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huxleypiggles
4 years ago

Good to be back.

Morning all.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Good morning, hp.

Good to see you (so to speak).

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

Thanks very much AE. How we manage to raise so many downticks on what is a very friendly site is amazing.

Perhaps some of the miserable sods could explain.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

It may be “ON TOPIC” Utilitarians – the sort of people who can’t abide chatting in the workplace?

Ceriain
4 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Excuse my bad manners; I posted before paying homage to the King of First Posters. 🤣

Good morning, hp.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

Good morning, Ceriain!
 
Let us not be discouraged by the downtickers who disapprove of the exchange of greetings (perhaps it’s not allowed in the New Normal).

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

I remember when one used to get a load of upticks just for posting “first”. So easy back then…

RedhotScot
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

It seems our pet downticker has adopted multiple accounts.

Mogwai
4 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

Oh there’s more than one. But still with multiple accounts. Miserable gits who have zero of worth to add, just their petty behaviour. ( I don’t think they get out much…. 😉 )

RedhotScot
4 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

They’re fleeing Twitter in droves now that Elon is torturing them. 🤣

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

Good evening Ceriain.

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Good to be back? You could have fooled me. Meat pie. sausage roll…

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Come on Oldham – give us a goal😀😀

Lockdown Sceptic
4 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Dr. Bryan Ardis releases huge allegations: The covid-19 virus, vaccines and some treatments are all derived from snake venom
https://www.newstarget.com/2022-04-12-dr-bryan-ardis-releases-huge-allegations-the-covid-19-virus-vaccines-derived-snake-venom.html
 By Mike Adams

Stand for freedom with our Yellow Boards By The Road next events 

Thursday 14th April 3pm to 4pm
Yellow Boards 
Junction A329 Reading Rd 
& Station Approach
Wokingham RG41 1EH 

Monday 18th April 2pm to 3pm
Yellow Boards 
Junction A3095 Warfield Rd/
A329 Millennium Way
Bracknell RG12 2XT

Stand in the Park Sundays from 10am – make friends & keep sane 

Wokingham Howard Palmer Gardens 
(Cockpit Path car park free on Sunday) 
Sturges Rd RG40 2HD   

Bracknell  
South Hill Park, Rear Lawn, RG12 7PA

Telegram http://t.me/astandintheparkbracknell

arany madar
arany madar
4 years ago

I would treat this idea with extreme caution. Plenty in the movement, such as Amanda Vollmer (below) see this as plain nonsense. I’m inclined to agree:

https://odysee.com/@DeepIncite:e/Watch-the-Snakes-Discernment-Time-Again-Truthers._-720p:c

Ceriain
4 years ago

‘We need to give him our support at this critical time, difficult though it is. Better the devil we know.’

Toby Young says the public should not oust Boris Johnson after he was given a fixed penalty notice by the police.

Given the hammering he got for this yesterday on Twatter, I’m surprised Toby is continuing to bang on about this.

Or maybe Toby realises that keeping his old mate Bojo in No. 10 is the only chance of getting that knighthood. 🤔 🤣

Seriously, though, I do agree with one point Toby made; that there are people who want the top job that would try and lock us down again the minute they got in; Hunt and Gove for starters.

As for giving the fat liar our support: No chance! He wanted to shut us down again at Christmas (and TY knows it); it was the backbenchers (and some of the Cabinet) who stopped him from doing so.

The man is a disgrace!

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

I wonder. There must have been plenty in his party pushing the other way. Maybe Toby is just being practical? Anyhow, I suspect that there are not many others who could give the Tories a majority, and we know what Keir Starmer would do. Of course if the right Corbyn had a chance, it would be different…

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

I despise Johnson and think he’s the worst PM ever, probably has committed treason. But which REALISTIC candidate to replace would be better from a sceptical point of view, and how?

Dave Angel Eco Warrior
Dave Angel Eco Warrior
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

The media and the most of the populace don’t really care what comes next. The name of the game these days is to continually bay for resignations, sackings, apologies etc and then it’s onto the next one. I agree that Johnson is worse than useless but there are no credible alternatives which in itself is a shocking state of affairs.

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago

but there are no credible alternatives

I’m sure this tedious better the devil argument was made by some for Shipman or Savile. Unless Johnson is booted out, and placed in the dock for crimes against the UK people, this country will no longer deserve to use its already tarnished democratic tag line. Anyone would make a better PM, not least because the removal of Johnson would send a much needed message to all No10 wannabes. And even if the pretender ended up being worse, it still wouldn’t justify retaining the imbecile Bozo.

RedhotScot
4 years ago
Reply to  B.F.Finlayson

Largely agree with you. A great leader would be one who defied the prevailing consensus i.e. lockdowns, face masks and everything else which went with covid and trusted the British people to do what they thought was right.

The end result may not have been much different really. We would mostly have been cautious but it would have been our decision, not that of tyrants.

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  B.F.Finlayson

Agreed – “send a much needed message” is one way of putting it.

