Podcast appearances and mentions of sammy wilson

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Best podcasts about sammy wilson

Latest podcast episodes about sammy wilson

Cutting Through the Matrix with Alan Watt Podcast (.xml Format)
Feb. 9, 2025 "Cutting Through the Matrix" with Alan Watt --- Redux (Educational Talk From the Past): "Public Persuasion, Ain't It Amazin'"

Cutting Through the Matrix with Alan Watt Podcast (.xml Format)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2025 45:00


--{ "Public Persuasion, Ain't It Amazin'"}-- Era of Change, Industrial Revolution, New World Order - Planned Society, Genetic Enhancement - Control of the Mind, Authority Over Life and Death - Terrorism, War on World. Foundation Fronts - Intergenerational Planning, Fanaticism - French Revolution, Depopulation Programs, United Nations - Darwin, Huxley Family, Eugenics - UN Treaties. Public Relations, Predictive Programming - Internet, Information Wars - Marketing, Psychology - Beria of NKVD, Upgraded Scientific Indoctrination. Pentagon and Military "Education" (Propaganda) - "Extremist" Groups - Pentagon Media, Psychological Operations, "Winning Hearts and Minds". Soviet System, Merger with West - Green Party - Britain, Sammy Wilson, Climate Change Adverts - Parroted Terminology - Planetary Takeover, Regulation. "Free Flow of Capital and Labor" - Restricted Travel (Essential Only) - Agenda 21. Loyola Science Meetings, Brain Chips and Public Acceptance, Novels, Cartoons, "Final Cut" movie. Australia, Chip Implantation, Surveillance - Microchipped Animals, VeriChip - Human "Black Box", Tracking.

Highlights from The Hard Shoulder
Could the Labour Party reverse Brexit?

Highlights from The Hard Shoulder

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2024 13:13


Aodhan O'Riordain has caused quite a stir after calling for the Irish Labour Party to play a role in reversing the British exit from the European Union.Aodhan joins Kieran as well as Sammy Wilson, DUP Brexit Spokesperson, to discuss.

The Matt Feret Show
How to Overcome a Sedentary Lifestyle & Increase Your Health with Personal Trainer, Sammy Wilson | The Matt Feret Show Podcast | #075

The Matt Feret Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2024 36:19


In this episode of The Matt Feret Show I interview Sammy Wilson, a personal trainer and mobility coach. As a mobility coach, Sammy specializes in helping her clients mitigate the negative effects of a sedentary lifestyle by increasing their daily movement, mobility, and wellness. We discuss how sedentary jobs and lifestyles can impact physical and mental health and Sammy provides helpful suggestions and beginner steps listeners can take to increase strength, flexibility, movement, and overall wellness. Watch the full episode on YouTube.Introduction to Sammy Wilson with Matt Feret [1:09]The Problem with a Sedentary Lifestyle with Sammy Wilson [3:00]How to Mitigate the Harm of a Sedentary Lifestyle [5:30]How to Improve Posture in a Sedentary Lifestyle [9:19]Finding the Balance Between Posture, Exercise, and Rest [12:42]How to Increase Movement in Challenging Circumstances [19:35]Sammy Wilson's Online Presence and Free Groups [25:26]How Fitness Can Improve Mental Health [31:30]Connect with me via the podcast website, LinkedIn, Facebook, and Instagram.Check out Sammy's Facebook group, Instagram, and TikTok. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Raidió na Life 106.4FM
Nigel Farage ag tacú leis an DUP sna toghcháin - Ciarán Ó Pronntaigh

Raidió na Life 106.4FM

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2024 12:38


Ciarán Ó Pronntaigh ag caint linn faoi chinneadh Nigel Farage ó Reform tacaíocht a thabhairt d'Ian Paisley agus Sammy Wilson ón DUP, in ainneoin comhaontú a bheith déanta acu leis an TUV.

The Live Diet-Free podcast
181. Staying Mobile When You Have A Desk Job with Sammy Wilson

The Live Diet-Free podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2024 33:14


Ever find yourself hunched over your desk like Gollum and think, "I really need to work on my posture"? Or stand up after 8 straight hours at your chair and the creaks and cracks in your joints are only drowned out by your groans over how stiff and achy you are? Then you need today's episode where I'm joined by movement and mobility coach, Sammy Wilson, who's giving us advice for how to stay mobile even if we're at a desk all day.  --- Meet Sammy Wilson: Sammy Wilson, the Pocket PT, is a movement and mobility coach. She has a BSc in sports and exercise science and is a qualified level 3 personal trainer. She's a retired elite athlete who used to compete for the Great Britain artistic swimming team and have since been navigating staying mobile whilst spending a lot of time at a desk! Her job is to help people who sit at a desk all day getting achy and lethargic, to move more, feel energized and ultimately become happier! Connect with her: https://www.facebook.com/groups/activethrivingprofessionals/ https://www.instagram.com/pocketptuk https://www.tiktok.com/@pocketptuk/ --- Subscribe, rate, and review this podcast and get a copy of our Weekend Survival Guide as a thank you! Just email a screenshot of your review to admin@estheravant.com and we'll send it over ASAP! Thanks for your support! Get your Weight Loss That Lasts Cheat Sheet at: https://www.go.estheravant.com/cheatsheet Learn about our 12-week Gone For Good coaching program:** www.estheravant.com/**coaching Join the Live Diet-Free FB group:http://www.facebook.com/groups/livedietfree Connect with Esther on Instagram (shoot me a DM and let me know you listen to the podcast!):** **www.instagram.com/esther.avant

KDTime
KDTime 90: Seated Exercises with Sammy Wilson

KDTime

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 37:35


Got a desk job? Do you find it hard to stay active? Well look no further than to this episode where my special guest Sammy comes on to talk about exercising while having a desk job. Here are the links to get connected Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ActiveThrivingProfessionals  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pocketptuk TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pocketptuk/ ENJOY > SUBSCRIBE > SHARE :D linktr.ee/kdtime --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/kdtime/support

exercises seated sammy wilson
Hearts of Oak Podcast
Andrew Bridgen MP - A Bridgen Too Far for the UK Government

Hearts of Oak Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2023 47:55 Transcription Available


