1 0:00:00 --> 0:00:12 Welcome everybody to Medical Doctors for COVID Ethics International. This group was founded 2 0:00:12 --> 0:00:17 over four years ago by Stephen Frost, a British trained medical doctor. I'm Charles Kovess, 3 0:00:18 --> 0:00:23 your moderator here in Australia, wearing my red jacket signifying passion. At this time, 4 0:00:23 --> 0:00:29 we remember two lawyers incarcerated by government on political grounds, Arno Van Kessel 5 0:00:29 --> 0:00:38 and Rainer Fullmich. And at this time, I also mentioned Buttonheart, the freedom loving bear 6 0:00:38 --> 0:00:44 from the Forever Freedom movement, who shines a light on the horrors of children being trafficked 7 0:00:44 --> 0:00:49 for sex and slavery. It's the Forever Freedom movement because we have to forever free children 8 0:00:49 --> 0:00:55 from being trafficked. So have a look at that website and invest in a bear. 9 0:00:55 --> 0:01:01 This group is a blend of voices of all professions, many professions from all around the world. 10 0:01:02 --> 0:01:10 Many of us once viewed vaccines as benign. Now many wear the badge of passionate anti-vaxxers. 11 0:01:11 --> 0:01:16 And right up front, I want to bring to your attention this book, Forbidden Facts, 12 0:01:17 --> 0:01:23 by Gavin De Becker. I have finished this book. It is magnificent. It is brilliant. It is 13 0:01:23 --> 0:01:32 brilliant. It is wonderful to read. It's got magnificent data and the way to get 14 0:01:32 --> 0:01:37 people whose minds are a little bit open is to give them this book for Christmas. 15 0:01:38 --> 0:01:46 I also urge you to watch the recording of Gavin De Becker with Joe Rogan 16 0:01:47 --> 0:01:52 for two and a half hours talking about this book for those who don't like reading. And also 17 0:01:53 --> 0:02:00 Aaron Siris book, Vaccines, Amen. And right up front in this program is salutary to note that last 18 0:02:00 --> 0:02:08 Thursday the CDC has changed its website on the question of the link between 19 0:02:09 --> 0:02:15 children's vaccines and autism. It has now changed it to say there's no evidence supporting 20 0:02:15 --> 0:02:24 what the CDC has been saying for 30 plus years that vaccines don't cause autism. 21 0:02:24 --> 0:02:30 That statement has been removed from the CDC's website everybody. It shows the fraud that the 22 0:02:30 --> 0:02:36 CDC has been perpetrating. And I put to you that it's because of these two books that were the 23 0:02:36 --> 0:02:42 tipping point. Andy Wakefield's work has been good as well. But these two books, the evidence is 24 0:02:42 --> 0:02:49 overwhelming. And Stanley Plotkin, who was deposed by Aaron Siris, the author of this book, for nine 25 0:02:49 --> 0:02:56 hours. Stanley Plotkin in that cross-examination, in that deposition, conceded that no vaccine 26 0:02:56 --> 0:03:03 ever in the history of mankind has ever been properly tested for safety and efficacy. And 27 0:03:03 --> 0:03:15 the latest book to prove that is this by Gavin De Becker. So, stop injecting crap into your bodies. 28 0:03:16 --> 0:03:21 This is the place where you will get good information, and particularly today with our 29 0:03:21 --> 0:03:29 guests Dr Sheila Richards and Jeremy Willetts. We are in the middle of World War III. We're five and 30 0:03:29 --> 0:03:34 a half years into this war. We've got at least two years to go, so stay strong, stay healthy. 31 0:03:35 --> 0:03:42 We'll hear from our guest presenters, Sheila and Jeremy, after which we have Q&A. Stephen Frost, 32 0:03:42 --> 0:03:49 as the founder, asks the first 15 minutes of questions. This is a free speech, haven't if 33 0:03:49 --> 0:03:56 you're offended by anything, be offended. We are genuinely not interested. However, we choose love 34 0:03:57 --> 0:04:06 over fear. Fear squashes you, love expands you, inspires you, helps you grow. 35 0:04:08 --> 0:04:13 These twice weekly gatherings are far from mere talk. They have birthed real world actions and 36 0:04:14 --> 0:04:20 alliances, and we're still waiting on the first marriage that's been created from alliances created 37 0:04:20 --> 0:04:27 in these meetings. A key tactic in our fight is exposing medical crimes on social media, 38 0:04:27 --> 0:04:34 and this book, promoting this book, shows the medical crimes that have been committed 39 0:04:34 --> 0:04:42 over the last 20, 30, 50 years. We expose medical crimes and we rally behind the demand of medical 40 0:04:42 --> 0:04:49 truth now, crafted by the wonderful John Rappaport. This call can unite humanity in a 41 0:04:49 --> 0:04:57 search for accountability, and as Mark Dyer has just announced, the UK inquiry into the COVID 42 0:04:57 --> 0:05:04 response by the UK government came and said, we should have gone harder. What a fraud. I call out 43 0:05:04 --> 0:05:10 the UK inquiry as a total fraud, and anyone who pays attention to its conclusions is 44 0:05:12 --> 0:05:15 ignorant, not just innocently ignorant, but negligently ignorant. 45 0:05:16 --> 0:05:22 Now we're thrilled to welcome our two guest presenters. Let me give you a bit of background. 46 0:05:22 --> 0:05:30 Dr Sheila Richards will speak first. Sheila's a Chinese medicine acupuncture doctor, a functional 47 0:05:30 --> 0:05:38 medicine doctor, MBBS, MRC, GP, member of the Royal College of General Practitioners, DRCOG. 48 0:05:38 --> 0:05:46 I love it. I love it, Sheila. All of these post-nominals are in the show notes. She's a 49 0:05:46 --> 0:05:51 member of the IFM Institute for Functional Medicine. She trained at St George's Hospital Medical School 50 0:05:51 --> 0:05:58 in London. She's been a practicing general practitioner for over 25 years, always with a 51 0:05:58 --> 0:06:03 keen interest in integrative medicine and a holistic approach to patient care. Sheila is a 52 0:06:03 --> 0:06:08 fully certified IFM functional medicine doctor holding a diploma in Chinese medicine and 53 0:06:08 --> 0:06:13 acupuncture and a member of the British Medical Acupuncture Society. Just by the by, Sheila, 54 0:06:13 --> 0:06:19 I've had two sets of acupuncture in the last couple of months. I've experienced the benefits 55 0:06:19 --> 0:06:24 of acupuncture. In addition, Sheila has trained in homeopathy, neuro-listic programming as I have, 56 0:06:25 --> 0:06:34 heart math and medical or medicinal cannabis, as I have been. Sheila Richards is dedicated 57 0:06:34 --> 0:06:38 to educating and empowering her patients to address the root causes of their health issues, 58 0:06:38 --> 0:06:45 promoting long-term wellbeing by integrating physical, mental and emotional health. Her passion 59 0:06:45 --> 0:06:50 lies in fostering a healing partnership with her patients. Recently deepening her focus on the 60 0:06:50 --> 0:06:57 transformative psycho-neuro-immunology approach to harness the power of the mind on health. 61 0:06:58 --> 0:07:03 Outside of work, Sheila enjoys outdoor adventures with her teenage sons from rollerblading and 62 0:07:03 --> 0:07:08 sea swimming to paddle boarding and hiking. She's a firm believer in the healing power of 63 0:07:08 --> 0:07:14 creativity. She also loves dancing, singing and unwinding with a good book. Sheila, you can keep 64 0:07:14 --> 0:07:20 the dancing to yourself, even though I did lots of dancing on stage. And you don't want to hear 65 0:07:20 --> 0:07:28 my singing, but we look forward to your singing. And her husband, Jeremy Willits, is a dentist. 66 0:07:28 --> 0:07:35 Both of them live on Jersey, on Jersey in the Channel Islands. And he will be talking to us 67 0:07:35 --> 0:07:43 about climate, about climate lies. And he's got a great deal of experience in a lot of fields 68 0:07:43 --> 0:07:49 and he's a dentist. We welcome you both. And Sheila, you're in charge of how long you speak. 69 0:07:49 --> 0:07:55 Then let, in fact, you can speak and then I think we'll do Q&A with you and then we'll let Jeremy 70 0:07:55 --> 0:08:02 speak. And that's the way we'll handle it. So over to you. Lovely. Well, thanks very much, 71 0:08:02 --> 0:08:12 Charles. I'm going to share my screen now. Hello. Right. Can you see that? Yes, we can. 72 0:08:13 --> 0:08:20 Right. Lovely. And I've got a lot of slides, but I'll whisk through them. I just want to give you, 73 0:08:20 --> 0:08:25 I don't know where, how much anybody there knows already. So forgive me if I'm telling you things 74 0:08:25 --> 0:08:33 you already know. Sheila, we've had a number of integrative medical experts. And the more we hear, 75 0:08:33 --> 0:08:39 the better. So don't worry. Repetition is the key to learning. The second key to learning is an open 76 0:08:39 --> 0:08:43 mind. And some people here have an open mind. I used to have an open mind and my brain kept 77 0:08:43 --> 0:08:50 falling out. Okay. So functional medicine, this is all about treating root cause to chronic disease, 78 0:08:50 --> 0:08:56 because we know that this is the trouble now. So why is it needed? What is functional medicine? 79 0:08:56 --> 0:09:01 And how can this functional medicine approach address chronic disease management and prevention? 80 0:09:01 --> 0:09:06 Because, you know, we don't want to wait for the, for the horse to bolt. Ideally, we'd like to get 81 0:09:06 --> 0:09:13 in before, before that happens. So if we don't treat the root cause, then we use medication. 82 0:09:13 --> 0:09:20 It only acts on the downstream symptoms. And there is sadly so often so little interest in answering 83 0:09:20 --> 0:09:24 the questions, why? My patients come back and they, they tell me, but they couldn't say, I asked the 84 0:09:24 --> 0:09:30 consultant why my son had had a psychosis. A friend told me today and, and, and he said, well, 85 0:09:30 --> 0:09:34 it's just a psychosis, isn't it? And she said, but why are you treating brain inflammation? He said, 86 0:09:34 --> 0:09:39 we're not talking about that. So, you know, this is a consultant pediatrician. So this is, 87 0:09:39 --> 0:09:46 this is mainstream medicine and a lot of areas, sadly, that we're not looking at the why. And of 88 0:09:46 --> 0:09:54 course, time is short. GPs don't have time to do as, as deep and depth investigation and history 89 0:09:54 --> 0:09:59 and examination as I do. I'm very lucky with my long appointments. I do a general practice clinic 90 0:09:59 --> 0:10:03 once a week to keep my hand in, but I prefer doing the functional side. So in acute disease, 91 0:10:03 --> 0:10:09 medicines may cure the symptoms. We'd all like antibiotics. If we've got pneumonia, we'd like 92 0:10:11 --> 0:10:18 cortisol and what would we want? And, and we'd want antihistamines. We've got a nasty, 93 0:10:18 --> 0:10:23 infect a nasty reaction, allergic reaction, but we don't want it for chronic disease because it's 94 0:10:23 --> 0:10:28 only going to modify the symptoms. So if you only use medication, the chronic disease is left to 95 0:10:28 --> 0:10:33 gradually evolve and the patient never gets to be well. And this is the trouble that they come in 96 0:10:33 --> 0:10:37 with their symptoms, hoping to get well. They're told, here's your name. Here's your diagnosis. 97 0:10:37 --> 0:10:43 This is your name of what you've got. And we have a medication for it. And they assume that means 98 0:10:43 --> 0:10:49 they're going to be better again, but as we know, it doesn't. And sadly, it's just the first step to 99 0:10:50 --> 0:10:54 everything, you know, each, each new symptom arriving. So modern medicine doesn't cure 100 0:10:54 --> 0:10:59 chronic disease. And we know that the incidence is horrific. And now even children are getting 101 0:10:59 --> 0:11:05 chronic diseases. It never used to happen. And the developing countries didn't use to have 102 0:11:05 --> 0:11:10 diseases like we do, but they're developing our diet and lifestyle and that they're developing 103 0:11:10 --> 0:11:16 them too. So it's this tsunami and you know, there's no point raking up the seaweed on the 104 0:11:16 --> 0:11:22 beach when there's a, when there's a wave behind you about to push it all away again. So metabolic 105 0:11:22 --> 0:11:28 syndrome is, is the big issue that encompasses most of the chronic diseases we have today. So 106 0:11:28 --> 0:11:33 heart disease, lipid problems. And we need to be careful looking at that because a lot of my 107 0:11:33 --> 0:11:38 patients put on statins when they don't need them and they're not, they're looking at the total 108 0:11:38 --> 0:11:44 cholesterol rather than the, the LDL cholesterol and the triglycerides. And of course, if you've 109 0:11:44 --> 0:11:50 got high cholesterol, but you've got high healthy cholesterol, then that's a good thing. That reduces 110 0:11:50 --> 0:11:56 your risk of heart disease. But there's a bit of confusion in that. And it's lovely to be able to 111 0:11:56 --> 0:12:02 help people to do, to normalise cholesterol levels with diet and lifestyle. Hypertension, 112 0:12:02 --> 0:12:08 blood pressure is very important. Type 2 diabetes. The non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is a big 113 0:12:08 --> 0:12:13 thing now. It used to be alcoholic fatty liver disease. We now have this non-alcoholic one, 114 0:12:13 --> 0:12:19 which is related to high triglycerides in the liver, which are produced by a high process 115 0:12:19 --> 0:12:26 carbohydrate diet. Polycystic ovarian syndrome, PCOS, it used to be, well, I don't think we 116 0:12:26 --> 0:12:30 really had it when I was at medical school, but anyway, it's, it's become the norm now along with 117 0:12:30 --> 0:12:36 ADHD, hasn't it? Cancer, of course, sadly we're seeing higher and higher rates and dementia, 118 0:12:36 --> 0:12:44 which is really type 3 diabetes. So chronic disease is a high percentage of GP appointments. 119 0:12:44 --> 0:12:50 I won't waste time on that. We'll go ahead. We know about the diabetes. Basically what we're 120 0:12:50 --> 0:12:57 doing isn't working. The, our conventional medicine system is, is bursting at the seams. 121 0:12:57 --> 0:13:03 They can't manage and they're literally firefighting. You know, it's a bit like there's 122 0:13:03 --> 0:13:08 water on the floor and they're busy mopping up the water and nobody's stopping to unblock the 123 0:13:08 --> 0:13:13 sink and switch the tap off. So we need to change direction. And of course, we all know Albert 124 0:13:13 --> 0:13:18 Einstein said insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. 125 0:13:18 --> 0:13:22 Well, this is what's going on. So the Hippocratic Oath says first, do no harm. 126 0:13:23 --> 0:13:29 And as you can, we all know this has changed because there's no such thing as a clean drug. 127 0:13:29 --> 0:13:35 Every medication has the risk of adverse side effects. So as soon as your management of, 128 0:13:35 --> 0:13:40 of symptoms involves medication, you're automatically running the risk of doing harm. 129 0:13:41 --> 0:13:46 So I always ask three questions. Why does these, this patient have these symptoms? Why now? And 130 0:13:46 --> 0:13:51 where's the imbalance? Because until we have the answers to those, we can't really address it 131 0:13:51 --> 0:13:57 properly. So again, Tony Robbins, if you do what you've always done, you'll get what you've always 132 0:13:57 --> 0:14:02 got. So my journey, so picture of me with Rongan Chatterjee, well, basically I've always been, 133 0:14:02 --> 0:14:09 I was, I was lucky. I was a medical student who was always off doing rowing and, and, and 134 0:14:09 --> 0:14:16 athletics and looking after myself and eating, eating well, doing nursing at the weekends so 135 0:14:16 --> 0:14:22 that I could afford good, healthy food and skiing holidays. And I think for people who's come from 136 0:14:22 --> 0:14:29 a healthy lifestyle and diet, it's much easier. Some people who were brought up with a poor diet 137 0:14:29 --> 0:14:32 and not going out much, they find it more difficult to make these changes. 