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

So, are you saying TY’s brand of blinkered sceptism means its loyal BTL adherents also become too frit to call for the removal of an incompetent bumbling criminal who declared war on the UK public? Indeed should all commenters now dutifully row behind TY’s ongoing defence of a corrupt libertine who approved killer jabs for kids, trashed the economy, kept his Tory ‘friends’ loyal with taxpayers’ money spaffed on dodgy contracts, casually broke his own rules (while these same rules were being followed at great personal cost by millions), and is even now propping up an oppressive undemocratic genocidal Ukrainian leader and his fascist hit squads with UK ambulances and weaponry?
From a real sceptical point of view ANYONE would be better than the murderous imbecile Johnson, unless one cynically confuses principled scepticism with opportunistic public school style cronyism, as TY does every time he puts his apologist-in-chief hat on when being interviewed (this is not the first time) or refuses to make crucial sceptical editorial calls on this website for fear of annoying his chum in No10, in doing so blighting his own prospects, and damn the consequences!

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  B.F.Finlayson

I don’t see any “loyal BTL adherents” here – just people with varying viewpoints, not afraid to express them and not stopped from doing so.

I think TY is guilty of wishful thinking/denial over the PM, rather than “cronyism”, but equally I think it’s true to say that of the candidates with a realistic chance of becoming PM, I can’t see anyone we’d be better off with and some we’d be worse off with. In the long run I don’t think it matters much whether the PM stays or goes – I think we will see further decline of our civilisation over the next few decades/centuries. Certainly don’t hold out much hope in my lifetime.

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I don’t see any “loyal BTL adherents” here

I was hopefully speaking hypothetically, but unfortunately…

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I think we will see further decline of our civilisation over the next few decades/centuries. Certainly don’t hold out much hope in my lifetime.

You’re obviously clear-sighted and intelligent (which is more than can be said for the majority of politicians), so of course you see the appalling developments around us.

But don’t you think we have to create hope? Look for hopeful signs? What will we tell children?

I’m not suggesting inspiring myths. They serve a purpose that’s exploded the moment people realise they’re myths. But human creativity is a remarkable thing; and the future is not written. It’s being created now.

We’re not powerless.

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Julian, you are an optimist. The destruction of this country is scheduled to occur by 2030 at the latest.

iane
iane
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

The point is that, if Bozo is allowed to get away with his appalling leadership, there will never be any way to control any other politicians. Bozo fully deserves to be destroyed, but the sauce to be added is the need to encourager les autres!

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  iane

But he has got away with his appalling leadership, and resigning over partygate won’t change that.

ComeTheRevolution
ComeTheRevolution
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

The leaders we get are all hand picked pre-vetted traitors and all reps of our political class have proven themselves to be good for nothing in the last two years. None of them have a real backbone. If we get Jeremy Hunt we get Henry Kissingers biggest fan. That is frightening. It is now OUR DUTY to create OUR OWN POLITICAL MOVEMENT AND VOTE FOR OURSELVES. We the people hold the power. They serve us. They need to learn what that means. All of the mainstream parties are contaminated and full of lowlife corporatebraindrained no soul scum. Once we hold power, by voting for ourselves instead of the treasonous homegrown enemies of the UK currently occupying our Parliament and violating our rights and freedom, we can get on with the busines of prosecuting the politicians, the judges, the heads of the NHS and medical boards, The regulators, the four horsemen of the convid apolcalypse, the new head of the Met who has dissolved the crime nuimber which was issued who has already commited a huge crime and already deserves to spend the rest of his life in prison, the scum in the media like Richard Sharp BBC Chairman – 23… Read more »

huxleypiggles
4 years ago

Top class.

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

So just let him bumble on with his ‘appalling leadership‘ until a more fitting opportunity presents itself to oust him, eh? Is Stockholm Syndrome contagious BTL, or is it you can’t see how ludicrous your comment is?

Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

He’s not an immortal God-King and he will be replaced sooner or later.

And I agree that he’s likely to be replaced by a worse creature.

So what message are we sending to that future WEF stooge about the consequences for despotism if Johnson is allowed to simply shrug his hypocrisy, lies and self-created criminality off?

You can keep a spider in your boot to try and keep the scorpions out, but ultimately all you’re signalling is that you’ll tolerate toxic scuttling invertebrates.

Idris
Idris
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I think David Frost has his eye on the job

RedhotScot
4 years ago
Reply to  Idris

I think a lot of people see Frost as a steady hand. He certainly seems level headed.

At almost any other time in history I think Boris would have been welcomed as a swashbuckling, eccentric British rogue and most would have quite liked it.

Sadly though, our government hasn’t had to govern for the last 40 years of the EU, just follow instructions so many skills have been lost. Now, they are just compliant muppets, personified by the featureless Starmer.

The disaster of the past few years might just tease out a decent candidate from left field and perhaps it might be Frost. Remainers hate him, but then who don’t remainers hate?

Our next General Election is scheduled for May 24th 2024. Will the year be as momentous a coincidence as Brexit followed by Trump in the November?

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

If he falls in some kind of perceived relationship to having cr*pped on the population regarding SARSCoV2, that’s good because it means his successor – and the corporate government as a whole – may possibly be at least a little bit weaker in that department.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

An inanimate object would do better.

iane
iane
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

‘The man is a disgrace’: yes, and Bozo is equally bad.