Show notes and Transcript Andrew Bridgen MP is one of those rare individuals in UK politics.  He is driven by convictions and critical thinking as opposed to fame and power which is the norm in Westminster (or on Capital Hill I assume).  He was an absolute Brexiteer and led part of that campaign for The UK to have freedom from the EU.  He joins Hearts of Oak to discuss how he fought for Brexit all through his political life, but his biggest battle has been against the Covid Tyranny imposed on us by the UK government.  Andrew spoke up for all who have been vaccine injured and for that he was thrown out of the Conservative party and vilified in the media.  But the Conservatives loss was the gain of The Reclaim Party as he now represents them as the MP for North West Leicestershire. His bravery and boldness is plain for all to see and as long as we have people like Andrew Bridgen in Parliament, we have a glimmer of hope in the UK. Andrew Bridgen was elected in 2010 after spending 25 years running his successful family business, AB Produce, based in the constituency at Measham. Prior to this Andrew attended local state schools and Nottingham University. He has also trained as an officer in the Royal Marines. During his time in Parliament, Andrew has been a prolific speaker and has campaigned on a variety of local and national issues in Parliament. Locally Andrew campaigned for grant funding to bring all of NW Leics District Council housing up to the Decent Homes Standards. Andrew has also campaigned for better transport infrastructure which led to the duelling of the A453 and the planned electrification of the midland mainline. He has also worked with business and community groups to bring down the rate of unemployment in the District, as well as holding a jobs fair. On a national level, Andrew led the successful campaigns to decriminalise non-payment of the TV Licence and to scrap Air Passenger Duty for Children. He has also used his business experience to serve on the Regulatory Reform Committee as well as the Deregulation and the Enterprise Bill committee. Connect with Andrew... X: https://x.com/ABridgen?s=20 The Reclaim Party: https://www.reclaimparty.co.uk/andrew-bridgen Interview recorded 22.9.23 *Special thanks to Bosch Fawstin for recording our intro/outro on this podcast. Check out his art https://theboschfawstinstore.blogspot.com/ and follow him on GETTR https://gettr.com/user/BoschFawstin and Twitter https://twitter.com/TheBoschFawstin?s=20  To sign up for our weekly email, find our social media, podcasts, video, livestreaming platforms and more... https://heartsofoak.org/connect/ Support Hearts of Oak by purchasing one of our fancy T-Shirts.... https://heartsofoak.org/shop/ Please subscribe, like and share! Transcript (Hearts of Oak) Andrew Bridgen, it is wonderful to speak to you today. Thank you so much for your time. (Andrew Bridgen MP) Yeah, you're welcome.  Andrew Bridgen, of course you can find him @ABridgen on Twitter and he has served as Member of Parliament for North West Leicestershire since 2010, re-elected 2015, 2017 and 2019 with a whopping 62% off the vote, one of the few MPs with anywhere near that. Obviously, thrown out of the Conservative Party, the whip removed, and then that was in April 2023 for raising concerns on the Covid jab, and Andrew now represents the Reclaim Party in Parliament as an MP. Andrew, may I ask you first, what got you into politics? You entered Parliament in 2010. What made you think it would be a good idea to get into politics? Frustration, Peter, and I've been running a business for 22 years, which would start it up the thousand pounds. So I've been I've been MD and chairman of the company and we built it up to 25 million turnover company employing 300 people by 2006. And I'd give, I'd been interested in politics. I joined the Conservatives in 1983 at Nottingham University. And I'd been chairman of the Institute of Directors and on the council of the IOD in Pall Mall, and through working during the Blair years with the East Midlands Regional Assembly as a business member. Obviously I'd met a lot of ministers and I can't say that I was impressed. Well, it was pretty clear they were going to bankrupt us. So a group of friends, most, they were all really sort of small and medium-sized business people and their wives, we used to meet in a pub locally and every Friday night it was sort of a groundhog day, so they always moaned about the state of the country. I'd given a reasonable donation to the Conservative Party in 2005 and I think we had a half a percent swing to the Conservatives so worked out at that rate we're never going to get rid of Tony Blair. And so they moaned every Friday night and it eventually it got to me but I mean by that time I was running a business that was making about three million pounds a year across the group. I've got a good management team and no debt whatsoever and one pint of Marston's Pedigree on a Friday night too many and I said to this group of collected individuals, that's it then. It's no good relying on anybody else. There's only us. So in North West Leicestershire was supposed to be a rock solid Labour seat. The council I don't think had ever been conservative controlled properly. I think they may have had control for about three months once out of 40 years after a by-election. So I said well you all stand for the council, the district council, I'll stand for MP, we'll take over and we'll get it sorted and to a man and a woman every single one of them agreed. And so I put most of the money up for the, I put the money up for the campaign and I got the nomination. Nobody really wanted to be the MP for North West Leicestershire, well the candidate for North West Leicestershire because no one, the Conservatives told me we can't win North West Leicestershire, 83rd target seat. They also said they weren't giving me any money but I said that's fine, I've got my own money and my factory was in the, in the, so I actually did have a payroll vote. So 300 people plus their families in the constituency and the District Council elections came round first in 2007 and I was already selected as the parliamentary candidate. I ran those elections and put the money up and it was the first time the Conservatives had put a full slate up in the seat and they said I was running them too thin but I always thought basically if you didn't put a candidate up at an election it's very difficult to see how how they're going to vote for somebody aren't they? So we put a full slate of candidates up and took Labour down to five councils out of 38 in one night, the biggest swing in the country in the District Council elections in 2007. We took control of the council obviously, and I had the second biggest swing in against Labour in 2010, so I turned a rock-solid four and a half thousand Labour majority with a much loved Labour MP, who sadly died, into seven and a half thousand Conservatives at one, so that's like a 12.5% swing. The seat's my home and, you know, I'm very comfortable in North West Leicestershire. And we moved it to, in 2015, it went up to 11,200 majority. And despite Theresa May's best efforts in 17 with her manifesto, which was appalling, I moved it up to 13,300 majority. Then in 19, I led the leave campaign in the referendum for the East Midlands. I told my seat that if they didn't back me I would have to resign as their MP because we didn't agree on the big issues but to be honest Peter I was fairly sure they would. So the East Midlands voted 59-41 to leave and my own seat voted 61 39 and I'm actually the MP who persuaded Boris Johnson to back leave. He was no way that he was a natural Brexiteer and also if you look back on YouTube you'll find that on the eve of the referendum Boris Johnson came to my seat and we went round Ashby de la Zouch. That's when I told him we were going to win and you should have seen his face when I told him we were going to win. I don't think that that wasn't actually part of the plan Peter and in fact he tried to talk me out of it he said no no it's going to be close but we're not going to win. I said no no we're going to win tomorrow. No, it's going to be close. I said, well, maybe I said, but certainly not around here, not around here. It's not going to be close. You know, the bit we're running. So, and then in 19, on the get Brexit done election, which now seems so much happened since 19. It feels like a very long time ago, more than four years away. And I got a 20,400 majority, it was 62.8% of the vote. And the BBC, I had no sleep that night, the next morning the BBC interviewed me and they said, Mr Bridgen, you must be delighted, this is your fourth election victory, each time you've increased your vote, you've increased your majority, your percentage of the vote, you must be delighted. I said, no, it's terrible actually. They said, why is it terrible? I said, well, I've, you know, it's nine years since I was first elected as the MP, I've delivered the highest economic growth in the country. We've taken the poorest constituency in Leicestershire and made it the richest, the only part of Leicestershire with above-average UK salaries and wages. We've got the happiest place to live in the Midlands now, Colville, which was the most deprived town in Leicestershire. I said one in three of the electorate are still not voting for me. I'm gonna have to work much much harder.  Tell me about that whole Brexit battle. I mean my time was UKIP and UKIP was easy because 100% of Kippers were on board. The Conservative Party have always had that tension and division over Europe. What was that like actually in the Conservative Party pushing something that wasn't necessarily what the Conservatives wanted?  Well it wasn't what the establishment wanted, all the established parties were backing Remain. I think it was interesting that the Conservative Party was like, a very civilized internal war, and there were probably only a quarter to 30 percent of conservative MPs who were for leave, so still the majority were, remain, or indifferent, and some of them maintaining indifference, which I mean, I don't know what you're into politics for. If a big question like whether we should remain or leave the European Union, they say, I don't want to get involved in this. I'll just sit down and see what my people say. I mean, that's not exactly leadership, is it? I mean, I think that should be pretty much automatic deselection, if you can't make your mind up on that sort of issue. And what comes back to mind is that the Conservative Party, we used to, when I was in the Conservative Party, before they threw me out, well, first I'll tell you this, Conservatives have never been encouraged in the Conservative Party, they're only ever tolerated. And the Conservative Party, Parliamentary Party, had something called an away day every two years, and they pay for them in advance to get a good deal. So despite the fact that there was this internal schism over the referendum that was coming, the party had paid for an away weekend in Oxfordshire at this basically hotel that's like a Bond villain's hideout, with an underground lecture theatre, which is a very weird place, and because we paid for it, we were told we'd all got to go there, and this is only sort of three months before the referendum, and we had a very civilised weekend of talking about policy, but no one mentioned the EU and no one mentioned the referendum over the whole two and a half days and the dinner, but I do remember that Craig Oliver sat with me at the final dinner he sat next to me on my table at the final dinner and I told him, I said have you got yourself another job lined up for when you lose, and he said to me he said that's fine he said if we win by one vote that's it settled and that's that's it done. I said well I'll be honest I'll take though I'll take that on as as it cuts both ways, you know, if we win by one. And I knew we were going to win, Peter, because, I'd been around the East Midlands and I could tell we were definitely going to win. But it's about driving the vote up because it wasn't just winning by a seat, all the votes were cumulative, so every vote counted. And what I'd sussed out is in my seat and in the East Midlands is that people who didn't normally vote were going to come out and vote. They weren't, those people who didn't normally engage with politics, they weren't coming out to, they weren't coming out to vote for the status quo, they were voting for change. So I concentrated my campaigning efforts the last six weeks. And did a lot of campaigning and also I was running a load of field operatives who were, 90% of it, they were UKIP. The Remain campaign had nobody on the ground willing to deliver leaflets, hardly at all, for them. We were destroying them on the ground battle. Obviously, in the air campaign we could only be responsive because they got all the media, they got all the established parties, and we were the insurgents. So that was more of a struggle, but on the ground we were doing very, very well. And what I'd sussed out was that people were going to come out and vote who didn't normally vote and every time I saw the polls I was not disappointed because I knew that we were probably, we probably got five or six percent better than the polls were saying because these people who were going to come out and vote and they told me they were and I believe they were, They're not engaged in politics, they're not on YouGov's polling panel, and when Com Res or somebody else rang them up and they said, oh, I'm going to vote to leave the European Union, they'd say, well, did you vote in the last general election? No. Did you vote in the local? No. Did you vote in the one before? No. Have you ever voted? No. And they'd put them down as zero chance of voting. Well, I knew as long as we got those people out, it was all going to come as a bit of a surprise to the Remain campaign. In North West Leicestershire, and we counted our votes, so I know it's fine, I know exactly what the vote was in North West Leicestershire, but you could terminate my seat of North West Leicestershire until the next boundary changes. I think it was a sort of 70-75% turnout to get me in in 2010, important election. And then ever since then, as my majority had gone up, the turnout had gone down and it dropped to sort of 68.5% or something in 19. But I mean, it was a stonking massive majority. And obviously the referendum, I was very encouraged when it was nearly 80%. And I'd spent all my time in Northwest Leicestershire and across the East Midlands. In my villages, I mean, it's a general election, they turn out 85 percent anyway. I'm not going to squeeze much more out of those people. You know, it's very hard to squeeze that they're on the second, third pressings of the pips. So I went to all the areas that normally turn out 50, 55, 60 percent because there was plenty of low-hanging fruit and you know it was that turnout in North West Leicestershire and across the East Midlands some people who didn't normally vote and that's why we won and that's why the polling was so wrong and that's what people like David Cameron who'd come to my seat in 2008 when he was leader of the opposition and he really upset me Peter so I'm a a candidate. We've just taken the council with the biggest swing in the country for the first time in living memory and Cameron told me in front of constituents that my seat was a dump and it should never be conservative. And they weren't giving me any money and I said I don't need your money and to be honest David if that's your view, never ever come to my constituency again and I will with it. And to be honest, David Cameron is a man of his word, he never came, he never came again. So that's fine. And I think now my majority is bigger than Whitney, so I mean what a dump the Cotswolds must be. North West Leicestershire. And we've gentrified. So people used to say Coalville was a very poor place and it didn't have a chance and now it's Coalville and proud. In fact I'm speaking to you from Coalville today.  