News Round-Up
- “Government arms embargo on Israel faces legal challenge” – U.K. Lawyers for Israel has sent a formal letter to the Government threatening legal action unless it cancels the decision to suspend around 30 licences for the export of arms to Israel.
- “How Israel learned to fight Hamas deep under ground” – The 300 miles of tunnels beneath Gaza form a remarkable subterranean world – and call for military tactics never attempted before, writes Jake Wallis Simons in the Telegraph.
- “The BBC cannot ignore this shocking evidence of bias” – The BBC should not be allowing the perception to take hold that it is acting as a useful idiot of the enemies of the West, says the Telegraph in a leading article.
- “Keir Starmer slams Southport rioters” – Keir Starmer has blasted “racist” rioters who took to the streets after the Southport child murders and says they will not dictate Government policy, reports the Mail.
- “Racism? Poverty, drink and social media? We still don’t know why Britons rioted a month ago – and we need answers” – After all that violence, we face the choice that confronted Cameron and Thatcher: to seek real explanations or move blindly forward, says criminologist Tim Newburn in the Guardian.
- “Domestic abusers will be freed under early-release programme” – Two men who inflicted years of physical and mental abuse on their partners are among 1,700 prisoners to be released early from prison, reports the Times.
- “Europe has finally realised the enormous costs of mass migration” – Britain is the odd one out as country after country adopts harsh measures to control their borders, notes Daniel Johnson in the Telegraph.
- “Islamist terrorism is staging a barbaric comeback” – From Solingen to Moscow to Hartlepool, jihadist attacks risk becoming the new normal, warns Tom Slater in Spiked.
- “PM removed No.10 Thatcher portrait because she was ‘staring down at me’” – Keir Starmer removed a portrait of Margaret Thatcher from a No.10 study, saying he didn’t like the fact that she was “staring down at me”, according to the Mail.
- “What is the point of the Conservative Party?” – The members should be front and centre of what the Conservative Party does, and it should be delivering the conservatism they wish to see, says Christopher Howarth in Conservative Home.
- “The Labour Party does not understand the most basic rules of economics” – Labour believe it can interfere with prices and wages without any cost, writes Daniel Hannan in the Telegraph.
- “Charlie Mullins selling penthouse as he flees Britain before tax raid” – Britain’s richest plumber has put his £12 million London penthouse on the market as he prepares to flee Britain ahead of a mooted Labour tax raid, reports the Mail.
- “Keir Starmer is governing as the prisoner of Labour’s Leftist factions” – This isn’t Blair Mark II. Why isn’t the PM behaving with the courage his electoral win would seem to justify? wonders Janet Daley in the Telegraph.
- “Farage’s new boss: we’re serious about winning the next election” – The Reform Party’s new Chairman Zia Yusuf has set a goal of nothing less than making Reform the next government, writes Tim Shipman in the Times.
- “Don’t ditch the dukes” – The House of Lords, as Gilbert and Sullivan put it, “does nothing in particular and does it very well”. Until they have a proposal for something better, Brits should stick to what works, says Dan Hannan in the Washington Examiner.
- “Starmer under mounting pressure to U-turn over winter fuel cash cuts” – Keir Starmer is facing a major cross-party effort to kill off plans to cut winter fuel payments for pensioners, reports the Mail.
- “‘We’re going to be unpopular over winter fuel payment cut’” – Keir Starmer has declared his Government is “going to have to be unpopular” amid a backlash to his decision to cut winter fuel payments, says the BBC.
- “How you have paid over £2,000 more than inflation in water bills” – Ofwat’s forecasts reveal that customers will pay an average of £473 this year, £67 more than the £406 they would have paid if bills had matched inflation, reports the Mail.
- “What the AR6 auction results mean for consumers” – The Government’s AR6 renewable auction results are being hailed as a “great success”, but they’ll really just hike bills and benefit foreign investors, says David Turver on his Eigen Values Substack.
- “Electric vehicles contribute more to river pollution than other cars” – Heavier electric vehicles are a key driver of the nearly 20% of river pollution in England from road run-off, reveals the Mail.
- “Calls to free Lucy Letby are crass and insensitive” – The Health Secretary says that, unless the courts suggest otherwise, we should continue to regard Lucy Letby as a “convicted killer”, according to LBC.
- “800,000 children on ‘broken’ NHS waiting lists” – A review by eminent surgeon and independent peer Lord Darzi is expected to highlight how children are being let down by the health service, reports the Mail.
- “Working from home is good for the U.K. economy says Business Secretary” – The new Business Secretary has backed remote working, saying it is good for the economy because people are more productive when they are “happy at home”, according to the Mail.
- “Police Scotland confirms it allows rapists to self-identify as women” – Police Scotland has been slammed for allowing rapists to “self-declare” their gender identity to foster “a strong sense of belonging”, reports STV News.
