Why Michael Gove’s Night Out in Aberdeen is Good News For Opponents of Vaccine Passports

In my latest Spectator column, I say how pleased I was to see the pictures of Michael Gove enjoying himself on a night out in Aberdeen. It will make it that much harder for him to resume his advocacy of vaccine passports.

Scotland, after all, is experiencing a record number of coronavirus cases following the reopening of schools a few weeks ago, yet the minister was perfectly happy to visit several hospitality venues in Aberdeen without having to certify his Covid status. The implication of Gove’s night of revelry is that, like many of us, he’s decided to say good riddance to the restrictions that have been crippling the economy and wreaking havoc with people’s mental health and learned to live with the virus. The pictures of him posing for selfies, arm in arm with total strangers, his face and shirt pouring with sweat, were particularly refreshing.

Admittedly, the influential cabinet minister may not have intended to send a message that it’s time to get back to normal. This was a night out in Aberdeen, after all, not a Downing Street press conference. But the fact that he let his hair down in this way will make it harder for him to resume his position as the government’s finger-wagger-in-chief when it comes to restrictions on our freedoms.

It’s widely predicted that cases in England will start to surge as a result of our schools reopening – and will accelerate even more when university students go back — and no doubt the usual chorus of scientific advisers, public health panjandrums and NHS bosses will be clamouring for another lockdown. Before this, they could have counted on Gove as their closest cabinet ally. Now they may have to look elsewhere. For the minister to call for vaccine passports and other containment measures in England when he didn’t modify his behaviour in response to a case surge in Scotland will leave him vulnerable to the charge he cares more about protecting lives in England than in Scotland.

Worth reading in full.

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Lockdown Sceptic
4 years ago

No they’s just bring them in anyway. An the mask wearers will carry on wearing. We saw teenagers queuing for vaccines in Brighton on Monday. They’ll still be queuing up.

We need a laugh

Dr Steve Turley: John Cleese is FIGHTING BACK against Cancel Culture!!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-DRP1BW4Qw&t=628s

 need to get join in with Worldwide BACKLASH as much as possible before it’s too late 

Next Peaceful & Friendly events: Wokingham & Woking  
– let’s join in with Worldwide backlash before it’s too late

5.30pm Friday 3rd September 
Loddon Bridge, (Winnersh Garden Centre/Showcase Cinema) 
Reading Rd, Winnersh, 
Wokingham RG41 5HG

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Stand in South Hill Park Bracknell Sundays from 10am & Wednesdays from 2pm
Make friends – keep sane
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crisisgarden
4 years ago

I’ve contributed some satire: https://youtube.com/user/CrisisGarden

vivaldi
vivaldi
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

Cleverly done CG..plus history in images.

mishmash
4 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

Loved it – ‘cow to bat to bio weapons lab to bat’ – very funny!

TreeHugger
4 years ago

Gove will just employ the old phrase ‘do as i say not as I do’ as most parents have done when caught out by their kids.

stewart
4 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

I don’t understand the logic of the article or the comments.

Has Gove not taken the vaccine? If he has, then there is absolutely nothing inconsistent between his going out to a nightclub and advocating vaccine passports. Quite the opposite, I would say.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

I suppose the logic would be that until vaccine passports are introduced, nightclubs are not safe and he should not go to them. Which begs the question as to why the government reopened nightclubs if it thought that vaccine passports were needed for them, before the passport infrastructure was ready. More questions that will never be asked.

The article is just wishful thinking from TY who is hurting because people he perceived as his allies turn out to be evil fascists.

Lister of Smeg
Lister of Smeg
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

It does if many of the other attendees weren’t vaccinated – he obviously didn’t care two hoots what their vaccination status was – either those vaccinated rightly feel safe and proetcted against serious illness from COVID (or worse) and that those who’ve not been vaccinated are there at entirely their own risk, or the vaccines are bunk.

