 Gweithio gynnwys hynny o'r ffordd ar gyfer y coronavirus, ac yn ymdyn nhw'n mynd i'ch gweithio i fynd i'r ffordd cerddurau ddefnyddio'r ffordd ar gyfer y gynhyrch, ac yn ymdyn nhw, ymdyn nhw'n ffordd ar gyfer y gynhyrch, a'u helpu yn ymddangos yn y cyfnodol. Yn ymddangos cymdeithasol a'r cymdeithasol, mae'n fyddi'r gwahod. Gweithio i'r gwaith, a'u helpu'n gwyllgor. Mae'r gweithio ar gyfer y gwaith, fe fydden nhw'n ffordd, Ond nid yw, o'ch gyfnod, yn ysgriffa ar y cwmgwch chi'n ddweud o'r unig, a'r ddweud o'r Cyfredinig Unig yn ym 355. Rhaid beth gallwn ei ffordd. Rwy'n gweithio, rwy'n ddod, yn y ddoch yn gwneud y cyfraith cymoedd gwaith, Boris Johnson yn gweithio arno iawn o'r ddweud o'r gweithio, rwy'n gweithio arno'r cyfraith i'r ddweud o'r cwmwysig ac i'r ffyrdd o'r rhan o'n gweithio. ond we should not, and must not forget, that actually 335 people have died and 335 families have been devastated. Sadly, that figure is likely to rise. It's sobering, it's sombering and it drives home the crisis and it is a crisis that we are facing. So, what I wanted to do today was spend some time on the coronavirus and try to demystify it a little bit for us. There's, as I say, fear and confusion surrounding this, so I've spent the weekend immersed in coverage about this. I've watched hours of video and read dozens of articles and I will try to put together simply, quickly and clearly as I can, at where we are on this, what exactly is happening. So, always best to start at the beginning, I've got my trusty pad of notes. Always best to start at the beginning and we know this virus started in Wuhan in China and in December a group of doctors were talking online in a group chat. One of them mentioned that he had seen what he thought was a recurrence, a resurgence of SARS disease. Now, you remember SARS disease, it's a respiratory disease, there was an outbreak of it back in 2003 and over 800 people died and it came from the same global region as the current virus. The doctors who were speaking to each other online about this were silenced by the Chinese state and warned to stay quiet about it. Now, this silence, this inaction by the Chinese government went on for some weeks and a University of Southampton study, and I will link to this below, this is absolutely fascinating, it's pretty much known now that the Chinese government could have acted and could have prevented this. I will link to the most interesting, I won't link to everything I watched or read this weekend because you'll be swamped, but I'll link to the really interesting ones and this is one. The University of Southampton studied and concluded that had the Chinese government acted three weeks prior, it would have stopped 95, 95% of the infections that have taken place. China has got to answer for this and I know there's a debate going on at the moment about where the blame lies and as we probably can expect from Donald Trump, he's not shy about saying what he thinks on this and he's calling it the Chinese virus and of course the United Nations, I think he's going up against the journalists who don't know what to do with him, they just don't know what to do with him. One of them asked him whether he thought it was racist to call it a Chinese virus and he just said no it's not racist. He just doesn't entertain it, he's not playing the game. But is it right to blame this on China? Well let's look at the facts. The markets, now the doctors who were speaking online pointed to what's known as a wet market in Wuhan, the city of Wuhan and they identified that as being the potential source of this virus. Now I watched a documentary about an undercover documentary about wet markets across Asia, they don't just happen in China, they happen across Asia and here's the scenario. You've got animals taken from the wild who are put into tiny cages, housed in dark, dirty, cramped conditions together, they're cages on top of each other, next to each other, they are crammed into these cages. These animals are bought and slaughtered there and then. You have animals who would never come into contact in the wild being housed in these conditions together and it's a and then being handled by humans and the scientists that I listened to said it's not a matter of ingesting the meat from these animals but of handling these animals and the conditions of these animals and this you know it brings to light the horrific frankly horrific treatment of animals that is common in these markets and for those who know me you'll know how strongly I feel about that but it's also hygiene practices this is not a high standard of practice for food production. I'm not it's not racist to say that it's an observation of reality remember that so the United Nations as one might expect in all of this is less concerned about people dying and more concerned about not calling it China virus or Wuhan virus and this this sort of nonsense which is essentially telling us that the borders are staying open you are just going to have to get used to this this is a by-product of open borders and this is and one of the primary key points I want to make today is that this is a result one of the results of a globalist attitude and a globalist mindset we are being told not to blame China we are being told that it's racist to look at all at China our wider Asian practices and food production we have every right to look at these practices we have every right to object to them and it's particularly the case that we have a right to speak when it is spreading viruses killer viruses all across the world globalism means that if you have a disease in China caused by Chinese practices you also have a disease in the UK thanks to Chinese practices we must must talk about this and there's a lot of talk about even placing sanctions on China for this well personally what I'd rather say is bring our production back home I probably know we've got to start making our own products again that would really really help with globalism and here's here's something else that would help we should have grounded our planes we should have