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huxleypiggles
3 years ago

Good morning.
Arguing for England.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

En-ger-land!

(Sorry…)

Sir, good morning (I was just watching HMS Pinafore – politics don’t change much…).

So do you think China’s WHO will be able to make anything of monkeypox then?

Adrian25
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Oh no you’re not!
🙂

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Adrian25

She’s behind you. With her penis…

Adrian25
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

🙀

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Good morning, hp. More strength to your arm!

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

Good morning (or afternoon to (some of) those not on GMT) to you AE. I see “covid” deaths going up with the all cause mortality deaths in Oz. Will there be a reckoning?

Well it’s goodnight from me – and goodnight from him!

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

I’ve been busily passing on the link to those I know will pass it on further.

There have been bits and pieces, but this (Australia begins to reap what it has sown. It’s grim. (substack.com) is the most detailed I’ve seen so far.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

The thing I’ve noticed about viruses is that they’re incredibly patient. None of this ‘tooting when stuck in traffic’ for them.

huxleypiggles
3 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

Thanks AE.

iane
iane
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Ah yes, I seem to remember living there once, but I can’t find it on the map nowadays.

AethelredTheReadier
AethelredTheReadier
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Top o’ the morning to you, HP!

huxleypiggles
3 years ago

Cheers ATR

crisisgarden
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Good retrospective morning HP!

huxleypiggles
3 years ago
Reply to  crisisgarden

All the best CG.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

I wondeer what percent believe (correctly) that there never was a pandemic? The power of propaganda!

Adrian25
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

I would say only about 5%-10% of people really understand that the pandemic was faked, that the vaccines don’t work, and are highly dangerous.
Fewer than the 10%-20% or so who have worked out that man-made Climate Change is entirely bogus.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Adrian25

They’ll pretty soon all be having cardiac arrests while driving their Teslas.
Expect carnage.

Mogwai
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Oh well if a poll said it it must be true. 😉

Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

I wonder what percentage of ‘conspiracy theorists’ really are mad as a box of frogs?

If you are an angry nutter, feel free to downtick this comment!

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

No takers so far, EF.

Beowulf
Beowulf
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

You’re not very inclusive EF, limiting down-tickers to the angry nutter community [ANC].

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

|”Concerning a potential engineered bioterrorism event, the best known precedent are the 2001 US anthrax letter attacks, which were closely linked, in multiple ways, to the September 11 operation. The US media and the US government initially tried to blame the anthrax letters on “Al Qaeda” and Iraq (based on various false claims), but they were caught off-guard when a leading private lab, using recently developed genomic sequencing technology, could show that the anthrax strain originated from a US military lab or from one of its military-intelligence contractors (more).”

If there were indeed similar labs in the Ukraine, it is no wonder if the Russian government were concerned. I note that the “US” government apparently lied about it too. I used to think it was mainly communist governments that did that sort of thing…

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

(From the Swiss Doctor)

ComeTheRevolution
ComeTheRevolution
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

The anthrax attacks are very important – they expose the fact that the story we were given about 911 is a lie. Fully explained in War By Deception, this film is an absolute must watch for anyone not fully versed with what actually went down on 911. Chris Bollyns site also packed with incredible information, and the Clean Break paper, the key to it all.

War By Deception
https://www.bitchute.com/video/d8E6qLblH0Ib/

https://www.bollyn.com/9-11-archive-2001/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Clean_Break:_A_New_Strategy_for_Securing_the_Realm

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

Ah yes, I remember the tyrannosaurus DNA discovered some years back – even though science apparently suggests that DNA could not possibly survive from the date often claimed for when they were alive. People need to understand that historical science is fundamentally different from real observational laboratory science. These dates commonly claimed such as 830 million years are extrapolations at best, and should not be presented as fact any more than computer models, no matter how many people might believe these extrapolations. Scientists are prone to bias, and I repeat that the Piltdown fraud was believed particularly by British scientists who apparently liked the idea of Britain being home to the earliest race of men in Europe. I repeat further that dismissing and ignoring minority or politically inconvenient views in science is unscientific and indeed dangerous.