Unavccinated people who are clinically vulnerable will also be either daft for not getting vaccinated or, if its due to some medical condition – will likely not be frequenting such establishments because it is a very risky thing to do (That’s what I’d do).

People in low risk groups (i.e. the fit and healthy under 60s, especially the under 40s) -as every adult has – have the free choice to be vaccinated or not, with little difference in the risk before and after.

Vaccine passports for nightclubs are particularly stupid, given the likely clientelle.

OnceIWasARemainer
OnceIWasARemainer
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

This has nothing to do with vaccines (probably quite safe, clearly effective enough and I’ll get one as soon as the pasport plans are scrapped, but no sooner), the point is clubs are mostly not so stupid as to ask for vaccine ID cards, hence we know he chose to use a club but likely didn’t present an ID card to get in. This is the hypocrisy, the vaccine has nothing to do with it.

Julian
4 years ago

I’d love to see data you’re looking at that leads you to say the vaccines are quite safe and effective enough.

The hypocrisy is to choose to go to a nightclub before vaccine passports are implemented, as I have pointed out below.

OnceIWasARemainer
OnceIWasARemainer
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I only said probably safe, not definitely. And effective “enough” because given how mild covid is a vaccine doesn’t really need to be all that effective, just taking the edge of the symptoms for the most vulnerable is all that is of value.

Julian
4 years ago

Well no vaccine is 100% safe, but this vaccine appears a lot less safe already than many established vaccines (no surprise given the speed with which it was rushed out, and the surrounding hysteria and political machinations) and we don’t yet know the long term effects, nor do we know whether the dangers are cumulative with the coming of boosters.

“taking the edge of the symptoms for the most vulnerable” Evidence for that seems unclear to me. A lot of the most vulnerable seemed to die all at once at the same time as the vaccines were rolled out to precisely that group. I would really need to see reliable data on deaths and serious illness from rather than with covid (such data probably doesn’t exist) and look at outcomes of vaxxed vs non-vaxxed, taking into account narrow age bands and state of health. Then one could start to make am informed judgement. Good luck finding such data – no-one wants you to have it.

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

What planet are you on?

Nessimmersion
4 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Planet Israel indicates the vaxxes are neither safe nor effective.

Bellathebrave
Bellathebrave
4 years ago

Vaccines are safe. I’m speechless. I’d look
on the yellow card system if I was you.

RTSC
RTSC
4 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

That’s assuming Gove isn’t a Grade One Hypocrite, of course, like the rest of the Lockdown Extremists in SAGE/Government.
And there’s no evidence of that.

Catee
4 years ago

“It’s widely predicted that cases in England will start to surge as a result of our schools reopening –” 

Which of course will have nothing to do with increased testing 🙄

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  Catee

or increased faking of results to bunk off via dipping the swabs in sunny d

Julian
4 years ago

Utter nonsense. The elites have always had trouble abiding by their own rules and few seem to care. Anyway, I am sure Gove has been vaxxed.

Gove is just another evil liar, like the Prime Minister, Alexander “Boris” Johnson.

Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I’m sure that Gove will be able to show that he’s been vaxxed. In Scotchland or England though? The systems aren’t compatible.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Coke snorters that back the war on drugs.

BungleIsABogan
4 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

He might have powdered his nose before that picture was taken.
Of course I’m not saying he did, but he could have done…

J4mes
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I very much doubt any politician will have had the actual covid jab, their photo-opportunity PR stunts may have shown them being injected, but I think we can be sure that the syringes will have contained saline solution.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  J4mes

My guess is that a lot of backbench MPs are as deluded as the general public. The Cabinet, not so much, but I tend to think they would have had the real jabs as they probably believe they are safe, and the risk of getting found out would have put them off any funny business.

J4mes
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

You’re most likely right about that.

TheGreenAcres
4 years ago
Reply to  J4mes

The upper echelons certainly, but the majority of backbencher are merely useful idiots.

