00:00:00
finally some truth and if ever you
00:00:02
wanted justification for being
00:00:04
frustrated with this government and the
00:00:06
previous government for making promises
00:00:08
that they didn't yet keep this is it but
00:00:11
it's even worse than you might think
00:00:14
because not only have the promises about
00:00:16
ending hotels for asylum seekers not
00:00:19
happened yet they are not likely to
00:00:21
happen for a long time and it's even
00:00:24
worse than you might think so please do
00:00:26
stick around there's a number of things
00:00:28
in this video that are going to blow
00:00:29
your mind i literally couldn't make this
00:00:32
up but it's all true so if you like this
00:00:36
brutally honest analysis please do
00:00:38
subscribe to my channel i am independent
00:00:40
of everybody including the mainstream
00:00:42
media and i will tell you this as it is
00:00:45
and as it applies to the law etc so what
00:00:48
are we talking about here so we have our
00:00:51
own sort of doge now our very own
00:00:54
government office for value for money
00:00:57
and they've set out a number of
00:00:59
documents here summarized on this page
00:01:01
here uh all with underlying reports and
00:01:03
documents etc which i'm going to show
00:01:05
you um all with some details statistics
00:01:08
and reviews that they're going to do but
00:01:10
in all they tell a bit of a dismal story
00:01:14
in that we have companies accused of
00:01:17
profitering from the practice of housing
00:01:21
asylum seekers in hotels and the fact
00:01:24
that this is probably going to go on for
00:01:26
some time but the worst is yet to come
00:01:28
so stick around however let's start with
00:01:32
the basics now um there's this command
00:01:35
paper here which details the use of what
00:01:38
they call short-term residential
00:01:40
accommodation now there's different
00:01:43
types of accommodation there's the
00:01:44
immediate accommodation the short-term
00:01:46
accommodation temporary transitional
00:01:48
accommodation etc um all i think
00:01:51
deliberately confusing in some sense but
00:01:53
by the by procuring this is one of the
00:01:56
areas let me explain this this is one of
00:01:58
the value for money studies that they
00:02:00
are going to have to do to find areas
00:02:03
that they can save money and one of the
00:02:05
areas they're looking at is this here
00:02:07
procuring short-term residential
00:02:10
accommodation temporary and transitional
00:02:12
accommodation is procured by multiple
00:02:14
central government departments as well
00:02:15
as local authorities for a range of
00:02:17
different groups so that will include
00:02:19
asylum seekers for example and it will
00:02:21
include veterans and homeless people and
00:02:23
so
00:02:24
on the scale of spend is significant for
00:02:27
example in 2022 to 2023 the home office
00:02:30
spend was 2.3 billion pounds on hotels
00:02:34
for asylum seekers and local authorities
00:02:37
spent 1.6 billion pounds on temporary
00:02:39
accommodation those are added together
00:02:42
they're not uh within the same figure
00:02:45
unit costs have increased significantly
00:02:47
in recent years this is partly where the
00:02:49
accusations of profiteering comes from
00:02:51
independent experts including the
00:02:53
national audit office and the center for
00:02:55
homelessness impact have identified
00:02:57
shortcomings in the procurement of
00:02:58
temporary and transitional accommodation
00:03:00
that may have contributed to the cost
00:03:02
escalation that's another way of saying
00:03:05
someone's making a buck somewhere the
00:03:08
study will involve that's this study
00:03:09
they're talking about here will involve
00:03:11
the home office the ministry for housing
00:03:13
uh communities and local government and
00:03:15
mod ministry of justice and the treasury
00:03:18
with input from the cabinet office the
00:03:19
government commercial function local
00:03:21
government association the center for
00:03:22
homelessness impact and other experts
00:03:25
and this will inform the government's
00:03:27
approach to thematic reviews as to what
00:03:30
they're going to do
00:03:32
next and all of that culminating in the
00:03:35
plan um which is included included
00:03:38
within this bit here the value for money
00:03:40