138 0:14:33 --> 0:14:41 And I met Dr. Rongan Chatterjee at a conference in Guernsey on Journey to 100. It was a good, 139 0:14:41 --> 0:14:46 I don't know, was it 10 years ago? And this was about looking at the blue zones and diet and 140 0:14:46 --> 0:14:53 lifestyle and how, how to make more people in, in Guernsey live to be over a hundred so they could 141 0:14:53 --> 0:14:59 join the blue zones list. So my journey has always been not interested. I was a medical student who 142 0:14:59 --> 0:15:04 was going, who was spending my spare time going on massage courses and meditation courses, and I've 143 0:15:04 --> 0:15:10 never enjoyed prescribing medication. So I've always been looking for safe alternatives. So 144 0:15:10 --> 0:15:16 that's how I got involved in homeopathy, NLP, Chinese medicine. And when I met Rongan, he told 145 0:15:16 --> 0:15:21 me about the Institute for Functional Medicine and I thought, right, this is what I've been doing all 146 0:15:21 --> 0:15:28 along, but I didn't have any, any official training on it. So I live on a small island with over a 147 0:15:28 --> 0:15:34 hundred GPs and unless I had proper training in it, I didn't think they'd listen. I don't know if 148 0:15:34 --> 0:15:40 they're listening now, but I've done as much as I can on that side. So Rongan has been a really good 149 0:15:40 --> 0:15:48 mentor for me and I've found a way to, to, to use medicine in a way that, yeah, that gives me good 150 0:15:48 --> 0:15:52 results. So the next screen, you won't, sorry, the picture, you don't want to see the details, 151 0:15:52 --> 0:15:59 but the idea is that these are all the metabolic processes that are going on in our bodies the whole 152 0:15:59 --> 0:16:04 time to keep us well. All our body wants is to be well, and it's constantly monitoring. Am I safe? 153 0:16:04 --> 0:16:11 What can I do to keep myself safe? And a single symptom may be caused by multiple imbalances 154 0:16:11 --> 0:16:17 and just the same, a single imbalance may result in multiple symptoms. So assuming that the same 155 0:16:17 --> 0:16:23 medication is going to help everybody with a headache or everybody with high blood pressure 156 0:16:23 --> 0:16:27 means that you're missing some people because that's, you're not looking at the wrong side, 157 0:16:27 --> 0:16:33 at the right side. So our bodies are a complex organism of web-like connections and you can't 158 0:16:33 --> 0:16:41 treat them as separate entities. So we need to work out what is going on. What is this unified 159 0:16:41 --> 0:16:46 theory that explains the incidence of these apparently unrelated diseases? And I think 160 0:16:46 --> 0:16:54 everybody here knows that we can't carry on working in silos where, what happens with the silos, you 161 0:16:55 --> 0:17:03 have a headache, so you go and, you know, your GP might refer you to see the neurologist who 162 0:17:03 --> 0:17:09 might give you anti-inflammatories and codeine, which of course messes up your gut. So you end up 163 0:17:09 --> 0:17:15 with gastro problems and you end up seeing the gastroenterologist who will give you a proton 164 0:17:15 --> 0:17:21 pump inhibitor. This will cause dysbiosis, immune dysfunction, allergies. You end up seeing the 165 0:17:21 --> 0:17:26 immunologist who will give you steroids and then you become depressed and see the psychiatrist who 166 0:17:26 --> 0:17:32 will give you antidepressants. None of this was really necessary if we could have worked out what 167 0:17:32 --> 0:17:38 the migraine was telling us. And if we don't address our symptoms by looking at what they're 168 0:17:38 --> 0:17:44 about and rebalancing that imbalance, the symptoms just keep continuing. And of course, when it gets 169 0:17:44 --> 0:17:49 to a point where we're really not listening and we get up, we get very ill and it would be nice 170 0:17:49 --> 0:17:54 to stop that before it gets that far. We mustn't work in silos. We need to be connected because 171 0:17:54 --> 0:18:00 it's all about chronic inflammation, everything. All illness is chronic inflammation. 172 0:18:00 --> 0:18:07 So this is just busy mopping up the downstream. So functional medicine asks, what is the imbalance 173 0:18:07 --> 0:18:12 in our diet, our lifestyle and our environment that's causing the root, the chronic disease? 174 0:18:12 --> 0:18:19 It's the root cause and it's different for each person. So genetics is very important. We're 175 0:18:19 --> 0:18:26 looking at the exposome, how internal metabolic factors influence our genetic expression. We're 176 0:18:26 --> 0:18:30 talking about which genes are being switched on and expressed, which ones are being switched off 177 0:18:30 --> 0:18:37 and silenced. Epigenetics is how the external environment affects this. Nutrigenomics is how 178 0:18:37 --> 0:18:44 our nutrients and foods affect our genes. And socio-genomics is how our social networks affect 179 0:18:44 --> 0:18:52 it as well. Because if we're lonely and not meeting up with people, we tend to be more unhappy and 180 0:18:52 --> 0:19:01 more likely to express the depression genes. So genes and environment affect our phenotype. That's 181 0:19:02 --> 0:19:06 how we are. We can change, we can't change our genes, but we can change our environment 182 0:19:07 --> 0:19:12 to address which genes are being switched on. Genetics loads the gun, but it's the environment 183 0:19:12 --> 0:19:18 that pulls the trigger and more than 90% of chronic disease is driven by the environment. 184 0:19:19 --> 0:19:27 So we know it's about physical stress, emotional stress, electromagnetic stress, infections, 185 0:19:27 --> 0:19:38 drugs and pollution. I will go through that. So yeah, this was good. And I think more and more 186 0:19:38 --> 0:19:43 people, particularly with GMO, people are waking up to the fact that we need to treat the whole 187 0:19:43 --> 0:19:48 problem of health in the soil, the plants, the animal and man as one subject. There's no point 188 0:19:48 --> 0:19:55 we're going to grow food and pour soil and add lots of chemicals to it and then be surprised 189 0:19:55 --> 0:20:03 when people get ill. Epigenetics is coming to the fore. People are now listening. But are 190 0:20:04 --> 0:20:12 America's weapons of mass destruction your cutlery? People are now having injections because 191 0:20:12 --> 0:20:18 they're not able to stop, to control what they're putting in their mouths. And not all calories are 192 0:20:18 --> 0:20:23 created equal. This idea of I'm eating this number of calories a day means nothing to me. 193 0:20:24 --> 0:20:29 It's like saying a low calorie diet is good. Well, is it? What's it made of? It's like saying 194 0:20:29 --> 0:20:35 a shopping basket with three items is a healthy one and a shopping trolley with 20 items is an 195 0:20:35 --> 0:20:38 unhealthy one. Well, it's ridiculous. We need to, we're looking for quality. 196 0:20:40 --> 0:20:46 Diabeticity is another way of looking at the more our diets are imbalanced with processed 197 0:20:46 --> 0:20:53 carbohydrates and non-nutritional, I don't want to say food because it's not food, is it? But 198 0:20:54 --> 0:21:01 the more we increase obesity and then we're on that metabolic pathway with the metabolic syndrome. 199 0:21:02 --> 0:21:08 So the microbiome is a big key in all this, massive. And I've just finished a two-day 200 0:21:08 --> 0:21:15 longevity conference in Dubai, except I was live streaming. And the biggest take home from that is 201 0:21:15 --> 0:21:21 the nasal microbiome and how the nasal microbiome of course will affect the gut microbiome, but it 202 0:21:21 --> 0:21:28 also affects neurological disease and psychiatric disease. And it's a big key in the puzzle that 203 0:21:28 --> 0:21:35 hasn't been addressed. So the microbiome has so many different, each different bug has got different 204 0:21:36 --> 0:21:41 foods it likes. So if we always eat the same food, we'll grow plenty of the bugs that like it. 205 0:21:41 --> 0:21:47 But if we can increase diversity, we're getting more different bugs and they all have different 206 0:21:47 --> 0:21:53 jobs to do. So we're looking for diversity in food and to get diversity on our microbiome. 207 0:21:55 --> 0:22:02 The microbiome organisms outnumber the human cells by a factor. Yeah, by huge, huge numbers. 208 0:22:02 --> 0:22:10 That's hidden behind it. I can't see how many is it? Can you see it? You're muted. But anyway, 209 0:22:10 --> 0:22:17 lots. And they've got lots of jobs to do. And the gut is the second brain. It produces neurotransmitters. 210 0:22:17 --> 0:22:23 It regulates hormones in the immune system and it's damaged by antibiotics, by stress, 211 0:22:23 --> 0:22:30 environmental toxins. And then of course we've got glyphosate. The nutrient density is important. We 212 0:22:30 --> 0:22:35 don't want empty calories. Calories mean nothing to me. I want to know about whole foods. I don't 213 0:22:35 --> 0:22:43 want to know about fat-free, sugar-free, wheat-free. It usually means that gluten-free usually means 214 0:22:43 --> 0:22:47 it's full of processed things that aren't proper food. I don't want my patients having low fat, 215 0:22:47 --> 0:22:53 low sugar. I just have real foods that don't have those things in. Otherwise they're trying to 216 0:22:53 --> 0:23:00 pretend to be something. They're not by adding in artificial additives. Glyphosate, we know, 217 0:23:00 --> 0:23:08 affects all sorts of parts of the way our body works. They cause cancer, infertility. There's 218 0:23:08 --> 0:23:16 a lot about glyphosate in the news. So I will go fast over that bit. EMF radiation, of course, 5G 219 0:23:16 --> 0:23:25 is a big problem. The way our bodies, our cells and nerves communicate is in tiny, tiny electric 220 0:23:25 --> 0:23:30 currents. As soon as we start having long periods where we're exposed to 221 0:23:32 --> 0:23:40 electromagnetic frequency signals, the more it interferes with it. So pulsed EMF, which is 5G, 222 0:23:40 --> 0:23:47 causes oxidative stress, lowers fertility, neurological effects, cell death and damage, 223 0:23:47 --> 0:23:53 changes steroid hormone levels. Remember, the steroid hormones are cortisol, progesterone, 224 0:23:53 --> 0:23:59 estrogen, testosterone. These are really, really carefully balanced. And as soon as we go interfering 225 0:23:59 --> 0:24:03 with those, we've got problems. And calcium overload, they activate calcium channels in 226 0:24:03 --> 0:24:12 the membranes of the cells. So particularly children at risk of this because they have a 227 0:24:12 --> 0:24:18 thinner skull, so it's easier for it to get through. And of course, Wi-Fi and mobile phone 228 0:24:18 --> 0:24:22 masks are everywhere. So what does functional medicine have to offer? Why do we want it? There's 229 0:24:22 --> 0:24:28 an article here from 1871 in the Lancet, a clinical lecture on functional medicine. So it's 230 0:24:28 --> 0:24:34 not new, but it's a systems biology-based model to empower patients and practitioners to work 231 0:24:34 --> 0:24:39 together. This is about a partnership. So the patient feels empowered and understands how to 232 0:24:39 --> 0:24:44 look after themselves to get as healthy as possible, rather than just taking them out of a disease state. 233 0:24:45 --> 0:24:51 We're looking for optimal wellness. And if we look at this illness wellness continuum, 234 0:24:51 --> 0:24:58 in the GHEP practice, they're happy for the average health of the average man on the street, 235 0:24:58 --> 0:25:05 which is average signs here. Your blood results from your GP in the hospital will have an average 236 0:25:06 --> 0:25:11 normal range. And I say to my patients, but do you want the health of the average man on the street? 237 0:25:11 --> 0:25:16 Because that's what those are. And every so often they change because the average health has changed. 238 0:25:16 --> 0:25:23 And so inflammation is more common. So the normal range goes out. We're looking for optimum health. 239 0:25:23 --> 0:25:29 And this is what functional medicine is looking at, not just out of disease, but into super health, 240 0:25:29 --> 0:25:35 feeling as good as possible. So is there a pill for all ills? And is depression a Prozac deficiency? 241 0:25:35 --> 0:25:39 We've talked about the medication. It's there when we really need it, but ideally we don't want to be 242 0:25:39 --> 0:25:45 taking it every day. This is the steroidogenic pathway. You see it starts with cholesterol. So 243 0:25:45 --> 0:25:52 anybody taking statins is going to be interfering with this. And this gets converted to our important 244 0:25:52 --> 0:26:00 hormones, our DHEA, our estrogen, all the estrogens and testosterone and cortisol. It's all really 245 0:26:00 --> 0:26:05 important. And as soon as we mess around with that fine balance, we have to expect that there will be 246 0:26:07 --> 0:26:14 problems from that. And here, these are all the things that increase and reduce our hormone levels. 247 0:26:14 --> 0:26:18 And we're really looking for our estrogen to be, and this is men as well as women, because 248 0:26:18 --> 0:26:24 testosterone gets converted to estrogen and we have a lot of Zenoestrogens in the environment, 249 0:26:24 --> 0:26:31 which work like estrogen in the body. And we want them to be metabolized down the two hydroxy 250 0:26:31 --> 0:26:39 antioxidant, anti-cancer, anti-heart disease pathways. But sadly, a lot of things in our current 251 0:26:39 --> 0:26:46 environment push it down the cancer and heart disease promoting pathways of 4-hydroxy and 16-hydroxy 252 0:26:46 --> 0:26:52 estrogen. Omega-3, I think people understand that's important. I won't spend time on that. 253 0:26:52 --> 0:26:56 And then just to show you what happens in my clinic. So the functional medicine tree 254 0:26:57 --> 0:27:02 looks at the signs and symptoms, but actually starts to look below to where it's come from, 255 0:27:02 --> 0:27:07 rather than your conventional medicine doctor who will say, okay, those signs and symptoms 256 0:27:08 --> 0:27:13 couldn't fit with a neurological problem or a urological problem. We go down to the bottom 257 0:27:13 --> 0:27:19 and we look, are you getting, these are your roots? Are you getting sleep and relaxation? Are you 258 0:27:19 --> 0:27:24 getting exercise? How is your nutrition? What are your stress levels? Are your relationships 259 0:27:24 --> 0:27:31 supportive? And then we look at your genetic predispositions. Then we look at your antecedents. 260 0:27:31 --> 0:27:36 What was there before you got ill to make it more likely? What are the triggers that made it happen 261 0:27:36 --> 0:27:41 then? And what are the mediators perpetuating factors that are making it continue? Why didn't 262 0:27:41 --> 0:27:47 you get better? We can see that you got ill because this was going on, but why hasn't it got better? 263 0:27:47 --> 0:27:53 So the timeline is the most important thing I would say in my practice. I want to know 264 0:27:53 --> 0:27:58 what has happened and when, and what else was going on in this person's life. And I'll give 265 0:27:58 --> 0:28:04 you a very brief example. I had a lady in her sixties who came with type 1 diabetes, which 266 0:28:04 --> 0:28:08 was a strange thing to get. That's the autoimmune type to get it in her sixties. 267 0:28:09 --> 0:28:15 So we went through a timeline and it turned out that she had, she got her first autoimmune disease 268 0:28:15 --> 0:28:21 was vitiligo when she was 12. I said, goodness, that's young. What was going on then? Well, 269 0:28:21 --> 0:28:26 she was sent to boarding school and her younger sister wasn't sent to boarding school. She felt 270 0:28:26 --> 0:28:34 very, this was really unfair and she hated it. So that stress upset her immune system. 