MrTea
MrTea
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

The partygate story was beginning to break before Christmas, that and the Owen Paterson corruption scandal made it impossible for chunky Johnson to slap us with another lockdown.

RedhotScot
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

There might be more to come. Then the Sue Gray report which is likely to be the killer. An insiders perspective of what’s been going on.

I wouldn’t bother about any of his shenanigans other than for NetZero. It’s the single issue I can never forgive him for and the the hill he needs to die on, by whatever means.

Nymeria
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

The only support Johnson needs is the lamppost holding the piano wire.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

Yes, only the backbench rebels stopped it.

Ceriain
4 years ago

“Judge praises ‘inspiring’ Insulate Britain mob who delayed ambulance”

Judge needs a kick up the arse!

re. Greece story:

“… the Science helpfully shifts to rescue the economy.”

Nice one, Will.

re. Doctor appointments:

“GP services are in fact delivering more appointments than prior to the pandemic…”

Not round my way they ain’t; 3 weeks wait just to talk to them on the phone.

“Ex-Brexit minister Lord Frost warns U.K. could end up rationing energy”

Lord Frost tore into the Prime Minister’s energy security strategy

Lord David Frost: top man!

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

According to the doc on GB News, doctors are in fact working 36 hour weeks, and administering the dangerous experimental gene therapy drugs on top of that. So that’s alright then.

Really, the whole system needs reforming.

Jon Garvey
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

The headlines about doctors working part-time need to be understood not in terms of men on golf courses, but in the light of well over 50% of GPs being women committed to work-life balance.

Ceriain
4 years ago

Small aside:

It’s 1:44 in the morning and I just popped out front to have a ciggie (Yes, I know!).

Neighbour across the street just popped out to put something in her blue bin (15 feet from her front door). She was wearing a mask! Seriously, she was!

It’s 1:44 in the morning!

Dave Angel Eco Warrior
Dave Angel Eco Warrior
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

For many people masks are now their new normal.

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago

What was that film about doing certain acts in a car with a bit of a history? I suspect there will be a similar fetish with masks for some.

Encierro
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

Send them this link.
https://youtu.be/OBsCHDdi_O4

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  Encierro

That was superb – entertaining and thought-provoking!

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  Encierro

Brilliant – covers ALL the agendas – BLM, Ukraine, virtue signalling, mask wearing – share widely!

Francis64
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

Yes, its incredible isn’t it? I’m seeing things that would make you scream with total frustration at the sheer idiocy of some people and their mask-wearing rituals – I mean, where are their brains for crying out loud, why is it that people can’t seem to perform some very basic logic anymore?

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

You can’t be too careful…

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

It’s 1:44 in the morning

Because she knows that just like nicotine addiction, COVID-19 never sleeps!

Susan
4 years ago

“A certain poetic justice to BJ’s Partygate fine,” writes Lord Sumption. But no real justice for the numerous, dead serious crimes committed against his country and its citizens.

Stephanos
Stephanos
4 years ago
Reply to  Susan

Indeed not. A mere apology, however grovelling is not enough. Zacchaeus promised to repay FOUR times over if he had cheated anyone. Then Jesus said, ‘Today salvation has come to this house’. So: IF MR. Johnson wishes to remain Prime Minister and IF all of his cabinet wish to remain in office this is what all those party goers MUST do: Reimburse ALL the fines or penalties to everyone who has been caught in this sorry saga FOUR TIMES over out of their own pockets. There must be no question about this. There MUST be HEAVY financial penalties for this crime. £50 (or whatever it is) will not do. If any fine has been threatened but has been subsequently rescinded the victim must be reimbursed for the threatened fine out the pockets of ALL MPs and cabinet ministers. There must also be substantial compensation for ALL businesses that have been ruined by this criminal government and the proceeds for this compensation must come from the following OUT OF THEIR OWN POCKETS: 1. The Prime Minister and all Cabinet Ministers 2. The Shadow Cabinet 3. ALL MPs with the possible exception of Sir Desmond Swaine 4. ALL members of SAGE, Nervtag,… Read more »

Idris
Idris
4 years ago
Reply to  Stephanos

A better reaction would be for the country to realise that the Government needs to butt out of our lives. What do they do that we can’t do better for ourselves?

Stephanos
Stephanos
4 years ago
Reply to  Idris

A very good point and I agree. The ONLY thing that the government does better than we could do is defence of the realm.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago

My video call with the WHO this morning” – Dr. Tess Lawrie reports on the sham of a “public participation process” organised by the WHO this week and expresses concern that “the WHO now intends to take full control over every member nation via this pandemic treaty”.

If the WHO does indeed move to take full control over every member nation via the pandemic treaty, people across the world will be massively alerted to the aims and ideas of the kind of globalists often discussed here.

The discussion will become mainstream. The WHO, like the UN, is not an organisation which enjoys widespread popular respect.

There are people who put up with all sorts of edicts, because they come from elected governments (whatever they think of those governments or the elections which put them into office).

If those governments tell us that we have to be locked down or that we all have to be “vaccinated” because the WHO decrees it, they will face a different kind of opposition: Brexit on steroids.