studies are completed in a small number
00:03:41
of specific high-risisk areas cross
00:03:43
departmental spending and informed
00:03:44
decision in phase two of the spending
00:03:46
review and as a result of all that they
00:03:49
give you this outcome here demand for
00:03:51
short-term residential accommodation
00:03:53
across all the cohorts which includes
00:03:56
hotels is likely to remain over the
00:03:59
coming years given other pressures on
00:04:02
housing supply and risks presented by
00:04:05
global
00:04:06
instability so in black and white
00:04:10
crystal clear they do not expect the end
00:04:14
of the use of these hotels for years to
00:04:17
come and so this spend not only has
00:04:20
increased and some are accused of
00:04:23
profiteering out of it making a lot of
00:04:25
money out of the use of these hotels but
00:04:28
that is likely to continue for years to
00:04:30
come now i'm always a little bit cynical
00:04:34
and when companies are making money like
00:04:35
this and there's a system set up that
00:04:37
people are making money like this i'm
00:04:39
always cynical that this is going to
00:04:40
continue and there's no real incentive
00:04:43
to stop it from happening and the
00:04:44
numbers tell a dreadful story so i'm
00:04:48
going to come back to you in a moment
00:04:49
with the numbers which are horrific um
00:04:52
the absolute killer point which will
00:04:56
blow your mind and is a revelation that
00:04:59
i think we should all be up in arms
00:05:01
about and then finally at the tail end
00:05:03
of the video another story um which is
00:05:06
completely unrelated but i have to throw
00:05:08
it in here anyway because it's utterly
00:05:10
ridiculous but i have to come back to
00:05:12
that so all of that coming up but don't
00:05:14
go away just aside for a quick story
00:05:16
quite an alarming story actually
00:05:17
yesterday i received an email from a
00:05:19
company that had set up a new account in
00:05:21
the name of a former employee of mine
00:05:24
now he hasn't worked for me for over 10
00:05:26
years but what they've done is they've
00:05:28
taken his details used a generic company
00:05:31
email address and set up an account and
00:05:33
then started emailing it telling him
00:05:35
that he's eligible for certain uh credit
00:05:38
cards and things like that which
00:05:39
obviously raised alarm bells because
00:05:41
they've got enough of his information to
00:05:42
start setting up credit searches and
00:05:44
things like that which i thought was
00:05:45
quite horrendous given that this guy had
00:05:47
not worked for me for over 10 years but
00:05:49
this was a genuine email from a genuine
00:05:51
company and i thought that's quite
00:05:53
horrendous that they've still got those
00:05:54
details even though he hasn't worked for
00:05:55
me for over 10 years and this is one of
00:05:58
the things that happens with identity
00:06:00
theft when these companies have your
00:06:02
information because it's sold on again
00:06:03
and again and that is why i partner with
00:06:06
a company on my channel called incogn
00:06:08
because incogn is a service that is set
00:06:10
up specifically to target these data
00:06:12
brokers and marketeteers that collect
00:06:15
all your information together and sell
00:06:16
it onto other parties like the one that
00:06:18
sent this email yesterday having set up
00:06:20
an account in this guy's name and i
00:06:22
haven't even spoken to him for over 10
00:06:23
years now but incogn will request and
00:06:27
require using uk law and us law that
00:06:29
these companies remove your data from
00:06:31
their servers it works off an email
00:06:34
address and your details and they must
00:06:36
remove your data from their servers else
00:06:39
they are in breach of law and if they
00:06:41
fail to remove that data after your
00:06:42
request then there is potentially a good
00:06:44
claim against them incogn does all the
00:06:47
work for you you get access to a
00:06:48
dashboard and it gives you information
00:06:50
on how many companies have confirmed
00:06:52
that they've got your data and that they
00:06:53
are removing it or in the process of
00:06:55
removing it you will be alarmed as to
00:06:57
how many companies have your data and
00:06:59
confirm that they are removing it if you
00:07:01