Annie
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

If you worry about this one, you’re a nutter.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Toblerone?

(There’s a very long (and amusing) literal translation of this chocolate into German (Schokoladenussensomethingotherwhatsitpackchen?) which unfortunately I can’t remember).

In any case, I maintain that it is vital, especially in these times, to distinguish between actual scientific fact and someone’s opinion/extrapolation.

Oh, and I’m also “seemingly nice” too, apparently (but in reality so “appallingy unwoke” that I won’t even accept Darwinism without proper evidence)! Still, it’s certainly an opinion…

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Don’t worry, Phillip Day can set you right on this (and on the big pharma crooks).

Credence UK/Global store | Shop (credenceonline.co.uk)

Annie
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

‘Proper evidence’? Like what?

Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago
Reply to  Annie

He purposefully doesn’t specify, no creationists ever do.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

No Darwinists ever prove anything to support their hypothesis. If you really don’t know what Darwinists have failed to prove, here are a few pointers. Where has life ever been observed to come from non-life (eg amino acids randomly combining to form a protein)? Why would a life-form allegedly remain unchanged for 300 million years when you consider the masses of changes which would have to happen in the 4,000 million years claimed by Darwinists? Where are the “aliens” if life is so likely to occur by itself (we are now years after the 2010’s when your fellow fantasist Patrick Moore predicted they would be discovered)? Where does energy-matter come from, and why is there the amount there is (“get your own mud…)? What is the human mind (atoms arranged in a certain way? Genes? Ones own atoms? There are problems with all of these)? Where are the missing links (all the rat-bats and monkey-men that haven’t been found, despite vast numbers of other discoveries of fossils)? Where has macro-evolution been observed (and yes, apparently there has been one genuine example of speciation, but that is rather different from observing an eye in the process of forming)? And yes, how… Read more »

Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

My mind is active and rejects the moronic superstition of creationism.

You are not after evidence for Evolution, you wish to discredit science for being science

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

So you do take this stance for philosophical reasons then.

In reality, the neo-Darwinists have to rely on their own “creation story”. Apparently they’re in trouble over galaxy formation (among other things)…

Amtrup
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

A solution to those and other gaps in Darwinian theory might be an interaction between it and that of Lamarck, who hypothesised permanent changes occurring in offspring ( and ensuing generations ) based on dietary and other influences/events experienced by the parents/progenitors, as seen, for example in cats fed pasteurised milk becoming progressively less fertile. Darwinian theory on its own is not enough. Paired with/acting in concert with Lamarckian principles it might be.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Amtrup

The point about the msm narrative is that large scale change (macro-evolution) such as an eye forming (or any of the many stages that would be necessary for a light sensitive membrane to form from a mole, or whatever it is they claim ) has not been observed, and that far more than has been proven and demonstrated is routinely claimed as if it were immutable fact (such as a mathematical equation). Such intellectual arrogance among the media and some computer modelers has been the bane of the last two years, and it is vital that all scientific views are heard if we are to get to the truth. That’s how science works.

Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

You do know Jurassic Park was a movie? I’d still check for dinosaurs under your bed though, if I were you.
“Nature always finds a way”.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

I’m afraid that Mrs Dee thinks there’s a dinosaur on top of the bed, rather than underneath.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

Cleverdick comments are all very well, but they hardly count as observational science.

Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Darwinism has plenty of evidence, you just refuse to accept it.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

I’m looking for proof.

The only reason the hypothesis still works at all is because it is altered when evidence turns up that goes against it.

Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

In other words, dependence on evidence is not science, according to you.