I want to get on to the COVID discussion situation, but just you, you talked at the beginning about having a business and I guess part of your reason for getting into politics was you wanted the government to butt out, you want local businesses to be able to get on, to have, not to have restrictions on them actually doing well, making money, employing people. What kind of other kind of interests or passions? Well, I've actually cut my teeth in politics when I was chair of the Institute of Directors, which they didn't like particularly because they were fairly pro-EU, is that I got involved as a businessman in the,business for sterling in the no campaign to keep the pound so 25 years ago and thank goodness we didn't join the euro otherwise I mean it'd be much much more difficult to extract ourselves. Yes and Simon Wolfson the chairman of Next we used to meet at Enderby in his boardroom and plot business for Sterling in the No campaign. So I suppose that's where I got involved. And a chap called Chris Eaton Harris, who's gone on to great things, apparently, he was an MEP. And his father had a fruit and vegetable wholesale pitch in Covent Garden Market. And since I was into washing, packing, and distributing vegetables, mostly potatoes, nothing sexy. Chris was one of my customers. I used to buy from Mark Potatoes from Mark Spencer. And Philip Dunn as well. They're farmers. So we had the whole supply chain between us, do you know what I mean? But I made most of the money.  Which is just as well because they're not in parliament. Just as well. So yeah, I wanted to put something back and yeah, that's where we ended up. Obviously being a Brexiteer, there was backlash in the media, there was probably some pushback within the party itself. But I guess none of that even prepared you for the backlash whenever you addressed COVID tyranny. Is that a fair assessment?  Well I know that the two years under Theresa May were purgatory quite honestly. I mean I was a Spartan so I voted three times against Theresa May's deal which you know it wasn't, you know, some colleagues were conflicted and there was Steve Baker crying his eyes out. Well I mean there's nothing to cry about because I've already voted against it twice, it hasn't got any better and once you've come to the conclusion, which was the correct conclusion, that Theresa May's deal was constitutionally and democratically worse than being in the European Union. I mean at least if you're in the European Union you have a chance of leaving whereas Theresa May's deal we would be in vassalage forever and there's no way of leaving. Well I mean that's not a deal, not in my name and that vote on the third time Theresa May's deal came up before the Commons I was pretty convinced that there were probably going to be 28 Conservatives in the no lobby. The rest of Parliament would vote yes and that we would have been slung out of the Conservative Party within a few days. That was where I thought we were. Thank goodness. I mean we always criticise Jeremy Corbyn but he is a man of principle and he is secretly a Brexiteer really I think and he marched the Labour Party in behind us and the rest, as they say, is history. But I mean, a politically savvy Keir Starmer would never, would have taken Theresa May's deal and consigned us to EU vassalage. So thank goodness it was Jeremy Corbyn. But he did win the Conservatives the 19th election. That wasn't, down to Boris, it was pure fear of Jeremy Corbyn.  Yeah, no, it was, you don't want Corbyn, 100% I remember that well.  Well, I actually had two, during that 19 election, I can remember when I was going around the doorsteps, two members, two paid-up locally members of the Labour Party came to me and said I'll be voting Conservative, I can't vote for Jeremy Corbyn.  And they actually told me they were paid up members of the Labour Party locally. Well I mean if you, I mean that is your core, ultra core vote. They weren't even voting for him. Wow. On to the COVID. I've never seen anything and I mean I've loved politics, forever with Northern Ireland parties, the DUP and we've had Ian Paisley and Sammy Wilson on before and then conservatives then over to UKIP, but nothing has divided people like what we've had in the last three years with the COVID tyranny. But you spoke a step, it wasn't just on the restrictions that we had, that civil liberty, but you also saw what was happening with harms and went on that. Tell us about that, how you worked that out, because that was a big step and that was an unacceptable step.  I think there's an element of destiny about all of this Peter. When I was 18 and I'm the only member of my family that's been to university, I had a foreground because my parents weren't very wealthy, they were poor. So about two and a half percent of people went to University when I went in the 80s and I went to Nottingham locally but I studied biological sciences with biochemistry specializing in genetics, virology and behaviour. Oh dear! And I don't know why, just they were things I found quite fascinating so I've tried to keep my knowledge up so I mean in February when we'd had the 19 election and then we had a sort of six weeks period and then we had then we had COVID and everything changed. Well in the February I was sent and I looked through the scientific papers for the efficacy of hydroxychloroquine, its effectiveness against coronaviruses and it was compelling. They were scientific papers and because I've got, my degree a very long time ago in those subjects I mean I can read them and I can understand the papers and I sent the papers to Mark Spencer, Chief Whip, and said the government need to look at this urgently, this could be could be very useful and also sent them to Jeremy Hunt who was at the time, Chair of the Health Select Committee, and I didn't get anything back from Spencer. And I also told Spencer, I said, you realise that I've got qualifications in all the areas that'll be useful, if you want some help in the number 10, with someone who can actually read the papers and understand it and put it across politically, I'll be quite happy to help. They never, Mr Stewart never asked me to help, and I rang up Jeremy Hunt a week later, and this shocked me, Peter and it will shock your listeners. So I rang him Hunt up and said Jeremy I sent you these papers, have you have you looked at them? And he said Andrew he said don't send me scientific papers he said I don't understand them and I said but Jeremy you're chairman of the health select committee and you were health secretary for seven years. I said what? You don't understand scientific papers, and what you have no access to anyone who does understand them he could actually explain them to you and he put the phone down and that was it and so my suspicion, so I hadn't got a great deal of confidence I did support the first lockdown because I don't think anybody knew, well somebody knew what was going on it certainly wasn't me, you know was it three weeks to flatten the curve. Anyway, so, and I was, from then on, things just didn't seem to stack up. The masks, I couldn't see the sense behind the masks. I mean, those paper masks, they are to stop saliva from the doctors and nurses going on to the patient's wounds and to stop blood and other bodily fluids squirting into the medic's mouths, which they don't really like, they don't like that. That's what they're there for. So not to stop viruses and the gaps around the edges And I was briefly in the military. And if you had a full nuclear biological chemical suit, you've only got an 80% chance of keeping a virus out. Well, I mean, that's not what these paper masks are. And I guess, I hated putting them on anyway. They're horrible. So I was on that. And then the continuous lockdowns, and Northwest Leicestershire was chucked in with Leicester. And so we were locked down as much as anywhere in the country. It was completely unprecedented and unwarranted. I also really objected to the schools being closed. And I objected. I mean, they were making the children wear masks. And even some schools were making the children wear masks when it wasn't mandated. And none of this seemed right. And there are some, speaking to some scientists who were speaking out about their concerns, And the fact that they were silenced, and they said all the science is all settled, I mean we've heard that one before several times, I'm sure we'll hear it again, but I mean science is never settled. It's a bit like politics, there's always another view, and if you can't defend your position, then there's something wrong. You know, every scientific thesis is open to challenge, or should be able to challenge, and most of them, I mean half of everything that doctors are taught in medical school within 10 years will be proved to be completely wrong. That's a fact, I mean that's just a fact. So, you know, the only constant is the evolution of science and new theories to supersede old ones and saying that, you know, we're not having any debate about this and cancelling eminent scientists. Then my concerns grew and grew and grew but I didn't want to believe the worst of the government. I actually am double vaccinated. They will call me an anti-vaxxer so which is difficult when I'm vaxxed. I'm more the sort of concerned vaxxed and I had two shots of AstraZeneca, I wish I had none, and I had a bad reaction after the second jab, which really, really hurt me. So I'd bitten my tongue, that also uncovered a lot of corruption around PPE. My whistle-blower was sacked. We uncovered £860 million worth of PCR tests that had disappeared from stock at Kuehne & Nagel were the distributor. We traced some of the unique barcodes and they turned up in Berlin. They'd been resold. So nearly a billion pounds. And my whistle-blower could only go back 12 months on his computer. And he was only in one of the three channels. He was in the channel to do with bulk. So it was only sort of prisons, schools, hospitals, things like that. But 860 million pounds worth of PCR tests had gone missing the taxpayer paid for. We took it to the government and the civil service. My whistle-blowers computer was switched off on the day and he was sacked within seven days, no investigation. I was pretty annoyed. And I mean, the corruption of the Boris Johnson regime was the first one I'd, and he was the he'd been the first Prime Minister I'd actually voted for and I was feeling very betrayed. So I hadn't voted for David Cameron, obviously, I voted for David Davies, and Cameron got in and I didn't vote for Theresa May. She got in. And so then Boris turned out to be as crooked as all the rest of them. So that wasn't good. And then my pretty view on the vaccines and the mRNA technology, the messenger ribonucleic acid technology. I was working behind the scenes and obviously Matt Hancock had to go and we had, Sajid Javid became health secretary. But there are about five Conservative MPs who are qualified doctors. Well Matt Hancock, not a good man, but he had said in the House of Commons that these vaccines were for adults, they weren't for children, so no one under 18 was going to have them. I know that every one of the doctors, qualified doctors, went to see Sajid Javid and told him not to use the experimental vaccines on under-18s and he listened to all of them and then approved it. It's interesting that these two health secretaries are both leaving the Commons at the next election, isn't it? I wonder where they'll land, you know what I mean? I suspect Peter, there'll be earning a lot more money than MPs get paid, let's just put it that way.  