J4mes
4 years ago
Reply to  TheGreenAcres

Yep agreed, see above.

Bellathebrave
Bellathebrave
4 years ago
Reply to  J4mes

100% agree there’s not a chance they’ve had the jabberwockie not a chance

Rogerborg
4 years ago

That’s fairly specious reasoning. Wormtongue Gove will doubtless hiss “But of course I have been fully vaccinated, and of course I would be delighted to prove that to any goon in a hi-vis costume who demands proof of it.”

He might even whip out his little Vaxport on the spot and waggle it around.

Of course, there’s a twist there as the Scotch and English systems aren’t compatible, so cross-border junket-monkeys might find their Caledonian clot-shot-apps being about as welcome as a Scotch £50 in a Solihull kebab shop.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Rogerborg

Scotch is a type of whisky. The word you’re looking for is Scottish.

Rogerborg
4 years ago

As a Scotch in Scotchland, with a solid grasp of Scotch history (internecine backstabbing, fleecing and fleeing), I’m quite certain of how I want to refer to my fellow stunted workshy spongers and our ungrateful begging wee pseudo-nation, thanks all the same.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Rogerborg

Yes, you refer to them by not using the English language.

tom171uk
4 years ago

“Scotch” was always common usage. At some stage (20th century, I think) it became a middle class affectation to insist on “Scots” or “Scottish”. It has some parallels with it having been usual to refer to a black person as “coloured” (as did Martin Luther King) but some now insist you must say “person of colour”.

RW
RW
4 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

Martin Luther King is much more evil than that :-): The term he used was negroe. It’s all over the “I have a dream” speech most people who nowadays claim to have been inspired by it obviously never read. He also believed in being able to overcome racism for the common good of all.

That was before it had been overcome to such a deegree that people started to long for it: It’s obviously easier to shout “I’m a victim of racisms!” when this doesn’t equal being lynched under some pretext anymore.

BungleIsABogan
4 years ago

And you are a pompous waste of space.

Oh no! I started a sentence with “And”…….

…you refer to them by not using the English language.

What language was he using then?

What you should have said, if you had any grasp of the English language, is –

“you refer to them with incorrect use of the English language.”

Not that it matters one iota, as it would have been clear to anyone with a brain that his use of “Scotch” was intended to be humorous anyway.

Hopeless
4 years ago

Gove, Probity and Morality are complete strangers, planets apart. Anyway, judged on past stratagems, this idiot capering is likely yet another special “test event”, solely for this creep.

Sceptic Paul
Sceptic Paul
4 years ago

Lockdown Sceptic – when you can, please provide details of the event in Woking. I live locally, and would love to participate in any such event.

RickH
4 years ago

 It will make it that much harder for him to resume his advocacy of vaccine passports.”

You must be joking!!!

When was the fear of contradiction and hypocrisy ever a barrier for dangerous cupid stunts like Gove? He’s a superannuated scribbler, ffs!

Jane G
Jane G
4 years ago
Reply to  RickH

He was probably taking part in a pilot study of ageing, bespectacled, jabbed MPs in Scottish nightclubs.
Appears to have a reverse-polarity magnetic effect.

Jaguarpig
Jaguarpig
4 years ago

Fuck the poison dwarf twat he should be hanging from a lamp post.

Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  Jaguarpig

You could hang the stunted runt from a fence post, and not a tall one either.

Rowan
Rowan
4 years ago
Reply to  Rogerborg

Yes please.

