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Lockdown Sceptic
1 year ago

Tuesday Morning Bagshot Rd & Rectory Lane Bracknell


601
pjar
1 year ago

Who can doubt that Labour’s application of 20% VAT on private schooling is the right thing to do?

Nobody who can afford anything better than the state provides should be allowed to have it without penalty.

We must, in 2025, extend this thought process to all other areas of society, penalising people (who after all will all be Far Right bigots) who seek to have anything that others cannot, be it cars, holidays, houses, healthcare or more than subsistence levels of food.

Happy New Year!

Old Arellian
Old Arellian
1 year ago
Reply to  pjar

If they’re reading “Declined” we may get there a lot sooner, which terrifies me.

pjar
1 year ago

Like the SDP, or indeed the risible Change UK, Reform’s biggest challenge will be developing properly thought through policies and credible candidate selection in the volumes required to have any effect in an election.

Musk’s purported ‘bung’ of £100m, dwarves Vince’s mysterious donation to the party likely to add to his already considerable wealth, and are far greater than other fledgling parties have ever enjoyed so might help.

Provided that safeguards are put in place, to prevent spivs skimming from the pot, there is hope that they might build something worth voting for by the time an election comes around…

Then, all they’ll have to do is work out how to bypass the same Civil Servants and judiciary that scuppered anything the Tories tried to do, and we’ll be home dry.

DiscoveredJoys
DiscoveredJoys
1 year ago
Reply to  pjar

Implement a version of the Trump Schedule F plan. Senior Civil Servants who operate in a political environment can be fired at will by Parliament.

That will make all the Humphries and blockers think twice.

huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  pjar

The Davos Deviants will seek to ensure that another election does NOT take place.

EppingBlogger
1 year ago
Reply to  pjar

A purported bung would surely be one that has happened in secret or is about to happen. According to those most well positioned to know, no such proposal has been made.

While it is clear that Reform will be held to a higher standard than Uniparty on candidate selection and policies it must not be cowered by criticism.

Candidates for Uniparty, elected representatives and their advisers are not widely judged as examples of competence, propriety, charm or honesty.

On policy the key will be to avoid excessive detail. That would bring a charge of pretentiousness and niggling criticism of the detail. Stick with the big issues and specific policies to address them. Add in more general objectives and values with clear but not suffocating briefs for candidates.

Remember the socialists and their green branch operation have taken over public policy and discourse without coherent policies and with weak candidates.

Monro
1 year ago

What really happened in Wuhan Can we just get this straight? ‘….went on to kill more than 20 million people and devastate the education, economics and mental health of many more.’ No. In fact, we have no idea how many people actually died from Covid. What we do know is that the average age of death from covid in Britain was almost exactly the same as the average age of life expectancy. We also know that all cause mortality for 2020/21 was simply that of a bad flu year. ‘Life expectancy 78.4 and 82.4 years respectively in 2008-10. 2020 life expectancy Males 78.5 years females 82.6 years.’ Covid: Males 79 females 82.5 Entirely avoidable lockdowns did everything else……. ‘What could have and should have happened? The world should have been told the truth.’ Yes ‘It might still have been too late, but there was a chance it could have been stopped.’ No It was a highly contagious, aerosol transmitted, fast mutating common cold coronavirus. It could not have been stopped. ‘What is probably right is that just as with SARS there’s probably much stricter guidelines in mainland China for a case to be considered positive. So the 20,000 cases in China… Read more »

Jack the dog
Jack the dog
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

Yes, quite right, I don’t really understand why Ridley is still banging on about this.

The lab leak/ cover-up stuff is now mainstream.

What does still require attention is the insane reaction of western governments and the globalist agencies, which is what did the damage as well as ushering in a new epoch of global digital tolitarianism.

But basically Ridley is a normie so not holding my breath.

Joss Wynne Evans
Joss Wynne Evans
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

The estimate circulating of 20 million worldwide casualties to date is an estimate of deaths arising from the totality of the virus outrage, being largely from the administration of the so-called vaccines and not from a virus that may or may not ever be isolated. Flu is not genocide.

