited.
All the links are there.
You can see that it's just an incredible thing.
We also introduced then a one called joint health.
I really should have called it anti-inflammatory because it is just the more research I've done into curcumin and turmeric, piperine, which is black pepper extract.
It's phenomenal what it does because nearly everything from heart attacks to you name it, your joints, everything is inflammation.
And we have had huge good feedback from people about this.
It's got very, very good levels of curcumin and piperine in it.
And organic turmeric in it.
We do a deep sleep product.
We do an Ibida Boost product.
And we have the shilajit, which is a resin that comes out of the Himalayas, the highest quality we could find.
And we're introducing now the junior one for 9 to 17 year olds.
And then we're also looking at one for, hopefully within the new year, diabetes and prostate are the two things that we're looking at at the moment as well.
But every product we have is completely unique.
Every product we have is free of fillers and colors and all the usual nonsense they put in these things in the trade.
Every capsule that we sell is full.
And the reason why it's full is because there's nothing more we could get into it.
Literally, physically can't get any more than the 720 milligrams into each capsule.
And it's packed with everything that's needed for that particular thing.
And people go onto our website, have a look at the reviews.
All the reviews that are there are 100% genuine from our customers.
They get asked to send a review.
10%, 20% of them send a review.
And they're just delighted with the products.
And the repeat businesses is phenomenal.
And we get a lot of people buying five and six bottles of Immunex at a time.
So they're obviously giving them to their family and their friends.
You know, which I think is just fantastic.
But look, if anybody's got any suggestions of what we should be doing, how we could be doing something better, or if they want to lambast me for something I've said during this interview that I got completely wrong, by all means, get on the form, send me an email, aiming at neutralhealth365.com, and I'll read it and I'll respond to it immediately.
Okay.
And I'd be delighted to hear it.
Thank you, Eamon.
That's been a great wide-ranging chat.
Before I go out for my self-hate fag, I will get over this in the end, but I don't like failing myself.
Please continue with your support.
Well, those of you who do support me and those who don't support me yet, give it a thought.
Well, I would suggest, can I say, James, as a business that does support you, Your coverage of Mutual Health 365 has been very significant in terms of our sales.
It has done us no end of good, and we're a very small company, we don't have a big budget, and we would give them far more than we can, than we do at present if we could, and we will in the future.
But I would say to anybody else thinking of advertising with you, do so.
Do so and then Then you'll see yourself, whether it's worth it while.
But I think it's...
That's interesting.
Because like, you know what?
I do always feel a bit awkward about advertising, which is why I'm really sketchy.
But none of us like it.
None of us like advertising.
I mean, I hate advertising.
You're listening to a podcast, and then they have to take out these three minutes.
I love the way you do it at the start, and you just make...
It's off the cuff.
I mean, you know I provided you with a sort of suggested talking point, and you completely sort of ignore them most of the time, and you just rattle on regardless.
But that's so much better.
You know what I mean?
To me, that's real.
And that isn't going to be replaced by AI or by some brilliant marketing wizard who has got the perfect script.
You know, we want to keep it real.
Everything we do, we want to keep it real.
And advertising with people like yourself, it helps you to keep the podcast going.
Your podcast helps educate people.
It helps people to see another side to what's really matter.
So it's important for us, not from just a selling product perspective, But it's because we're helping you to continue doing what you're doing.
And that's really important to us as well.
Well, thanks for the advertising endorsement.
Yeah, that's good to hear.
And apart from that, of course, you can support me as a subscriber.
Get early access to my podcast.
Probably on Substack or Locals is probably the best.
Or you can just buy me a coffee.
Thank you very much.
And thank you again.
Okay, James.
Well, it's an absolute pleasure.
I really appreciate the opportunity to talk to you.
And thank you.
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