271 0:28:34 --> 0:28:40 And she created antibodies which affected her skin. And then when we went carried on and the 272 0:28:40 --> 0:28:45 next time she got an autoimmune disease, it was thyroid disease. And that went happened in her 273 0:28:45 --> 0:28:50 forties. I said, what was going on then? And we looked back and she was racking her brain. What 274 0:28:50 --> 0:28:56 was going on? Oh, she said, my dad had died a year before. So again, major stress, the immune system 275 0:28:56 --> 0:29:02 is trying to help, but it gets distracted from what it was doing. And then before you know it, 276 0:29:02 --> 0:29:07 there's another autoimmune disease. And so I said, so what's happened now? What's been going on in 277 0:29:07 --> 0:29:11 the last couple of years? And she said, my mom's just died. I've been looking after her and she's 278 0:29:11 --> 0:29:17 been very ill. So the timeline can be really helpful to help people to understand why it's 279 0:29:17 --> 0:29:23 happened. Why me, why now, and why isn't it going? And then what can I do to make it better? The 280 0:29:23 --> 0:29:30 functional medicine matrix helps people to put all these on the same map. So we know what their 281 0:29:30 --> 0:29:35 antecedents, predisposing factors, their triggers, their mediators are. We can look at the modifiable 282 0:29:35 --> 0:29:41 personal lifestyle factors. And then we can see which areas that are all interlinked. Is it to do 283 0:29:41 --> 0:29:49 with their gut assimilation? Is it to do with communication? Is it to do with the neurotransmitters 284 0:29:49 --> 0:29:56 and the immune system and the hormones? And the psycho-emotional spiritual side is so important. 285 0:29:56 --> 0:30:03 This gets missed a lot in conventional medicine. So chronic disease results from the emergence of 286 0:30:03 --> 0:30:09 a disturbed metabolism. And that's what we need to redress. So we know about metabolic pathways. 287 0:30:10 --> 0:30:14 We want to know what does this person have? Do they have too much? What do they have too much 288 0:30:14 --> 0:30:21 of that they need more of, or that they need to get rid of? And what do they need more of that 289 0:30:21 --> 0:30:25 they don't have enough of? And as soon as we redress that, the symptoms aren't needed anymore. 290 0:30:27 --> 0:30:32 So they may have too much stress. They may have toxins, antigens upsetting their immune system, 291 0:30:33 --> 0:30:41 infections, chronic infections, nutrition, deficits, all of these things we need to redress. 292 0:30:42 --> 0:30:48 And what do you need to have more of? The good nutrients, the proper fats, proper whole 293 0:30:48 --> 0:30:55 carbohydrates. People have got this idea of, or you said low fat. Why do you want low fat milk? 294 0:30:55 --> 0:30:59 Because you want more sugar in it. Is that why you want more of the lactose? And people haven't 295 0:30:59 --> 0:31:03 taken that next step in the thought process. They just say, oh, I've heard fat's bad. So I 296 0:31:03 --> 0:31:09 have to cut it down. We need fat. Our brain is made of cholesterol. Our hormones are made from 297 0:31:09 --> 0:31:16 cholesterol. Every cell membrane in the body is made of cholesterol. So we need healthy fats, 298 0:31:16 --> 0:31:23 vitamins, light water and air. Night workers tend to have poor health because their circadian rhythm 299 0:31:23 --> 0:31:31 is out of the window and they don't have enough daylight. Movement, sleep, and just getting love, 300 0:31:31 --> 0:31:37 community connection, meaning and purpose. That's where the blue zones came in, that the people who 301 0:31:37 --> 0:31:45 did really well had purpose. The retired people in Okinawa in Japan live a long time because their 302 0:31:45 --> 0:31:51 responsibility is the preschool children. So they've got purpose. So a couple of case histories 303 0:31:51 --> 0:31:56 before I finish. Twelve year old girl came to see me for 10 years. I don't know how this had gone 304 0:31:56 --> 0:32:02 so long. She'd had cyclical vomiting and migraines. They'd got worse. They weren't so bad at the start. 305 0:32:02 --> 0:32:08 But when I was seeing her every six weeks, she was having three days in bed vomiting with severe 306 0:32:08 --> 0:32:14 headaches. She'd got all the pain killers in the world. Nothing was making it better. And her poor 307 0:32:14 --> 0:32:19 family were at their wit's end. So they came to see me and we looked at her gut microbiome. There 308 0:32:19 --> 0:32:25 was a bit of dysbiosis there. We addressed that. We looked at her diet. There were improvements we 309 0:32:25 --> 0:32:30 could make in that. So we did that. We helped her to get healthier food during the day. So she wasn't 310 0:32:30 --> 0:32:36 living on rubbish at school and got her walking the family dog every morning. She'd literally been 311 0:32:36 --> 0:32:42 coming straight home, going straight to school in the car and coming home and spending the evening 312 0:32:42 --> 0:32:47 on her on screens and watching telly. So we changed all that and it got a lot better. 313 0:32:48 --> 0:32:54 She was no longer needing to take time off school, which was huge because the school authorities had 314 0:32:54 --> 0:32:58 been upsetting the parents saying, you know, your child's having too much time off school. 315 0:32:58 --> 0:33:02 So she was no longer missing school, but she was still getting these headaches. 316 0:33:02 --> 0:33:10 And I just, I suddenly thought, I said, do you have Wi-Fi? Yes, we do. I said, where is your Wi-Fi box? 317 0:33:10 --> 0:33:15 And she said, oh, we've got one downstairs. I said, do you, does it reach upstairs? Is it near 318 0:33:15 --> 0:33:21 her bedroom? And then the mother said, oh, she's got a booster in her room. I said, a Wi-Fi booster? 319 0:33:21 --> 0:33:25 She said, yes, yes. I said, whereabouts in her room is it? Well, it was under her pillow on the 320 0:33:25 --> 0:33:32 floor under her bed. I said, well, you know, it's very difficult to know if these things are causing 321 0:33:32 --> 0:33:37 harm, but it would be easy to switch that off and certainly remove it from her room or switch it off 322 0:33:37 --> 0:33:41 at night. Cause she said, oh, my husband doesn't want the Wi-Fi off at night. I said, well, if it 323 0:33:41 --> 0:33:46 stopped your daughter having her headaches, would that be worth it? Well, I got an email 324 0:33:46 --> 0:33:51 a few weeks later saying, thank you so much. She has no, she's had, in fact, it wasn't, 325 0:33:52 --> 0:33:56 they said that she was already better, but obviously it was cyclical. And a few months later, 326 0:33:56 --> 0:34:00 they said, we don't need to come for the follow-up. She no longer has headaches. So you can see it was 327 0:34:00 --> 0:34:06 working out. Sometimes it's not just one root cause. Sometimes there are a few, but that girl 328 0:34:06 --> 0:34:11 and her family now understand what is needed to keep her well. And if it did come back, 329 0:34:11 --> 0:34:19 they'd have an idea where to start. A 65 year old twin man with a 20 year history of psoriasis, 330 0:34:19 --> 0:34:26 fatigue and insomnia, again, in a job that he wasn't happy with. Again, not getting good exercise, 331 0:34:26 --> 0:34:36 very fussy about his food, staying up all night watching TV late. As soon as he woke up in the 332 0:34:36 --> 0:34:41 morning, he had to go straight to work. He'd have, anyway, there were a lot of things that needed 333 0:34:41 --> 0:34:47 tidying, but, or needed improving. But the main thing was that he was lonely. He had a poor 334 0:34:47 --> 0:34:54 relationship with his family. And we talked about this and how psychoneuroimmunology, psychologically, 335 0:34:54 --> 0:35:00 our thoughts, beliefs, and emotions affect our nervous system, telling the body whether we're 336 0:35:00 --> 0:35:06 safe or not. If we're safe, we can focus on rest, digest, detoxify, repair, rebalance hormones. And 337 0:35:06 --> 0:35:14 the vagus nerve gets to do its job. And if we're in a danger zone, if the body believes that we're 338 0:35:14 --> 0:35:21 at risk, then all of that gets put on hold. So he started meeting up gradually with his family. He 339 0:35:21 --> 0:35:29 changed his diet. He started an exercise class and his skin got better. So again, the man with 340 0:35:29 --> 0:35:35 Alzheimer's, who we looked at his, he couldn't count his swimming lengths. His wife had to do 341 0:35:35 --> 0:35:40 it for him. He was avoiding going out and seeing people because he couldn't follow the conversations. 342 0:35:40 --> 0:35:47 And again, we looked at his, he had dysbiosis. We did a stool test with him and we changed his diet. 343 0:35:47 --> 0:35:52 He had a few supplements to help support his nervous system. And he came in one day and he said, 344 0:35:52 --> 0:35:57 and gave me good eye contact, which was a lovely improvement. And he said, I can count my own lengths 345 0:35:57 --> 0:36:03 now. My wife doesn't have to count them. So it's lovely. And a two year old with eczema and the 346 0:36:03 --> 0:36:08 mother threw out the air fresheners and added in proper fruit and veg. And she said, oh, she's fine 347 0:36:08 --> 0:36:13 now. And these are, you know, this could have been through the dermatology clinic at the hospital and 348 0:36:13 --> 0:36:20 the pediatricians and got buckets of medication. So it can be really satisfying, not only to help 349 0:36:20 --> 0:36:25 people get better, but to teach them how to look after themselves and their families long term. 350 0:36:26 --> 0:36:31 The blue zones, this is just a quick picture. I saw Michel Poulin, who went round the five, 351 0:36:31 --> 0:36:36 who went round the blue zones and decided if they really did have high proportions 352 0:36:36 --> 0:36:42 of people living to over a hundred. And what they all had in common was good local food, 353 0:36:43 --> 0:36:50 lots of colors in their plants that they were eating, good social communications, connections, 354 0:36:51 --> 0:36:59 purpose and exercise and time outside. I will go fast there because I need to leave some space 355 0:36:59 --> 0:37:04 for Jeremy. So do you think these are weapons of mass destruction or are they incredible tools of 356 0:37:04 --> 0:37:10 health and healing? So that's, that's basically functional medicine in a, in a nutshell. 357 0:37:12 --> 0:37:18 Sheila, love it. So if you stop your sharing now, if you're ready for some 358 0:37:19 --> 0:37:26 questions. Very happy to answer questions. Beautiful. And because you were kind to your 359 0:37:26 --> 0:37:35 husband to give him some time, that's very lovely. The one thing that you didn't touch on, but I 360 0:37:35 --> 0:37:44 really think is important for this group and for people watching the recording, I'm planning on 361 0:37:44 --> 0:37:57 working till I'm 125 and I'm 73. And I've been working since I got my law degree 52 years ago. 362 0:37:58 --> 0:38:04 And it's 52 years now till I'm 125. So I was born in 52, like Glen Glen, you were born in 52, 363 0:38:04 --> 0:38:11 weren't you? 1952. Just, just say thumbs up on it. I think you were 52. Absolutely. 364 0:38:12 --> 0:38:18 52 is a year of the drag. October 6th, 52. Yeah. So he's eight days older than me. So I was born in 365 0:38:18 --> 0:38:26 52. I've worked for 52 years since my, got my law degree and I'm planning on another 52 years of 366 0:38:26 --> 0:38:35 work. Now that planning you is in your bio. So can you touch on the impact of our thought process on 367 0:38:35 --> 0:38:43 our health? Absolutely. So psycho neuroimmunology, what we think, what we believe and our emotions. 368 0:38:44 --> 0:38:51 So we have control over some of that, don't we? We can have gratitude in our lives. We can remove 369 0:38:51 --> 0:38:57 ourselves from negative people. There's a lot we can do to optimize the psychological side of us 370 0:38:57 --> 0:39:05 so that our nervous system can allow our vagus nerve to get a look in. So we're not constantly 371 0:39:05 --> 0:39:10 fight flight. You know, I don't listen to the news. I let Jeremy do that. I don't watch it. I 372 0:39:10 --> 0:39:15 don't read the news. My patients, my family will tell me if I really need to know. If anybody wants 373 0:39:15 --> 0:39:20 help, they know I will do whatever I can, but I don't feel the need to immerse myself on a daily 374 0:39:20 --> 0:39:25 basis in negative things that are going on around the world that I don't have, can't do anything 375 0:39:25 --> 0:39:33 about. But if anybody asks, I will, I will absolutely do anything I can. So how to keep, so yeah, 376 0:39:33 --> 0:39:38 a positive mindset and having purpose. You know, you obviously love what you're doing. And I think 377 0:39:38 --> 0:39:44 often when people stop working, they lose purpose. And that's whenever you don't lose it. If you don't 378 0:39:44 --> 0:39:52 use it, you lose it. Neuroplasticity is about constantly changing the way we do things so that 379 0:39:52 --> 0:39:59 our nerves are constantly making newer, stronger pathways. And we say that nerves that fire together, 380 0:39:59 --> 0:40:04 wire together. So the more times you do something, the stronger those nerves will be. 381 0:40:05 --> 0:40:09 It's like playing, I play the piano and sometimes I pick up a piece I've not played since I was at 382 0:40:09 --> 0:40:14 school. And the first time I played, it's dreadful. And I hope nobody's listening, but very quickly, 383 0:40:14 --> 0:40:20 two or three, four times after start playing it through, I lose my place in the music and 384 0:40:20 --> 0:40:26 realise I'm playing it out of my head. Because the more times you repeat something that, you know, 385 0:40:26 --> 0:40:32 that the better those nerves are working. Like the baseball players, they did that study, 386 0:40:32 --> 0:40:39 didn't they, where half of them would go and have practice to score their goal, there's a quarter goal, 387 0:40:40 --> 0:40:44 and half of them would go, would sit at home and just think it through, think it through, 388 0:40:44 --> 0:40:49 imagine where you are and do it in their heads. And I think they got more, a higher score when 389 0:40:49 --> 0:40:55 they were down on the court. So it's a round. It's like the story, Sheila, of the US 390 0:40:56 --> 0:41:01 Air Force guy who was caught by the Vietnamese was in solitary confinement, I think for five or 391 0:41:01 --> 0:41:07 seven years, he was a scratch golfer. And to keep sane, he played a round of golf for the full length 392 0:41:07 --> 0:41:15 that would normally take him every day. And when he got out of prison, the first round of golf he 393 0:41:15 --> 0:41:20 played, he shot his handicap, like, anyway, keep going. But that's just another great reminder of 394 0:41:21 --> 0:41:30 how powerful our minds are. Absolutely. And our brains don't understand virtual reality. Everything 395 0:41:30 --> 0:41:37 is true, isn't it? If you hear, if somebody tells you bad news, you react as if it's happened. Maybe 396 0:41:37 --> 0:41:42 it didn't happen. You've not seen it happen, but you react as if it's happened. Your heart rate goes 397 0:41:42 --> 0:41:47 up when you even think of something negative, even if it's not happened, that it might happen. 398 0:41:47 --> 0:41:52 So then that's telling your nervous system. So the two sides are the sympathetic nervous system, 399 0:41:52 --> 0:41:59 fight flight, which increases heart rate, blood pressure, cholesterol, blood clotting. It makes 400 0:41:59 --> 0:42:05 you crave carbohydrates because you need to run away from that lion because we're cavemen at heart. 401 0:42:05 --> 0:42:12 And any risk to our lives is going to be because there's a physical risk, something's going to kill 402 0:42:12 --> 0:42:21 us. But we can change that and have a positive thought and take three deep breaths and stimulate 403 0:42:21 --> 0:42:26 the vagus nerve, go for a walk, take our socks and shoes off and walk around on the grass. All 404 0:42:26 --> 0:42:32 of those tell the nervous system, well, the world must be safe or I wouldn't have time to do this. 405 0:42:32 --> 0:42:38 And then the vagus nerve can do its job of rest, digest, detoxify, repair, rebalance hormones. 406 0:42:38 --> 0:42:45 So I think a combination of all of those, getting up and going out and getting daylight on your face, 407 0:42:45 --> 0:42:50 making sure you're getting exercise, sweating is important, whether it's exercise or saunas, 408 0:42:50 --> 0:42:54 cold water swimming. I've missed my sea swim the last couple of days. It's been bad weather here, 409 0:42:54 --> 0:43:02 but all of those things we know keep, they keep our metabolism going and they bring us joy and all of 410 0:43:02 --> 0:43:10 this is helping to reduce inflammation. So one question before we go to Stephen, Sheila, 411 0:43:11 --> 0:43:18 is what is a book that you or people listening have read? Because I've got a number of them on 412 0:43:18 --> 0:43:25 my bookshelf, but what's one book that anyone watching now or here in the meeting would 413 0:43:25 --> 0:43:32 recommend the stories of people who have cured themselves, not through drugs, not through anything 414 0:43:32 --> 0:43:39 but through their mental capabilities. And I've got a number of stories here of people who are 415 0:43:39 --> 0:43:46 written off by the medical profession, you are incurable. And of course, Patch Adams is the great 416 0:43:46 --> 0:43:54 example, Dr. Patch Adams, who used humour and laughter as the healing modality, which is entirely 417 0:43:54 --> 0:44:01 mental. But anyway, I'm just asking people to books that have inspired them on the power of mind to 418 0:44:01 --> 0:44:06 heal physical. And so, and Sheila, if you have any, I'd be most interested. 