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago

“Terrifying ‘quad-demic’ alert as NHS top doctor warns U.K. is set for ‘worst year ever’ for flu – and predicts surge will get worse” – NHS National Medical Director Prof. Sir Stephen Powis warns that the worst of Britain’s tidal wave of flu is “yet to come”, according to the Mail. Thanks for the warning Sir Stephen. What have you done or do you propose to do about it? So once again the NHS is un-prepared for winter. Perhaps it’s come at an unusual time of year? No, that can’t be it. Ah! I have it: we’ll blame it on unusual winter colds and ‘flu and silly people socialising around Christmas and New Year – ‘cos that’s never happened before. I’ve posted some of this stuff before but I think it’s worth repeating. ___ Below is a chart of weekly any-cause death *registrations* (note, not dates of death occurrences, or deaths caused by any specific disease) in England and Wales where the number deviates from an expected number calculated from a long term 2011-2018 baseline. We can argue about the methodology used to derive the expected baseline as much as you like but nearly everyone agrees that something unusual started… Read more »

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

Oops. That last chart was supposed to be:

comment image

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

Key point that I didn’t have room for above:

We can’t stop an epidemic. But we could keep people warm – assuming we don’t do something stupid like stopping an anticipated pension benefit with less than half a year’s warning.

Also more people die in the colder months than in the warmer months. This is true even in warm places like India.

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

If you look at your UK data going back 10 years, you will notice that there is always a maximum number of deaths in January/February (the coldest period) of each year, never in March or April. So what happened in 2020? If you think there was a world-wide epidemic, as declared by the WHO on 11th March 2020, then you need to explain why there was no such peak in deaths in, for example, Austria, Germany, Romania and Slovenia, despite the then high exchange of travellers between UK and Europe. Also, how is it possible for a respiratory epidemic to become global in March, when this is the hottest time of the year in the southern hemisphere? There were high April 2020 mortality peaks in, for example, France and Italy, so what is the explanation for the differences between neighbouring countries? In my opinion (and backed up by Denis Rancourt’s analysis of mortality data from 125 countries), the deaths were largely the result of how individual countries reacted to WHO’s announcement and, in particular, how drastically they implemented the treatments required by WHO for those deemed to have ‘Covid-19’. Of course, a country with a highly unified healthcare system, such… Read more »

NickR
1 year ago
Reply to  CGW

Close to 70% of all hospital patients were kicked out of their hospital beds in the middle of March 2020.
Deaths in hospital actually fell through the lockdown but deaths ‘at home’ surged.
Hospital bed occupancy also fell. Hospitals primarily felt full because staff stayed off & beds spaced out.
I’ve never seen it, but an analysis of the fate of those hospital exiles would be interesting. Many/most were elderly vulnerable, scared, subsequently locked away. I’ve always suspected that that’s where many of the deaths came from.

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  NickR

No argument, but no treatment is also treatment, so to speak.

According to the book ‘Virus Mania’, there is overwhelming evidence for the theory that in these latter countries [Spain, France, England, USA] it was primarily the mass and experimental administration of preparations such as hydroxychloroquine, Kaletra and azithromycin that caused countless people to die prematurely.

With regard to the NHS, Midazolam also springs to mind.

Monro
1 year ago
Reply to  NickR

Probably you already saw the Amnesty International report into care homes and hospital clearances 2020?

https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/press-release/2020/10/uk-older-people-in-care-homes-abandoned-to-die-amid-government-failures-during-covid-19-pandemic/

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  CGW

March 2020 was the point at which the NHS stopped caring for us and instead we were asked to care for the NHS,
April was when the ludicrous public pan banging started.

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  CGW

UK data going back 10 years – or so.

comment image

I think this is what you mean with the seasonal peaks and troughs. The red line is my calculated ‘expected’ number of death registrations. Where you see a gap between the red and the blue we have fewer than expected deaths and where the blue appears above the red vice versa.