stopped flights into this country as soon as it became apparent how serious this was now we'll get on to the government's response to this in due course but a major criticism I have is that we should have the airports the especially flights from the most the worst affected countries I eat China Italy Iran are high have high death tolls in this and you know hold on to your hat because last week as we were being told to go indoors rightly planes were still landing in the UK to my knowledge as I speak planes are still landing in the UK both from China and from Italy now Italy is the European leader in this a death toll in Italy is in the thousands people are under a complete lockdown there this is absolutely catastrophic for Italy and and I yesterday we heard or I read among the many things I read that the government is saying we're a few weeks away in the UK from being at Italy levels now I'll link below to an article from odd news media which goes into why Italy and the answer is quite simple and it's obvious to everyone that the answer is mass immigration mass Chinese population in the areas of Italy where this is particularly northern Italy have a read of that article it's very interesting as I say I'm not going to overload you I'm just going to give you a few of the most interesting things and a few of the most informative things that I found so here back at home as I say Italy is the worst in Europe at the moment and I'm staggered I'm staggered to tell you that we still have flights coming into the UK from Italy at least at the time that I'm speaking to you across across Europe we are looking at unprecedented restrictions people in France for example unable to leave the house without a printed document to to say that they have to go out for food or whatever it may be so here in the UK we haven't had compulsory lockdown but we have been told or asked the restaurants bars cafes were told and I quite enjoyed when Boris repeated the word telling twice there in his announcement he said we are telling bars clubs restaurants cafes to close tonight and not reopen so that's happened there are it's it's a very strange very strange time it's it is the stuff of movie plots it really is and I'm not being flippant about it it's really a very very strange time so all the bars restaurants etc are closed in the UK only food shops are post office essential things are open key workers are working key workers children are not at the moment but depending on how this goes on we'll be able to go to school and it's at the moment we're being asked to voluntarily stay two metres away from each other in public I've got to say I saw on yesterday Sunday I saw people at a beach near me queuing queuing for fish and chips and queuing for ice cream I the work you know the thought went through my head as people think they're on holiday and I don't quite know my sympathies with the government a little bit on this because I don't quite know how what more they can do to to try and get this across the seriousness of this across it is a very very difficult thing and it may be that we will be compulsory even more stringent measures will need to be brought in so very very difficult time and and it's very difficult for the government because I do know that they know that it's that what they're asking people is extremely extremely difficult to do people with symptoms are being asked to self isolate people at high risk groups are being asked to stay home you know for 12 weeks 12 weeks is a long time so yeah on absolutely unprecedented restrictions on our freedoms already and I'm not complaining about that we need to do whatever is necessary to save lives and whilst I don't enjoy the prospect of not being able to meet with people or you know go to a cafe for an unlimited time is actually quite daunting and and quite we've got to consider this don't we this this is this is an issue to me and I don't really hear it being talked about and it is an issue if we have to stay isolated for a year what effect will that have on us I watched a fascinating documentary as well about how it is potentially going to change our online behaviour people who don't use the internet now will start using the internet we're going to be likelihood is we're going to be stuck home people will be bored and even even television has got you know there aren't live sports on television even the soaps have stopped filming you know we've we're going to people are going to be going to the internet and and it's it we could really see a shift in how people use media over the next year anyway that was a very interesting documentary that I watched now to the government response now I don't want to you know pick out the government or criticise the government too much because this is an incredible incredible a thing that they're facing and I don't I'm guessing assuming it comes doesn't come with a handbook to tell you how to deal with unprecedented crises however it must be said that the airline planes should not be landing in this country planes should not have been allowed to land here from the high-risk countries from the early stages when it became apparent that this was killing hundreds of people we should have taken strict and necessary measures at that time to stop people coming into the UK the fact that they're still coming in is quite shocking to me and quite a dereliction I saw just before I started this video this evening people mashed together on the tube uh I I I do get how difficult this is but the tube is a tube at rush hour is the stuff of nightmares to me already so you know we've got us we've got we've got us to take stricter measures we've got to we've got to as a primary point stop people coming into the country surely surely uh this is this is obvious this is the first thing one would do right when you've got a global pandemic you stop people coming in to your country and you especially stop people coming in from the parts of the world with the highest death tolls this is staggering to me and to me it tells me that globalism trumps all we are still not