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

We hope.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Indeed. I decided to use a definite tone!

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

I forget if the UN (like the WHO) is in the pocket of China.

Anyhow, there was something on GB News yesterday about how Shanghai was the place in China that lived the good life off the hard work of other areas of China, and now that Shanghai has been shafted, there could be trouble for the regime. I suspect the CCP might struggle to fulfil their plans for 2049.

pjar
4 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

The thing about Brexit is that it was the result of a vote… you may or may not like the result, but it was democratic. The WHO takeover suggested here is the very antithesis of democracy. If it were to be attempted, it would require a much more robust, physical response which would set one half of the population against the other… on steroids, as you say,

Perhaps that’s the plan?

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  pjar

Brexit was a reaction to outside control that shocked many of the elite. The whole point is that it was indeed “democratic”, in the sense of the people speaking to and about power.

From what I gather (as someone not living in the UK), there was an assumption by the Cameron government that people accepted and would continue to accept a degree of control or influence over their lives by external organisations. The vote showed that most did not.

I imagine that if the WHO were to decree health policies people could not vote against, a lot more than half would be seriously annoyed.

We are to be locked down because the WHO says we should be? And the government we elected says we must meekly obey?

Who will enforce such a lockdown? Local police? If so, whose police are they?

JayBee
4 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

How can ANY democratic country of the world even have chosen to participate in this discussion, let alone sign this ‘treaty’?!

Regardless where you stand on the political spectrum or on public health measures, this is totally insane and ceratainly beyond me.

Imagine the EU asking for such powers, or the UN security council- and that leaves the WHO’s dodgy private financing aside.
Ridiculous.

In the UK in particular, where are those ‘It’s all about sovereignty!’ Brexiters now and on this, far more serious and the GBPeople enslaving issue?!
Have they been bought too?!

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

It would be appalling even if the WHO’s financing wasn’t dodgy. Public health issues are highly specific not only to particular nations, but to regions within those nations.

The WHO’s performance over the last two years has been disgraceful: contradictory and dishonest. At best, it’s become a standing joke; at worst, it’s now a serious threat to the health of people all over the world; despite the excellent work done by outstanding individuals and their programs.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

I think democracy – true democracy – is dead. Its death was helped along by the events of the last 2 years, rapidly speeded up if you will. But democracy has been ailing for a much longer time than that. The events of the last 2 years have done much to quell in the average person any thought of rebellion, and it is very very hard for me personally to avoid the conclusion that there is something in the jabs which is designed to impact people’s brains and their ability to think and reason for themselves. People were dumbed down before the lockdowns by the reliance on their smart phones, but there must have been something in the jabs which has added a whole new layer to that dumbing down, to the point, I see in the people around me, where they just comply, they don’t care where the order comes from, their own government? WHO? what’s that? doesn’t matter, they just do whatever they are told. It wouldn’t occur to them that they cannot vote for the body telling them to do X or Y – they would just do it. If everyone else is doing it they will… Read more »

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  Milo

Well Milo – I’ve just upticked what you’ve written; but God that was depressing!

I can’t deny that you make excellent points, and I wish I didn’t agree with so many of them.

BUT – we’ve been through dark times before. Perhaps a not very large minority is all that’s needed.

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago
  • My video call with the WHO this morning” – Dr. Tess Lawrie reports on the sham of a “public participation process” organised by the WHO this week and expresses concern that “the WHO now intends to take full control over every member nation via this pandemic treaty”.

Yes, I suspected the consultation would be pointless. I agree that apathy is the enemy (though widespread, with mer survival and the mental health crisis paralysing mny) – you don’t get to Heaven on a feather bed – but we need to know what will genuinely make a difference. I still say that telling people in your community (work, cultiral etc.) why you object, and supporting communities trying to continue the old normal (even if it means doing things you wouldn’t normally do) is of paramount importance.

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago

Fantastic! Now for the zero carbon nonsense. I bet they’ve already started in the Ukraine…

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

The Greek relaxation only lasts until the end of August.

Jon Garvey
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

No – all the weapons donated from from the West are guaranteed to produce no CO2, and contain no single-use plastics.

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago

And you thought that HS2 was bad! Back in 2019, I would never have thought that HS2, and the Climate Change Act could be made to look cheap…

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago

Yes. I wonder if any judge said that they were inspired by the many hundreds of people who continued to protest the genocidal human rights abuses in London (and Australia) through the lockdowns in the face of police brutality? (They should, heroes every one).

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

I’ve been on Lindon demos and never seen the slightest trace of any police brutality.

pjar
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

You were in the wrong place Annie, Lindon only has a population of 11,000 and its 14 police officers are not known for their brutality… ;o)

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Judiciary totally captured – made that point yesterday.

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

“raising questions of impartiality.”

Impartiality? Raising questions about this toe rag’s intelligence and common sense more like.

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago

The late great Christopher Booker was warning about this years ago. And what has the “Conservative” government been doing about this since 2010? Useless toerags.

watersider
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

They have been trying to enforce the installation of “smart” meters so they can ration electricity.
The gullible are ready for rationing.