Another way of looking at it is in annual terms:

comment image

Here we can see the terrible toll of 2020 offset by a preceding dip in 2019. 2019 was benign and we went into 2020 with more frail people than usual.

Yes. It was an epidemic and the UK had more than usual numbers of vulnerable people.

Why didn’t Germany get a March peak? I don’t know – did they perhaps just have the usual number of very frail people?

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

Bad form to reply to myself but,

the terrible toll of 2020

is sarcasm.

It was so bad it was nearly as bad as 2008!

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

All your work is excellent, I am not questioning it at all. Yes, there are ‘good years’ and ‘bad years’ concerning how many primarily old people die each year (generally around 1% of the population dies in any country). If there is a bad flu, as for example in 2018, then larger numbers die, resulting in smaller numbers of frail people dying the following year. Sometimes this so-called ‘dry tinder’ effect means that there can be low numbers of deaths for two or three years in succession, rarely longer, I believe. I have not looked at all this stuff for ages but, just to outdo you (!), I have appended mortality data for England going back to 1838. England’s population has been steadily growing – you see the two dips caused by the two world wars – and I plotted the so-called crude mortality rate as well as the age-standardized mortality rate: these data were taken directly from ONS sources (if I remember correctly). Mortality was generally on the decrease since 1838, as one would expect with the advance of better living conditions and medical care. The interesting point is that, as you noticed, despite so many deaths in the… Read more »

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  CGW

Thank you for your good words. Just a few last thoughts: I don’t think winter 2017/18 was a bad ‘flu year – I think it was cold weather that boosted the death rates. I think that usually a bad year follows a good year. Frail people being still alive when the usual bugs come around the following year – rather than deaths being brought forward by a bad bug. Usually. But not a completely hard and fast rule. I think early 2015 was part of an ordinary ‘flu year but winter 2013/14 was unusually mild which left ‘dry tinder’ for the next winter peak. I do think there was a Covid bug and it did spread around the world. It was not very deadly. I do think it leaked or was released from a lab. If it was a leaked bioweapon research project it must have been a severe disappointment to its creators. I do think it mutated/changed and we in the UK got Original, Alpha (Kent) and Delta (Indian) varieties before it changed to nothing very much at all. It was not very deadly – did I say that already? Reports of death rates in the UK do not… Read more »

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

The way old and dying people and the bereaved were treated was disgusting – and pointless.

You are so right! And good that you feel better.

Have a good 2025!

Monro
1 year ago

The moments that made 2024 a year we’ll never forget

The DT forgot the most significant moment of all, the first ever invasion of a nuclear power:

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2024/08/17/ukraine-invasion-russia-biggest-threat-to-putin-authority/

Infiltration
On August 4, Ukrainian soldiers began infiltrating Kursk Oblast with the help of the Special Operations Forces

Main assault
On August 6, Ukrainian fighters crossed into Russian territory with tanks and armoured vehicles

Putin’s response was to deploy troops from another country, North Korea, turning his invasion of Ukraine into a World War.

‘Dear Song Ji Myong, my closest comrade in arms, celebrating his birthday here on Russian land, away from our beloved Choson (North Korea) and the embrace of his affectionate father and mother.’

Jong Kyong Hong, Dec. 9.

The letter was not delivered.

‘DEPUTY PRESS SECRETARY SINGH: In terms of uh North Koreans in in Russia, you probably heard that the white House recently announced that approximately 1,000 DPRK soldiers have either been killed or wounded in the Kursk region. That’s our assessment as well. What we’re seeing right now is that the assaults that the DPRK soldiers are launching within that Kursk region are proving to be ineffective……..approximately 1,000 casualties that they’ve taken on.’

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  Monro

I dispute that “we’ll” never forget. You, maybe, but certainly not me, or were you using the royal we?

godknowsimgood
godknowsimgood
1 year ago

It’s Alex O’Connell in the Telegraph using the words “…we’ll never forget”, not Monro.

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  godknowsimgood

My comment stands.