And then when the MHRA came out in November last year and wanted to extend the experimental vaccines to babies, down to six months of age, and I'll declare an interest, I've got a five-year-old and I thought now, I've got to speak out and I knew there'd be a huge backlash from the party, politically and I knew the vested interests that were involved in it but I also knew that it was probably going to cost me my position in the Conservative Party because they were so committed, but that I could win, that I'm pretty sure I thought, well there's no point doing it for nothing, you've got to win and I was pretty sure that I could put the science over that there were no healthy child of that age had died anywhere in the world of COVID-19 so there was minimal, minuscule risk from the virus but there was a risk from the vaccine. I thought even the most pro-vaccine person I could persuade that since the manufacturers still had immunity from prosecution that there had to be a risk. But there was no risk for those children. I thought I could get that message across and we could actually do some good and so I'd spoken out in a Westminster Hall debate, in I think it was October and then on November 13th I secured an adjournment debate and and blew the lid off the childhood vaccines, vaccination with the experimental mRNA. And that night, my life changed. I was basically immediately cancelled by the mainstream media. And from that moment onwards, I had hundreds of thousands of emails from around the world from people who were telling me about the vaccine harms and the vaccine deaths that they were seeing and that was it really. So after that, although the government will say that I'm a conspiracy theorist and anti-science, anti-vax, and all the people who call me anti-science and everything, I mean they haven't got any science degrees between them and the fact is that the government, our government was never able to approve those vaccines for healthy under fives, whereas all the other countries around the world did. So despite the fact that they said that I was talking absolute rubbish, they never bought the policy and every other country did. And then we got round to sort of January and the infamous tweet, which was actually, I mean, yes, so I retweeted, I actually didn't do it, but it was retweeted on my Twitter, a tweet from Dr. Josh Guetzkow of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and it's fair to say that Mr. Guetzkow is a Jewish gentleman, that he'd been told by a top cardiologist that the rollout of the vaccine was the biggest crime against humanity since the Holocaust, and the party seized on that, the Conservative Party seized on that, to say I was an anti-Semite, and suspended me immediately from the party. I had a meeting at that time with a Conservative Party grandee who'd clearly been briefed by the party. We had an hour together in his office and I told him all of my concerns around the vaccine harms, the midazolam and morphine, the creation of the first wave of deaths by moving people out of care homes and then putting them onto the death pathway, putting them down, treating them with respiratory suppressants to give them the symptoms of COVID-19 which will appear on their on their death certificate and they were pretty much all cremated very shortly afterwards so there was no autopsies and we had an hour of that. I also knew that the person I was meeting with, because I'd done my research and I've got plenty of informers, he knew full well all of my concerns because he'd been told them. I also know that his sister had had to go into hospital after the second Pfizer jab with chest pains, but I didn't tell him any of this. And at the end of the meeting this grandee turned around to me, obviously with the party line, I've been suspended and said that there is currently no political appetite for your views on the vaccine, Andrew. They may well be in 20 years time and you're probably going to be proved right but in the meantime you need to bear in mind you're taking on the most powerful vested interest in the world with all the personal risk for you which that will entail, and at that point I said well the meeting's over then isn't it? I'm not, don't ever threaten me and I don't like being threatened by public school boys. You know, as a comprehensive school boy, if they had been at my school, they'd have spent most of their time with their head down the toilet. It was a very comprehensive education.  So we basically called it a day at that and then they just fast-tracked the investigation and found me guilty and permanently expelled me from the Conservative Party, which is interesting because in their investigation what they didn't discover is I never put the tweet out myself anyway. I've never ever had the codes to my own Twitter. It was actually posted by my association chairman who remains in the Conservative Party.  Can I ask you about... I need to ask you about the conversations with colleagues and obviously not breaking confidentiality of that, but working with Lord Pearson I'm always amazed people come to him after a debate and says well done. I could never say that but well done you said that. Did you have any kind of similar?  Yes, it's coming up to a year since I first spoke out so yeah I've probably had 20, I probably had 30 backbenchers have come up to me and said you're definitely onto something with these vaccine harms, keep going but that's a million miles from standing in the chamber and saying anything. I've had senior members of the Conservative Party have come to me and said that they're going to speak out. I've had a very senior MP came to me before summer recess and said he'd been approached by a constituent representing 1,100 vaccine-harmed people and he'd have to speak out, but he hasn't, and I had a very senior minister who came to me and said that they're, I mean this is all in private in parliament, no witnesses, so I mean they can deny it if they want to, but you have my word it's the truth, and come to me and said you do realize that my sister's just taken the Moderna booster and now she's paralyzed from the neck down. And I said well that's that's that's terrible news but clearly you're going to have to speak out now aren't you? and they said no, well she doesn't want any publicity and they think they're going to get her to walk again. I said well you don't have to name names I mean you know, you've got to speak out you know and the minister said I'm not speaking out and walked off. And I don't know what to go, I mean, we're supposed to speak without fear or favour, you know, I think the job of an MP is to, certainly I see the job as being to represent, the people, start with my people in North West Leicestershire, against the government and the establishment. And now what we seem to have is a lot of MPs who represent the government and the establishment against the people. That's an inversion of the job of a Member of Parliament. They said to me, you know, why are you willing to die on the hill of vaccine harms, you know, of an issue? And I said, well, because that's the hill you're killing my people on. No completely. I want to add two things to finish. One, you're in the Reclaim Party because that seemed to be the only option. Course you could do as an independent, that doesn't really happen in the UK, but also you're continually asking the government questions. One of the latest questions is did the MHRA inform the Minister of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine had been switched? Tell us about Reclaim and I'm assuming you're yet to receive an answer to that government question.  Well Reclaim are a political party, they didn't have any MPs but they're well funded and they've got some lovely premises and they've got great people and they're also aligned with something called the Bad Law Project, so I have access to lawyers and solicitors and so I'm taking Matt Hancock to court for defamation and we have a very strong case. I'm probably going to take the Conservative Party to court for the way they handled my dismissal from the party, which is unbelievable. I'm on my fifth subject access request to the Cabinet Office. I mean, Peter, I've put in for all the information they're holding on me, and even when I'm over four, this is the fifth one going in now, I keep cutting down the number of keywords and compressing the time, and every time they come back and say, I mean, they must have a library on me. They haven't got a black book, they've got a whole library on me. And every time they come back and say, it's too much work. I mean, the last one was about 10 key words. And I said, it's only from 1st of January, 2017. I'll publish all the papers one day and it'll be fascinating, but goodness knows what they're hiding. They're certainly not willing to release any documentation. So I think we're going to have a massive, massive, massive bust up with the government over that. And if they're doing it to me, it won't be just me, will it? There'll be. Yeah, I mean, if there is any mitigation of my colleagues, and I'm not thinking of any any mitigation at all for their inactivity when so many of them, I mean, what you've got to understand, Peter, is people say to me, So there was a lovely female Conservative MP who will remain nameless, but she was elected in 19. And she came up to me a few months ago and said, Andrew, I'm really worried about you. You speak in the chamber on your own. You have all your meals on your own. You sit on your own table in the tea room and the dining room. No one talks to you. You seem really isolated. I'm really worried about you. I said, well, that's very touching. I said, but you've got to remember, 4,000 real people work in Parliament. The cooks, the cleaners, the waiters, the security guards, the police, I said, and they all come to me and 80% of those agree with me. So I'm not really isolated at all, am I? I said, actually, you're isolated, you just don't realise it. So it's not been that bad in Parliament. As far as the Pfizer data, it was again Dr. Josh Guetzkow sent me some from the Hebrew University, sent me some evidence and he's not a scientist, he's a criminologist but he's a specialist in fraud and he went through the Pfizer papers and discovered how they'd switched the vaccines. There were two batches in the initial batch, one that they basically made a Rolls-Royce vaccine up which they gave to 22,000 individuals and they had 22,000 in the placebo group who got a saline shot and that's what they got approval for with the MHRA and every other regulator around the world. But that wasn't the vaccine, that wasn't the Pfizer vaccine that was rolled out. And the smoking gun for the switch of the vaccines is the fact that the MHRA changed the protocols on day two of the mass rollout of the vaccination in the UK, and said that everyone got to stay at the vaccine centre for 15 minutes after day two because of the risk of anaphylactic shock and you only get anaphylaxis if there's endotoxins in the vaccines and you only get endotoxins in the vaccines if they're cultured up in bacteria such as Escherichia coli and the MHRA hadn't expected anaphylaxis because that is not how the vaccine that was given approval for was manufactured, it wasn't manufactured in bacteria with all the contaminants that would go with it. Now, you can't, to get approval for a drug, you have to use the same mechanism of production. You can't change anything because then you've got a different drug with different side effects. So basically, what my allegation is, supported by 44 pages of evidence supplied to me by a doctor of criminology from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the government will not answer or even acknowledge, is that the vaccine that was rolled out in the UK and around the world was effectively completely untested and it also explains why the, I mean that the harms from the Pfizer trials of the very best vaccine they could make in in a very small, basically a bespoke vaccine that they made for 22,000 doses, I mean that was horrific enough and that should never have had approval but it was nothing like the harm profile we've seen in actuality through the VAERS system and the yellow card system and the fact that the vaccine is a different vaccine basically explains that as well. If they were doing that with Pfizer, I mean I have no doubt that Moderna and the same and of course I had the AstraZeneca vaccine which which was actually that bad. It was just quietly withdrawn, wasn't it? And it's interesting that the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which is the AstraZeneca vaccine is not a messenger RNA. It's a DNA strand in an adenovirus vector. So it's different technology to the Pfizer and the Moderna. It's because obviously the DNA then will code for the messenger RNA. And so it's one step further back. It's interesting also that the, I asked for an urgent question in Parliament a few months ago because the Johnson & Johnson vaccine was withdrawn in America and I saw the FDA, the Federal Drugs Agency guidelines and it said stop basically, stop injecting the Johnson and Johnson and all stocks are to be destroyed. And the Johnson and Johnson that was also, a DNA strand not a messenger RNA strand and also in an adenovirus vector to get it into the into the cell. So it's interesting that basically both the vaccines, experimental vaccines were using the DNA adenovirus vector method, they were, both withdrawn and destroyed. But it is interesting that India are still producing effectively AstraZeneca under license. They call it Covishield in India. And of course they didn't stop the Australian version of the AstraZeneca vaccine until only a couple of months ago, so there's going to be a big kickoff there as well. So that's it. I sent it to the Attorney General because one of the questions I did ask was did the MHRA tell the Minister that they'd switched the vaccines, in which case if they didn't then the MHRA are guilty of potentially a crime which is I think it's a two-year prison sent us an unlimited fine, but if they did tell the minister, then how could the minister go out and say they're safe, effective, and tested when they knew that they weren't? I don't understand why the prime minister doesn't want to come back to me. I'm afraid the letter I sent him was a bit of a, do you still beat your wife question. There isn't a good answer, because either I'm going to nail the MHRA, or I'm going to nail the ministers. And it's also interesting, I think, you know, so many health ministers are deciding to not stand at the next general election. No, 100%. Andrew, I've watched your many speeches in the Commons and followed those written questions and I think for our UK viewers and listeners who are very frustrated at UK politics, I think as long as there remains someone like you speaking this truth, then there is hope. So thank you for what you do and thank you for your time today. Thank you very much for having me on. I'm sure we'll speak again in the future.