The anti-science of creationism never changes because it rejects all evidence

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

When in fact, some of the people who founded the branches of modern science were not in fact Darwinists. There was a story about an atheist meeting an old man praying on a train, and saying to him, “you know, science has disproved all that”. The old man looked troubled and said, “what is this science”? and was told, “give me your address and I will send you some information”, and so he began to write: “Louis Pasteur”…

Some anti-science from Emerald Fox’s silly book by Richard Dawkins: according to him, apparently there is a “smooth gradient” from zero light sensitive membranes to one in the ascent up Mount Improbable. That tends to be how these people work – glossing over the gaps, and dismissing philosophy as irrelevant.

The point is, their core hypothesis (or philosophy) is immutable, and whatever evidence turns up has to be fitted into this hypothesis.

I have raised a number of issues. I note that no serious attempt has been made to address them (well, possibly one, though it is hardly the game-changer I am looking for). One wonders if supporters of this philosophy need to get their own house in order…

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

“Looking at both sexes and all ages, it is clear that things have gone really wrong for Australia since the week ending 11th April 2021. Between then and the end of Feb 2022, there have been 16k excess deaths.
There have been less than 4k COVID deaths in that same time with most of those coming since Sept 2021.
So, much like every other country of the world, Australia has had more COVID death since the COVID vaccine was introduced in Feb 2021 and substantially more excess death from other causes. By the end of the period, around 90% of the adult population has been jabbed.” (Substack).

Someone please let me know when the BBC gets around to reporting this…

Adrian25
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Oh no.
Neither newspapers, radio, TV nor internet news outlets are allowed to say anything negative about the truly wonderful ‘vaccines’.
And if you try saying suchlike on YouTube, Facebook or Twitter, you will be censored and possibly banned.
Even for telling the truth.
Or is that, especially for telling the truth?

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Adrian25

You will be censored if you say that your spouse died from a “covid ‘vaccine’ “, as Mark Steyn (GB News) grimly noted (when talking to a spouse of such a victim).

Londo Mollari
3 years ago
Reply to  Adrian25

Or the equally wonderful Ukrainian Azov forces.

RedhotScot
3 years ago

….

https___bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com_public_images_76a4b47e-a2e3-4d59-9a23-81716529e3e6_1248x886.png
Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

Jabber jabber jabber jabber…

aba daba monkey honeymoon at DuckDuckGo

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

So basically a health agency has lied. On a public health matter. Isn’t this quite a serious crime?

Adrian25
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

It used to be.
But if it’s considered to be for a good cause, they call them ‘Noble Lies’ now.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Adrian25

For which they get a Nobel prize (cos that’s been totally corrupted too).

Adrian25
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Sweden’s public health guy, Anders Tegnell, did such a good job in Sweden of avoiding lockdowns and other Covid restrictions that he’s been captured to work for the WHO, ensuring Sweden will do as it’s told next time.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Adrian25

That was pretty much my reaction when I learned about it.
‘Money talks’.

huxleypiggles
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

Although perhaps it wasn’t just money. The Magafuli persuasion technique perhaps?

Mogwai
3 years ago
Reply to  Adrian25

Well you can cover up an awful lot of elderly deaths doing it that way can’t you? Who’s going to bat an eyelid if an 80yr old dies of a cardiac arrest or stroke? ‘Coincidence’ will definitely be the biggest cause of death in this age group, and will they hell be investigating if the person took the jab or not. Criminal.

Mogwai
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

This is hardly exclusive to Sweden. I thought this was commonplace everywhere. And how many deaths are recorded as caused by the jab if they die within 14 days? According to Dr McCullough ( I don’t have the data he cites to hand ) the vast majority of deaths post-injection are within just a few days. There’s ‘coincidence’ and then there’s taking the pish! But hasn’t the fudging of the figures generally been the problem all along?

kate
kate
3 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

There is another death spike six months post vax. This was discovered by Craig Paardekooper of “how bad is my batch”

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

So now I know – I am a “seemingly nice” person! And no matter that I bear no malice towards any man, I cannot possibly be really nice. The civil service said so.

pjar
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

The more of this nonsense I am exposed to, the less nice I get… seemingly, or otherwise.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Hugh know it makes sense…

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

Ah, David Lammy, MP for Tottenham – “there are two great football clubs in North London – Tottenham Hotspur and Enfield Town”.