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

And just how sane was the ‘first ever invasion of a nuclear power’? And still no proof of North Korean soldiers, who apparently die in their thousands and disappear at the same time. One North Korean was supposedly captured but then died (and disappeared). Other dead Koreans supposedly had their faces burned by the Russians to avoid identification – what a lot of nonsense. And all simply to justify use of US/UK long-range missiles against Russia. But as long as the fighting continues …

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

Not sure if it was this one but a text supposedly written by a North Korean was identified as not being authentic. If there are so many North Koreans openly fighting in Kursk, there must be so many possibilities of proving it. Unclear videos taken far off and hand-writing samples are not proof of anything.

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  Monro

It starts “Well my sources in the Ukrainian military…”. Well that does rather colour what follows. If anyone considers that was evidence then their standards must be extremely low – laughably low IMHO.

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

We all know that US and South Korean news sources are pushing the idea that – shock news, how dare they? – North Koreans are fighting in the Kursk region. Why the propaganda? To justify Biden and Starmer pushing the Ukraine debacle closer to the nuclear edge by allowing Ukrainians (of necessity with direct US and UK assistance) to fire long-range missiles into Russia. Clearly, the recent mutual defence agreement means that North Korea would be justified in supporting Russia in Kursk and why should they not support Russia, considering how many countries (36?) are openly and frequently providing financial and military support to Ukraine? The whole outrage at the idea of North Koreans fighting in Russia is utterly ridiculous. But how helpful would it be to Russia if suddenly hundreds or thousands of North Koreans began wandering around the battlefield? In particular, North Koreans are reported to generally suffer from chronic malnourishment – although I am sure Kim Jong Un looks after his closest troops – and are probably physically less impressive than their Russian or Ukrainian counterparts. Finally, the Russians are doing very well on their own and I imagine they are also very keen to continue doing… Read more »

Jon Garvey
1 year ago

Why is Israel being blamed for the battle of Kamal Adwan Hospital?

Apologists for Hamas seem to follow a semi-logic I find hard to comprehend. It’s not that they deny Hamas fighters are in the hospital (usually), or that such putting of civilians in harm’s way is wrong (though “war-crime” is usually not conceded).

But the argument seems to be, “Sure, they shouldn’t put fighters in hospitals, but that’s no excuse for Israel to disrupt the hospital’s work by evacuating the patients.”

Quite apart from the ethics of fighting a war behind civian human shields, I’ve worked in big district general hospitals, and can vouche that they do not have spare barracks capacity or an unoccupied defensive centre.

If you stationed a battalion of 450 squaddies in Poole General or Addenbrookes, even if they weren’t firing out of the windows or stealing the patients’ food, I can tell you that no useful medical work would be happening in the hospital. Evacuating the medical staff and patients would be the priority, as the hospital managers are unlikely to have a contigency plan for evicting heavily-armed men.

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon Garvey

Battle? What battle? You are quite right in saying that no hospital would tolerate or could afford to have fighters in its midst – and especially not a hospital bursting at the seams with terribly mutilated people and suffering from an extreme lack of all kinds of medical support. You may have missed the open letter signed by 99 doctors to Biden demanding a ceasefire in Gaza and describing the situation there: https://www.gazahealthcareletters.org/usa-letter-oct-2-2024. They particularly note: We wish to be absolutely clear: not once did any of us see any type of Palestinian militant activity in any of Gaza’s hospitals or other healthcare facilities. The Israelis have killed over 500 medical workers, from ambulance drivers to hospital staff, not to mention over 200 reporters, all with the aim of continuing the ‘ethnic cleansing’ with minimal international reporting. A ‘new’ report by the UN Human Rights Office documents 136 Israeli attacks on 39 medical facilities – and that just up to the end of June 2024 (https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/documents/countries/opt/20241231-attacks-hospitals-gaza-en.pdf). https://www.youtube.com/@DemocracyNow reported In Northern Gaza the director of the besieged Kamal Adwan Hospital says five medical workers were among 50 people killed in Israeli strikes near the hospital. Israeli forces have since stormed the… Read more »

chesterbear
chesterbear
1 year ago
Reply to  CGW

The smell of BS is strong in this one

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  chesterbear

Are you sure the smell is not originating elsewhere?