419 0:44:07 --> 0:44:11 The first that comes to mind is the cancer one. I think it's called Miraculous Remission 420 0:44:12 --> 0:44:18 about people who were told that they were not going to recover and yet they did. And it reminds 421 0:44:18 --> 0:44:25 me of a patient whose husband had, he had, I can't remember where his primary was, but he had liver 422 0:44:25 --> 0:44:31 metastasis and brain metastasis and he was told he was going to die. And she decided she wasn't 423 0:44:31 --> 0:44:36 accepting that. So they changed his diet. She was doing smoothies, all sorts of healthy things for 424 0:44:36 --> 0:44:41 him. She even got him to have some psychological support to help his relationship with his mother. 425 0:44:41 --> 0:44:48 And she learned German new medicine and started looking at that with him. Anyway, he was doing 426 0:44:48 --> 0:44:54 really well. He was meditating. He was swimming in the sea. He was in his seventies and they went 427 0:44:54 --> 0:44:59 back for a follow-up and he had more scans and the scans were up on the screen and the doctor said, 428 0:44:59 --> 0:45:05 well, there's your brain scan and I can't see anything in it. And there's your liver scan 429 0:45:05 --> 0:45:10 and that looks clear as well. So this man said, that's amazing. We've been working really hard 430 0:45:10 --> 0:45:17 on this. So I'm cured. And sadly, this toxic oncologist said, oh, there'll be a little seed 431 0:45:17 --> 0:45:24 somewhere to get you eventually. You're not cured. And a month later he died because he believed it. 432 0:45:24 --> 0:45:30 Yeah. So I think people can cast spells from the point of view, but if you believe what you're told, 433 0:45:31 --> 0:45:37 then it becomes reality because your brain can't tell the difference between reality and not. So 434 0:45:37 --> 0:45:42 yeah, it's positive. That's right. The power of belief is wonderful. So everyone like you, Sheila, 435 0:45:42 --> 0:45:47 I'm a great fan of Tony Robbins and your beliefs will create your health, everybody. 436 0:45:48 --> 0:45:54 Okay. Let me introduce Jeremy Willets, dentist. Dentists are wonderful because we, Julie and I, 437 0:45:54 --> 0:46:02 have a business in dental business mastery. And we do a lot of work with dentists and Julie has been, 438 0:46:02 --> 0:46:08 Julie was the first non-dentist in Australia to own a dental practice, Jeremy. So she's had 439 0:46:09 --> 0:46:15 37 years of experience in the dental world. And if your dental practice is not working well, 440 0:46:15 --> 0:46:22 Jeremy, then Julie's for you. Anyway, unmute yourself and you're going to talk to us not 441 0:46:22 --> 0:46:27 about dentistry, although Sheila might have some good advice to people about what anesthetics to 442 0:46:27 --> 0:46:32 take when you are, if you don't want jabs. But that's a secondary question. Over to you, 443 0:46:32 --> 0:46:35 Jeremy, what would you like to share on climate and anything else? 444 0:46:35 --> 0:46:40 Right. I'll just share my screen to start off with. Oh, can you switch off your... 445 0:46:41 --> 0:46:47 Okay. Yeah. Can you turn sharing on? Right. Okay. Let's put sharing on. 446 0:46:48 --> 0:46:52 Jeremy, I'm very impressed to see that you had a haircut for this meeting. 447 0:46:54 --> 0:46:55 On a Sunday. 448 0:46:56 --> 0:46:58 Let me just reduce you a lot down a bit. 449 0:47:01 --> 0:47:05 Right. Okay. So I thought I'd give a little chat about my understanding of the world, where we are, 450 0:47:06 --> 0:47:12 and the climate scam and the cycles as well behind this, and the 451 0:47:14 --> 0:47:23 insults to our intelligence, I think, and basically a review of the lying that governments do to us, 452 0:47:23 --> 0:47:29 and the supranational bodies behind them, and the risk of potential civilizational decline 453 0:47:30 --> 0:47:35 is drawing close. It sounds quite depressing, but the good thing is we get to start all over again. 454 0:47:35 --> 0:47:37 And I think that's what it's all about. So... 455 0:47:41 --> 0:47:44 Jeremy, just do a real hatchet job on these people. 456 0:47:46 --> 0:47:47 That's right. I don't know. 457 0:47:47 --> 0:47:53 Right. Okay. So I think that says it all, really, and that's my view. I didn't always have this 458 0:47:53 --> 0:47:59 view. I once avoided buying a house early on in our marriage, right on the beach, because I was 459 0:47:59 --> 0:48:03 worried about the sea levels changing. But I rapidly realized that this is just so much 460 0:48:03 --> 0:48:12 hocus pocus, and it's not happening at all. And anyway, and there's... I put lots of slides on 461 0:48:12 --> 0:48:16 here. I'm going to have to rattle through them quickly, but I put some slides are better than 462 0:48:16 --> 0:48:23 others. But here we are. There's 50 years of failed climate doomsday predictions. There's another 463 0:48:23 --> 0:48:32 recap of failed predictions going back to the 60s. Oh, here's another one that we've been lied to 464 0:48:32 --> 0:48:38 about recently. Where did all the flu cases go to over COVID? And I found that particularly 465 0:48:38 --> 0:48:45 difficult. And then here's another one where we're told that vaccines are these saving 466 0:48:45 --> 0:48:51 medical interventions. Well, in fact, it's just good hygiene and plumbing and sanitation, 467 0:48:51 --> 0:48:57 but we don't want to talk about that. So I think, you know, we have to... Critical thinking is in 468 0:48:57 --> 0:49:03 decline. The teaching of critically critical thinking seems to be inclined in schools. People 469 0:49:03 --> 0:49:08 don't think for themselves. They'd rather look at a TV and be told what to think. And I find it very 470 0:49:08 --> 0:49:14 alarming amongst my peer group and friends how few people actually question. And I've always been one 471 0:49:14 --> 0:49:20 of those people who do question and do ask why. And I think, you know, the ability to change is 472 0:49:20 --> 0:49:27 a huge benefit for all. Now, this is the thing that really got me going back in the year 2000. 473 0:49:27 --> 0:49:32 So here we are as your classic climate graph, which is showing, you know, the temperature 474 0:49:32 --> 0:49:40 increasing with... Perhaps it might be due to CO2. And this is produced by NASA. But actually, 475 0:49:40 --> 0:49:48 this isn't the real data. That's the real data. And they changed it. So post-2000 is the graph. 476 0:49:48 --> 0:49:52 Pre-2000 was that graph. And I'll just flick it backwards and forwards for you. So this really 477 0:49:52 --> 0:49:57 got my hackles up. So in other words, they're cooking the books. And every single climate 478 0:49:57 --> 0:50:04 model you see on the planet is that... Is just a model. And we all know that most models don't work. 479 0:50:05 --> 0:50:14 We've had Ferguson's model for the deaths from COVID. I mean, it's just the biggest piece of 480 0:50:15 --> 0:50:19 rubbishy code you could ever imagine. You know, a child would have written it. It's like something 481 0:50:19 --> 0:50:27 out of a computer game. It was absolutely useless code. And they almost bankrupted the nation on 482 0:50:27 --> 0:50:32 the back of that code. And anyone associated with that should hang their head in shame. 483 0:50:33 --> 0:50:40 Going forwards, here we have a graph of CO2 and temperature for the last 600 million years. 484 0:50:40 --> 0:50:45 If anyone can show that there's a correlation between temperature and CO2 there, I'd be 485 0:50:45 --> 0:50:53 very well impressed. This is a geological time period. And as you can see, the one thing that 486 0:50:53 --> 0:51:01 you can see is there, there is a downtrend line in CO2 600 million years ago. It was at 6,000 487 0:51:01 --> 0:51:08 parts per million. Now we're down to about 400. And in the last cold period, it has got very low 488 0:51:08 --> 0:51:14 indeed, which is quite concerning. Here's another period, another graph, the same information, 489 0:51:14 --> 0:51:21 just showing you CO2 concentration alone. And we look at the Earth's temperature in relation to 490 0:51:21 --> 0:51:30 CO2. And one of the things you'll see there is the lowest period of CO2 occurred at around 180 491 0:51:30 --> 0:51:36 parts per million. And that is where all life on the planet would probably cease to exist, 492 0:51:36 --> 0:51:40 because it wouldn't be enough for the plants to survive. And so life, as we know, it would 493 0:51:40 --> 0:51:46 cease to exist. The other thing is if you pulled this graph out, you would actually notice that the 494 0:51:47 --> 0:51:54 rise in CO2 actually follows the rise in the oceans' sea temperature. So the temperature 495 0:51:54 --> 0:51:59 leads and then the CO2 follows. And that is another huge falsehood which is we're told. 496 0:52:01 --> 0:52:05 Going forwards again, we can see just the decline of atmospheric CO2 and where we are 497 0:52:05 --> 0:52:11 in the present era. So we are way, way below where we have been in the past. And if anything, 498 0:52:11 --> 0:52:16 I'll get on to show you shortly that CO2 is the gas of life. And we could do with doubling, 499 0:52:16 --> 0:52:26 tripling CO2. And that would be hugely beneficial for humanity. Here's a graph from the last 8,000 500 0:52:26 --> 0:52:32 years. This is showing how temperature and CO2 seem to be pretty much inversely related. There 501 0:52:32 --> 0:52:38 isn't a correlation. This is taken from the Greenland Dome ice cores. Everything I've got 502 0:52:38 --> 0:52:45 on here can be found easily. This is all, this is my, I must thank a few people here for and 503 0:52:45 --> 0:52:53 give a few citations. So Tom on the call was very grateful. He put me in touch with Ted Postel. 504 0:52:53 --> 0:53:00 And Ted Postel and I think Valentina Sarcova are two absolute great physicists who have 505 0:53:00 --> 0:53:05 really, really cracked this. And I'll mention some others later on. But the physicists of the 506 0:53:05 --> 0:53:11 world, the planet on the world are just amazing. And I think you'd really, really struggle to find 507 0:53:11 --> 0:53:17 any solar physicist worth his salt who would ever put his name down to backing the theory, 508 0:53:17 --> 0:53:22 present theory of global warming. So here again, we can see that the temperature of the 509 0:53:23 --> 0:53:27 world has been declining. We're actually in a real cool period at the moment. So they'd like 510 0:53:27 --> 0:53:31 to tell us that we're in a warm period. But obviously you can see the rise and fall of 511 0:53:31 --> 0:53:36 civilizations, which I'll show earlier has occurred with the rise and fall of the temperature. 512 0:53:36 --> 0:53:41 So you can see the Minoan warm period that occurred at a certain period of sunspots, 513 0:53:41 --> 0:53:46 then the Roman warm period, then the medieval warm period. And now we are at another period, 514 0:53:46 --> 0:53:52 a warm, slightly warm period at the moment. And what follows where we are is of real concern. 515 0:53:53 --> 0:54:01 So here we go again. This shows the concentration of CO2 against the temperature. And again, 516 0:54:01 --> 0:54:08 the CO2 level has only risen recently in the recent period, but it's got nothing to do with 517 0:54:08 --> 0:54:15 the industrial age. It was rising way before that. Here again is the longest temperature record we 518 0:54:15 --> 0:54:22 have, human temperature record. And this shows the central England temperature record. And 519 0:54:22 --> 0:54:29 CO2 correlated to it. And there is no correlation. You can see the central England temperature 520 0:54:29 --> 0:54:35 record is reasonably constant. We've warmed marginally. But the CO2 has risen dramatically. 521 0:54:35 --> 0:54:41 And actually, if you actually go to the industrial revolution period, which is, we'd say, 1850s, 522 0:54:41 --> 0:54:46 yeah, it was rising, but it rose a hell of a lot faster before that than it has since. 523 0:54:46 --> 0:54:51 So again, you can't really correlate CO2 and temperature. Now, one of the things that's 524 0:54:51 --> 0:54:56 really interesting, I have friends that tell me that the Greenland ice sheets melting and so on, 525 0:54:56 --> 0:55:00 I'll not be inclined to agree with them. But one of the things they don't talk about is the 526 0:55:00 --> 0:55:05 movement of the magnetic pole. So the polar shift there, there's a little map for you. You can see 527 0:55:05 --> 0:55:10 how much it's moved. It's moving at about 50 kilometers a year towards Siberia. And it looks 528 0:55:10 --> 0:55:15 like it's continuing to do so. But again, that's not talked about. But that's a little bit of 529 0:55:15 --> 0:55:19 not talked about. But that's obviously going to have a massive impact. And they could talk about 530 0:55:19 --> 0:55:28 the glaciers receding in Western Canada. And of course, this may have a lot to do with it. 531 0:55:30 --> 0:55:37 Now, we've been told that there's a climate apocalypse occurring. And I'm going to go 532 0:55:37 --> 0:55:43 through some of the apocalyptic scenarios they've told us. And they really are just lying again. 533 0:55:44 --> 0:55:53 So polar bears, they're the icon of the movement. We've all seen that destitute polar bear. But in 534 0:55:53 --> 0:56:00 fact, the polar bear population was at real risk in the 50s and 60s. And the population has 535 0:56:00 --> 0:56:07 increased dramatically over the last 30, 40 years, or 50 years. So the population now is between 536 0:56:08 --> 0:56:12 around 30,000. I've seen numbers, this one's saying up to 50, well, I've seen numbers around 537 0:56:12 --> 0:56:20 30. Al Gore was born when there were only 7,000 polar bears around. And now there are about 26,000, 538 0:56:20 --> 0:56:26 which I thought that was quite an amusing slide. The next one is the chronic heat. Well, 539 0:56:26 --> 0:56:33 the hottest temperature in the mainland US, in the period of peak temperatures was in the 1930s. 540 0:56:33 --> 0:56:37 And this has actually been removed from the records now. They keep on lowering the 541 0:56:37 --> 0:56:43 temperatures there and raising the temperatures post 1990. And that's a falsehood. Then if we go 542 0:56:43 --> 0:56:50 around and look at the actual acreage of fires burnt in the US, you'll see there, but back in the 543 0:56:50 --> 0:56:57 1930s, when the temperatures were extreme, we had the acreage burnt was far, far higher. But actually, 544 0:56:57 --> 0:57:04 you'll see this small insect graph. This is a graph from the 80s to the present day. And they 545 0:57:04 --> 0:57:10 have distorted the data. They have made the y-axis longer. So it looks like there's a steeper 546 0:57:10 --> 0:57:15 increase. But actually, if you look at the real long-term graph over 100 years, there's actually 547 0:57:15 --> 0:57:21 been, you know, it's reasonably constant. There were a lot more forest fires and now there are 548 0:57:21 --> 0:57:29 less. And if you look at it on a global basis, this has been reducing considerably for some time. 549 0:57:29 --> 0:57:37 So carbon dioxide has gone up and forest fires have gone down. Moving on, oh, we're telling all 550 0:57:37 --> 0:57:41 the species are dying out, you know, and again another falsehood. So let's go and examine this. 551 0:57:42 --> 0:57:48 This is telling us all the extinctions that have occurred. And a graph like that would suggest is 552 0:57:48 --> 0:57:53 there's loads and loads of extinctions occurring now. But actually, that's a falsehood as well. 553 0:57:53 --> 0:57:58 Most of the extinctions occurred during the periods of exploration, especially when the westerners 554 0:58:00 --> 0:58:05 visited islands like New Zealand and Australia and introducing feral animals such as cats and 555 0:58:05 --> 0:58:13 dogs and weasels and stoats. In actual fact, the rate of decline and the rate of extinctions has been 556 0:58:14 --> 0:58:23 declining a lot over the last few years. So you can see that actually in the 2000s now, 557 0:58:23 --> 0:58:28 we're at probably the lowest rate of extinction. So there goes old Greta's claim again. 