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NeilParkin
1 year ago

Matt Gaetz paid underage girl $400 for sex, U.S. ethics report finds

Poor girl (17..). Too young for the Republicans, too old for the Democrats…

NeilofWatford
1 year ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Don’t believe all you read from Democrat controlled sources.
Two sides to every story …

Monro
1 year ago

https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/putin-accuses-nato-creating-security-threat-russia-asia-2024-06-20/ ‘NATO is already “moving” there (to Asia) as if to a permanent place of residence. This, of course, creates a threat to all countries in the region, including the Russian Federation.’ Putin 2024 That from the man who has just signed a treaty with North Korea and imports drones from Iran….. For those who doubt that NATO’s role is defensive; to keep the peace: ‘In 2004, the US agreed to act as Lead Nation for the project, but with conditions. Concerned that Ukraine’s surplus Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW) and Man-portable air defense system (MANPADS) presented a potential security threat, the US wanted Ukraine to surrender MANPADS and SALW, for destruction. Phase 1 of the project would: Develop Ukraine’s ammunition demilitarization capabilities Destroy 25,000 tons of conventional ammunition Destroy 1,000 MANPADS plus 500 grip-stocks (firing mechanisms) Destroy 400,000 Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW) Phase 2 (2012-16) Destroy 366 000 SALW, 76 000 tonnes of conventional ammunition and 3 million PfM-1 (anti-infantry high-explosive) antipersonnel mines.’ Even Putin himself agrees: ‘We of course are not in a position to tell people what to do. We cannot forbid people to make certain choices if they want to increase the security… Read more »

WillP
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

Michael McFaul is an imbecile.
Russia and Korean have a shared border and a level of military cooperation has been going on sinice Korea. It’s not new.
NATO should have been wound up in 1993. It’s a giant money laundering scam for the military industrial complex. Russia’s Empire..oh fgs. What do you think NATO is exactly?

Monro
1 year ago
Reply to  WillP

NATO is a defensive alliance of Nations responsible for the ‘Long Peace’ in Europe 1945-2014.

North Korea is an international pariah, as, now, is Putin’s Russia, for the foreseeable future.

huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

Yawn.

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  Monro

I wish you a happy Christmas Munro.

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

Firstly, why should Putin not sign a (defence) treaty with a neighbouring state (North Korea) and why should he not buy war material from any place he can get it, if he needs it? For comparison, how many countries are members of NATO and where do they get their weapons from (and who is interested)? For those who doubt that NATO’s role is defensive …. Oh, come on – ask Libya and the old Yugoslavian states just how defensive NATO was. And just what is NATO doing in Asia? They should at least change their name. You have been reading the Kyiv Post again (https://www.kyivpost.com/opinion/43969): How I Helped NATO Destroy Ukraine’s Weapons. But you omitted to mention the reason for the destruction of the weapons: My first experience of Ukraine was in 2001. As the demilitarization advisor for the NATO Maintenance and Supply Agency (NAMSA), I ran a project to destroy anti-personnel landmines, in the Donetsk Chemical Plant, so that Ukraine could meet its “Anti-personnel Mine-Ban Treaty” obligations. Then, in 2002, the government of Ukraine asked NATO for assistance in destroying some of its huge surplus of conventional ammunition. Soviet forces, withdrawing from Eastern Europe, had dumped in Ukraine huge quantities… Read more »

Monro
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

‘Ladies and gentlemen, we have just concluded our meeting with the Secretary General of the North Atlantic Alliance, George Robertson, and we have discussed the most important issues of NATO-Russia relations. We believe that the potential established in Rome within the NATO-Russia Council is beginning to be implemented. That body conducts joint work to find responses to a broad range of threats to both global and regional security and, first and foremost, to the threat of international terrorism.

The recent tragic events in Moscow have become yet another tragic confirmation of the need for the world community to join efforts in combating this evil. In this connection, let me express our appreciation to Lord Robertson, Secretary General of NATO, for the support to the people and leadership of Russia given by him during those difficult days.

That solidarity clearly demonstrated that the “20” is exactly the type of instrument that is in a position to combine the political and real resources of Russia and NATO, with a view to strengthening peace and stability and to provide reliable protection to our citizens, protection against the threats of international terrorists.’

Putin 2002

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

And Putin 2024?