Mark
4 years ago

Young’s desperate loyalty to his old friends generally does him credit (though where they are in positions of power or influence it does open him up to accusations of smarm), but he seems to have a remarkable ability to compartmentalise in this regard. He knows (few better) the sheer scale of the murderous, evil harms the likes of Gove have inflicted on the world and on the nation, and just how gratuitous they were and are. He must now be aware that Gove was one of the obsessively fear-filled, neurotic prime movers in the government pushing for panic. It is no exaggeration to say that the covid panic has been by some distance the greatest, most costly crime or blunder in UK peacetime governmental history, and it is yet a long way from finished. His “friend” Gove shares full personal responsibility for these events. There are, or should be, limits to how much gratuitous harm either friendship or political sympathy can sustain before they break. The Guilty Men of the Covid Cabinet crossed those lines, for any decent person, long ago. Even Gove’s own wife seems understandably to have found his contemptible nature as revealed by his covid actions too… Read more »

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

It baffles me. In general, friends and acquaintances with whom I shared some kind of mutual respect, intellectually and morally, who have gone with the panic are those I find the hardest to forgive, and indeed I have cut ties with more or less all of them.

steve_z
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

it baffles me. I speak to loads of people and always say exactly what I think. Everyone agrees (that its not that bad, been overegged etc). But then they go off and behave as if its airborne Ebola. I think people have let the rational parts of their brains be overwhelmed by propaganda.

CynicalRealist
4 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

There’s also the doublethink element – many people will agree that muzzles and vaxxes don’t stop it spreading, but still insist that we must wear muzzles and get vaxxed to stop it spreading…

A Heretic
A Heretic
4 years ago
Reply to  CynicalRealist

or as I was told yesterday “Masks won’t stop you catching it but it’s the ultimate show of respect for other people to wear a mask to show you care about their health.”
Those special 1-way cotton filters in action again.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  A Heretic

You could look upon it as the opposite of respect – by indulging what you perceive as their irrational fear, you are assuming that others are weak-minded fools.

CynicalRealist
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Up until now, the general medical opinion was that other people shouldn’t try to go along with the rituals of OCD sufferers as that only serves to reinforce it and make it worse…

Jess
4 years ago
Reply to  CynicalRealist

When it comes to muzzles, I think more people than you’d dare imagine just ‘like’ wearing them. Small shops in Soho were selling muzzles for recreational purposes long before Pfeffel Johnson recommended them to families.
The fashion for pre-torn jeans is maybe less explicable.

Bellathebrave
Bellathebrave
4 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

Excellent comment more than just an uptick I feel. Know loads who have had ‘covid’ bad flu + they all said all recovered. 5 in theirs 90’s and underlying health conditions.

charleyfarley
charleyfarley
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Great post Mark, thanks. A thousand upticks.

It seems to me that there are members of an elite (which includes TY) and there are the rest of us, and that if you belong in the elite group your loyalty to fellow members is absolute.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  charleyfarley

old school tie and all that

Hopeless
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

I suppose this all goes back to the heady days of Gove and his “Free Schools”, which were bitterly resisted in this part of the country, not least because of the enormous sums of money spent on them, and the profits made by all the usual hangers-on that make money out of being Government/Ministers’ favourites.
I have no idea whether these two are connected through interests other than education and free schools, but if indeed, “education” is the tie that binds, then it ill-behoves someone to cut slack for the man who is at back and more than in part responsible for wrecking the education of millions. Add to that the monstrous attacks on free speech and freedom of expression, and the suppression of dissent, carried out not by the woke brigade but by the Government and its purchased agencies, the main stream media at al, and there is yet another dichotomy and reason for any sensible person of principle to wash his hands of Gove. I’m pretty sure that Gove would p*ss on anybody’s back, close friend or foe, if it suited him cf. Brexit.

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  Hopeless

If any parties wrecked education it was those who nationalised it, subsidised it (always ruins quality) and centralised it.
i.e. the Department/Ministry of education. LEA’s and teachers unions.

Hopeless
4 years ago

I was thinking more specifically of wrecking it by removing it (such as it is), in large part, over the past 18 months, by use of “lockdown” measures and all the rest. There is a lot to be argued about State education, which has indeed been seriously damaged over decades, but I guess the question that then arises is whether depriving children of large expanses of learning by government diktat, cravenly riding on the back of union demands, is in any way acceptable. As with everything else at the moment, it’s a welter of half-baked ideas, knee-jerk reactions, chaos, lack of leadership and the usual race to the bottom.