did this yourself even if you knew who
00:07:02
to go to it would take you hours but
00:07:04
incogn does all of the work for you and
00:07:06
as a partner to my channel of course i
00:07:08
get you a discount just remember the
00:07:09
code black belt you'll get 60% off the
00:07:12
plan with incogn at the link in the
00:07:14
description below and of course you get
00:07:16
a 30-day money back guarantee but once
00:07:17
you see very quickly how many companies
00:07:19
ping back on the dashboard that they
00:07:21
have your data and they're in the
00:07:23
process of removing it you will want
00:07:24
them to keep removing it and this is an
00:07:26
ongoing process because these companies
00:07:29
will have your data all over the place
00:07:31
and gradually you'll need to get rid of
00:07:32
it so remember the code black belt for a
00:07:34
60% discount off the plan the links in
00:07:36
the description below and on screen and
00:07:38
you will be relieved when you see how
00:07:40
many companies are removing your data so
00:07:42
check out incognia because this story
00:07:43
was very real quite alarming and you'll
00:07:45
be relieved when you see how many
00:07:47
companies are removing your data so
00:07:49
coming back to the use of hotels and why
00:07:50
the numbers are skyrocketing and
00:07:52
something that i think we should all be
00:07:54
quite alarmed by now let's go first of
00:07:57
all to the smallboat activity so we've
00:08:00
got two pages here one is the small boat
00:08:02
arrivals for the last 7 days and you can
00:08:04
see here hundreds upon hundreds of
00:08:06
migrants arriving every day but we also
00:08:09
get access to a spreadsheet which gives
00:08:11
you a list of all of the arrivals going
00:08:14
back some years and i've taken the
00:08:17
liberty of summarizing those for 2025
00:08:19
which now exceeds 5,000 migrants in 2025
00:08:24
alone um this spreadsheet shows you how
00:08:27
many are arrived i mean on some of them
00:08:28
over 400 arrive each day this is going
00:08:31
back to december 2024 um but in 2025
00:08:34
alone this now totals over 5,000
00:08:38
arrivals and that is up to the 20th of
00:08:41
march and so not including uh those that
00:08:44
are shown on this screen here um so
00:08:47
these are several hundred more than that
00:08:49
already so these numbers are leading to
00:08:53
exponential spend on hotels as
00:08:57
highlighted in this document here
00:09:01
the scale of the spend is significant
00:09:03
for example in 2022 to 2023 and this has
00:09:06
expanded since then the home office
00:09:08
spent 2.3 billion pounds on hotels for
00:09:11
asylum seekers and that is only going up
00:09:13
now to consider what might be of major
00:09:15
concern is to ask a question and then we
00:09:17
can work backwards and find out actually
00:09:19
government ministers have been asked
00:09:21
this question dodged the question and in
00:09:23
fact here it is in black and white i
00:09:26
will explain why i think that for legal
00:09:28
reasons but the question is this what do
00:09:32
we do to prevent the use of hotels for
00:09:35
asylum seekers now first of all why do
00:09:38
we need to do that well why is because
00:09:40
it's expensive and it's basically
00:09:41
taxpayers money so it's an expensive use
00:09:44
of taxpayers money for people with all
00:09:46
respect should not be in the country in
00:09:47
the first place now granted there are
00:09:50
some that genuinely need support and
00:09:52
asylum and that's what the system's
00:09:53
there for but that's not without its
00:09:55
criticisms for those for example that
00:09:56
are here as economic migrants but what
00:09:59
do we do if we stop the use of hotels as
00:10:03
it's described here the government is
00:10:06
committed to ending the use of hotels
00:10:08
for asylum seekers and increasing the
00:10:11
supply through building 1.5 million
00:10:14
homes in england it's also announced
00:10:16
measures to tackle homelessness now
00:10:18
homelessness spreads across both asylum
00:10:20
seekers and veterans and homeless people
00:10:23
and so on but in crystal clear language
00:10:26
the government is committed to ending
00:10:28
the use of hotels for asylum seekers and
00:10:30
increasing supply through building 1.5
00:10:33
million homes now if that wasn't quite
00:10:36
enough to persuade you that the homes