willing to admit the dangers of open borders we are still not willing to just stop the mass movement of people we have got to stop the mass movement of people and you know what if anything good is to come out of this it will be that greater understanding of that reality by the wider public not just in britain but across europe and across the world this has to stop we have got to stop willy nilly allowing people and products and cultural practices to come here from all corners of the world I will say it till I am blue in the face to the united nations who talk of a human family yes we are all human but the a characteristic of humans is our difference our developmental differences our cultural differences our value differences our hygiene differences our food practice differences and the I'm going to mention it although I'll be criticized for it there's the videos going around social media some of which have been brought to my attention and nothing short of shocking uh not just hygiene practices as I mentioned but cruelty and there's a notorious video going around of a dog being I'm sorry to say this a dog being fried while still barking and it has horrified people and rightly so but you cannot you're never going to persuade me of the cultural compatibility between the English let's say uh and the English English relationship with dogs uh you're never going to tell tell me that it's the same mindset that fries a dog while it's barking uh than a a you know the wonderful English tradition of the beautiful breeds bread in this country and and you're never going to tell me that this is all is all going to gel okay uh it's not we as cultures are often horrified by each other and we must talk about that the fall out from this must be that we will talk about hygiene practices we will talk about the movement of food and the movement of people uh from parts of the world which do not have the same value systems in terms of food production or hygiene this is what it causes and this is not the first time a deadly disease has emerged from Asia so I'm with Donald Trump on this uh it is a Chinese disease it came from China and this virtue signaling rubbish is just more of the globalists who hate it when the peril the danger of open borders is revealed as it's so starkly has been with this uh so they're battling back with the usual screech of racist but we must talk about these things and I frankly object I object to the the import the mass import of products from this country or from from China into this country so getting back to the government response really on the whole in terms of the economy lots to praise in it I would suggest and I'd suggest that Boris and Rishi Sunak are going to be popular for this and rightly so it's a it's a good response I probably would I thought I found myself thinking I maybe go a bit further than that but pretty pretty good response from the government on on this at least but overall I'm not happy at all with the government response on this however like its unprecedented restrictions that are being placed upon us it's also an unprecedented intervention by the government to prop up the economy because you know apart from the deaths themselves the most frightening thing about this to me is the potential for a extremely damaging extremely dangerous global recession people are not able to work and here in the UK we have people working from home but we have people who I know of people who've already been laid off uh uh we we people are just not not able to go to work and it should be obvious I guess uh as to what that does to the economy now how long this will go on for will be obviously crucial because the longer it goes on for the more danger we're in so the government's response and I'll just read through a list of some of the measures and probably the most dramatic of those is that they are going to be paying 80 percent of wages up to a two and a half thousand pound a month limit the Chancellor said that there was no limit to the amount he was making available for this unlimited loans for zero interest for 12 months from the government to businesses differed that uh until the end of June uh business rates abolished for a year universal credit increased for a year working tax credit increased for a year both of those by a thousand pounds and they are going to be launching a national advertising campaign to let people know that they that this help is here from the government and it is it is very welcome and I must say that it was an example of a government stepping up and we this is it is a time of crisis uh people should not feel like they are alone they should not feel frightened they should feel well at the moment and it's natural to feel some fear at this but they shouldn't feel I guess they should feel like they have leaders who are going to take the brunt of this on their behalf who are going to do what it takes to protect their livelihoods and to keep a roof over their head and that's when government shows its merit it shows whether it is worthy of the name government uh and I think it's right and proper that the government's stepping up economically to help people in practical measures to actually pay their wages uh is a remarkable thing but as I say I am not over I don't I I do hate to be the uh a gloom monger um and I do hate to be critical at times like this but we can't keep we we can't keep going like this the fact that flights are still landing in the UK from countries with thousands of deaths uh while Boris Johnson is telling the rest of us to keep two metres away from each other it's just one of those things again when you shake your head in dismay you can't quite believe so what when when Boris when government when are you going to stop allowing people from allowing people to come on come into the UK that must be stopped it should have been stopped weeks ago but we are where we are it must be stopped now and the longer term lessons of this must be about globalism we must restore our borders we must restore our own manufacturing base as well and we must be able to