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
4 years ago
Reply to  Hopeless

He pisses on people’s fronts

J4mes
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

I do wonder how the blunder theory can still hold any merit when evidence is in abundance that this whole thing has been organised and deliberate. They didn’t accidentally ship thousands upon thousands of people from hospitals into care homes and inject them with the life-ending drug Midazolam, for example.

steve_z
4 years ago

I’m surprised Scotland hasn’t had a circuit breaker given the rise in ‘cases’ to all time highs. Something has changed. Either we aren’t going to see more lockdowns and will rely on more and more jabs and boosters OR they are keeping their powder dry for a big 6 month lockdown starting around October

Rowan
Rowan
4 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

Relying on jabs and boosters, sure that’ll work a treat.

Rowan
Rowan
4 years ago
Reply to  Rowan

Looks like 77th Brigade have been marking down!

CynicalRealist
4 years ago
Reply to  Rowan

Like in Israel, you mean? 🙂

nickbowes
nickbowes
4 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

And many people were predicting another lockdown in August. Don`t think there will be much compliance if another lock down happens

Rowan
Rowan
4 years ago
Reply to  nickbowes

The autumn and early winter were always more likely than August. Most people are utterly gutless and/or stupid, so they will, in my view, comply with any new lockdown orders. Their compliance should be regarded as collaboration with people who are clearly enemy agents.

Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

Because they want a casedemic as an excuse to bring in the Social Credit Score apps, which will “allow” some places to stay open, on sufferance.

That’s always been the goal, it’s just taken this long to get the systems in place.

chunky lafunga
chunky lafunga
4 years ago
Reply to  Rogerborg

Agreed. If anyone is interested a chap on the latest James Delingpole podcast (Delingpod not London Calling) does an excellent job of elucidating how it will play out, culminating in the implementation of new government owned digital currencies with the digital ID/apps being the conduit.

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  chunky lafunga

AND EVERY payment subject to checks and bureaucracy (and more tax) for your benefit of course…

PoshPanic
4 years ago

I did wonder when I saw this, whether it was some club that was enrolled in one of the vax pass schemes. Seems from what I can see with a quick search, it’s a club night hosted at O’Neills, cash on the door type deal. Anyone who know’s it who can confirm?

If that is the case, then at least the headline here might have some mileage..

Rowan
Rowan
4 years ago

Cases are not surging due to children back at school, that is utter twaddle. Cases are surging because of PCR tests that are designed to give the results that governments want. Oh and of course there are the vaccine injuries, that are wrongly and often knowingly described as Covid breakthrough cases. Now roll up your sleeves, the boosters are on the way.

Davke
4 years ago

At this stage it is evident that the vast majority of us either have had or will have Covid, or at least and dodgy positive test result stating the same.
Just as most of us have had Flu and survived so it will be with Covid. It is time to move on.
I suggest we now adopt a new policy which I am calling, Fuck Covid!
Anybody think it could catch on?

tom171uk
4 years ago

It won’t make it difficult for him. He is a hypocrite, well steeped in doublethink.

ComeTheRevolution
ComeTheRevolution
4 years ago

What needs to happen now is some form of staged (because it’s all staged anyway so why quit now when we’re having so much fun) story about Gove being C19 positive and that now he is thought to be a super-spreader – call him Gove The Aberdeen Super Spreader. Then we need to see some kind of Australian witch hunt, like the guy who had the common cold/flu recently in Aus, who was hounded and hunted down by The Satanic Freemasons……sorry that should say The Police, my bad. That’s where we need to be going with all this – helicopters and search lights, blankets headlines across local and national media, all guns blazing, lynch mobs, the lot – because Govey boy caught the common cold. Why let a good crisis go to waste, as they say…..

