Oh, morning guys.
I've... we've started a bit late for us this morning on a Monday but we're going anyway.
Dan's just emptying the car now from the shed clearance or definitely one for the boys.
We've had loads of stuff on it.
Absolutely brilliant.
We'll go through it now and see what we need for the shop or the shops, shall I say.
And then anything we don't need we'll put in baskets and I'll let you know what shop is going into because there's good stuff.
We picked up anything.
Anything that looked like a cable, a bolt, a screw, we were like chuck it in the bag, chuck it in the bag because we were like somebody somewhere will say I've been looking for one of them, I've been desperate.
Or somebody somewhere will say these are eight pound in B&K, thank you so much.
So anyway, on the topic of prices again I'd like to call out Carla Hughes, right, or we're gonna start a wall of whinging fame I think in the shops.
I'd like to call her out because the nasty horrible cow decided she was gonna bully a woman who was sick, very sick, just come out of hospital, but I'm still here fundraising, okay, because do you know what?
It keeps me out of trouble, right?
It keeps me out of trouble.
So anyway, I'm gonna call her out because this is her there.
I'll put a picture up.
That's her there.
Horrible cow.
Slagging us off for selling brand new baby clothes for 20 pound.
Now, we are supported by the government and the councils because we are preventing billions of landfill, not to mention everything else.
I mean look at the books and everything else we've saved.
Going to landfill, there is an abundance of second-hand clothes over there.
You've seen how many clothes we've got in our shops, you've seen how many clothes the other charity shops go, right?
So people like this need to be, need a wake up call, right?
They really do.
This nasty horrible cow decided she was gonna slag off a woman that's just come out of hospital because she's been terminally ill, that's me by the way, right?
Having work, having to have an operation to make sure, you know, I don't die somewhere down the line.
So let me just put up a little thing now.
Why did I charge 20 pound for a pack of brand new baby clothes?
I'll show you why.
Have you seen the price on baby milk?
I will put the videos up online after this, okay?
Now, selling one pack of those baby grows for 20 pound, which we've sold multiple by the way, we've also given a pack away to a mother in need, okay?
Bearing in mind that we have an abundance of second-hand clothes in the shop, okay?
But this mother, her partner, has actually spent quite a bit of money on the army clothes, right?
Because he's in the army and the army clothes didn't have any discount on him.
So yeah, he paid the price as we asked, okay?
And he's also another 60 pound pending, right?
So we said, well, we give him a pack of them because they fundraised really well for us, you know?
What is the price on baby milk, Carla?
Have you had a look lately?
Because last time I looked they were nearly 15, 18 pound a tin.
One pack of those baby grows, right, would support a baby for less than seven days.
You'd be lucky to support one and a half children for seven days.
We've got an indirect comment off HCT on there.
We've got an indirect comment on Ian Smith.
And I'm like, grow up, guys.
Do you not know, like, how much fundraising do you get given?
The one group.
And the other one is on bail and in the back of beyond.
There was his wife of something going through the courts.
How much fundraising do you get given?
We fundraise everything Jen Spinks.
So I think it's time you wound your neck in too.
Because otherwise I'm gonna pop up and see you, I think, because I've had enough now of people like you.
18 pound, 15 pound a tin of baby milk is.
People don't need clothes, Carla.
Jen Spinks.
People don't need clothes.
They need food.
That's why we're the Food Bank fundraising shop.
Slagging us off all over Facebook because we're a charity.
We're not a charity.
Read the sign.
Read my page with a Food Bank fundraising shop.
And every single bit of fundraising we do ourselves.
So I'd like to see what you do, Carla, to help people.
Come to my door and I'll help you.
Go on then.
I tell you what.
Go knock your door today, guys, if you're in need.
And let me know how many 20 pound notes she hands out to you today for baby milk.
Let me know how many 20 pound notes she gives you for baby milk.
You need to wake up, my love, because you just made yourself look really, really bad.
And we're going to put a nice picture up in the shop.
And we're going to put a nice little write up of why you're banned from the shops.
So that everybody can see that you were trying to prevent a woman who's ill, the stress come out of hospital from fundraising to feed babies because mothers can't afford the baby milk anymore.
And mothers are putting babies on solid food and putting their babies at risk earlier because they cannot afford 18, 15, 20 pound for baby milk.
I said on my post on your page, if you've seen it, that it would feed a baby and a half for less than a week.
Actually, I don't think 20 pound would now, looking at it, because the baby milk have gone up again.
But people like you need a wake up call.
You really do.
So do me a favour today now, guys.
If you're in need of baby milk or nappies or anything like that, go and knock Carla's door and then perhaps she'll realise how many people are actually in need.