Can I have him for a seemingly nice person who is in fact appallingly woke?

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

Beaten to it by Warner Bros. “that’s all folks”!

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

Hmm. I remember a story some years ago about an athlete competing in women’s sports who, after a medical examination, was found to have tiny male genitalia despite appearing to be a woman. I assume such medical exceptions are quite rare…

Adrian25
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

My first girlfriend joked; “You have one of those, but I have one of these, and with this, I can have as many of those as I like!”

Mogwai
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Surely anyone who thinks ( and especially declares publicly ) that a woman can have a penis is justified in being immediately sectioned under the Mental Health Act. One does wonder if their obvious derangement is specific to this topic only or if they shouldn’t be allowed to leave the house without a responsible adult. To me these broken clowns are in the same category as people who have sex with their cars ( usually men ) or who want to marry their horse ( usually men ). These people are just damaged goods. Worryingly they look like regular folk and move among us without being noticed…well until the ‘woman’ gets her todger out in the women’s communal changing rooms at the gym!

tom171uk
3 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

No, it’s not specific to one topic. Stella Creasy is a profoundly silly woman (presumably without a penis). Worse than that, she is extraordinarily irritating.

Beowulf
Beowulf
3 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

From Wikipedia:

“Creasy was born on 5 April 1977 in Sutton Coldfield, and is the daughter of Corinna Frances Avril (nee Martin) and Philip Charles Creasy, both active Labour Party members; her father is a trained opera singer and her mother a headteacher of a special needs school.[2[ Her elder brother, Matthew Henry Creasy (born 1974), is an academic Creasy’s mother described her own parents as “very aristocratic” and herself as “enormously privileged”, which contributed to her decision to join the Labour Party.”

Typical working class background then.

Star
3 years ago
Reply to  Beowulf

Be fair, though – she’s not claiming to hail from one of those.

Her PhD thesis is here, on “the lifeworld of social exclusion”.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Stella’s not exactly stellar, is she?

rockoman
rockoman
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

More luna-tic.

Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Caster Semanya, I believe.

Caster Semanya is registered as a woman on her birth certificate, I add.

I accept she is a woman, albeit a freak of nature.

Star
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Creasy is wearing a nice top in that photo and she may well be a fan of Maurits Escher. Unfortunately she talks codswallop. When she goes on about “trans women”, she doesn’t have genital deformities in mind: she supports “self-identification”. The following bit is almost parodically moronic: “As an old fashioned feminist, I’m still fighting the patriarchy. I’m not interested in fighting amongst ourselves. And one of the things that happens to trans women is that they are oppressed because the patriarchy goes, ‘Oh well you’re a woman, right that’s it, let’s pick you apart’. So it’s right for me to stand with my trans sisters and say: ‘Let’s fight these battles together’.” She doesn’t comprehend what the patriarchy is. The patriarchy is rule by men. It’s not the patriarchy that tells men who say they’re women that because they are women they should be picked apart. In fact nobody tells such men that. She is just wibbling. And I am not sexist to point that out. She doesn’t seem to know what “old-fashioned” means either. The radical feminists of the 1960s would agree with me, not her. Has she even read “The Female Eunuch”, I wonder? Patriarchy, she says?… Read more »

Star
3 years ago
Reply to  Star

I wonder how on earth Creasy managed to go to grammar school after failing the 11-plus. The official explanation seems to be that her family’s move from the Manchester area to Colchester in Essex gave her a “second chance”. Sounds like something for a biographer to look into.

Gregoryno6
3 years ago

Australia begins to reap what it has sown…Australia has had more COVID death since the COVID vaccine was introduced in Feb 2021 and substantially more excess death from other causes.
Another day, another ‘Fucking hell, those vaccines aren’t so great after all!’ story.