Monro
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

‘It is a different time now and Putin is not Stalin in many ways. But targeted killing has always been part of his system:

His accession saw a spiral of killings of his enemies or inconveniences to his power, from that of Galina Starovoitnova, the Duma member who promoted western democracy when he was still FBS director, to Anna Politovskaya, the investigative journalist, in 2006 and ex-deputy-premier and critic Boris Nemtsov in 2015, and famously the poisoning of his chief opposition Alexei Navalny in 2020.

While abroad dissidents and double-agents from Alexander Litvinenko to Sergei Skripal were targeted for murder with exotic poisons from the biological weapons laboratory.

Since the Ukraine war started, destabilizing and reshaping the secretive tournament of rivals and clans into a frenzied cagefight for money and power, the killing spiral has become unpredictable and widespread:

Bankers, oil executives, bureaucrats—and sometimes as a gruesome warning, their mistresses—have been murdered—thrown out of windows, drowned in pools, poisoned.

Many businessman who expressed skepticism about Putin’s war now found that their rivals—who may well have been FSB potentates—could forcefully grab their companies and sometimes liquidate them, too.’

Montefiore

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

How easy it is to write accusations, especially against a powerful leader with whom you are in disagreement. How much is true and how much is conjecture can only be affirmed by the individuals investigating each crime.

It is sadly the case that lists of government assassinations are prevalent in Wikipedia.

The Wikipedia table for Russia (i.e. post-USSR) lists 82 names, but they are people “suspected or confirmed” to have been assassinated by the government (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Russian_assassinations).

The list of Soviet assassinations (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Soviet_assassinations), dating back to 1918, names a meagre 34 subjects but there are claims that 60 million Russians were murdered or starved to death under the communist regime (https://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/USSR.CHAP.1.HTM).

The list of US assassinations (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_assassinations_by_the_United_States) numbers just 63 rows but, for example, there is just one row for ‘Viet Cong operatives’.

But when it comes to targeted assassinations, Israel surely leads all countries (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Israeli_assassinations). I gave up counting how many victims are listed.

How charming the world is that we inhabit, when it is the norm for our governments to assassinate whomever they wish.

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

How easy it is to write accusations, especially against a powerful leader with whom one is not in sympathy. How much is true and how much is conjecture can only be affirmed by the individuals investigating each crime.

It is sadly the case that lists of government assassinations are prevalent in Wikipedia: for USSR, for Russia, for USA and (by far the longest) for Israel.

How charming the world is that we inhabit, when it is the norm for our governments to assassinate whomever they wish.

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  CGW

Apologies for the duplication but DS has the habit of making inputs disappear – and obviously reappear after a while. I assumed the number of URLs was a problem and therefore rewrote my original input.

Lockdown Sceptic
1 year ago

Monday Morning Bagshot Rd 
& Nightingale Crescent, Bracknell 

401
Steve-Devon
1 year ago

Net zero ‘crisis’ prompts £42 billion merger talks between Honda and Nissan

Whilst there is much low level, unimaginative, simplistic thinking from politicians with regard to ‘Net-Zero’, it is hard not to conclude that some at the core of this scam knew exactly what they were doing and what the consequences would be. It took 100 years to develop the petrol/diesel (ICE) car industry to the position it has had in our economy. The idea that we could change and seamlessly move to electric cars (EVs) in a few years was ludicrous. I cannot believe that nobody saw that this attempt to rapidly shift to EVs was going to lead to a huge upheaval and major changes to the world economy and to the lives of ordinary people.
Is there nobody prepared to question this net-zero, EV lunacy? Maybe there is somebody? I guess we will see what develops in 2025? If there are sinister forces behind this net-zero scam then they are not going to give up without a fight.

Sceptical Steve
Sceptical Steve
1 year ago
Reply to  Steve-Devon

Sadly, the impractical timescales are a direct consequence of the unhinged (and unchallenged) predictions that, “unless we do something NOW”, the World will be reduced to a burning ember. Rational discussion left the building a long, long, time ago.

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  Steve-Devon

This chimes with a thought that’s been developing in my mind for a few years now.

The car industry is a major source of wealth for the UK. Directly in terms of taxes on vehicles (VAT, road tax) and fuel (VAT, fuel duty, carbon taxes), almost directly in terms of employment taxes (income tax and NI) and the tax (VAT) on the spending power it generates for the workers and less directly in terms of the supply chain manufacturing and employment taxes and the maintenance and repair and insurance businesses and their workers.