The Masters Swimming Podcast
#64: Saying goodbye to aches and pains with Sammy Wilson

The Masters Swimming Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2023 39:03


Former GB artistic swimmer Sammy Wilson works as a movement and mobility coach and understands the daily aches and pains we experience as we age. Lifestyles such as desk-bound jobs don't help, but Sammy helps athletes incorporate small, daily habits into their lives to rid themselves of chronic pains. In this episode, Sammy explores some of the simple changes you can make to improve your mobility. Get 15% off a pair of custom-fit goggles from TheMagic5 by using the link: www.themagic5.com/freestylemedialimited.com  

Highlights from Newstalk Breakfast
A second PSNI breach uncovered

Highlights from Newstalk Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2023 4:11


An emergency meeting of the Northern Ireland Policing Board will take place this morning. This comes after a second breach within the PSNI was uncovered yesterday evening. Northern Editor with the Irish Times Freya McClement explained the severity of the breach and we get further reaction with DUP Brexit spokesperson Sammy Wilson.

Newstalk Breakfast Highlights
A second PSNI breach uncovered

Newstalk Breakfast Highlights

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2023 4:11


An emergency meeting of the Northern Ireland Policing Board will take place this morning. This comes after a second breach within the PSNI was uncovered yesterday evening. Northern Editor with the Irish Times Freya McClement explained the severity of the breach and we get further reaction with DUP Brexit spokesperson Sammy Wilson.