Right side of history.jpg
Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Gregoryno6

As BBC, ABC and every other broadcasting corporation will no doubt report. The lying baskets.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
3 years ago
Reply to  Gregoryno6

Exactly as Australian dissidents predicted.

Throughout 2020, we kept asking, “What’s the exit strategy?” We pointed out that we couldn’t lock ourselves up forever, either internally or externally.

We were told that we were “waiting for the vaccines”. And then they came.

Gregoryno6
3 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

And the ‘exit’ provided by the ‘vaccines’ was a ride in the back of a hearse.
I could be wrong – and I probably am – but I anticipate our new Canberra clownshow going big on ‘climate action’ and lighter on The Dreaded C. Climate action is something that happens elsewhere – apart from solar panels on the roof it’s not immediately visible. Fauci junk juice is a different matter. Sitting at the dinner table, looking around at your vaccinated family, you’d be wondering by now what you’ve bought into.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

Unfortunately, the virus was playing the waiting game, too.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

Yep – the mighty monster that turned out to be, physically speaking, a sniffle for the vast majority. But as a metaphorical beast – off the planet.

Ceriain
3 years ago

What happened to all the news stories about young kids with Hepatitis? Did the kids get better?

I assume so since there’s no coverage any more. Funny, that is.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
3 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

I think, but don’t know, that there are swathes of such stories about health conditions which may or may not be linked with the injections.

We’ve had myocarditis stories, and now hepatitis ones. I believe the msm is not yet ready to launch a major news offensive – and some sections never will. But if stories begin to break in a way they think will sell newspapers or attract ratings, they are capable of dramatically changing their tone.

JXB
JXB
3 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

The hepatitis cases are not linked to the faux-vaccines but to adenovirus infections – known to cause hepatitis.

The question is why the surge in adenovirus infections in young children? The answer seems to be lowering of acquired immunity due to lack of contact because of lockdown restrictions.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  JXB

Yes, I was worried that might happen. Still criminal harming of children though.

pjar
3 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

Up to 222 now…

Another 25 British children are struck down with mysterious hepatitis | Daily Mail Online

One reason for reading the Mail, is that it seems to cover stories that others can’t be bothered with. If they could ditch the sleb news, it might even be a newspaper.

Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

Same with the nonsense about ‘nanobots’ in the vaccines – if it were true you’d think everyone would be aware by now.
“The MSM is covering it up”, say the usual suspects.

Everyone has died from the ‘vaccines’. Only they haven’t. An inconvenient truth.

DS99
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

No idea at all about nanobots but I’m intrigued you think that “everyone would be aware” if it were true.

Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  DS99

Yes, you could be right – I expect it’s all ‘Top Secret’ and the ‘teams of scientists’ who discovered the nanobots in the vaccines have ‘been silenced’.

ImpObs
3 years ago
Reply to  DS99

Anyone claiming the pics of “self assembling nanobots” are anything but micro crystals has not spent enough time looking down a microscope.

I’ve seen similar objects in drying samples of soil and AACT (compost tea).

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  ImpObs

Oh, no! Don’t tell me they’ve been at the tea as well…

ImpObs
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

comment image

John
3 years ago
Reply to  ImpObs

Samantha Bailey published a video of an analysis of the contents of one of vaccine preparations which purported to show nanotechnology assembling through a microscope. The shape that these formations took was strangely reminiscent of sodium or potassium chloride cubic crystals.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  John

You don’t think those nanobots are smart enough to do ‘camouflage’?

ImpObs
3 years ago
Reply to  John

Kevin McCairn (retired neuro scientist) has been all over the subject to debunk it, there’s ~8 groups claiming “nanobots” so far, he made a saline control sample and got very similar results.