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago
  • Monsoon’s female changing rooms are ‘open to both sexes’” – Mail report that Monsoon apologised to 18 year-old Charlie Moore following an incident at its Grand Central, Birmingham, store and said its changing rooms are “open and available to all customers” – which probably reassured Charlie, but many women less “.

Whatever happened to chivalry?

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Another place I won’t be shopping in then.

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago
  • The shameful silence surrounding David Amess’s murder” – MPs, tasked with responding to this outrage, decided it was time to regulate the “corrosive space” of social media to make sure people in public life “can no longer be vilified”. What exactly does that have to do with this MP’s brutal murder at the hands of an Islamist, asks Sam Ashworth-Hayes in the Spectator.

I was watching a progrsmme about the Manchester arena bombing tonight. Apparently just before the attack, someone spoke to Salman Abedi minutes before his attack, but persuaded himself that he wasn’t a threat because of fears of the consequences if he turned out to have falsely accused him. Now I remember when I was working nights and used to be regularly stopped by police on my way home from work, simply because they didn’t like the look of me (the number of producers I got…). I know it’s been said before, but the police need to go after the real criminals.

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Ransack shopping trolleys for non-essential products? Send drones to spy on country walkers? Arrest two friends for meeting for an outdoor coffee? Set up special websites for the convenience of snitches?
The police are the criminals.

Lockdown Sceptic
4 years ago

VenomTech company announces massive library of snake venom peptides for Big Pharma
https://www.naturalnews.com/2022-04-13-venomtech-company-announces-massive-library-of-snake-venom-peptides-for-pharmaceutical-deployment.html
VenomTech company announces massive library of SNAKE VENOM peptides for pharmaceutical development; “nanocarriers” stabilize snake venom in WATER
by Mike Adams

Stand for freedom with our Yellow Boards By The Road next events 

Thursday 14th April 3pm to 4pm
Yellow Boards 
Junction A329 Reading Rd 
& Station Approach
Wokingham RG41 1EH 

Monday 18th April 2pm to 3pm
Yellow Boards 
Junction A3095 Warfield Rd/
A329 Millennium Way
Bracknell RG12 2XT

Stand in the Park Sundays from 10am – make friends & keep sane 

Wokingham Howard Palmer Gardens 
(Cockpit Path car park free on Sunday) 
Sturges Rd RG40 2HD   

Bracknell  
South Hill Park, Rear Lawn, RG12 7PA

Telegram http://t.me/astandintheparkbracknell

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago

Anything to do with snake oil?

Anyhow, the WHO should be in prison with Fauci and the rest.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago

To think that last week we were expressing concern about fluoride.

David Martin has obvs been barking up the totally wrong tree. Some should tell him.
No more Mr Nice Guy! Doc Martin’s vow to expose the Covid conspirators – The Conservative Woman

Julian
4 years ago

Partygate has united two groups previously at loggerheads in a common chorus of disgust, says Lord Sumption in the Telegraph.”

I can’t read this (paywall) but the headline seems like nonsense to me. Which is a surprise from Sumption. Maybe he just doesn’t like how divided we have become. But if he means that as a sceptic I now feel “united” with the covidians in disliking the PM, he’s lost his marbles. The covidians mainly hated Johnson anyway, thought he was too lax on covid or they were lefties anyway and hated him because he’s not leftie enough.

Good to see Ross Clark drawing the CORRECT conclusion – that the crime was not the party but the rules. Shame he writes for a relative fringe publication, albeit one that has helped our cause more than most.

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

But Clark thinks Bozo ought to have closed pubs and banned this, that and the other. Nothing about trusting in the public’s common sense, or respecting human rights.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

I don’t read The Spectator, just noted more sceptical pieces in there that in most other places, admittedly the bar is low. They published that interview with the SAGE bloke who said they didn’t model realistic scenarios, only worst case, around Christmas time, think that helped solidify political support for ditching the nonsense.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

That is worrying that he thought that.

Ross Clark has generally been good on that subject but not on that one.

maggie may
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Re paywall, try searching for 12 foot ladder….

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  maggie may

Thanks

Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

That is Sumption’s point too. We should be sceptical of headlines.

If you’re reading on a computer, just repeatedly F5 the page and hit escape quickly enough and you’ll interrupt the script that hides the content pretty quickly.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

“It is entirely understandable that Boris Johnson should want to take a drink with friends and workmates at the end of the day. It is what we all like to do. It is entirely understandable that he should want to make his own judgment about the risk of spreading Covid-19 among the population of Number 10. Probably there was no risk at all. What Johnson did was only human. The problem is that it was a humanity that he denied to everyone else. The lockdown was a sustained assault on our humanity. First, it was an attack on our instincts as social animals. Interaction with other human beings is not just an agreeable leisure activity. It is fundamental to our culture, our social organisation and our economy. It is essential to our mental health and general wellbeing. It is the source of our creativity. It is the basis almost everything that we do. Secondly, the lockdown was a denial of our autonomy. We make our own judgments about our lives, our health and all the risks which are inseparable from existence. Of course, we make them within a framework of laws designed to enable us to live in society, at peace with… Read more »

Milo
Milo
4 years ago

“It is entirely understandable that he should want to make his own judgment about the risk of spreading Covid-19 among the population of Number 10.”