Bella Donna
4 years ago

You do make a good point. Personally I found the video embarrassing.

steve_z
4 years ago
Reply to  Bella Donna

I don’t get it when people wear a suit outside work. Just seems odd – even with the tie off.

Nymeria
4 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

Gove is odd. Aside from every other odious trait, he is a fuddy duddy with a stick up his arse.

Mark
4 years ago
Reply to  Nymeria

One of his few redeeming features.

Sadly it has turned out that his oddness was probably a warning sign of whatever underlying mental disorder, perhaps shared with Cummings, predisposed him to his hysterical fear response to a new cold virus.

Nymeria
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Indeed.

Bellathebrave
Bellathebrave
4 years ago
Reply to  Nymeria

Interesting you should say that….

HelenaHancart
HelenaHancart
4 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

That’s what you wear when you haven’t got a life outside…of work.

Bellathebrave
Bellathebrave
4 years ago
Reply to  steve_z

Why didn’t he wear his disco pants!

J4mes
4 years ago

[The pictures of Gove’s] face and shirt pouring with sweat, were particularly refreshing.

Refreshing, like sticking your head in a bucket of sick.

HelenaHancart
HelenaHancart
4 years ago
Reply to  J4mes

The only thing “refreshed” was Gove himself!

Mark
4 years ago

Meanwhile, to bring in some political balance, another icon of the left reveals himself to be utterly incompetent to address the world: https://twitter.com/slydoug/status/1433297526191497221 Noam Chomsky: “People who refuse to accept vaccines, I think the right response for them is not to force them to, but rather to insist that they be isolated. If people decide “I am willing to be a danger to the community”, by refusing a vaccine, they should then say “I also have the decency to isolate myself. Okay, I don’t want a vaccine, but I don’t have the right to run around harming people”. That should be a convention. Enforcing is a different question.” One can debate to what extent this is the inherent collectivism of the political left, to what extent just the conformism of the intellectual, adhering desperately to the hysterical group-think overstatement of the covid “threat”, and whatever other motivations there might be for this undoubtedly intelligent person to believe such patent hogwash. But it’s worth pointing out the nasty euphemism contained in “not forcing them”, but “insisting they be isolated”. This is the gateway to applying the modern leftist abuse of cancel culture – demonising and shunning – in order to coerce… Read more »

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

To Gnome Chomsky, I say ‘the human body does not belong to the state, you totalitarian turd. Your pronouncement comes straight from Stalin and you can go and live in a hippo’s arse, right before it has laxatives administered.’

Judy Watson
Judy Watson
4 years ago

AAAAH that’snot very nice. why are you being so cruel to hippo?

RW
RW
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Enforced isolation is considered to be a form of torture. Hence, Chomsky’s stance is People who don’t agree to get vaccinated against Sars-CoV2 ought to be tortured until they do.

There’s no use trying to put lipstick on this hog.

milesahead
milesahead
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

“insisting they be isolated”. 

In camps, perhaps? With showers?

I always thought Chomsky was a fool.

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Noam Chomsky has been wrong about everything forever, he’s the goto guy for grauniad nonsense.

Nymeria
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Another who needs to go up against the wall.

Mark
4 years ago

Most here inclined to agree with Julia Hartley-Brewer’s response to Toby’s suggestion, it appears:

Julia Hartley-Brewer
@JuliaHB1
·1h

No it won’t. This is not a Minister or a Government that has show itself to be remotely troubled by evidence of their blatant hypocrisy.

https://twitter.com/JuliaHB1/status/1433352034229571586

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Correct. Kim Jong Johnson considered Matt Hancockwomble’s adultery to be a closed matter.

Rowan
Rowan
4 years ago

Well he would do wouldn’t he!