I’ve not watched his latest stuff but he was busy linking all these groups together last time I did, Bailey doesn’t come out well, tho I can’t remember the details you can find his streams at mccairndojo.com

John
3 years ago
Reply to  ImpObs

I’ve only seen the one on Sam Bailey’s Odysee channel, and, although it’s a good few years since I did any chemistry, I recognised the distinctive cubic shape of <alkali metal><halide> crystals, given that the vaccine under test contains both potassium chloride and sodium chloride.

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  DS99

I don’t know about the nanobots, but in a world where Fauci can expect to get away with funding gain-of-function research in China that was against the law in the US, who’s to say what’s impossible?

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

You shouldn’t be so selective with your ‘inconvenient truths’. The last 28 months have had more than their fair share.

Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

Well, you can knock yourself out shouting “Dungford, Dungford, Dungford!” – which, frankly, just makes people look silly.

Even after another 20 years no-one will be able to prove anything one way or the other; people will still be claiming that without ‘the vaccines’ the spread of ‘Covid’ could have been worse, whilst others will be saying there was no pandemic, and Mr Tea will be still claiming viruses don’t exist at all.
My guess is that the likes of Drakeford will be spending more time with their pension tending to their gardens, and not in prison serving out a life sentence for ‘Crimes Against Humanity’.

And in another 20 years’ time Reiner Fuellmich will still be adding the finishing touches to his army of ‘lawyers’…. anyone had the feeling they’ve been duped?

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

Sorry. You lost me with the ‘Dungford’ bit. I must have missed that, since it means nothing to me.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

Dungford!

Some months back (well into 2021 at least), it was reported that possibly only a third of people in Romania had had the “covid ‘vaccines’ “. And then there are those African countries. Not to mention the Amish. I’m sure control cases will be available, despite their best efforts.

JXB
JXB
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

It us true thousands have died from mRNA non-vaccine injury, and tens of thousands have suffered non-fatal injuries, many serious.

That is true but clearly everyone is not aware as you are not.

Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  JXB

How do you know? Just because someone says so on a conspiracy website does not make it true.
Some ‘anti-vaxxers’ have been claiming airline pilots are dying at the joystick – when it’s pointed out there have been no plane crashes, they change their tack to “There’s a shortage of pilots because they’ve been injured or killed by the vaccines, hence the cancellations of flights”.
Always twisting and turning, never providing real, hard evidence.

No sign of nuclear world destruction yet either. You’d think on a Saturday evening Putin would have had enough to drink to be tempted to press the red button. No empty supermarket shelves yet, either.

Star
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

Putin rarely drinks alcohol. He might have a glass at a formal occasion – that’s all.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

Like that idiot Dawkins with his spurious assertion that there is a smooth gradient from zero light sensitive membranes to one, or that religions (apart from his own) are responsible for most of the wars in the world.

JXB
JXB
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

“Lipid nanoparticles are a vital component of the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, playing a key role in protecting and transporting the mRNA effectively to the right place in cells. They are next generation liposomes that use nanotechnology and are well suited to stable and efficient delivery of various therapeutics. 
Although mRNA vaccines have received much global interest as they are a new type of drug, lipid nanoparticles have held a recognised position in the mainstream of drug delivery systems (DDS) since the discovery of liposomes in the 1960s. Let us take a closer look at what liposomes are, their evolution and potential for use in other industries.”

Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  JXB

Talking about ‘nanobots’ not ‘nanoparticles’.

kate
kate
3 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

These discussions go on in the basement
https://staging.dailysceptic.org/todays-update/#comment-811997

The connection to adenovirus 41F is getting stronger. This is the adenovirus similar to the AZ vector virus. But there are other interesting hypotheses.