This for me is the nub of it.

Why should he have that right when he denied it to every other single member of the UK population trashing both the economy and the mental and other healths of the vast majority of the population?

The rules were wrong – they should never have been put in place in the first place, but once made, then we all had to stick to them or no one had to stick to them, it wasn’t rules for thee but not for me, and the fact he thought it was shows there was nothing to be afraid of in the first place, ergo the rules should never have been made.

Nutshell.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Milo

Correct. The sooner he is sentenced to permanent exile in Michael Moore’s underpants, the better.

myrtle
myrtle
4 years ago

My 18 year old daughter was at the University of Edinburgh where students were effectively locked up for 6 weeks with very little (and some days no) food, no exercise and no common room. They were treated like pariahs. Then they allowed the police to patrol inside the halls of residence where they would barge into rooms to look for infringements and sometimes cuffed terrified students whilst issuing fines of up to £150. They then handed details to the university who added their own fine.
And now the people responsible for drafting the legislation that allowed such egregious (and previously unthinkable) assaults on civil liberties have been given just a £50 fine, I …..
well, I am truly lost for words and I am very, very angry

TheTartanEagle
TheTartanEagle
4 years ago
Reply to  myrtle

That is disgraceful. It’s easy to say, and I understand everyone’s personal circumstances are different, and hindsight is great, but I would have attempted to spring my kid from internment by fair means or foul. And raised a stink with the highdehighyins in the uni. This sort of thing gives me the rage, due to family experiences in previous generations. If everyone withdrew for a year it would mess with the uni finances and the admin section would have a ‘mare. But they hide behind “the law” to create inhumane regimes. I had a lesser unpleasant experience two weeks ago. A young eagle participated in a “national” level activity (type of sporting or skills event, won’t say any more at this time). On arrival, we were quizzed as to whether a lateral flow had been taken. Having swerved these totally at school, I just answered no. Nothing had been mentioned in previous correspondence, until a few days before, but I figured it would be much like the school, they have to cover themselves. Well, there followed over an hour of interviews with the directors etc of this organisation. Coercion tactics (separation from the crowd, private interview, emotional appeal to their… Read more »

myrtle
myrtle
4 years ago
Reply to  TheTartanEagle

You are right, Eagle and I assure you that I did my best. But the problem was exacerbated by the complete absence if staff who were all ‘working’ from home which meant nobody answered phones or emails.
And that pretty much sums up the last 2 years at that institution where my daughter has not had a single lecture in person.
I wish the students would revolt but they’re all brainwashed to accept this state of affairs.

Nymeria
4 years ago
Reply to  myrtle

My daughter’s experience at Lincoln University was that she had a couple of in person lectures, albeit everyone spaced out and muzzled up. The rest of the time was spent isolated in a small room. The student were not supposed to travel but she did the long journey every weekend, and tearfully returned to Lincoln the following week. Her already fragile state of mind was further damaged and so she left. Has now transferred to a university closer to home and which enables her to live at home.
Likewise, I wish the students would revolt. My daughter has been too accepting of all this covid related bollocks. She has not inherited my fire and fury.

TheTartanEagle
TheTartanEagle
4 years ago
Reply to  myrtle

The working from home further diffuses “authority”, so it is impossible to determine the individual responsible. Or doorstep them. I too wish the students would revolt, they seem so disengaged from actually living except through a computerised device. The whole point of university was the managing by yourself, learning to interact with others, gaining soft skills as well as academic.

Nymeria
4 years ago
Reply to  TheTartanEagle

The whole point of university was the managing by yourself, learning to interact with others, gaining soft skills as well as academic.

All clearly lost on my two as the current state of their bedrooms, and their generally unwillingness to help around the house/general apathy, bear testament to.

TheTartanEagle
TheTartanEagle
4 years ago
Reply to  Nymeria

Modern halls of residence have ensuites and decent facilities. We shared rooms, and bathrooms were used by dozens, used to have prowl around looking for one that hadn’t been disgustingly fouled, was truly ghastly.

Had some young adult relatives to stay recently, I understand your pain. The extra workload was horrendous, and it was stressful. Lack of social skills, no offers to help washup, stack dishwasher, do a bit of weeding, etc etc. My generation, and my parents and grandparents, would all muck in and it would actually be easier having loads of people staying as all those little jobs you never get round to got done!! And it was a laugh!

Nymeria
4 years ago
Reply to  TheTartanEagle

They are totally oblivious to the things which need doing. Their lives revolve around social media, mobile phones, and the occasional real life socialising. Meanwhile, Mommy Dearest will take care of everything which needs doing. I had an almighty screaming match with them the other night, to no avail. Anyway, there’s a pile of their dirty washing to be done and it’s staying that way. Am buggering off for the weekend to hopefully have a rest 🙂

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  TheTartanEagle

Well done you for standing your ground in the face of what must have been horrendous pressure. Plenty more would have caved and taken the easy option. After all, it’s only a test [etc etc]

Fingerache Philip
Fingerache Philip
4 years ago
Reply to  myrtle

If the Bozzer, Dishi and the rest are fined £10,000, what difference would it make?
Their rob dogs and cash fiddlers (accountants) will get the fines classed as expenses and tax deductible.

scaredmama
scaredmama
4 years ago

Well well well, the New Scientist mentions the jabbs effect on the heart. Rare of course, so rare.