CyprusScene.com
Sammy Wilson MP tells how to solve the Cyprus Issue

CyprusScene.com

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2023 5:56


CyprusScene shares the views of UK MP, Sammy Wilson through his proposal to solve the Cyprus Issue. This episode is also available as a blog post: https://cyprusscene.com/2023/08/02/sammy-wilson-mp-tells-how-to-solve-the-cyprus-issue/ Don't forget to select FOLLOW on our channel listing to hear more news and reviews from Northern Cyprus CyprusScene Podcasts can be found on the following apps Anchor, Apple Itunes, Amazon Music, Castbox, Google Podcasts, Overcast, Pocket Casts, RadioPublic, Spotify. Spotify now includes full videos to watch from CyprusScene If you like what we do, please click like and show your support by perhaps donating through our Buy Me A Coffee campaign which will help with our production costs https://www.buymeacoffee.com/chrismycypZ CyprusScene brings a yearly review of news and reviews from Northern Cyprus to the world https://youtu.be/ihUdHWc-wWc

Crunchy Allergist Podcast
Exploring Mobility and Exercise

Crunchy Allergist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 30:08


How can incorporating mobility training and exercise into your daily routine unlock a happier, more energized version of yourself? Join us in this dynamic episode as we dive into the world of movement and mobility with Sammy Wilson, a renowned coach and former elite athlete. Discover the transformative power of incorporating proper movement techniques, even in desk-bound lifestyles. Explore the benefits of mobility training, learn practical tips for getting started, and uncover how exercise can positively impact both your body and brain. Get ready to unleash your body's innate potential and embrace a more vibrant, active life! Listen to this week's podcast episode and don't miss this opportunity to unlock your movement potential and embrace a happier, healthier lifestyle. EPISODE IN A GLANCE-How Sammy became a movement and mobility coach-The impact of movement-Moving the right way with desk jobs-Variety of movements-What is mobility-How exercise can help our brain-Start small-Get up and move-The more you move, the more you are energized to move more-Our bodies were made to move ABOUT SAMMY WILSONSammy Wilson is a movement and mobility coach from the Pocket PT. She has a BCS in sports and exercise science and a qualified level 3 personal trainer. Sammy is a retired elite athlete. She used to compete for the Great Britain artistic swimming team and have since been navigating staying mobile whilst spending a lot of time at a desk. Her job is to help people who sit at a desk all day getting achy and lethargic, to move more, feel energized and ultimately become happier! CONNECT WITH SAMMY WILSONInstagram → https://instagram.com/pocketptuk Facebook → https://m.facebook.com/groups/activethrivingprofessionals ABOUT DR KARA WADAQuadruple board-certified pediatric and adult allergy immunology & lifestyle medicine physician, Sjogren's patient and life coach shares her recipe for success combining anti-inflammatory lifestyle, trusting therapeutic relationships, modern medicine & our minds to harness our body's ability to heal. CONNECT WITH DR WADAWebsite → http://www.drkarawada.com/ LinkedIn → https://www.linkedin.com/in/crunchyallergist/ Instagram → https://www.instagram.com/crunchyallergist/ Facebook → https://www.facebook.com/CrunchyAllergist Twitter → https://twitter.com/CrunchyAllergy TikTok → https://www.tiktok.com/@crunchyallergist SUBSCRIBE TO NEWSLETTER → https://www.drkarawada.com/newsletter Get Dr. Kara's weekly dose of a naturally-minded and scientifically-grounded approach to immune system health. JOIN THE 12-WEEK BECOMING IMMUNE CONFIDENT PROGRAM! Feel confident, energetic, and more like that bad*** you used to be.Apply Here→ https://www.immuneconfident.com

M.P.I. Radio
How To Stay Focused at Your Desk w/ Sammy Wilson

M.P.I. Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2023 23:34


Sammy Wilson is a movement and mobility coach from the Pocket PT. Her job is to help people who sit at a desk all day getting achy and lethargic, to move more, feel energized, and ultimately become a lot more productive. Connect with Sammy: IG: https://instagram.com/pocketptuk Facebook: https://m.facebook.com/groups/activethrivingprofessionals/

desk stay focused sammy wilson
The Real Story
Will the Windsor Framework finally get Brexit done?

The Real Story

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2023 49:04


A new Brexit deal for Northern Ireland has been announced. The Windsor Framework replaces the Northern Ireland Protocol - that was deemed unworkable, but does this new deal solve Northern Ireland's trading arrangements? In his speech in Windsor, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said his new framework agreement had "removed any sense of a border in the Irish Sea". It is true that Northern Ireland consumers should certainly have no sense of a border when it comes to buying food, plants and medicines or taking their dog on the ferry to Scotland. But it will still be a trade border of sorts. Moving goods from Great Britain to Northern Ireland remains conditional: it will require signing up to trusted trader schemes, providing information on what goods are moving and having the correct labelling. But given the constraints the UK set itself back in 2017 - a hard Brexit with no land border on the island of Ireland - that may be as good as it gets. Rishi Sunak and EU chief, Ursula von der Leyen, seemed comfortable together in Windsor but it's still unclear whether the Democratic Unionist Party in Northern Ireland will back the agreement and bring back the power-sharing government. So, is the Windsor Framework a feasible solution? How did Mr Sunak make such progress where his predecessors failed to? If the DUP do reject it, does this mean Brexit can never truly be ‘done'? And what would be the implications for Northern Ireland, Great Britain and the EU if the wrangling over the border continues indefinitely? Chris Morris is joined by: Raoul Ruparel, special advisor on Europe to former UK Prime Minister Theresa May from 2018-19. Tony Connolly, Europe Editor for Ireland's national broadcaster RTE. He is the author of Brexit & Ireland: The Dangers, the Opportunities, and the Inside Story of the Irish Response. Professor Danuta Hübner, a Polish MEP and a member of the European Parliament's UK Contact Group . Also featuring: Sammy Wilson, Democratic Unionist Party MP for East Antrim and DUP chief whip Image: Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen during a press conference at the Guildhall in Windsor, Berkshire, following the announcement that they have struck a deal over the Northern Ireland Protocol. Credit: PA Producers: Imogen Wallace and Pandita Lorenz

Low Hanging Fruit
EP009 - Sammy Wilson, The Corporate Dumpster Fire (@liljehu_)

Low Hanging Fruit

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2022 29:30


Welcome to the Low Hanging Fruit Podcast! Today, the bros sit down with the hilarious corporate humor content creator, Sammy of @liljehu_ (aka Corporate Dumpster Fire) to discuss his quick rise on TikTok, how he became a content creator & life as a corporate tech worker & content creator! Come chill with the self-proclaimed Corporate Bros and enjoy this fun conversation! Follow us on Instagram @LowHangingFruitPod & follow the bros for more funny content! @ThatCorporateLawyer@TheCorporateChase@ChampagneCruz Audio License for Music: Come On, Let's Go by Le Gang https://soundcloud.com/thisislegangCreative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0Free Download / Stream: https://bit.ly/come-on-lets-goMusic promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/nNaO-8etjqs

Highlights from Newstalk Breakfast
SWhat does UK Government reshuffle mean for Northern Ireland?

Highlights from Newstalk Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 8:00


New British prime minister Liz Truss announced her cabinet reshuffle yesterday evening with Therese Coffey landing the central role of deputy prime minister. Chris Heaton-Harris has been confirmed as the new Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, having previously served as Minister of State for Europe and North America under Truss when she was Foreign Secretary. So what does this reshuffle mean for Northern Ireland? To discuss with Ciara was Sammy Wilson, DUP Brexit Spokesperson and Chris Hazzard, Sinn Féin MP for South Down.

Newstalk Breakfast Highlights
SWhat does UK Government reshuffle mean for Northern Ireland?

Newstalk Breakfast Highlights

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 8:00


New British prime minister Liz Truss announced her cabinet reshuffle yesterday evening with Therese Coffey landing the central role of deputy prime minister. Chris Heaton-Harris has been confirmed as the new Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, having previously served as Minister of State for Europe and North America under Truss when she was Foreign Secretary. So what does this reshuffle mean for Northern Ireland? To discuss with Ciara was Sammy Wilson, DUP Brexit Spokesperson and Chris Hazzard, Sinn Féin MP for South Down.