criticise cultural practices which are unhygienic and cruel and to do so without being labelled racist as usual can we just stop with the racist for five minutes okay uh to finish I want to to uh have a look and I will link to this one below as well because I think this one is crucial it's what happens now and these scenarios for now and there are three options on on the article that I I read it's a BBC and you know how I feel about the BBC but they are actually really good I've said this before they are actually really good at collating things and summarising things and and making things accessible so they've basically given three options of what what might happen now a vaccine develop natural immunity or permanently change our behaviour how about that so a vaccine is could be it says around a year to 18 months away it would need to work it would need 60 of the population vaccinated so it's a year to 18 months not very encouraging particularly if we're kept at home develop natural immunity again this this would be I guess it itself explanatory really um if we were infected in in in stages and recovered at a big enough scale we could develop a natural immunity to this the final one sends chills down my spine permanently change our behaviour um that's that's a worry that's something that that's that's almost like a dark cloud hanging over all of this to me and one that isn't really being discussed of how this will affect us socially if we are kept from each other for a year it could have real real consequences for for how we behave and and and our behaviour we may become less social on a on a much you know on a much longer for a much longer time it it could have I mean it let's let's let's not be pessimistic but to me there's that little edge a little sort of voice in in the back of it saying I'm worried about how this will affect us if it goes on and on and on um and to not be able to go for a cup of coffee for a year year and a half to not be able to pop down the pub with some friends for a year year and a half cinema theatre museum it's a daunting prospect let's let's just let's just say that okay um but on let's let's finish on a positive note because it's difficult to summarise what's going on with a killer disease and and say anything positive but I do want to end on something positive and that is that from what we hear new cases have stopped in china and life is again from what we hear uh getting back somewhat to normal in china um this again is to be expected because we simply can't lock people down we will come up and and one of the things that worries about the worries me about the permanently behaviour or permanently change our behaviour aspect um is is how you know how do we how do we change it will it from now on will will corona virus be a part of our life from now on will we be wearing masks will we have people being charged with criminal offences if they have if they go outside with symptoms of a cold will we have uh things similar as of what we've seen we've seen with china and enforcing people into hospitals will we have restrictions on the number of people who are able to meet and will we get so used to this that we'll accept it and adapt to it in a short space of time and find it you know the find will we go back to ourselves afterwards um we'll see we'll see but the good news is that there does seem to be I mean I know none of us it's difficult to trust the chinese government um but uh from what we from what we do know things are beginning to go back to normal slowly in in china um you know this this is unprecedented the word keeps getting thrown around isn't it unprecedented but it is um none of us have known this before and it is for that reason and many others a very very frightening time but let us do what we can let's stay positive stay optimistic and do follow government advice you know I I'm not being a government puppy here you know I don't it's not I'm suddenly trusting the government the government should have should have stopped people flying in here I don't you know I don't think um I don't have every bit of faith in the government no matter what I think you should know that um but we have to trust the science we have to trust the scientists and we have to have faith that our government is going to follow their advice and act in our best interests um however we shall be keeping a very very close eye on them and making sure that they are doing in the in the during and after this crisis what needs to be done because this is a globalism problem this globalism brought this to our door and that's why the globalists are shouting about racism as per usual because we're finally starting to realise there are major major issues or I should say more people are realising that open borders is causing these problems I shall be back I'm going to be doing a lot more videos over the coming weeks but I can't go anywhere so I shall be back tomorrow and I'll start back on our policy videos but I'm going to start doing a daily live stream I'm going to start live streaming for an hour a day I'll let you know the date of that it's very very soon we will talk about this and other issues of the day we're all going to be stuck inside now for a while so let's keep each other company it's the one of the either you know the the internet is an enormous and terrifying network um but it can keep us together while we're not allowed to be around each other and for that we're very very lucky to have it so stay safe everyone um try not to to worry too much you know it's it's a it's a very very difficult and very daunting thing that we're facing but we shall fight we shall do what it takes to get ourselves through it to get each other through it um and we'll come out the other side and uh I shall be keeping your company so some good news I shall be keeping your company throughout it I'll let you know the start date very very soon when we'll have a daily round up of what's going on with coronavirus and other issues I'll be back tomorrow with some for Britain policy in the meantime take care of yourselves