I had my biggest ‘heated discussion’ with an old friend in the summer, in which i was told that she didn’t need to read the articles i sent because she read this rag, the New Scientist. Do we think that if I point her to this article and say, well, now its in the New Scientist, it must be true, I will a) receive an apology or b) vomit uncontrollably all over said rag?

pjar
4 years ago
Reply to  scaredmama

Do let us know!

Encierro
4 years ago

Apart from the outbreak of hepatitis in children noted by the UK 3 have been found with it in Spain.
The link is in Spanish.

The European Centre for Disease Control has now issued an alert.

The article does say research indicates that this disease is not linked to Covid-19 vaccination or to cases of infection.
Then why is this occurring?

Cecil B
Cecil B
4 years ago
Reply to  Encierro

If the hepatitis was discovered in the 14 days immediately after jabbing then it occurred in the ‘unvaccinated’ and therefore there is absolutely NO CONNECTION to the vaccines

Keep up folks

John
4 years ago
Reply to  Cecil B

This has been since January, the children are under 10, therefore they cannot have been vaccinated. It could be CoViD19, it could be adenovirus or it could be any number of other viruses including the different herpes viruses.
see: https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/encyclopedia/content.aspx?ContentTypeID=90&ContentID=P02517

Cecil B
Cecil B
4 years ago
Reply to  John

Yesterday is ‘since January’

Cecil B
Cecil B
4 years ago
Reply to  Cecil B

The article you attached to your comment gives a description of what hepatitis is but makes no mention of these current cases and makes no reference to January.

John
4 years ago
Reply to  Cecil B

I was simply pointing out the possible aetiology of hepatitis in Paeds. This is where I got January from https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-61085870

Cecil B
Cecil B
4 years ago
Reply to  John

Apologies if this comes across as being pedantic but in my opinion anything from the BBC and UKHSA needs to be treated with extreme caution

The BBC article refers says ‘since the start of the year’

The article says this was ‘spotted’ last week

The BBC article also makes no mention of the age of the children so could mean any child up to the age of 18

The article does not give any detail of when these events to place. It could be that one case took place in January and 70+last week

Cecil B
Cecil B
4 years ago
Reply to  Cecil B

Not scientific I know but can smell rat

John
4 years ago
Reply to  Cecil B

I’ve been tracking this since it broke over a week ago about cases in Scotland.

John
4 years ago
Reply to  Cecil B

If you read the details from the U.K. it is from January. As salmonella can cause hepatitis type symptoms and the Kinder factory in Belgium had an outbreak last Friday I emailed the lead at public health Scotland to ask if there was a possible connection, This was his response
Thank you for your e-mail.

We are aware of the current salmonella issue and this was considered as part of our initial investigations but has subsequently been discounted.

Best wishes,

Nicholas Phin
Director of Public Health Science and Medical Director
Clinical and Protecting Health Directorate
Public Health Scotland”

TheTartanEagle
TheTartanEagle
4 years ago
Reply to  John

Any info about where in Scotland, as in random locations or a cluster?

John
4 years ago
Reply to  TheTartanEagle

IIRC 6 cases across 4 health authorities, no obvious common link. Which is what made me query a link with the Kinder factory outbreak of salmonella. What I cannot find is the “normal” rate of this type of hepatitis in children.

TheTartanEagle
TheTartanEagle
4 years ago
Reply to  John

How does Salmonella get into a chocolate egg, it must be molten hot to go in the mould and also full of sugar. Mind you, those are the things with the cheap tat plastic toy in the middle, could introduce anything that way.

Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  Encierro

Global warming? Referees blowing their whistles too loudly?

TheTartanEagle
TheTartanEagle
4 years ago
Reply to  Encierro

It could also be the start of a new marketing campaign for another vaccination drive.

harrystillgood
harrystillgood
4 years ago

Is it time to elect a leader rather than follower?

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  harrystillgood

It is. But such a person is rather hard to find just now.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

Ron DeSantis

NeilofWatford
4 years ago

Toby, you’re a great bloke but I absolutely disagree.
Johnson, a card-carrying member of the WEF, has damaged our country severely.
Wokism, covidism, greenism, Brexit in name only – the list is endless and his actions are deliberate.
He, and this whole woke cabinet, must go.
Its time for a government that backs Britain.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

Yes I think almost all of us agree on that but it’s just fantasy, sadly. It’ll be an uphill struggle to restore sanity, and may not happen.

DanClarke
DanClarke
4 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

It began with Blair (in the shadows now) and continues with the blairites. Since then the destruction of our country in every way possible has been uninterrupted.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago

Toby Young: you are as wrong as it is possible to be on this subject, Kim Jong Johnson should have been ousted long ago.

If not for a backbench revolt, he’d have imposed a fourth lockdown in December.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago

MPs, tasked with responding to this outrage, decided it was time to regulate the “corrosive space” of social media to make sure people in public life “can no longer be vilified”. What exactly does that have to do with this MP’s brutal murder at the hands of an Islamist, asks Sam Ashworth-Hayes in the Spectator.”