Today with Claire Byrne
Boris resignation update

Today with Claire Byrne

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2022 4:46


Claire Hanna, SDLP Member of Parliament for South Belfast, Sammy Wilson, DUP MP for East Antrim, and Party Brexit Spokesperson

parliament boris resignation sammy wilson dup mp
Highlights from Newstalk Breakfast
DUP react to the Northern Ireland protocol legislation due to be published

Highlights from Newstalk Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 7:38


Controversial legislation overriding parts of the Northern Ireland Protocol is to be published by the UK government today. Sammy Wilson, DUP Brexit Spokesperson joined us on Newstalk Breakfast.

Newstalk Breakfast Highlights
DUP react to the Northern Ireland protocol legislation due to be published

Newstalk Breakfast Highlights

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 7:38


Controversial legislation overriding parts of the Northern Ireland Protocol is to be published by the UK government today. Sammy Wilson, DUP Brexit Spokesperson joined us on Newstalk Breakfast.

Booze Free Bants - Your Sober Pod!
BFB with Buddies - Sammy Wilson from Sober Mates

Booze Free Bants - Your Sober Pod!

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2022 75:58


Sexy Sammy Wilson is in the house and she is talking all things sobriety, from dating, sex, ex boyfriends, sex with ex boyfriends and the hangover from hell that set her off on her sobriety journey.Sammy is the creator of Sober Mates, an online community supporting people who are sober and sober curious, you can join in on the discussion here https://www.facebook.com/groups/981049929190461.  Sammy is ball of energy and positivity.  She is a spring chicken and has so much self awareness, Breeza and Maso are in awe.   The girls have a ball with her!  Even the girls had to buckle up for this ep.  Thanks Sammy!

RTÉ - Drivetime
Sammy Wilson on the Northern Ireland Protocol

RTÉ - Drivetime

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 10:36


Sammy Wilson, DUP MP for East Antrim

Highlights from Newstalk Breakfast
Counting begins in the Northern Ireland assembly election

Highlights from Newstalk Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2022 9:08


Voters in Northern Ireland have cast their ballots in the Assembly election and counting begins around now. Opinion polls have suggested Sinn Féin is likely to top the poll, and the Alliance Party is tipped to have a surge in support. So, what could this vote mean for Northern Irish politics?  DUP Brexit spokesperson Sammy Wilson and   Enda McNulty Former Armagh Footballer and CEO of McNulty Training and Developmentspoke to Shane this morning. Listen and subscribe to Newstalk Breakfast on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.     Download, listen and subscribe on the Newstalk App.    You can also listen to Newstalk live on newstalk.com or on Alexa, by adding the Newstalk skill and asking: 'Alexa, play Newstalk'.

Best of Nolan
DUP distance themselves from Sammy Wilson claims that face masks deprive wearer of oxygen

Best of Nolan

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2022 79:10


Sammy Wilson once again repeats his claim.

Best of Nolan
DUP's Sammy Wilson under fire over ‘insulting' Covid rhyme tweet criticising restrictions

Best of Nolan

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2021 78:34


Sammy Wilson has been criticised for a tweet about new Covid-19 rules in Northern Ireland

Bloomberg Westminster
Will it Fly? (with Sammy Wilson MP)

Bloomberg Westminster

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2021 24:40


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sammy wilson
Learn Irish & other languages with daily podcasts
20210616_IRISH_gan_aon_ghar_nios_mo_i_gcainteanna_faoi_acht_gaeilge_-_sf

Learn Irish & other languages with daily podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2021 11:26


jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/yjyxqkga "No more proximity in talks on an Irish Language Act" - SF. "Gan aon ghar níos mó i gcainteanna faoi Acht Gaeilge" - SF. Northern Finance Minister Conor Murphy of Sinn Féin has said the party will not nominate a Deputy Prime Minister unless language legislation is introduced within the timescale agreed by all key northern parties in January last year. Dúirt Aire Airgeadais an Tuaiscirt, Conor Murphy ó Shinn Féin, nach n- ainmneoidh an páirtí LeasChead-Aire mura dtabharfar reachtaíocht teanga isteach taobh istigh den achar ama a d'aontaigh na príomhpháirtithe ar fad ó thuaidh i mí Eanáir anuraidh. It is true for Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald, he said, that talks with the DUP are no longer good as that party has no intention of living up to their promises. Is fíor do cheannaire Shinn Féin Mary Lou McDonald, a dúirt sé, nach bhfuil aon mhaith a thuilleadh i gcainteanna leis an DUP mar nach bhfuil rún ar bith ag an bpáirtí sin a ngealltanais a chomhlíonadh. Last night, Mary Lou McDonald indicated that a few weeks ago the British Government had proposed passing an Irish Language Act in Westminster but that Sinn Féin had responded at the time that the party preferred the legislation to be introduced in Stormont. Aréir, thug Mary Lou McDonald le fios gur thairg Rialtas na Breataine roinnt seachtainí ó shin Acht Gaeilge a rith i Westminster ach gur fhreagair Sinn Féin ag an am gurbh fhearr leis an bpáirtí gur i Stormont a a thabharfaí an reachtaíocht isteach. She said it was now clear, however, that talks with the DUP are no longer close. Dúirt sí gur léir anois, áfach, nach bhfuil gar níos mó i gcainteanna leis an DUP faoin gceist. Conversely, Sammy Wilson of the DUP pointed out that the British Government should not accede to a request from Sinn Féin and the introduction of Irish language legislation in the North regardless of the decentralized government in Stormont. Os a choinne sin, thug Sammy Wilson ón DUP le fios nár chóir do Rialtas na Breataine géilleadh d'iarratas ó Shinn Féin agus reachtaíocht Gaeilge a thabhairt isteach sa Tuaisceart gan spleáchas don rialtas díláraithe i Stormont. Sammy Wilson said the decentralization of power in the north was undermined the last time the British Government introduced legislation regardless of politicians. Dúirt Sammy Wilson gur baineadh an bonn de dhílárú na cumhachta ó thuaidh an uair dheireanach a thug Rialtas na Breataine reachtaíocht isteach beag beann ar pholaiteoirí. He was commenting on the abortion legislation introduced in the North in October 2019, at a time when the decentralized government in Stormont was not functioning. Ag trácht a bhí sé ar an reachtaíocht maidir le ginmhilleadh a tugadh isteach sa Tuaisceart i mí Dheireadh Fómhair 2019, tráth nach raibh an rialtas díláraithe i Stormont ag feidhmiú. Following the resignation of Arlene Foster as First Minister of the North yesterday, the DUP and Sinn Féin have a week to reach a new agreement and re- enter into a coalition government. Tar éis do Arlene Foster éirí as mar Chéad-Aire an Tuaiscirt inné, tá seachtain ag an DUP agus Sinn Féin le teacht ar chomhaontú úr agus dul i mbun comhrialtais le chéile arís. While Paul Givan has been nominated as First Minister by new DUP leader Edwin Poots, Sinn Fein must accept his nomination and nominate a Deputy First Minister themselves. Cé go bhfuil Paul Givan ainmnithe mar Chéad-Aire ag ceannaire nua an DUP Edwin Poots, ní mór do Shinn Fein glacadh lena ainmniúchán agus LeasChéad-Aire a ainmniú iad féin. If both parties fail to bargain, the Stormont Executive will be dissolved and the Secretary of State for the North will have to call an assembly election. Mura n-éireoidh leis an dá pháirtí margadh a dhéanamh, scoirfear Feidhmeannas Stormont agus beidh ar Stát- Rúnaí an Tuaiscirt toghchán comhthionóil a ghairm.