558 0:58:29 --> 0:58:35 So how dare she, not how dare the rest of us. Then we're told about extreme weather deaths. 559 0:58:35 --> 0:58:42 Actually, it's cold as the killer and warm is good. More people die of cold than they ever die of 560 0:58:42 --> 0:58:47 warm. And this is extreme weather deaths and they've been declining as well over the last 561 0:58:47 --> 0:58:54 hundred years and that's through human endeavors. So despite some of the worst, some very bad 562 0:58:54 --> 0:58:59 hurricanes we've had recently, they didn't kill many people compared to 100, 200 years ago. 563 0:59:01 --> 0:59:08 Now, apparently, climate change, the good thing about climate change is the CO2's level is rising 564 0:59:08 --> 0:59:14 and that actually is good for plants. Plants grow faster and they actually retain more water vapor 565 0:59:14 --> 0:59:20 and more moisture and fertilize the soil more. You wouldn't believe that apparently CO2 is bad for us 566 0:59:20 --> 0:59:27 but what people don't realize is actually how much CO2 in the atmosphere there is 567 0:59:27 --> 0:59:34 and of the whole atmosphere, CO2 makes up 0.04%. So it's a tiny, tiny part of the atmosphere. 568 0:59:35 --> 0:59:41 And then what people don't know and you ought to maybe question yourself, I ought to do a 569 0:59:41 --> 0:59:47 raise hands scenario, but we won't. But actually all of human activity is only responsible for a 570 0:59:47 --> 0:59:55 maximum 6% of all CO2 in the atmosphere. The bulk of the CO2 is released by the warming of the oceans 571 0:59:56 --> 1:00:03 from the sunlight and the other part is from decaying biomass. And so this idea that 572 1:00:03 --> 1:00:12 humanity is responsible for really the bulk of CO2 in the atmosphere is a complete fault set 573 1:00:12 --> 1:00:17 and it needs to be junked. Here we are. Now the other thing is CO2 is actually 574 1:00:18 --> 1:00:24 virtually reached its saturation levels and you can listen to people like Will Happer who 575 1:00:24 --> 1:00:32 I did a lot of work on the saturation of CO2 and effect on the upper atmosphere. 576 1:00:32 --> 1:00:38 And basically we can double CO2 now or triple it and it really will have very, very little effect 577 1:00:38 --> 1:00:42 on the warming of the planet at all. And anyway it doesn't matter what we do, we're going to have 578 1:00:42 --> 1:00:48 no effect on the warming of the planet whatsoever. The planet's going to warm and I'll show you why 579 1:00:48 --> 1:00:53 and it's going to warm for the next five to six hundred years and we are a completer relevance. 580 1:00:54 --> 1:00:59 So let's have a look. So what has happened with the increase of CO2? Well the increase of CO2 581 1:00:59 --> 1:01:04 has been good for us. You'll see there's a direct correlation. We've had an increase in temperature, 582 1:01:04 --> 1:01:08 an increase in crop yields. So as the population has increased we've been able to feed a lot more 583 1:01:08 --> 1:01:15 people and if we keep on increasing the CO2 we will complete continue to increase crop yields 584 1:01:15 --> 1:01:23 and we'll continue to be able to increase feed more people. So the Malthusians on the planets 585 1:01:23 --> 1:01:27 have been wrong all the time and they continue to be wrong because they don't allow for human 586 1:01:27 --> 1:01:34 ingenuity and that's why they're such a bunch of idiots really. Going forwards this is one of the 587 1:01:34 --> 1:01:41 best graphs. So this has been the effect of the increase of CO2 over the last 100 years or so 588 1:01:41 --> 1:01:46 and here you can see the increase of biomass on the planet. So the planet has actually greened 589 1:01:47 --> 1:01:51 and this is the complete opposite of what you said. You know plants are growing in the Sahel, in 590 1:01:52 --> 1:01:58 southern Sahara. Everywhere the amount of biomass has increased and that's a very good graph. This is 591 1:02:00 --> 1:02:09 a graph from the CSIRO and you can follow this up yourself. Again another lie, you know here we are 592 1:02:10 --> 1:02:15 just showing where we are at the present global temperature. So we're actually still pretty 593 1:02:15 --> 1:02:21 cool here certainly compared to the medieval period. So you know I'm sitting here in Coldham 594 1:02:21 --> 1:02:26 Kitchen. I could do with a bit more warming at the moment. You know you have to sort of, 595 1:02:26 --> 1:02:33 the only time the general population actually even think about it and critically think is on 596 1:02:33 --> 1:02:40 April 1st and I think this slide is well placed because if people actually did sit down and examine 597 1:02:40 --> 1:02:47 what's being the narrative in front of them they would really be quite sickened by how they're 598 1:02:47 --> 1:02:55 being lied to. So let's examine the IPCC and see what they're doing. So the IPCC, you know they are 599 1:02:55 --> 1:03:01 a terrible organisation. They actually produce the SPM which is what they call, all the governments 600 1:03:01 --> 1:03:08 follow, it's called the Summary for Policymakers and they produced that document in the early 1990s 601 1:03:08 --> 1:03:15 before they had the data and that says everything. It means the IPCC document is purely a 602 1:03:15 --> 1:03:22 political document. It is nothing to do with the actual numbers and the best person to review on 603 1:03:22 --> 1:03:29 all this is a chap I must mention is Dr Tim Ball who sadly died last year and he sued Michael Mann. 604 1:03:29 --> 1:03:37 He called Michael Mann's graph a pack of BS and Michael Mann sued Tim Ball and Michael Mann lost 605 1:03:37 --> 1:03:44 because it's rubbish and Michael Mann has done it again recently. He's sued one of the radio 606 1:03:45 --> 1:03:50 presenters in the US. I think it's Stein and he's lost again apparently but not in the mainstream 607 1:03:50 --> 1:03:57 media and we wouldn't want to draw attention to that. So the IPCC agrees that temperatures 608 1:03:57 --> 1:04:02 are unusually cool at the moment so how can they tell us that we've been warming for all this time? 609 1:04:03 --> 1:04:08 Now they say actually hurricanes, we can't say hurricanes are worsening, 610 1:04:08 --> 1:04:14 they admit it's with low confidence. What's the other one? Oh tornadoes, tornadoes aren't getting 611 1:04:14 --> 1:04:23 any worse either. So another lie and then sea levels rise. So sea level rise has been going on 612 1:04:24 --> 1:04:30 approximately, you can see that about three or four millimetres a year and it's going to continue to 613 1:04:30 --> 1:04:37 do that and some of the sea level rise is obviously easily accounted for just by the 614 1:04:37 --> 1:04:45 movement of the earth's crust and the movement of mountains and the plate tectonic plate activity. 615 1:04:45 --> 1:04:50 So I really don't think that's an issue either. Going forward you can plot the rise and fall of 616 1:04:50 --> 1:04:57 civilizations by the output of the sun and this is what we're going to be moving on to next. So 617 1:04:57 --> 1:05:01 you can see the Minoan warm period, then the Great Dark Ages, then the Roman warm period, 618 1:05:01 --> 1:05:07 then the European dark age and the medieval warm period and then the Little Ice Age, 619 1:05:07 --> 1:05:12 it's the Monda minimum and then finally we're coming back out of the Monda minimum, 620 1:05:12 --> 1:05:19 you know finished it in the late 1700s and we've been getting warmer luckily since then 621 1:05:20 --> 1:05:24 and obviously you know because we've been coming out of warm periods you'll have noticed that a lot 622 1:05:24 --> 1:05:30 of glaciers have been retreating in the Alps and in the Rockies and that's nothing normal, 623 1:05:30 --> 1:05:36 they'll grow again. One of the things that will be you know we know we have people who travel to 624 1:05:38 --> 1:05:45 Greenland routinely as the ice sheet recedes in Greenland they are finding, not only are they 625 1:05:45 --> 1:05:51 finding trees, you know which are the stumps of trees so 400 miles north of the present arctic 626 1:05:51 --> 1:05:57 circle they are finding settlements so people obviously live there and even more astounding 627 1:05:57 --> 1:06:02 they are finding bodies but the bodies aren't on the surface, the bodies are buried in graves 628 1:06:02 --> 1:06:09 and so to be buried in a grave in that area they're in the permafrost so it therefore 629 1:06:09 --> 1:06:16 means that area was a lot lot warmer earlier again. So here we go that's another just another 630 1:06:16 --> 1:06:21 recap and you can see that we're actually in a in a cool period here at the moment we're just 631 1:06:21 --> 1:06:29 coming out of a cool period luckily for us. Now how does that relate to everything that's going 632 1:06:29 --> 1:06:35 on with if if co2 doesn't have to have anything to do really much with the weather what does 633 1:06:35 --> 1:06:40 well it's obviously the big yellow thing in the sky we all call the sun and the sun is 634 1:06:40 --> 1:06:46 isn't static they assume the sun is static but it doesn't it moves and the sun is has 635 1:06:46 --> 1:06:52 cycles as well so just as you've seen the cycles in civilization those cycles in civilization are 636 1:06:52 --> 1:06:58 actually driven by the sun cycle and the sun has a long a short cycle an 11 year cycle 637 1:06:58 --> 1:07:06 a grand solar cycle which is 350 to 450 years and an even longer cycle which is about 1850 years 638 1:07:06 --> 1:07:12 and you get super in position of these cycles and then on top of that the sun cycle also has a sun 639 1:07:12 --> 1:07:17 spot cycle and this is what we're starting to realize here and I'm showing here so this is a 640 1:07:17 --> 1:07:25 graph the sunspot cycles and you'll see we are in a bear market for sunspot cycles and we've just 641 1:07:25 --> 1:07:34 had a recent peak in the sunspot cycles in 23, 24 and we're going down again and we're going to go 642 1:07:34 --> 1:07:41 down seriously in the 2040s 2050s going so I think our solar cycle 27 so we can expect to start from 643 1:07:41 --> 1:07:47 the 30s I think maybe even sooner start to get a lot colder and actually I think we're going to 644 1:07:47 --> 1:07:52 get a lot lot colder this year it looks like this winter in the in the North America will probably 645 1:07:52 --> 1:07:58 be one of the top five coldest on record so you can quote me on that I haven't had time to put 646 1:07:58 --> 1:08:03 all the slides in that I'd like to for you but there's a I only had limited time to get this 647 1:08:03 --> 1:08:12 prepared now what what what's the effect of this well as the as the sun cycles decrease so the jet 648 1:08:12 --> 1:08:17 stream becomes affected and instead of having a stable jet stream which we used to recently 649 1:08:17 --> 1:08:27 we're now starting to get a wonky and varied some jet stream and we're already getting evidence of 650 1:08:27 --> 1:08:36 this so this is giant let me just go through this yeah I'll go on to that and we're seeing 651 1:08:36 --> 1:08:41 this because this is where I live I've never seen the aurora but or borealis so in little sweet jersey 652 1:08:41 --> 1:08:47 earlier this year that we had a jet stream come down and look what happened we got this from our 653 1:08:47 --> 1:08:53 house which is just amazing so in in my 60 years I've never seen this before but this is my first 654 1:08:53 --> 1:08:59 time now what happened in the Maunder minimum so this is very relevant to where we are at the 655 1:08:59 --> 1:09:05 moment so you can see from this graph in the Maunder minimum the whole of Siberia, Northern 656 1:09:05 --> 1:09:13 Europe and North America are much much colder and we had things like the Thames freezing over the 657 1:09:13 --> 1:09:20 Netherlands froze recently and the Alpine glaciers extended for far far further but obviously since 658 1:09:20 --> 1:09:26 the Maunder minimum we've been warming up and therefore you'd expect the Alpine glaciers and 659 1:09:26 --> 1:09:34 the rocky glaciers and the Greenland ice sheet to pull back and that's what we've seen. 660 1:09:36 --> 1:09:40 So here's a little pictorial graph just of the 661 1:09:43 --> 1:09:47 warm periods and the cold periods so you can see our current warm periods so we've got the Maunder 662 1:09:47 --> 1:09:56 minimum the Dalton minimum 1880 to 1915 there's the 1930s which was the highest period warm the 663 1:09:56 --> 1:10:02 warmest period with the highest extreme temperatures in the US then we had the 70s if we if I don't know 664 1:10:02 --> 1:10:08 if any of you are old enough to remember Leonard Nimoy on the front of Time magazine predicting 665 1:10:08 --> 1:10:13 you know we're going to be freezing well that was why in the 70s and then at the end of the 70s we 666 1:10:13 --> 1:10:18 suddenly started to get warm again and here we are we've had a little bit of a warming period 667 1:10:18 --> 1:10:27 with the latest solar cycle. Now Valentina Sarkova who's a physicist in Newcastle she's an amazing 668 1:10:27 --> 1:10:34 physicist and she did some amazing research and built a model of solar inertia motion and her 669 1:10:34 --> 1:10:42 this is her model and this is the observations of the sun cycles and basically she seems to have 670 1:10:42 --> 1:10:49 cracked it and both her Ted Postol does a great review and I must thank Tom Rodman for finding 671 1:10:49 --> 1:10:55 me a lot of these a lot of this material and another Danish scientist who I'll come through 672 1:10:55 --> 1:11:01 come to shortly really deserve a huge amount of praise and validation and recognition for what 673 1:11:01 --> 1:11:08 they've done. So the sun has a cycle and we can see the cycle so we are just coming to the end of 674 1:11:08 --> 1:11:15 cycle 25 now and we're back to drop off a cliff unfortunately and you can see the sun cycles here 675 1:11:16 --> 1:11:22 every 11 years or so and you can see why we'll you know we've got a bit warmer in the 80s I think 676 1:11:22 --> 1:11:29 everyone will remember 1976 when it got particularly warm in the UK and the sun cycles keep advancing. 677 1:11:29 --> 1:11:35 Now where are we in the big scheme of things we are right here and this is really really 678 1:11:35 --> 1:11:42 worrying because it means we're going to go here so solar cycle 26 is going to be a really really 679 1:11:42 --> 1:11:48 cold cycle and that's where we're heading and I have grave concerns for everyone 680 1:11:50 --> 1:11:57 and the population of the planet because if we do go into this super cycle this will mean we'll 681 1:11:57 --> 1:12:03 have some extreme temperature variations and food reduction will be therefore be affected 682 1:12:03 --> 1:12:08 and the reason this is relevant so we've got the 11 year cycle and in cycles you have constructive 683 1:12:08 --> 1:12:13 and destructive interference so here you can clearly see some destructive interference because 684 1:12:13 --> 1:12:20 we've got a 350 year cycle coinciding so we're going to have a modern minimum coming up shortly. 685 1:12:21 --> 1:12:26 So what does it look like when you get a say a Monde minimum well that's that's a good picture 686 1:12:26 --> 1:12:31 of either the Thames or Holland and people skating so that's what we've got to look forward to 687 1:12:33 --> 1:12:39 and I have grave concerns about this area just here so it looks like I'm going to get cold 688 1:12:39 --> 1:12:45 and is there an indication that it's happening well yes it's starting to happen so they had 689 1:12:45 --> 1:12:56 snow in Africa in the desert not long ago. The other thing that's sort of a real concern as well 690 1:12:56 --> 1:13:01 to coincide with this is as we have a decrease in solar activity I'm going to be talking more 691 1:13:01 --> 1:13:08 about the sun shortly but as the sun activity decreases with these solar minimums we seem to 692 1:13:08 --> 1:13:14 get any the because the earth seems to be bombarded more with cosmic rays we seem to 693 1:13:14 --> 1:13:20 get an increase in volcanic and earthquake activity and that seems to be happening as well 694 1:13:21 --> 1:13:26 and we need to really be having an intergovernmental panel on how to avoid disasters 695 1:13:26 --> 1:13:32 not on flipping co2 it's the wrong thing. Basically when you have these periods you 696 1:13:32 --> 1:13:37 can have a shortage of vegetation periods and they could lead to severe food shortages. 