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Rowan

Of course, he openly tells people laws don’t apply to him and his cronies.

realarthurdent
4 years ago

I don’t think it’s a coincidence that this news about Gove came out.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago

On the contrary, he wasn’t breaking any law, he didn’t need a vaccine passport to get in and probably won’t ever go to a nightclub in Aberdeen or anywhere else, ever again.

TheGreenAcres
4 years ago

Seems like a daft article to me. He can say he was double-jabbed and therefore could have proved his status had he been asked to.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  TheGreenAcres

Yes and vaccine passports weren’t necessary so he wasn’t breaking the law.

Julian
4 years ago

Indeed. TY is grasping at straws here. He is clearly bothered by the apparent intention to introduce vaccine passports and is desperate to believe it’s not going to happen.

Norman
4 years ago

Whilst we are on the topic of Scotland, I see that the Scots must have refined the perfomance of their PCR testing as they are achieving a positivity rate of 11.5%.
I find this figure completely incredible, and it would go along way to account for the massive jump in “cases” there, along with the fact that testing numbers are going through the roof.

Lister of Smeg
Lister of Smeg
4 years ago

Toby – I don’t think you’ve counted on Gove being a rank hypcrite. As a supposedly ardent Brexiteer, he should’ve been a critical thinker and who loves freedom.

Yet he, in my view, has been the most vociferous advocate of hard lockdown measures throughout the pandemic, having lied time and again that the government had no plans to introduce (or even look at) COVID vaccine passports, the undertook a (IMHO) fake ‘opinion study’ via the Cabinet Office to see whether he could get away with a U-turn, then it got out they’d already spend £00ks on research already.

Mark
4 years ago

And another celebrity arse opens up on the topic of vaccines:

Covid: Prince Harry blames ‘mass-scale misinformation’ for vaccine hesitancy
I’ve always been a kind of default monarchist (the inevitability of President Blair in the absence of the monarchy sealed it for me), but if there were ever a prospect of that utter tosser sitting on the throne I think I could become a republican fanatic.

CynicalRealist
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

I don’t really get the often-used argument of ‘President Blair’ as a justification for the monarchy. After Iraq he became (and remains) massively unpopuar – there’s no way he would ever get elected.

But that aside, I notice that we have the weasel-word ‘hesitancy’ in that article. Most of those who haven’t had it by now are not ‘hesitant’, they are more ‘fuck off we don’t want it’!

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  CynicalRealist

In most parliamentary republics, presidents get appointed by the various chambers of parliament. It’s only in republics (e.g. USA) or semi-presidential republics (e.g. France) that presidents are elected by popular vote. Blair would have/would still attract broad cross-party support as most MPs are Blairites.

RW
RW
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Similar to Macron, this guy is a non-entity completely contolled by the woman operating his (in his own opinion) most precious body part.

NB: I’m a monarchist, although no fan of the current British variant of that which is basically a monarchy in nothing but the expenses. But this doesn’t equal assuming that someone must make a good king (or queen) just because he happens to be a member of some royal family. The Prussians (& Germans) certainly had their share of monarchs of rather questionable ability.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Harry is an illiterate scrote, there is no media opposition to vaccines but the government itself has essentially said vaccines don’t make any difference, their policies demonstrate this.

That is the main reason for people not being vaccinated.

cloud6
4 years ago

Ah, Gove… Always knew he was a posh pisshead, a Scot educated at Oxford along with all the other idiots running the asylum.

Old Maid
4 years ago

Oh come ON, Tobes; you’re straw-clutching at best. You cannot infer what tw4ts like Gove are going to attempt to impose on the rest of us on the basis of some pissed-up night’s goings-on.

Pavlov Bellwether
4 years ago

What a revolting creature. Updated information, resources and useful links: FIGHT. BACK. BETTER. https://www.LCAHub.org/

debra
4 years ago

I don’t think, for one moment, that this was an unguarded slip! More manipulation of the masses- “Oh look over here! Something shiny!” Meanwhile, in the background something nefarious is occurring.