The Andrew Pierce Show
Biden 'could threaten peace in Northern Ireland' with G7 intervention, warns DUP MP

The Andrew Pierce Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2021 37:37


Andrew Pierce talks to Sammy Wilson, Democratic Unionist Party Brexit spokesperson on the row over alleged comments by Joe Biden's team on Britain's ‘sausage war' with the EU in Northern Ireland, and speaks to royal biographer Angela Levin on Harry and Meghan's latest legal row. Plus, with cases of burnout surging after the pandemic, a wellness expert offers tips on how to deal with it. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

1 2 3 Show
Agender Cafe: Sammy Wilson and Anna Healy Fenton - Addiction and relationships

1 2 3 Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2021 48:25


Lorcan live show
News and dup sammy Wilson

Lorcan live show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2021 12:54


Just basic podcast --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lorcan-curran/message

sammy wilson
Julia Hartley-Brewer
Julia Hartley - Brewer | Latest round of trade talks start in London, Matt Hancock blames the middle-class youth for spike in Covid cases and Robert Jenrick unveils £12 billion housing boost

Julia Hartley-Brewer

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2020 31:06


Julia speak with Sammy WIlson, DUP MP & Cheif Whip, and Maddy Thimont-Jack, Senior Researcher on the Brexit Team at The Institute for Government about the latest round of Brexit trade talks this week in London. Professor of Virology at the University of Leeds, Dr Mark Harris, tells Julia about the spike in coronavirus cases. Housing, Communities & Local Government Secretary, Robert Jenrick, explains his plan for a £12 billion boost for affordable homes. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Chatter
Thomas Copeland on Northern Irish Politics and Inter-generational Differences

Chatter

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2020 61:20


Thomas Copeland, one of the founders of Challenges NI was our guest on today's show. We had a fantastic, wide ranging conversation that included his Brexit debate with Eddie Izzard and Sammy Wilson, the Northern Irish identity, the intergenerational differences in our society, and much, much more. [**PRE ORDER BREXIT:THE ESTABLISHMENT CIVIL WAR HERE**](http://https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1789044901/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1634&creative=6738&creativeASIN=1789044901&linkCode=as2&tag=thejist00-21&linkId=713eb889ae4131bec19abcebdee517f6) [***Get 25% off podcast hosting with Podiant***](http://https://pcast.link/chatter/) ***RESOURCES*** [https://twitter.com/thomasdcopeland](http://https://twitter.com/thomasdcopeland) [https://www.challengesni.com/imagination-in-isolation](http://https://www.challengesni.com/imagination-in-isolation) [https://www.challengesni.com/](http://https://www.challengesni.com/) [https://www.facebook.com/ChallengesNI/](http://https://www.facebook.com/ChallengesNI/) [https://twitter.com/challengesni?lang=en](http://https://twitter.com/challengesni?lang=en) Follow us on Facebook or Twitter or [sign up for our mailing list to get information on my upcoming book, Brexit: The Establishment Civil War](http://http://www.establishmentcivilwar.co.uk/). Music from Just Jim - [https://soundcloud.com/justjim](http://https://soundcloud.com/justjim)

The Blame Game
Episode 4

The Blame Game

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2018 29:23


This week, The Blame Game comes from Banbridge where the panel tackles the vexed question of how a Pope can be too Catholic, offers advice on how to face down the All Blacks rugby team's war dance and agrees that Boris Johnson makes Sammy Wilson look good.

Roy Green Show
Being a "deplorable racist", the tumultuous U.S. presidential election, recovery in Fort McMurray, electricity bills in Ontario, and the Beauties and the Beast

Roy Green Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2016 55:46


A listener named Trish posts on the show's web page, "I guess I'm a deplorable racist," going on to outline that she has become a minority in area where she lives in Canada. She adds, "I have concluded I must leave my adult children behind and moved to a small prairie town in order to live in a community where a fifty-something Caucasian woman can feel including in the community."   An Angus Reid poll of a few days ago showed the majority of Canadians (68%) would prefer minorities to fit in better into mainstream society. Additionally, Canada's federal Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains told CBC he's encountering pushback from Canadians at large, as well as members of the Liberal caucus, on Immigration Minister John McCallum's decision to raise the immigration to Canada annual number above the largely static 300,000 (or slightly less than 1% of the national population). - It seems like it's been a week like no other in U.S. presidential election politics. Will that question be asked each week for the next three weeks? What are the numbers in the U.S. presidential election? And how did Americans answer the question "should Donald Trump resign from the campaign”? Guest: Fran Coombs, managing editor of Rasmussen polling - Roy asks callers if they would vote for Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton. - Stacy and Kevin have been struggling for financial assistance in Fort McMurray after the wildfire. Recently, there have been developments between Stacy & Kevin and the regional manager of the Canadian Red Cross. Guests: Stacy and Kevin - Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne is presiding over an electricity grid and electricity delivery system in the province which is seeing homeowners' electricity bills catapulting and earned the Premier boos when she spoke in public a few days ago. Wynne in turn accuses Ontarians of being "very bad actors" as far as greenhouse gas growth is concerned. Ontario's Auditor General has accused the Wynne Liberals of causing Ontarians to pay an unnecessary $37 billion over market price for their electricity over an eight year period and will add another $137 billion by 2032. Guest: A replay of an interview with Sammy Wilson, Minister of Finance and Minister of the Environment for Northern Ireland as he spoke on the program last year about cap and trade - The Beauties join Roy for their weekly Beauties and the Beast segment. Guests: Catherine Swift, Linda Leatherdale and Michelle Simson See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Roy Green Show
Sammy Wilson - Minister of Finance and Minister of the Environment

Roy Green Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2016 7:51


Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne is presiding over an electricity grid and electricity delivery system in the province which is seeing homeowners electricity bills catapulting and earned the Premier boos when she spoke in public a few days ago.  Wynne in turn accuses Ontarians of being "very bad actors" as far as greenhouse gas growth is concerned. Ontario's Auditor General has accused the Wynne Liberals of causing Ontarians to pay an unnecessary $37 billion over market price for their electricity over an eight year period and will add another $137 billion by 2032. Wynne about to launch a cap and trade carbon credits scheme. Sammy Wilson. Minister of Finance and Minister of the Environment as he spoke on the program last year about cap and trade and the economy wrecking ball and job destroy C&T turned out to be. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Cutting Through the Matrix with Alan Watt Podcast (.xml Format)
Feb. 9, 2009 Alan Watt "Cutting Through The Matrix" LIVE on RBN: "Public Persuasion, Ain't It Amazin' " *Title/Poem and Dialogue Copyrighted Alan Watt - Feb. 9, 2009 (Exempting Music, Literary Quotes, and Callers' Comments)

Cutting Through the Matrix with Alan Watt Podcast (.xml Format)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2009 46:43


--{ Public Persuasion, Ain't It Amazin': "Soaring on Wings, Propaganda, You Find, Is Sponged Up by Osmosis into Your Mind, Globalism, Environment, Neuroscience, Genetics, While Eugenics is Softened by Word 'Bioethics,' Through Education, Repetition, All This Attainable, So the Elite in Near Future have World Sustainable, For Their Children the Products of Master Class, Playing Over the Vanquished Under the Grass, Enhanced Servants to Serve, Chipped and Undaunted, Unable to Rebel if Even They Wanted, A Manipulator to Children, the Grinning Al Gore States, 'On Global Warming, Children Know More' " [See www.cuttingthroughthematrix.com for links.] -- Era of Change, Industrial Revolution, New World Order - Planned Society, Genetic Enhancement - Control of the Mind, Authority Over Life and Death - Terrorism, War on World. Foundation Fronts - Intergenerational Planning, Fanaticism - French Revolution, Depopulation Programs, United Nations - Darwin, Huxley Family, Eugenics - UN Treaties. Public Relations, Predictive Programming - Internet, Information Wars - Marketing, Psychology - Beria of NKVD, Upgraded Scientific Indoctrination. Pentagon and Military "Education" (Propaganda) - "Extremist" Groups - Pentagon Media, Psychological Operations, "Winning Hearts and Minds". Soviet System, Merger with West - Green Party - Britain, Sammy Wilson, Climate Change Adverts - Parroted Terminology - Planetary Takeover, Regulation. "Free Flow of Capital and Labor" - Restricted Travel (Essential Only) - Agenda 21. Loyola Science Meetings, Brain Chips and Public Acceptance, Novels, Cartoons, "Final Cut" movie. Australia, Chip Implantation, Surveillance - Microchipped Animals, VeriChip - Human "Black Box", Tracking. (Articles: ["Pentagon Spending Billions on PR to Sway World Opinion" Associated Press (foxnews.com) - Feb. 5, 2009.] ["Quit call over blocked green ad" (news.bbc.co.uk) - Feb 9, 2009.] ["Humans 'will be implanted with microchips' " by Josephine Asher (news.ninemsn.com.au) - Jan. 30, 2009.]) *Title/Poem and Dialogue Copyrighted Alan Watt - Feb. 9, 2009 (Exempting Music, Literary Quotes, and Callers' Comments)