CGW
CGW
1 year ago
Reply to  chesterbear

Prove me wrong, please. Are you saying the 99 US doctors are liars? Are you saying everything in Gaza is fine and all Palestinians are well nurtured and in good shape? Are you saying all the photographs of massive destruction are a Hollywood film set? Are you saying the Israelis have opened negotiations with Hamas, the former now suddenly caring about the demise of the hostages?

You may have heard that Israel bombed Syria’s naval fleet and all weapon storage areas in Syria to complete destruction, that Israeli forces are marching into Syria: even mainstream media has reported that. Also that Israel continues to bomb and (attempt to) invade Lebanon, despite the existence of a supposed cease-fire: also widely reported. You have probably heard that Israel is pushing USA to attack Iran, as a prime player in the ‘Axis of evil’: Israel cannot wait for Donald Trump to set up in office. Are all these Israeli military actions going to result in peace and a general love of Israel in the area, or are they more likely just to create more lasting enemies? What do you think?

EppingBlogger
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon Garvey

Likewise if the MoD built shelters, operations rooms, server farms and arsenals beneath the hospital or in its grounds the staff would know. If tunnels were built linking hospitals, schools snd the international border the staff would know.

if troops used these facilities to attack a neighbouring country, kidnapped its citizens and brought them to the hospital basement staff would know, especially the ones who took part in the operation.

Jon Garvey
1 year ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

Actually, the staff would probably assume it was another set of DEI facilities weeding out white supremacists. Less so in Gaza.

NeilParkin
1 year ago

Terrifying ‘quad-demic’ 

Is that a ‘quad-boiling-demic’..? You can always tell from the language if its bullshit. For a start, these top guys in the NHS are appointed to ensure that we meet whatever health challenge there may be. Winter flu isn’t an unknown phenomena, so why are they treating it like its a complete surprise. We pay you a lot of money. I dont want to hear your carefully prepared excuses as to why you have failed. Do your jobs, ffs.

Monro
1 year ago

https://www.rferl.org/a/war-talks-peace-russia-ukraine/33258279.html In November 2024, World War 3 commenced. The North Koreans sent roughly a division’s worth of troops from the North Korean 11th Corps, North Korea’s special forces. By November, Ukraine’s general military staff was reporting they were already facing squads of North Koreans in the Kursk region. ‘When detecting a drone, you need to create a trio (three people), while the one who lures the drone keeps a distance of 7 meters, and those who shoot — 10-12 meters….If the one who is luring stands still, the drone will also stop its movement. At this moment, the one who is shooting will eliminate the drone’ Jong Hong Jong, 09 Dec 2024. But prospects for peace in 2025 are good. ‘When we talk about changes in the mood of Ukrainians, I would say that our expectations have become more realistic. We now see that the war may drag on, and the number of Ukrainians who believe victory is possible, but let’s say in two years, is growing. The number of people who understand what victory means differently is also increasing. A survey conducted by the Ilko Kucheriv Democratic Initiatives Foundation on the prospects for starting peace talks showed that 73%… Read more »

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  Monro

Yet another totally vacuous statement by the master of spin Budanov.

Monro
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

“Europe’s response to any cease-fire agreement will be critically important — – both for Ukraine and for themselves,” Ruth Deyermond, senior lecturer in the Department of War Studies at King’s College London, said in written comments to RFE/RL.

“With many countries dealing with political turmoil at home (often stoked by Russia), they may be tempted to treat this as an end to the conflict and an opportunity to reset relations with Russia. That would be an enormous mistake,” she wrote. “Russia will continue to pose the most serious and immediate conventional and non-conventional threat to European security.”

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  Monro

There will be no cease-fire agreement so the point is moot.