697 1:13:37 --> 1:13:43 Now this is from Valentina and she's not the only person who's drawing attention to this 698 1:13:43 --> 1:13:49 so I'm going to come to some of the world's great economic forecasters right at the very end because 699 1:13:49 --> 1:13:55 they they look at the world in a different way and they are also highlighting this grave risk 700 1:13:55 --> 1:14:02 and volcanic risk. So we can look here at the you know IPCC prediction which is a computer model 701 1:14:02 --> 1:14:08 and I think you really need to view all their computer models like everyone views AI. If you 702 1:14:08 --> 1:14:14 use AI you're all probably people already realizing that it's just a large language model and it's 703 1:14:14 --> 1:14:20 just rubbish in rubbish out it cannot think it can produce large volumes of data and correlates but 704 1:14:20 --> 1:14:26 it cannot think it doesn't have that human capacity and the problem with large models is 705 1:14:26 --> 1:14:30 they're basically wrong they're always wrong not one of their predictions has been right 706 1:14:30 --> 1:14:36 and if you ask them to model things they can't even model a cloud you know we all know weather 707 1:14:36 --> 1:14:40 prediction is unpredictable so how are they going to predict the whole weather of the climate when 708 1:14:40 --> 1:14:45 they can't predict a cloud and they can't certainly can't predict a thunderstorm and a thunderstorm 709 1:14:46 --> 1:14:51 carries air from the sea temperature up to 30 000 feet in the atmosphere so if you and there 710 1:14:51 --> 1:14:57 are tens of thousands of thunderstorms on the planet every day and they can't model one so 711 1:14:57 --> 1:15:04 this is just garbage and they should they should fuzz up and say say so so this is their prediction 712 1:15:04 --> 1:15:10 this is the actual what what we're going to be going through and you can see the solar 713 1:15:10 --> 1:15:14 cycles carrying on and we're going to keep on warming but I'm going to carry it come to that 714 1:15:14 --> 1:15:20 later on and why we'll keep on warming so there's no relation really between carbon dioxide and 715 1:15:20 --> 1:15:25 temperature the only thing you can say is the carbon increase in carbon dioxide seems to lag 716 1:15:25 --> 1:15:32 the temperature and that's so that's reflected from this the oceans and all you need to do is 717 1:15:32 --> 1:15:38 take a can of beer out of the fridge when you when you have your can of beer and you take it out if 718 1:15:38 --> 1:15:44 you crack the top off it starts to fizz why does it start to fizz because it's starting to warm up 719 1:15:44 --> 1:15:51 and if you hold it it'll fizz even more and the carbon dioxide comes out so as you as you subject 720 1:15:51 --> 1:15:58 the oceans to more heating from the sun not from global co2 but from the sun therefore you'll get 721 1:15:58 --> 1:16:06 more co2 released and that's where we are now so going forwards this chap is just amazing and it 722 1:16:06 --> 1:16:11 really you know I don't I don't really have pay any attention to noble prizes now but if anyone 723 1:16:11 --> 1:16:21 deserves a prize Dr. Henrik Svensmund from the Division of the Subsystem Physics of the 724 1:16:21 --> 1:16:30 Danish National Institute really deserves it because he identified the primary driver I believe 725 1:16:30 --> 1:16:37 behind the formation of clouds and the and the heating of the planets effectively because he 726 1:16:37 --> 1:16:46 identified it's the fact that the background cosmic rays affect our planet and the reason 727 1:16:46 --> 1:16:51 they affect our planet is because it's the radiation from background cosmic radiation 728 1:16:51 --> 1:16:59 hitting hitting the earth's upper atmosphere causes provo sticks energy into the upper atmosphere 729 1:17:00 --> 1:17:07 causes causing atoms to split and causes cloud and droplets and nucleation and that's what forms 730 1:17:07 --> 1:17:15 clouds so if the sun shrinks then as a direct result of the sun shrinking the heliosphere will 731 1:17:15 --> 1:17:20 shrink which therefore means we're going to get more cosmic radiation hit the planet if you get 732 1:17:20 --> 1:17:26 more cosmic radiation hit the planet you're going to get more clouds and so 733 1:17:30 --> 1:17:35 we're going to get more clouds forming which is going to affect the temperature 734 1:17:35 --> 1:17:38 now if you go on go on I'm going to get come to this a little bit more I'm just going to mention 735 1:17:39 --> 1:17:43 Valentina's arcova again I put up links here so you can copy and paste the links 736 1:17:44 --> 1:17:52 Valentina has basically mapped the world's the movement of the sun and it's it doesn't 737 1:17:52 --> 1:17:57 revolve around the middle of itself it revolves around something called the bary center because 738 1:17:57 --> 1:18:02 the sun is affected by the surrounding planets so the big planets like saturn neptune uranus and 739 1:18:02 --> 1:18:09 jupiter all pull the sun and so it moves and it rotates around something called the bary center 740 1:18:09 --> 1:18:16 and so the sun is going to keep moving towards us for about the next 600 years so we're going 741 1:18:16 --> 1:18:21 to keep on warming regardless because of the movement of the sun towards the earth until the 742 1:18:21 --> 1:18:30 year 2700 and then after that it'll start to move away so here we have an example of what's going on 743 1:18:30 --> 1:18:37 the sun's rotating in the middle and the heliosphere puts out a huge magnetic field 744 1:18:37 --> 1:18:46 which deflects the interstellar wind now what happens when the sun reduces its activity 745 1:18:47 --> 1:18:53 well you're going to get more wind hitting us now the really interesting thing is somebody stuck 746 1:18:53 --> 1:19:00 another cloud setup recently and they actually this is from their site cloud set is the first 747 1:19:00 --> 1:19:05 of a kind radar system that's more sensitive to any other way radar weather it provides a never 748 1:19:05 --> 1:19:11 seen before perspective on clouds and it allows us to look into large cloud masses well it's all 749 1:19:11 --> 1:19:16 really good but if you look over here clouds and aerosols affect our climate in ways we do not 750 1:19:16 --> 1:19:21 completely understand oh so there you go first sentence they tell you they don't understand 751 1:19:21 --> 1:19:26 clouds and they don't know how they form and they can't model them so what on earth are they doing 752 1:19:26 --> 1:19:30 with all their other models i mean it's just rubbish anyway so here's a pictorial image of 753 1:19:30 --> 1:19:36 what the earth's what the sun's heliosphere does and that's a good a good picture of it 754 1:19:36 --> 1:19:43 deflecting the solar wind now what happens when the cosmic ray hits the upper atmosphere 755 1:19:45 --> 1:19:50 you've got trace gases in the upper atmosphere the cosmic rays come in they hit and they start 756 1:19:50 --> 1:19:58 bouncing around and they they cause ionization and the ionization causes a nucleation to occur 757 1:19:58 --> 1:20:03 and then the you get small droplets attract to other droplets and they get bigger and bigger 758 1:20:03 --> 1:20:09 and bigger and eventually you get cloud formation now why are clouds important they're important 759 1:20:09 --> 1:20:15 because they're reflects reflect sunlight so the more cloud formation you get basically the more 760 1:20:15 --> 1:20:21 the more sunlight you're going to get reflected so we can we can actually measure this so this 761 1:20:21 --> 1:20:26 can actually be proven because when the cosmic rays hit the upper atmosphere 762 1:20:26 --> 1:20:34 they affect beryllium and carbon so you get and actual aluminium as well so you can measure the 763 1:20:34 --> 1:20:41 beryllium and the carbon beryllium 10 aluminium 26 and carbon 14 within the plants and animals 764 1:20:41 --> 1:20:50 of the and in the earth's crust and in ice so here we go so the carbon gets sequestered by 765 1:20:50 --> 1:20:55 plants and animals and tree rings so you can measure the carbon 14 and the beryllium goes 766 1:20:55 --> 1:21:05 into the water and the clouds and you can measure it in the ice record and ice core samples so let's 767 1:21:05 --> 1:21:10 have a little look changes in cloud cover is the major physical mechanism that causes changes in 768 1:21:10 --> 1:21:17 the earth's average global mean surface temperature in all physical theories so the more clouds you 769 1:21:17 --> 1:21:22 get the more sunlight you get reflected and you therefore get a cooler surface temperature 770 1:21:22 --> 1:21:29 so for an example a five percent change in the cloud temperature would increase would roughly 771 1:21:29 --> 1:21:37 equate to a change in temperature of one degree in the global surface temperature so in other words 772 1:21:37 --> 1:21:46 you get feedback mechanisms from the changes in the cloud to the earth and amplification 773 1:21:46 --> 1:21:50 to certain extent of greenhouse gases now what are the greenhouse gases well 774 1:21:51 --> 1:21:57 they talk about methane and they talk about carbon dioxide but actually the biggest 775 1:21:59 --> 1:22:05 greenhouse gases in fact water vapor and therefore clouds and they can't even model it so they can't 776 1:22:05 --> 1:22:14 model the largest driver of the greenhouse gases so let's move forwards again so there's lots of 777 1:22:14 --> 1:22:19 cycles that are going on so you've got a solar cycle and here you have a guy called 778 1:22:19 --> 1:22:26 a guy called Wolfgang Glazeberg he noted variations in the sun's magnetic fields 779 1:22:26 --> 1:22:33 which are reported to occur every 90 years now a glazeberg cycle is really really important 780 1:22:33 --> 1:22:39 because the last time we had a glazeberg cycle that's when we had the last dust bowl and a real 781 1:22:39 --> 1:22:45 period of extreme dryness and we're due another one it was due in 2023 but i think that's been 782 1:22:45 --> 1:22:55 delayed by the tonga volcano which that was a subsea volcano and that put up literally tons 783 1:22:55 --> 1:23:01 of water vapor into the upper atmosphere and i think we've been artificially warm for the past 784 1:23:01 --> 1:23:07 two or three years because of that tonga volcano but that effect is now passing and i think we're 785 1:23:07 --> 1:23:11 going to really find we're going to get hit by some severe cold this coming this coming winter 786 1:23:12 --> 1:23:20 so here's some other slides not only therefore do are we at risk of a cold period coming because 787 1:23:20 --> 1:23:26 the reduction of the sun's output and a solar minimum coming but the problem is we also have 788 1:23:26 --> 1:23:31 an increase in volcanic activity and we're already starting to see that so we've got a category six 789 1:23:31 --> 1:23:37 volcano but luckily it was a subsea volcano if we have a big one like a big caldera erupt i mean 790 1:23:37 --> 1:23:45 that could wipe out humanity and they are all moving the naples area is moving yellowstone 791 1:23:45 --> 1:23:53 area is moving and it is very concerning that we're seeing an increase in volcanic activity 792 1:23:53 --> 1:23:58 around the world hopefully we don't have anything too bad because if one of these big ones goes if 793 1:23:58 --> 1:24:06 we get a v6 volcano go we'd be heading into a volcanic winter on top of a solar minimum and 794 1:24:06 --> 1:24:12 that would be very very bad and detrimental to the whole of humanity because you ought to remember 795 1:24:12 --> 1:24:20 you know we large volcanoes have affected people before and when napoleon invaded russia he wasn't 796 1:24:20 --> 1:24:27 defeated by the russians he was defaulted defeated by a volcano basically because that was a year 797 1:24:27 --> 1:24:31 without the summer and they starved and there was and they froze to death 798 1:24:32 --> 1:24:42 um so that was the tambora volcano and there it is 1816 um it put up so much air volcanic 799 1:24:44 --> 1:24:47 volcanic particulates into the atmosphere that um 800 1:24:48 --> 1:24:58 uh it it it caused um famine and colds across europe and we had food riots and we could be 801 1:24:58 --> 1:25:03 looking at the same thing going forwards now you can review all these slides afters i can't talk 802 1:25:03 --> 1:25:10 about everyone um in august 24 again we had a large eruption in peru um that was a 400 year old 803 1:25:10 --> 1:25:16 volcanic volcano which was responsible for one of the largest volcanic eruptions in history and um 804 1:25:18 --> 1:25:23 it erupted 400 years ago and it started moving again so again this is the cause for concern and 805 1:25:23 --> 1:25:29 again if this one of these big boys went up it leads to famine and crop failures in europe and 806 1:25:29 --> 1:25:35 russia and and around the rest of the world now um climate's very interesting because it's very 807 1:25:35 --> 1:25:42 convenient because this is why i'm sort of bringing trying to bring climate and economics together now 808 1:25:42 --> 1:25:48 because uh we've got all these bad things going on and we've also got a system that's just failing 809 1:25:48 --> 1:25:53 and so you have to wonder why on earth are they picking on carbon dioxide well our governments 810 1:25:53 --> 1:25:58 are all going bust we've got a world um an economic crisis and the sovereign debt crisis 811 1:25:58 --> 1:26:05 right in front of us and um so it's very convenient if they can try and tax us a little bit more 812 1:26:05 --> 1:26:09 so imagine a world if you could where people believe that the temperature of the planet can 813 1:26:09 --> 1:26:13 be controlled by giving more money to the government that's basically what's it what it's about 814 1:26:14 --> 1:26:21 now we're entering a public debt cycle at the moment and you can't get away from it it happens 815 1:26:21 --> 1:26:25 it's just our time we're going to live we're living through the fall of the west at the moment 816 1:26:25 --> 1:26:31 every civilization has its moment has its time just as britain britain ruled ruled the waves 817 1:26:31 --> 1:26:40 and we peaked in the um uh late uh uh 20th century early 20th century america's had its time it's 818 1:26:40 --> 1:26:45 peaking and now it's going to the world economic center is going to move to china it's just our 819 1:26:45 --> 1:26:52 time we can't do anything about that and unfortunately we have been kicking the can down the road we've 820 1:26:52 --> 1:26:59 been following modern monetary theory and um qe and all the rest of it and the debt is basically 821 1:26:59 --> 1:27:03 killing us europe i don't know whether the crisis is going to start in europe or japan 822 1:27:03 --> 1:27:08 but it's going to start in one of those places and because the debt can't be kicked any further 823 1:27:08 --> 1:27:17 and you can already see the rush of the europeans into a um a digital currency um simply because 824 1:27:17 --> 1:27:21 uh they can't pay their debt anymore no one wants to buy it no one wants to buy europe 825 1:27:21 --> 1:27:26 british debt no one wants to buy french debt they've already come out the finance ministers 826 1:27:26 --> 1:27:32 of europe and france saying that oh we might need a bailout from the imf it's basically because no 827 1:27:32 --> 1:27:35 one's buying their debt the japanese are different because they're the japanese are buying the 828 1:27:35 --> 1:27:39 japanese debt so they're slightly they've got to wave with it for a little while and it's all 829 1:27:39 --> 1:27:47 internalized but the europeans are they can't get the can anymore and and so what on earth is coming 830 1:27:47 --> 1:27:53 in front of us you're asking so well this is all predicted because there are cycles and on here i've 831 1:27:53 --> 1:27:58 also put reference to martin armstrong who discovered the economic confidence model and 832 1:27:58 --> 1:28:08 just as there is a solar cycle so we have um a pie cycle and uh an 8.6 year cycle a 51 year cycle 833 1:28:08 --> 1:28:17 and a 309 year cycle and then um a 1075 year cycle and the reason i'm bringing this to your 834 1:28:17 --> 1:28:22 attention is because obviously all cycles you can get constructive and destructive interference 835 1:28:22 --> 1:28:29 and unfortunately all these cycles are coinciding the year 2032 and that therefore means we're going 836 1:28:29 --> 1:28:36 to be going through basically a period of civilizational change um just as the you know 837 1:28:36 --> 1:28:42 the rome the roman empire peaked uh with the roman warming and with their own cycle they 838 1:28:42 --> 1:28:48 armstrong realized that they had public and private cycles and a private cycle we're in 839 1:28:48 --> 1:28:55 a private cycle at the moment and we're coming in the end to an end of it um and this is when 840 1:28:55 --> 1:29:00 people you know this is all the gentlemen prefer bonds and um at the moment we're in a cycle where 841 1:29:00 --> 1:29:05 everyone's buying private assets so we're in a commodity bubble at the moment before that was a 842 1:29:05 --> 1:29:10 a not commodity a copy of the body bubble we're not in a bubble we're in a commodity cycle before 843 1:29:10 --> 1:29:16 that we had the real estate but the cycle and so on and so forth and this is where this all happens 844 1:29:16 --> 1:29:22 so you can see here's this is the economic conference cycle and you can see how you had 845 1:29:22 --> 1:29:27 to take over boom in the 80s where you could buy a company split it up and sell it and make a lot 846 1:29:27 --> 1:29:32 of money the best person about charles will know was alan bond and now we're coming through these 847 1:29:32 --> 1:29:38 cycles now and we're peaking to the end of this period so everyone basically is going to be dumping 848 1:29:38 --> 1:29:44 their debt and they're going to be buying um companies because people are running away from 849 1:29:44 --> 1:29:51 debt from public debt and the public part of the economy why is this um significant because 850 1:29:51 --> 1:29:56 we're heading into the next great fall and the rebirth of civilization on societies we know it 851 1:29:57 --> 1:30:01 it's nothing to be i don't think you should be afraid of it it's just a change we're living 852 1:30:01 --> 1:30:07 through history and we should embrace it and we get to start again so all of this madness that 853 1:30:07 --> 1:30:12 we've seen with coven and the wef and all these supranational bodies they're all going to crash 854 1:30:12 --> 1:30:17 and burn they're not going to survive because the public won't put up with it i think what they are 855 1:30:17 --> 1:30:25 trying to do is try to steer um and steer us in a new form of society and that's what we have to 856 1:30:25 --> 1:30:32 fight and that's what we have to be ready for um yeah that is the end of my presentation there you 857 1:30:32 --> 1:30:39 go so that's that's quite a quite a lot to get through for through but i wanted to try and link 858 1:30:39 --> 1:30:45 um uh climate the changes in climate to the changes in civilization and where we're going 859 1:30:45 --> 1:30:48 the only thing i'd probably like to put in here at the end actually let me just uh 860 1:30:51 --> 1:30:58 oh nice let me just go back to my slideshow there i'd like to uh let you know there are a 861 1:30:58 --> 1:31:04 couple of slight places you can go to um the co2 coalition are amazing uh what they've done that's 862 1:31:04 --> 1:31:11 will happer um john clauser who won the noble prize for physics in 22 or 23 he was going to 863 1:31:11 --> 1:31:16 give a a talk to the imf and tell them that there was no such thing as a climate crisis and there 864 1:31:16 --> 1:31:23 never could be and rather than listen to him they de-platformed um the founder of the president of 865 1:31:23 --> 1:31:29 the co so co2 coalition i've nicked many of their slides i have to give them credit to them i have 866 1:31:29 --> 1:31:36 to give credit to climates at lance that's another great slide i have to give credit to um ted 867 1:31:36 --> 1:31:45 postal to valentina sarcova um hackett financial they are superb i'd i because it's one thing to 868 1:31:45 --> 1:31:49 really see all this it's another thing to understand the implications and also to go and 869 1:31:49 --> 1:31:54 see how you can protect yourself so i'd strongly recommend people look at sean hackett's work 870 1:31:54 --> 1:32:00 i'd read conservative woman um they're very honorable i'd read armstrong economics every 871 1:32:00 --> 1:32:06 day i'd read jerry brady he's a real all these people they are they question everything they are 872 1:32:06 --> 1:32:11 critical thinkers of the 10th order they're all amazing people and the the quality of they work 873 1:32:11 --> 1:32:17 with the work they put out is exceptional and jerry's you know one of us and his work is amazing 874 1:32:17 --> 1:32:21 and they all come at things from different angles but they all basically get sort of similar 875 1:32:21 --> 1:32:25 conclusion and another huge resource i found from an investing point of view 876 1:32:26 --> 1:32:32 is this website which is um rosen craig and grozen it just talks about where we are and the 877 1:32:32 --> 1:32:39 final one i'd say sorry i haven't i haven't put it up is elliot goo and the um income advisor um 878 1:32:41 --> 1:32:48 for uh publication they're they're all superb let me see um yeah so there i've tried to cite 879 1:32:48 --> 1:32:54 valentina sarkozy he can look her up um theodore postal um how else i got there 880 1:32:55 --> 1:33:01 let's go back oh the other one you should all look at um is um tom nelson i think that's what 881 1:33:01 --> 1:33:08 that one is for um tom is um and yeah they are the tom nelson podcast everything i've learned um you 882 1:33:08 --> 1:33:14 know i i started in the year 2000 being being a cynic really realizing i was being lied to 883 1:33:15 --> 1:33:19 my dad is a physicist and i've always followed the physicists i've i've always listened to them 884 1:33:19 --> 1:33:26 but the top nelson podcast is great uh he's he's interviewed so so many great physicists and just 885 1:33:26 --> 1:33:30 ordinary people like myself who've um drawn their own conclusion and gone off and done their 886 1:33:30 --> 1:33:39 research so uh as a as a um source of information it's fantastic so you can you can i hope you find 887 1:33:39 --> 1:33:51 that helpful and i'm happy to talk to anybody now wonderful jeremy good job you did that very well 888 1:33:51 --> 1:34:08 in in um 47 minutes excellent overview and turn your speaker up speaker yeah i've got it up yeah 889 1:34:08 --> 1:34:14 i can hear now good um is that you dave colley you're looking a bit different with your space 890 1:34:14 --> 1:34:20 things on but anyway we hand his hands was up first and then we'll do dave column um steven 891 1:34:20 --> 1:34:27 unless you got a couple of questions first please derek thanks so much for for speaking to us about 892 1:34:27 --> 1:34:35 this um uh and it's great that you're citing the evidence and uh giving credit to these people who've 893 1:34:35 --> 1:34:42 informed you um but why do you think that they uh kind of persist with or try to persist with this 894 1:34:42 --> 1:34:49 um and why would they choose something that's so not even true you know they're actually trying 895 1:34:49 --> 1:34:54 to say well this is man is responsible for the global warming when we're actually cooling is 896 1:34:54 --> 1:35:00 that right yeah well no we're in irrelevance we're not irrelevant i mean i must say i mean it's great 897 1:35:00 --> 1:35:05 having dave on the on here as well because he's a he's a huge influence i i had great great 898 1:35:05 --> 1:35:11 pleasure driving through france listening to educating one of my sons we listened to his whole 899 1:35:11 --> 1:35:16 conversation on climates with on the top on the on the tom nelson podcast he was hilarious 900 1:35:16 --> 1:35:25 yeah dave colons a good um yeah very good at ranting yes so i was i call it education 901 1:35:25 --> 1:35:30 with a smile but uh it's it's it's getting people to think critically so i i mentioned him earlier 902 1:35:30 --> 1:35:38 on i think one of the greats in this field was um dr tim ball and he as a man of great integrity 903 1:35:38 --> 1:35:44 he took the took the difficult path he could have decided to bouts of client scientists and not to 904 1:35:44 --> 1:35:50 not take the path he did but he said no and he fought them and it cost him both financially 905 1:35:50 --> 1:35:55 and professionally i think and he unfortunately died a year ago i think it wasn't um a day but 906 1:35:55 --> 1:36:00 he wrote a great book and i'm sorry i'll need to put it in here so it's called the deliberate 907 1:36:00 --> 1:36:06 corruption of climate science and it's it it wanders a little bit but it's a superb work 908 1:36:06 --> 1:36:11 and everyone should reread it because it documents and you've got all the croft fresh references all 909 1:36:11 --> 1:36:18 all the citations and it documents everything from the club of rome going forwards you know it 910 1:36:18 --> 1:36:23 documents these individuals like morris strung and the you know these communists and socialists 911 1:36:23 --> 1:36:31 who worked in these supranational bodies to basically compromise our civilization i believe 912 1:36:31 --> 1:36:36 i think and at the end of the at the end of the day they're all they're either malfeasance 913 1:36:36 --> 1:36:43 malfeasance or they are socialists and they just seem to be power crazed individuals they don't 914 1:36:43 --> 1:36:49 value the power individual they value the power of governments and large institutions over humanity 915 1:36:49 --> 1:36:56 i can't um work out why they want to do it but they're you know just psychopaths i guess but 916 1:36:56 --> 1:37:00 tim ball's book is brilliant and he documents the whole thing coming forward in a really good 917 1:37:00 --> 1:37:06 timeline and i wish you could have all listened to him speak i listened to him a couple of times and 918 1:37:06 --> 1:37:13 it's a great privilege so yeah and um yeah dave i mean he's a great me did you look into um 919 1:37:14 --> 1:37:22 so i have one question um so um are you aware of uh the russians allegedly hacking into the computers 920 1:37:22 --> 1:37:26 of university of east anglia i don't know whether that's true or not but i heard it 921 1:37:28 --> 1:37:33 i just know you that you know that university of east anglia lied and they've made all their stuff 922 1:37:33 --> 1:37:38 up and they just really have that whole department should be shut down it's a natural disgrace 923 1:37:38 --> 1:37:45 when this one person allegedly resigned over that and that was professor stephen jones as i remember 924 1:37:45 --> 1:37:49 do you know anything about that guy no i don't know but tim ball spoke about it i mean but 925 1:37:49 --> 1:37:54 you know i'm sure there's there's a lot of people there trying to do a lot of good they believe this 926 1:37:54 --> 1:37:59 narrative but it's it's like the biggest one of the the whole green agenda is one of the biggest 927 1:37:59 --> 1:38:04 misallocations of capital in human history and we're going to suffer suffer for it hugely and 928 1:38:04 --> 1:38:09 you know you see it in you know another another classic you know so this is climate all the green 929 1:38:09 --> 1:38:14 energy stuff i mean i meant to put a slide in there just um about i'll put it in afterwards 930 1:38:14 --> 1:38:20 actually for you just the cost of reduction of a whip of a large turbine it will never ever ever 931 1:38:20 --> 1:38:25 pay for itself it's an impossibility um just because they don't they don't put in the 932 1:38:25 --> 1:38:29 transmission costs they don't put in the build costs they don't put in the three thousand 933 1:38:29 --> 1:38:34 to five thousand tons of cement they don't put in the mine costs the rare earth cost and the 934 1:38:34 --> 1:38:41 and the thing needs to be oiled as well um so you know it's just garbage science and it all sounds 935 1:38:41 --> 1:38:46 good but it just it's never going to work and and and solar are questioned as well i mean the 936 1:38:46 --> 1:38:51 chinese are hedging their bets they're building loads of these things but they're certainly uh 937 1:38:51 --> 1:38:57 if solar and wind really worked really well uh why are the chinese way to opening two powers 938 1:38:57 --> 1:39:03 coal-fired power stations a week you know there's your answer and they don't use the wind turbines 939 1:39:03 --> 1:39:10 even though they make just about all of them well i don't know i don't know there's um jerry will 940 1:39:10 --> 1:39:14 put us right on this but there's that large um danish company but you just look at their share 941 1:39:14 --> 1:39:19 price it's just fallen off a cliff no one's buying wind turbines everyone knows it doesn't work 942 1:39:20 --> 1:39:26 yes it starts with a v jeremy good okay thank we'll keep moving because we're at and we're up in 15 943 1:39:26 --> 1:39:34 minutes i have a go so no no anders was first then dave well we don't have to follow the okay 944 1:39:34 --> 1:39:40 yes we do and okay thank you uh it was really great to hear you jeremy i kind of followed you and 945 1:39:41 --> 1:39:50 you have most of the same stars like me and i i noticed you didn't mention the name of 946 1:39:50 --> 1:39:56 pierce corbin the brother of jeremy corbin oh yeah there's just too many great scientists out there 947 1:39:56 --> 1:40:01 i mean yes a brilliant physicist there's so many it's the physicists you have to listen to but 948 1:40:01 --> 1:40:09 they've all been stonewalled he's quite a star let's say he had this idea with this uh just three 949 1:40:09 --> 1:40:19 movement with the lower magnetism of the earth or the sun let's say so so and then in the 30s a lot 950 1:40:19 --> 1:40:28 of people are not knowing this because it's been stonewalled and earns back a german scientist he 951 1:40:28 --> 1:40:39 found a lot of data proving that it was higher co2 in the late 30s and the top was in 1942 it is 952 1:40:39 --> 1:40:50 higher than now 440 about average parts per million connecting to what jeremy will showed about the 953 1:40:50 --> 1:40:58 high temperatures in the 30s so there is a correlation in short term with the co2 to the 954 1:40:58 --> 1:41:05 temperature but it it kind of dies off with the law of henry henry let's say the thermodynamics 955 1:41:05 --> 1:41:12 it goes down into the sea in four to six years so in the long term it doesn't show up because 956 1:41:12 --> 1:41:20 it is dying off in short term and this can be verified with the c12 and c14 let's say carbon 957 1:41:20 --> 1:41:26 and there's a question question we don't need your presentation what's the question yes so 958 1:41:27 --> 1:41:35 so what is your response to what i'm saying now that i'm afraid that the situation in the next 959 1:41:35 --> 1:41:43 15 20 years you refer to the fall of the temperature which is predicted by valentine 960 1:41:43 --> 1:41:52 sarkova which is very likely i would say but the other factor which is behind the 961 1:41:53 --> 1:41:58 increase of food production is not directly linked to co2 but it's linked to 962 1:41:59 --> 1:42:07 uh pesticides and fertilizers which is increasing the no question and just come on what is your 963 1:42:07 --> 1:42:14 comment to that yeah i mean obviously they have a huge increase as well um you know fertilizer use 964 1:42:14 --> 1:42:20 and pesticide use obviously as you know mechanism the mechanization the farming has a massive 965 1:42:20 --> 1:42:24 increase you know the number of people involved in farming now is just negligible compared to what 966 1:42:24 --> 1:42:30 it was in the 30s so yeah that's had a huge effect as well without a doubt yeah but how 967 1:42:30 --> 1:42:35 sustainable that is i don't know especially that's that's thank you and that's what we have we don't 968 1:42:35 --> 1:42:40 have a climate emergency we have