00:10:37
being built are planned for asylum
00:10:40
seekers let's read the bit further down
00:10:42
here now aside from the accusations of
00:10:44
profiteering of the system for temporary
00:10:47
accommodation in hotels etc and aside
00:10:49
from the comments of experts including
00:10:51
the national audit office that the
00:10:53
procurement of short-term residential
00:10:54
accommodation may have prompted the
00:10:56
issues it says that there's extremely
00:10:59
limited coordination between public
00:11:00
sector bodies that's another way of
00:11:02
saying they don't really know what
00:11:03
they're doing with all respect and that
00:11:05
in itself is driving up the costs so in
00:11:08
other words because they don't really
00:11:09
know what they're doing the costs are
00:11:11
going through the roof no pun intended
00:11:13
um secondly the capacity and capability
00:11:16
for procuring short-term residential
00:11:18
accommodation has been spread thinly
00:11:19
across government departments and local
00:11:21
authorities that's another way of saying
00:11:23
they're trying to spread it out so it
00:11:25
doesn't look so bad for one department
00:11:27
or another but then we get to the real
00:11:30
crunch here if you weren't convinced by
00:11:32
now that those houses being built were
00:11:33
for asylum seekers you probably will be
00:11:35
by this next paragraph given the lack of
00:11:38
coordination in procurement of
00:11:39
short-term residential accommodation the
00:11:41
steep rising costs and likely ongoing
00:11:44
reliance on it in the short term here it
00:11:47
comes there is a value for money case in
00:11:50
improving the procurement of short-term
00:11:52
residential accommodation across central
00:11:54
and local government that ties perfectly
00:11:57
in with this bit up here about
00:11:59
increasing the supply building 1.5
00:12:02
million homes across england and thereby
00:12:04
ending the use of hotels now what ladies
00:12:07
and gentlemen is that if not to move
00:12:10
asylum seekers from hotels into housing
00:12:12
that they are building so when i remind
00:12:14
you we had this interview between uh
00:12:16
trevor phillips and angela raina about
00:12:19
those very houses that were being built
00:12:22
this is what she said
00:12:24
all right let me ask you about another
00:12:26
element of this um on the present
00:12:29
densities you're going to add 3.4
00:12:32
million or homes for 3.4 4 million
00:12:34
people with your 1.5 million houses on
00:12:38
your own figures we're also going to add
00:12:41
to our population uh
00:12:43
2.5 million people over the same period
00:12:47
um are you content that more than five
00:12:50
out of seven new homes will go to
00:12:51
immigrants well that's not the truth and
00:12:54
that's not that's what will happen well
00:12:56
that's not the reality because uh we've
00:12:59
2.5 million immigrants that in are in
00:13:02
rachel v's budget figures going to turn
00:13:04
up where they're going to live well
00:13:06
there's plenty of housing in the uk but
00:13:08
the houses especially and so there it is
00:13:10
now i for one think and i'll be
00:13:13
charitable i think that was an
00:13:15
inaccurate statement you can make of it
00:13:17
what you will i think that was at the
00:13:19
very least an inaccurate statement
00:13:21
because on their official documents now
00:13:24
they are saying that there is demand for
00:13:25
short-term residential accommodation
00:13:27
across all cohorts there's a pressure on
00:13:29
housing supply risks because of global
00:13:32
instability we've got companies accused
00:13:34
of
00:13:35
profiteering making more money than they
00:13:38
should do off the situation that such as
00:13:41
it is with immigrants in hotel
00:13:44
accommodation and it says that there is
00:13:47
evidence that some form of short-term
00:13:49
residential accommodation have a
00:13:50
detrimental impact on those children and
00:13:52
families etc all the experts are saying
00:13:54
that there's limited coordination the
00:13:56
capacity and the capability of procuring
00:13:58
those has been spread thinly across the
00:14:00
whole system and given all of that taken
00:14:02
together they say here the government's
00:14:04
committed to ending the use of hotels
00:14:06
and increasing the supply through