They were looking for an excuse to censor, as if the government isn’t big and intrusive enough already.

Star
4 years ago

What if they’re vile already? Are we allowed to communicate that?

This is simple: obey without question.

DoctorCOxford
DoctorCOxford
4 years ago

Enough with Covid deaths! 28 days post + test makes you a Covid death. But loons still flapping their hands around. But hey, Scotland and Greece ending their mask rules. Rest of EU to follow? And when do GPS get back to work.

As for Boris, I have a compromise. Boris can stay but Carrie leaves. Along with all her daft ideals. Maybe she can serve the sentence for next Extinction Rebellion lunacy.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  DoctorCOxford

In my region the GPs never do – BBC announced yesterday that RCGP has said that the current way of working is the new normal and will not be changing. Why would a turkey vote for christmas?

As for the PM/wife compromise. I don’t think so. Both need to go.

DanClarke
DanClarke
4 years ago

Smiling US health chief shrugs off her Covid blunders – The Conservative Woman As clear as we’re going to get that we’ve all be led down the garden path “science is grey”

MrTea
MrTea
4 years ago

The critical thing in all of this is that no new virus was ever isolated and identified by the Chinese.
The Chinese used standard virology techniques whereby a computer generated thousands of theoretically possible sequences of genetic material that could theoretically be a virus, these sequences being taken from a patient sample that had been grown in a monkey kidney cell tissue culture.

The computer spat out thousands of possible gentic sequences and then the virologists decided to claim that one of those sequences was a new virus.

No actual sars-cov-2 virus was ever found to actually exist in nature, it was never isolated from a patient as in actually taken from a paitient that was ill.

It sounds ridiculous, it sounds insane, and it is, this is how virology operates.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  MrTea
Star
4 years ago

Who says it was a “Ukrainian missile strike” that caused serious damage to the Moskva, the flagship of Russia’s Black Sea fleet? The British state broadcaster claims “Russian warship seriously damaged as Ukraine claims strike”. The Daily Telegraph claims “Russia-Ukraine latest news: Russian flagship that attacked Snake Island crippled by ‘Ukrainian missile strike'”. The latter contains these words: However, the governor of Odesa said Ukrainian forces had hit the vessel with missile strikes, while Oleksiy Arestovych, a presidential advisor, said “we don’t understand what happened”. So it’s sourced to the governor of Odessa? At the time of writing, the Ukrainian state-owned news agency doesn’t even mention the Moskva. Nor does the Ukrainian defence ministry’s official news site. Why not? You would have thought a successful attack on the flagship of the enemy’s entire Black Sea fleet would be something the Ukrainian side would want to publicise. It would obviously be highly positive for morale. I don’t believe Ukrainian forces did it. There have been “unexplained attacks” on ships in the Gulf too. And do we all remember the ship that blocked the Suez canal last year? Whoever took control of it drew a p*nis in the sea with it before… Read more »

RedhotScot
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

The world and their granny have been providing Ukrainian forces with hand held anti tank missiles.

Polish jets, to date as far as I understand, are still on the ground probably because every Ukrainian airfields were one of the first things to be attacked.

I’d be interested in what kind of missiles struck the Russian flagship and how they were delivered.

One claim seems as bizarre as the other.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

It seems that there was no or very little loss of life on the Moskva – which would indicate that the Russian version of events (that a fire threatened the explosion of ammunition) is probably correct.

The crew was apparently safely removed and the ship, which was scheduled for decommission, towed away.

What caused the fire is probably the most interesting question.

Lockdown Sceptic
4 years ago

No more Mr Nice Guy! Doc Martin’s vow to expose the Covid conspirators
https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/no-more-mr-nice-guy-doc-martins-vow-to-expose-the-covid-conspirators/
Tom Penn

Stand for freedom with our Yellow Boards By The Road next events 

Thursday 14th April 3pm to 4pm
Yellow Boards 
Junction A329 Reading Rd 
& Station Approach
Wokingham RG41 1EH 

Monday 18th April 2pm to 3pm
Yellow Boards 
Junction A3095 Warfield Rd/
A329 Millennium Way
Bracknell RG12 2XT

Wednesday 20th April 5.30 to 6.30pm 
Yellow Boards 
Junction A321 Lower Wokingham Rd & 
B3348 Dukes Ride
Crowthorne RG45 6NZ  

Stand in the Park Sundays from 10am – make friends & keep sane 

Wokingham Howard Palmer Gardens 
(Cockpit Path car park free on Sunday) 
Sturges Rd RG40 2HD   

Bracknell  
South Hill Park, Rear Lawn, RG12 7PA

Telegram http://t.me/astandintheparkbracknell

ebygum
4 years ago

What Johnson did was only human. The problem is that it was a humanity that he denied to everyone else.” Lord Sumption

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
4 years ago

It is like a list of trivial headlines given the gravity of the situation we face. It is a darkening of the western perspective. A world view that sees the west as becoming more and more depraved. Sometimes you have to look in the bathroom mirror and slap yourself in the face.