Monro
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

‘In September, U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump said that Russia would not be able to fight at low oil prices. He said that when oil costs $100, Putin can fight, and when it costs $40, the war will end. Trump also said he could cut oil prices in half within 12 months of taking office.’

Scary…….

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  Monro

Unfounded allegation by Ukrainian special forces. Not very convincing.

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  Monro

See my dismissal of this above where you also posted it. You must be getting desperate or forgetful.

Monro
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

‘And in one piece of drone footage a DPRK soldier accidentally shoots a comrade as he tries to take down a drone. 
Ukrainian forces found a note on another dead North Korean soldier which reveals he was a member of the special forces.
The soldier wrote how he had been sent to fight against Ukraine for “ungrateful actions” towards Kim Jong Un and hoped to regain the party’s trust.
“The sins I committed are unforgivable,” he wrote. “But my homeland has given me a path to rebirth, a new start in life. Now I have no choice but to regain trust’

EppingBlogger
1 year ago

In court cases anything in a file is disclosable. That includes postIt notes, doodles, sandwich orders written on the back or in the margin and anything else.

When I ran compliance for a regulated business we audited files and did our best to train staff not to write informal messages. In one case a well paid senior technician had written an abiusive remark about a US client. If that file had been disclosed in a US court it would have detracted from any case we made and might have added to any damages by a multiplier.

Blair’s attempt at cheating does not work and civil servants should not try to avoid disclosure under FOI. If they destroy the Post-It notes they are guilty of serious administrative fault and would not be able to fully justify the reasoning (sic) for any policy or administrative decision.

EppingBlogger
1 year ago

Harsher sentencing will now be imposed in Ireland if hatred towards a protected group can be demonstrated, reports the Irish Times.

Are Protestants and British citizens protected groups?

Jack the dog
Jack the dog
1 year ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

A rhetorical question of course.

We are never protected.

We are everybody’s enemy to be oppressed and dispossessed, my values and achievements count for nothing, and you know what?

I no longer care, I will go my own way they can all f-f-f-fade away.

Old Arellian
Old Arellian
1 year ago
Reply to  Jack the dog

Preferably “on the road to hell”

Heretic
Heretic
1 year ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

Well and bravely said!

Joss Wynne Evans
Joss Wynne Evans
1 year ago

For those of us who wish to read it, the Telegraph remains the shell of a once proud title. The news Round-up here, without links to articles sitting behind the DT paywall would today, as so often is the case, be pretty thin.

The Telegraph is as much an enemy of free speech as the lovely Ms Reeves. I have the scars to prove it, as do many others. If you can get their pieces on here without the paywall, super. If not, please find other material. There is otherwise a great deal out there worth reposting.

Old Arellian
Old Arellian
1 year ago

So much doom and gloom but Scousese and Dicaprio made me laugh out loud. Thank you Stevo Stonko!

Heretic
Heretic
1 year ago
Reply to  Old Arellian

Me, too! Thanks to Stevo Stonko! 🙂

Heretic
Heretic
1 year ago

Shocking news today, but good news for Israel, which won’t have to worry about attacks from Syrian territory by the new Jihadist Rulers.

“Why’s that then?” you ask.

Because this:

Hal Turner Radio Show – Al-Jawlani, Head of HTS That Overthrew Syria President, is Jewish . . .

“According to Israel’s YNET News, Abu Muhammed Al-Jawlani was born Yonatan Avi-David, and is a Mossad Mole.” 
 
“He adopted the fake identity Abu Muhammed Al-Jawlani and became the head of the International Terrorist Group Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS).” 

“The story above, from YNET News in Israel, published August 27 of the year 2013, reveals the ugly truth.”

“Clearly, this is why Jawlani and all of his underlings, who are in the process of installing themselves as “officials” in the new Syrian “government” (they overthrew the old one) have made clear “Syria will not be a place from which Israel is attacked.
All the troubles with “Rebels” in Syria?  It was Israel all along.”

Mind-boggling.
(Link from Heroic Jewish Henry Makow’s website)