an environmental emergency and the destruction of our soils yeah 969 1:42:40 --> 1:42:47 and you shine a good light on that and it's very important that's why that book in the 1980s called 970 1:42:47 --> 1:42:54 from soil to psyche and doctors get zero training on nutrition and so all of there are many experts 971 1:42:54 --> 1:43:00 here on nutrition in this group and that's what sheila was talking about jeremy the quality of the 972 1:43:00 --> 1:43:07 food that you put into your body has a huge impact on your thinking ability so wakey wakey everybody 973 1:43:07 --> 1:43:14 okay dave colum you're next then marv hi i try to lightning round these first of all i'd like to 974 1:43:14 --> 1:43:20 apologize as a member of a social organization um i have let you guys down you should put me on a 975 1:43:20 --> 1:43:27 nice slow and send me off right you um i got in a global brawl that kind of got distracting um 976 1:43:28 --> 1:43:35 sheila i have a metaphor for you um think of organism rather than as a thing but as a great 977 1:43:35 --> 1:43:43 barrier reef i think is that yeah really really good i've read your comment i didn't know if you'd 978 1:43:43 --> 1:43:49 see it because i can't read them um i intermittent fasted for eight years it worked really well for 979 1:43:49 --> 1:43:53 me and you get used to it you stop getting hungry until dinner time and things like that 980 1:43:54 --> 1:44:01 the there's one theory of what happened in in covid which i can't shake is the idea that that 981 1:44:01 --> 1:44:08 that they actually used covid as an excuse to put the global economy into an induced coma because 982 1:44:08 --> 1:44:13 it was there was evidence things were starting to get completely nuts and i just wanted to 983 1:44:13 --> 1:44:20 keep that on the on the radar thomas curs is a guy who who did a nelson podcast he's got a book 984 1:44:20 --> 1:44:24 coming out it might be the best book of them all when it finally comes out i don't even know the 985 1:44:24 --> 1:44:30 title yet i'm not sure he's picked it um i agree solar physicists none of them think the climate 986 1:44:30 --> 1:44:37 destroys worth the damn um the overt lying in the field is horrific it's not just michael man 987 1:44:37 --> 1:44:43 and it's not just a few culprits it's they just lie their ass off and the question is why it's 988 1:44:44 --> 1:44:49 it's about trillions of dollars and in control of population there's got to be one some combination 989 1:44:49 --> 1:44:55 of those two there's a punchline coming here in a second but uh i think the polar shifts the polar 990 1:44:55 --> 1:45:02 the magnetic pole shift by some people i respect it could be very important and catastrophic 991 1:45:03 --> 1:45:08 there's a there's one thing you and i think we are going into a fourth turning in an economic 992 1:45:08 --> 1:45:13 disaster there's one thing you missed and that is about two weeks ago bill gates 993 1:45:14 --> 1:45:21 muttered that climate change isn't what we thought it was and you can say maybe that's just bill he 994 1:45:21 --> 1:45:27 got stoned or something and muttered i don't think so i think what that was is the first shot across 995 1:45:27 --> 1:45:35 the bow that says oh oh climate change narrative is now in the way of ai because of all the energy 996 1:45:35 --> 1:45:40 consumption of ai and as a consequence i think they're going to say oh never mind the climate 997 1:45:40 --> 1:45:46 change we need to burn a lot of coal and a lot of natural gas a lot of everything to uh to to to 998 1:45:46 --> 1:45:53 do our next big scam so keep your eyes on that i don't think gates's utterance was was random 999 1:45:53 --> 1:45:58 and spontaneous i think it was i think it was a first shot across the bow nice talk i agreed 1000 1:45:58 --> 1:46:03 with everything you said that's a worry that's amazing that's a worry 1001 1:46:06 --> 1:46:11 all right thank you because we're close to time so thank you dave marvin is next and then for those 1002 1:46:11 --> 1:46:19 with unlimited time you can go to tom rodman thanks dave marv hey jeremy i i'm going to ask 1003 1:46:19 --> 1:46:27 you about this um you know the explosion of human population has occurred because of this 1004 1:46:28 --> 1:46:35 you know the can canada ice shelf it melted and that cold fresh water rushed out into the north 1005 1:46:35 --> 1:46:43 atlantic sinks because it's i forget whether i think it's more dense and it created this current 1006 1:46:43 --> 1:46:51 around at the ocean depth and it circles the whole planet and this has created an air conditioning 1007 1:46:51 --> 1:46:58 thing what stabilized and that's why humans have exploded our population has been controlled for 1008 1:46:58 --> 1:47:07 the 200 000 or is it two million years we've been here but in the last 10 000 years now we've got to 1009 1:47:07 --> 1:47:14 9 billion or whatever it is well anyway my point and my question is why we focus 1010 1:47:14 --> 1:47:21 on what's happening on the land i mean it is a tiny i mean if you look at the arable land 1011 1:47:22 --> 1:47:27 it's a tiny fraction of what's happening the average depth of the oceans is three miles 1012 1:47:28 --> 1:47:34 that's what's happening on the planet what the hell we're doing on the land has nothing to do 1013 1:47:35 --> 1:47:43 so anyway i like your point about the sun that's obviously significant but this behavior of the 1014 1:47:43 --> 1:47:50 oceans the deep oceans and we don't talk about that at all i mean that's our so anyway i want 1015 1:47:50 --> 1:47:55 to know if you are aware of that oh yeah i mean i i put this together in about two hours this 1016 1:47:55 --> 1:48:00 i mean i could talk about agriculture i could talk about the the ocean oscillations i've got 1017 1:48:00 --> 1:48:05 loads of information that you just can't put it all in there and i sort of wanted to try and link 1018 1:48:05 --> 1:48:10 it all together a little bit for you um yeah no you're absolutely right i mean the sun is the big 1019 1:48:10 --> 1:48:16 driver though that's it's you know the uh there's a great on tom nelson again you can listen to lord 1020 1:48:16 --> 1:48:24 christopher moncton he did a great talk recently and again i'd encourage everyone to listen to 1021 1:48:24 --> 1:48:29 that i don't know if dave's still on the call but if he hasn't listened to it he really should do 1022 1:48:29 --> 1:48:33 because he he goes into the i haven't actually had time to watch it i've listened to it but i 1023 1:48:33 --> 1:48:40 wanted to go through the physics and go through the calculations because he you know the work 1024 1:48:40 --> 1:48:48 that will have has done on co2 saturation and then you know the christopher moncton goes on about the 1025 1:48:48 --> 1:48:56 laws of thermodynamics and the um please uh the laws of thermodynamics and basically the fact 1026 1:48:56 --> 1:49:01 that they've made some of the most elementary mathematical miscalculations you can imagine 1027 1:49:01 --> 1:49:08 so it's it's a little bit of my pay grade but um dave i'd strongly recommend you listen to that 1028 1:49:08 --> 1:49:12 and watch it and go through the maths and um i'd love to get some of these people to come and talk 1029 1:49:12 --> 1:49:18 to us i'd love ted to talk to us uh because he did such a good presentation which tom you are tom 1030 1:49:18 --> 1:49:24 nelson no uh maybe tom nelson i'd love to get in touch with tom i'd like i can get you in touch 1031 1:49:24 --> 1:49:28 with tom i can get you in touch with him oh that would be amazing because then i could reach out 1032 1:49:28 --> 1:49:32 to some of the other people because i think the person you meant you mentioned he's going to be 1033 1:49:32 --> 1:49:38 writing the book soon um who just said he's going to put damis kurz yeah he's doing a brilliant 1034 1:49:38 --> 1:49:44 speech um he's absolutely brilliant what he did um but yeah little christopher moncton i'd listen to 1035 1:49:44 --> 1:49:50 his uh podcast because he just he just goes through the maths and it's just brilliant so i did a zero 1036 1:49:50 --> 1:49:56 hedge debate against an economist and he totally shot himself in the foot i just let him talk and 1037 1:49:56 --> 1:50:02 he just dug deeper and deeper and deeper in the final blow where he was no feet no toes no nothing 1038 1:50:02 --> 1:50:11 left was when he said civilization will be over by 2038 oh my god you should check yourself into a 1039 1:50:11 --> 1:50:20 local mental ward yeah all right let's get moving i love your slides jeremy i'm gonna go back through 1040 1:50:20 --> 1:50:25 this i just loved your slides it was a wonderful presentation thank you i'm sorry kind of well it 1041 1:50:25 --> 1:50:31 was rostled up quickly because i was on armstrong's world economic um conference today just to get the 1042 1:50:31 --> 1:50:36 compliment jeremy that's why it was great because steven put the pressure on you and you performed 1043 1:50:37 --> 1:50:42 finishing in four three minutes everyone got a hard finish tom quickly your question and then 1044 1:50:42 --> 1:50:48 steven last question to you okay yeah we need uh i'll try to get those links out of your you know 1045 1:50:48 --> 1:50:54 and post them maybe next meeting but uh methane i'm saying this because i deal with other people 1046 1:50:54 --> 1:50:59 in groups that literally they'll leave the group because other people don't believe in global warming 1047 1:50:59 --> 1:51:06 and they bring up uh that methane's much more potent granted it's not around as long so that's 1048 1:51:06 --> 1:51:10 something to find a good argument against that it's not important and then what do you think about 1049 1:51:10 --> 1:51:17 uh geoengineering the day night spring to manipulate the weather by the planes i wanted to hear 1050 1:51:17 --> 1:51:24 someone else indicate they understood that because i think they're diverting the plane 1051 1:51:24 --> 1:51:32 paths flight paths to actually um manipulate the weather the commercial airliners well all i can 1052 1:51:32 --> 1:51:36 say all i can say on that is they are get all governments around the world are all doing the 1053 1:51:36 --> 1:51:42 absolutely worst possible thing they could do at the worst possible time i mean as you go into these 1054 1:51:43 --> 1:51:49 uh low sunspot activity and the decrease in the heliosphere we seem to get an increase in volcanism 1055 1:51:50 --> 1:51:54 and that's if we get an increase in volcanoes with a significant one and you can see it happening 1056 1:51:54 --> 1:52:00 there's been a lot of volcanoes going off the the the ring of fire has been moving if we get a big 1057 1:52:00 --> 1:52:05 one go off so they could be dimming the sky and then if we get a some major major eruption you 1058 1:52:05 --> 1:52:12 know category six volcano go up and then you're going into volcanic winter and into an extremely 1059 1:52:12 --> 1:52:18 cold period that's going to severely affect wheat so um i mean maybe i'll come back and do a little 1060 1:52:18 --> 1:52:24 bit more for you because i could you know i could talk you know um dead day talk very sensible 1061 1:52:25 --> 1:52:34 he's he's right about um uh bill gates backing off because these data centers need power 1062 1:52:34 --> 1:52:40 and unfortunately there's the cheapest energy molecule on the planet is is natural gas um it's 1063 1:52:40 --> 1:52:45 really really cheap at the moment they're all talking you know nuclear is great and it'll 1064 1:52:45 --> 1:52:49 probably come and small modular reactors as well will probably come but they're not going to be 1065 1:52:49 --> 1:52:54 there for at least five years so where on earth are they going to get the energy from to do all 1066 1:52:54 --> 1:52:59 of this so they're going to need oil coal and um natural grass and one of the most interesting 1067 1:52:59 --> 1:53:06 things and they've never show is that the the uh and um jerry is great for this jerry did a great 1068 1:53:06 --> 1:53:11 slide showing the actual world's usage of oil coal natural gas and fossil fuels and it's just 1069 1:53:11 --> 1:53:18 been one upward trend continuing uh world without end and and all right interesting they want to 1070 1:53:18 --> 1:53:24 talk about polluters there's one one major one major um a country on the planet that's actually 1071 1:53:24 --> 1:53:30 decreased its uh pollution that's because it's got a mature and decreased its uh greenhouse gases 1072 1:53:31 --> 1:53:37 it's got a mature economy and that's the u.s their output has actually been dropping but you know the 1073 1:53:37 --> 1:53:43 china and the um developing and india are developing so they're exponentially their output is going 1074 1:53:43 --> 1:53:49 exponential and all that's happened in the west and in europe is that we've basically de-industrialized 1075 1:53:49 --> 1:53:53 there's really nothing of value left in the west now other than the you know intellectual value and 1076 1:53:53 --> 1:54:00 that's debatable under the universities and you know with energy levels now in uk and um parts of 1077 1:54:00 --> 1:54:06 europe it's probably six times out of china and india um why would any industry set up you know 1078 1:54:06 --> 1:54:12 most of them are leaving any officers leaving the uk i think the germany germany's slowly being 1079 1:54:12 --> 1:54:18 de-industrialized and their economies are contracted about four percent i think so they are the driver 1080 1:54:18 --> 1:54:24 of the eu and they represent 25 percent of the eu economy and they're in they're contracting they're 1081 1:54:24 --> 1:54:29 in a deflationary spiral now and i don't really see them climbing out of it too quickly so the 1082 1:54:29 --> 1:54:38 all right jeremy yeah two and a half hours is up thank you well please can you connect me with dave 1083 1:54:38 --> 1:54:43 and then with tom as well that'd be great and then i can i'd love to know have a bit more a chat 1084 1:54:43 --> 1:54:48 thank you you've got dave's email address no i haven't thank you and thank you for 1085 1:54:50 --> 1:54:54 sheila for your contribution stepping into the last moment thank you steven for organizing 1086 1:54:55 --> 1:55:01 great job and there is more to talk about and it's an important topic because it's quite clear 1087 1:55:01 --> 1:55:09 from your that the evidence is compelling and um the it's all about a deep population agenda that 1088 1:55:09 --> 1:55:15 we in this group know watching this recording people know so speak out against the climate 1089 1:55:15 --> 1:55:20 fraud and on we go everybody we'll see you on tuesday i say one last thing just for everyone 1090 1:55:21 --> 1:55:26 a closing note i managed to get all this information freely off the internet in about 1091 1:55:26 --> 1:55:32 two to three hours so if i can do it anyone can do it and it's not it's not private there's nothing 1092 1:55:32 --> 1:55:37 there's nothing unique about this you can just tell that you know the difference between people 1093 1:55:37 --> 1:55:42 with inquiring minds and critical thinking skills and people without and unfortunately the large 1094 1:55:42 --> 1:55:48 majority are being lied to by the mainstream media and they should hold their head in shame 1095 1:55:48 --> 1:55:55 you know it really is well as john droves has told us jeremy and sheila and all of us here 1096 1:55:55 --> 1:56:00 that critical thinking is not taught logic is not taught at schools anymore and so the two of you 1097 1:56:00 --> 1:56:06 have demonstrated your ability to think as has dave colum as has steven all right thanks for 1098 1:56:06 --> 1:56:10 that final comment we'll see you again bye everybody go to the tom rodman group it's in 1099 1:56:10 --> 1:56:17 the chat for those who who uh want to who have got time bye for now thank you steven yeah thank you 1100 1:56:17 --> 1:56:21 john so jeremy thank you very much for presenting to us and i knew you could do it because 1101 1:56:22 --> 1:56:29 and all i needed to hear was 10 minutes of your ranting about two or three weeks ago correct 1102 1:56:29 --> 1:56:37 well spotted thanks everybody thanks jeremy thanks sheila thank you bye bye excellent jeremy and um 1103 1:56:38 --> 1:56:41 your wife too sheila thanks sheila