Third UKHSA detailed technical briefing out 19th May

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1077027/acute-hepatitis-technical-briefing_3.pdf
Adenovirus remains the most frequently detected potential pathogen. Amongst 197 UK cases, 170 have been tested for adenovirus of which 116 had adenovirus detected (68%). Amongst cases the adenovirus has primarily been detected in blood. On review of some of the adenovirus negative cases it was notable that some had only been tested on respiratory or faecal samples, and some had been tested on serum or plasma rather than whole blood (whole blood being the optimal sample). It is therefore not possible to definitively rule out adenovirus in cases

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

jabberjabberjabberjabberjabberjabberjabber said the monkey to the chimp…

aba daba monkey honeymoon at DuckDuckGo

Star
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

If there were ever a serious inquiry into the lockdown policy, one of the first-order questions it would be tasked to ask is “What kind of potential effects of the policy were considered before the decision was taken to impose it?” It’s not as if there isn’t a literature on the Chinese “Four Pests” campaign.

We can also observe that there has been no official effort to educate people about known and almost completely “do no harm” ways they can use to keep their immune systems in good shape.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago
Reply to  Star

It seems there was an effort to produce a rigged vitamin D trial (among other things)…

Gregoryno6
3 years ago

Geologists and their crystal opening.
Nothing like this, I hope.

Amtrup
3 years ago
Reply to  Gregoryno6

Lol One of the absolutely best ever “just desserts”/retribution scenes! 🙂

John Dee
3 years ago
Reply to  Gregoryno6

It’s rather striking that the set arrangers always manage to tether the ladies with a length of rope cleverly positioned so as to enhance their bosomly profile.
Or is it just coincidence?

huxleypiggles
3 years ago
Reply to  John Dee

It’s lurvley.

NeilParkin
3 years ago

Here is my comment about 100 genders.

Men come from Mars
Women come from Venus
The rest you pulled out Uranus…

Star
3 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Did you think that up? It’s hilarious 🙂 🙂 🙂

Encierro
3 years ago

The round up has missed the following headline.

Free universal testing over £15.7 billion in 21/22. Now the plan equal amounts for Monkypox.

testing.jpg
ImpObs
3 years ago

Monkeypox surge linked to end of Covid restrictions as virus finds new ‘niche’
– Post lockdown, viruses are increasingly circulating out of season,
appearing in new regions and causing unexpected disease, reports the Telegraph.

“new niche” did they say that because they couldn’t decide between impared immune systems, or contaminated adenovirus cultures?

JXB
JXB
3 years ago
Reply to  ImpObs

Repeat dosing of tens of millions of people with a product which does not provide immunity, but does weaken the immune system and…and… and… people are getting more opportunistic infections.

Well I’ll go to the foot of our stairs.

John Dee
3 years ago

[Monkeypox and other] viruses are increasingly circulating out of season, appearing in new regions… 

From what I’ve read so far, that should have been ‘nether regions’.

John
3 years ago

Teachers should not pander to trans pupils”, reads the main headline in The Times. In an interview, Attorney General Suella Braverman tells the paper that schools are under no legal obligation to do things like address trans children by a new pronoun or allow them to wear the school uniform of a different gender. She says teachers need to take “a much firmer line” and suggests that some schools are encouraging gender dysphoria by taking what she describes as an “unquestioning approach””

John
3 years ago
JXB
JXB
3 years ago
Reply to  John

Do we self-isolate concurrently or sequentially?

John
3 years ago
Reply to  JXB

Sequentially until you’ve had four negative tests.

ImpObs
3 years ago

It’s reported Rishi Sunak is handing out £400 to every household to help with energy bills, their total figure for this is £15 Billion, aparently this “will not effect inflation” either! LOL

Acording to Statista.com there are 28,081,000 households in the UK (2021)

15,000,000,000/28,081,000 = 534.17

who’s getting the extra £134.17 per household, a cool £3,767,627,770?

Enquiring minds want to know!

John
3 years ago
Reply to  ImpObs

Some people are getting a further £200, state pensioners and those on other benefits.

ImpObs
3 years ago
Reply to  John

thanks John

John001
John001
3 years ago
Reply to  John

The government ended the ‘triple lock’ with the effect that pensioners lose about £600 in the current year.