- “Labour won’t close biological sex ‘loophole’ in Equality Act” – The Government will not carry forward plans to rewrite the Equality Act 2010 that were aimed at protecting single-sex spaces, says the Telegraph.
- “The week that sent trans fanatics into retreat” – After years of kowtowing to extreme ideology, Britain’s institutions are finally questioning some of the trans lobby’s most dangerous ideas, writes George Chesterton in the Telegraph.
- “British taxpayers foot £825,000 bill for study on monarchy’s future” – British taxpayers have footed an £825,000 bill for a study on the monarchy’s future in the Caribbean as anti-royal activists continue to agitate for its abolition, reports the Mail.
- “Young people will not fight to save a country they’ve been taught to hate” – The collapse in pride in our history will have serious consequences, warns Simon Heffer in the Telegraph.
- “When you separate boys and girls, there always has to be a reason. That reason can’t be set aside because a child is confused about their sex” – Helen Joyce, Director of Advocacy at Sex Matters, talks about the group’s new guidance for teachers on how to navigate trans issues.
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Met Office Fakes Hottest Day – latest leaflet to print at home and deliver to neighbours or forward to politicians, your new MP, your local vicar, online media and friends online.
Start a local campaign. We have over 200 leaflet ideas on the link on the leaflet.
https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/this-is-not-representative-democracy-starmer-it-is-tyranny/
Janice Davis at TCW pointing out the reality, that we no longer live in anything remotely like a democracy. We are now suffering out and out tyranny.
“I would go further, and state that their deceit is an attack on the basic democratic right to be fully informed about what any aspiring political party stands for and intends to implement. The reality is that any party can say whatever they like to get voted in, then do whatever they want, having duped the public. It means that misleading manifestos are not just misinformation, but actual disinformation, defined as false information which is deliberately intended to mislead.”
https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/jordan-peterson-gives-tommy-robinson-the-fair-hearing-he-deserves/
An excellent article covering the reasons why Jordan Petersen interviewed Tommy Robinson and good on him.
Whatever anyone says of Tommy Robinson he is a brave man with the heart of a British Lion.
Salute.
“Whatever anyone says of Tommy Robinson” is, for the most part, a simple demonstration of how the media is able to form our opinions of people at a deep level without informing us of anything real about them.
Whether the government will “Not grant a licence [for weapon deliveries] if it determines there is a clear risk that the items might be used to commit or facilitate a serious violation of international humanitarian law” in the case of Israel is one thing but the government is obviously not in the slightest bothered when it comes to Ukraine. As reported by the Russian foreign ministry (https://mid.ru/en/foreign_policy/news/1968052/), British companies delivered weapons preprogrammed for flight targeting an oil depot inside Russia. Is that not an outright act of war? More facts are emerging about London’s deep involvement in the planning and implementation of the Kiev regime’s terrorist attacks in Russia. In particular, the examination of the electronic components of the drones which Ukraine used in early August 2024 to attack a fuel depot in the Kamensky District, Rostov Region, has shown that the drones’ flight controllers were pre-programmed near the headquarters of Callen-Lenz GB in Salisbury, UK, and in the hangars of Safran Seats GB in the vicinity of Newport, Wales … The report continues, The concerned Russian agencies take Britain’s destructive activity and its relentless striving to escalate the conflict into account … We would like to remind you, though,… Read more »
The current version of the British government has gone rogue and that’s an understatement and is clearly working for other masters. The people of this country are now at best an irrelevance if not a sheer nuisance to be treated as deemed fit by Kneel’s overlords.
HMG should show greater clarity in all wars and aggression: Iraq2, Afganistan, Ukrine.
In the case of Ukraine I would like to see a clear UK and western statement that our objective is to enable Ukraine to recover all its territory.
Slava Ukraini.
One of the many fantasies that our government entertains, like reliable green energy and the NHS is world-leading.
https://campaignformediastandards.org.uk/asserson-report.pdf
The conclusion to this well researched 199 page report includes the following:
“6. Why does the BBC Exist
We have devoted this study to BBC coverage of the Israel-Hamas War. But we strongly
suspect that the problems we have highlighted are present in the way the BBC covers
other controversial and important topics.
If, as we posit, the BBC lacks the management tools and systems to monitor its
adherence to its own Editorial Guidelines, then it is most improbable that the BBC is
meeting those standards consistently in any field. Where it does meet them, it will be by
mere happenstance. That is no way to run a serious news organisation”
I am sure most on this site will agree.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rqDdzBnV5Q4&list=WL&index=1 “Do YOU want a Medical Tyranny?” By Ivor Cummins, related to an NI proposal by the bureaucrats.
Sceptic in Surrey or nearby? You are welcome to join us tomorrow Tuesday 10th