00:14:07
building 1.5 million homes now i for one
00:14:09
think that is as clear as it could
00:14:11
possibly get now bearing in mind that
00:14:14
the bill for each and every one asylum
00:14:17
seeker is
00:14:20
£41,000 um being if they're in a hotel
00:14:23
the cost is £145 a night compared with
00:14:27
dispersal accommodation which includes
00:14:30
large houses bedsits and flats and other
00:14:33
buildings and accommodation across the
00:14:35
country is £14 per night but given the
00:14:41
5,000 that have arrived this year alone
00:14:45
that is 14,000 per every,000 that
00:14:48
arrives every few weeks or so so an
00:14:51
additional
00:14:52
£14,000 per night and that is if they
00:14:55
are moved into the cheaper accommodation
00:14:58
such as the houses that they're talking
00:14:59
about building as against
00:15:01
£145 per night whereas if they're in
00:15:04
hotels obviously the simple maths £145
00:15:08
at £5,000 that have arrived this year
00:15:10
alone is
00:15:13
£725,000 per night and that's just an
00:15:15
accommodation so this is a serious
00:15:18
problem but the the the more serious of
00:15:20
the problem is that it appears that we
00:15:22
are being fed all sorts of bits of
00:15:24
information a lot of which not really
00:15:26
true or accurate and in some cases maybe
00:15:30
they don't even know what the truth is
00:15:31
and so now as promised a completely
00:15:33
different story on a completely
00:15:34
different subject but equally something
00:15:36
i think we should all be alarmed by and
00:15:38
that's this story here with a christian
00:15:40
nurse called jennifer who is facing
00:15:43
losing her career because she was
00:15:45
investigated and disciplined by an nhs
00:15:48
trust because she refused to refer to a
00:15:50
male child sex offender patient as a
00:15:54
woman now this to be quite clear this
00:15:57
was a convicted pedophile in a
00:16:00
highsecurity male prison with multiple
00:16:03
convictions for all sorts of horrendous
00:16:06
things and all of the charts and
00:16:08
everything made it seem like this was
00:16:10
just a man and obviously looked like a
00:16:13
man and she referred to him as mister
00:16:16
and then because she was then told to
00:16:18
refer to this person as a woman and she
00:16:21
refused to do so it went against her
00:16:22
beliefs which are protected by the way
00:16:25
they are protected beliefs she now faces
00:16:27
the ruin of her career listen to what
00:16:29
she has to say
00:16:31
yes i'm still traumatized with the
00:16:34
situation the fact that i could be
00:16:36
facing suspension my career coming to an
00:16:39
end simply because i refused to refer to
00:16:43
this patient as a female as a she or
00:16:46
miss so this is sadly one case among
00:16:49
many where people are facing a
00:16:51
termination of their employment and all
00:16:53
sorts of other things and so if you are
00:16:55
among those i would suggest you um get
00:16:58
in touch with free speech union become a
00:17:00
member um don't let these things go
00:17:02
quietly i think these cases are
00:17:04
increasingly and very much more
00:17:05
prevalent across the country than most
00:17:07
of us realize so please don't say stay
00:17:09
silent about them these are protected
00:17:11
philosophical beliefs and you should
00:17:12
absolutely not be facing the end of your
00:17:14
career just because you're standing up
00:17:16
for what you believe in so let me know
00:17:18
what you think about any of that in the
00:17:19
comment section below um quite explosive
00:17:22
i thought because finally we get some
00:17:24
truth but the truth is really unraveling
00:17:27
what on earth is going on in this
00:17:28
government and previous governments as
00:17:30
to how we address this situation we have
00:17:33
in the uk let me know what you think in
00:17:34
the comments below please do subscribe
00:17:35
to the channel please do support me
00:17:37
that's the one way you can do that
00:17:38
because it helps my channel grow you
00:17:39
click all the buttons you like you share
00:17:41
in fact sharing and commenting and
00:17:43
subscribing and doing all those things
00:17:44
really does help spread this video to a
00:17:46
wider audience so thank you very much
00:17:47
for that thank you for watching i'll see
00:17:49
you next