When fewer people buy new cars every few years what is the plan to replace this wealth?

There is a plan, right?

Purpleone
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

I think you know the answer to that question…

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  Purpleone

Sadly yes, I fear that I do know. There is no plan to replace that wealth – reducing it is an end in itself.

Is anyone aware of any industry or business which has a plan to exploit the new conditions after Net Zero? Something significant that some people will want to spend a year’s wages on every few years? (If you earn 60k and you buy a 60k car and trade in a car worth 40k you’re still spending a year’s wages. It’s just that you traded in a capital asset worth 2/3 of a year’s wage.)

Windmills and heat pumps are not what I’m talking about. Something that we buy and then pass on into a second hand or pre-loved market.

Purpleone
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

Ultimately I’d say new car ownership is dead outside of companies purchasing – the aim is likely everyone else leases… remember ‘you will own nothing and be happy?’ – the last thingy the banks want is people NOT paying for services on an ongoing basis… they take their % of every such arrangement

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  Purpleone

Yes, car leasing can still be taxed to raise revenue for government. The lease companies can effectively decide how long we keep a new car before replacing it and sending it into the second hand market. Once on the leasing treadmill it is difficult to get off again – like a drug pusher’s dream. But anti-car policies will still bite the government income – where’s the plan to replace tax revenue on vehicles?

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago

Net zero ‘crisis’ prompts £42 billion merger talks between Honda and Nissan

Confirmation of the merger talks raised fears about the future of Nissan’s UK operations. The company employs 7,000 people in the UK, including at its Sunderland car plant in Tyne and Wear, where it produces its Qashqai, Juke and Leaf models. It supports 30,000 jobs in the supply chain.

Steve Bush, national officer for automotive at Unite, said: “Unite will be monitoring the progress of the merger talks closely and seeking assurances from Nissan about any potential impact on its UK operations.”

Imagine the ridiculous situation if a company was not allowed to sell its products, the costs of making those products was higher than anywhere else, and the work force threatened to take industrial ‘action’ to ‘prevent’ job losses… No need to imagine – it’s happening.

Jackthegripper
Jackthegripper
1 year ago

Thank you to all the staff at DS that bring me my daily dose of reality each morning.
Wishing you and all it’s readers a Happy Christmas and New Year.

Myra
1 year ago

Clare Craig is taking the UKHSA to court to force them to release death/Covid vaccine data.
The date is set for 20th of February. The defense is using the arguments that the data should not be released because of ‘privacy’ and ‘potential distress to relatives of the deceased’….
Will be an interesting case.

Myra
1 year ago

Merry Christmas to you all and wishing everyone a wise, common sense 2025!

EppingBlogger
1 year ago

Farage does it again!

The unsupported rumour about Elon Musk giving Reform $3100 million has sent the political class into a tail-spin. It has terrified the Tories. It has deranged journalists and the Labour government’s anti-democratic instincts have been disclosed by their ideas for new laws on donations designed solely to suppress a newcomer political party.

They are beside themselves with anxiety about how to stop reform. If they can’t, many of them will not getthe peerage they need to make their wives or partners into ladies.

huxleypiggles
1 year ago

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2024/12/23/labour-is-creating-a-blander-more-boring-britain-to-please/

I have been making this point almost since the start of the Scamdemic. Good to see some bright spark in the MSM catching up.

FFS.

trev_the_geek
1 year ago

Cadbury’s loses royal warrant for the first time in 170 years

I have to say that Cadbury’s chocolate has lost its flavour. I doubt very much that it’s still ‘a glass and a half, in every half pound.’ It’s gone downhill since the American takeover – and I say that as someone who would only ever buy Cadbury’s.

I also remember the family sized bars at Christmas being about half an inch thick. Now they’re more like 2mm thin, and not much larger than the fun-sized packs of yesteryear.

huxleypiggles
1 year ago

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/12/23/voters-will-tell-musk-where-to-put-his-100-million/

No good spouting from your London bubble Mr Moore, we proles don’t seei t that way. Remind me again who funds Liebour.

Hardliner
1 year ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Actually I’m encouraged by what Ld Moore says. He, Hague, Heseltine and Clegg are always, reliably, wrong

huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  Hardliner

Fair enough.

klf
klf
1 year ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

My thoughts exactly.