Calculated as follows …
‘New state pension’ £9,000 per annum
Inflation 10%
Actual increase in state pension 3%

Sum not paid but due = £9,000 x 7% = ~£600.

It’s staggeringly devious, to take away £600, offer over-65s what sounds like a roughly similar sum and claim that they’re really helping pensioners as much as they can.

JXB
JXB
3 years ago
Reply to  ImpObs

… there is a supply shortage… higher prices reduce demand so we don’t run out.

… Govt acts by giving people windfall cash to increase demand.

… Govt acts by taxation, regulation, sanctions, to prevent increase in supply.

What’s wrong with this picture?

Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago

No, Stella Creasy, a woman cannot be born with a penis, end of story.

Alkanet
3 years ago

Stella better start campaigning as Parliament has disproportionate number of “women”.

huxleypiggles
3 years ago
Reply to  Alkanet

Could the gender imbalance in Parliament not be cured simply by requiring the requisite number of inappropriately gendered MP’s to identify as women?

Alkanet
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Taken to its logical conclusion (not that its logical in itself) letting any human identify as anything that they clearly aren’t and giving their delusions the force of law or social acceptance means any imbalance real or imaginary can be swept away. How can that help right the wrongs that these same wokistas get so upset about? Too few women in top positions, easy get the top men to identify as women. Organisation staff profile too white, get some whites to identify as black. Too much salary disparity, get the lowest grades to identify as Associate Chief Executives on imaginary 6 £figure salaries. Who is to say asserting things that are demonstrably false isn’t just as valid as a woman with a penis?

AethelredTheReadier
AethelredTheReadier
3 years ago

Stella Creasy: ‘J.K. Rowling is wrong – a woman can have a penis’” 
I think there is a fundamental flaw in ‘our’ elected representatives in that very few of them seem to have actually had any real life experience outside the bubble of privileged education and politics. Reading about Stella Creasy’s background (university straight to think tanks, writing for ministers then a councillor job then MP then front bench) I get the distinct impression that her actual immersion in real life as lived by over 90% of the population is close to zero. She is a women with opinions, gold-plated due to her Oxbridge education. There are probably many in parliament who are the same. It shows how out of touch they are with real people and I feel that there needs to be a different method of selection. You can’t have people in positions of power and influence making decisions for the populace without knowing the populace.

huxleypiggles
3 years ago

Minimum age for MP’s – 35.

Must have ten years work experience in the private sector.

Time spent in public service “work” dies not count towards the 10 years.

‘Consultancy’ work does not count.

Work for MP’s does not count.

Work for family members does not count.

I am sure there should be other requirements and hopefully others can expand on this.

All the above assumes we retain our sovereignty of course. If Bozo signs it away all MP’s will be redundant naturally.

JXB
JXB
3 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Other requirement?

Must be self-supporting as no salary or expenses paid.

JXB
JXB
3 years ago

A woman can have a penis.

So can a horse. Does that mean a horse is a woman, or a woman a horse?

Clarification required.

Star
3 years ago

Who is the beneficial owner of the “superyacht” that went on fire and sank in Torquay harbour?

Not a pro-Kiev oligarch by any chance? Or, for a long shot, Tony Blair or Rishi Sunak? 🙂 There must be some reason for the D Notice that mainstream news editors have chosen of their own free volition not to speculate.

https://metro.co.uk/2022/05/28/devon-luxury-2000000-yacht-bursts-into-flames-in-torquay-harbour-16729141/

“One man who saw the fire, Joseph Barlow, told the BBC (…) ‘I heard a bang like a gun shot, from the harbour, followed by big plume of black smoke.’ “

Grumman
Grumman
3 years ago

nearly a decade of austerity under Osborne and Hammond, spaffed against the wall by an incompetent Johnson and a spineless Sunak. 65% tax rate on north sea oil, back to 1970s labour policies. From a Conservative government, with various spokesmen coming out to support him. May they rot in hell.