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Lockdown Sceptic
1 year ago

One Wind Farm £1 Billion Subsidy – 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.

02a-One-Wind-Farm-1-Billion-Subsidy-MONOCHROME-copy
Monro
1 year ago

Reform just six points off becoming biggest party, says election predictor

The state of British politics:

Reform:

Kemi Badenoch is horrid
Putin is admirable
Send in the Royal Navy

Labour Party:

Mission driven government: ‘Missions are designed to set bold visions for change, inspiring collaboration across the system and society to break down silos and work towards a common goal. They represent the ultimate purpose of the government, and the story it aims to tell by the end of the parliament.’ Eh?

Conservative Party:

Reform are cheating. Systemic reform is required. ‘Watch this space.’

Liberal Democrats: Whatever they didn’t say.

Green Party: Don’t light fires, ever

We are comprehensively fecked.

Monro
1 year ago

Starmer’s Britain is like North Korea if it was run by David Brent Today’s ‘Let’s test the water’ popular poll. Which style of management is better? Upvote: Process and Procedure are the last hiding place of people without the wit and wisdom to do their job properly. There may be no ‘I’ in team, but there’s a ‘ME’ if you look hard enough. There’s no ‘I’ in ‘team’. But then there’s no ‘I’ in ‘useless smug colleague’, either. And there’s four in ‘platitude-quoting idiot’. Go figure. You don’t have to be mad to work here! In fact we ask you to complete a medical questionnaire to ensure that you are not. You have to be 100% behind someone, before you can stab them in the back. Remember the 3 golden rules: 1. It was like that when I got here. 2. I didn’t do it. 3. (To your Boss) I like your style. It’s the team that matters. Where would The Beatles be without Ringo? If John got Yoko to play drums the history of music would be completely different. If your boss is getting you down, look at him through the prongs of a fork and imagine him in… Read more »

Art Simtotic
1 year ago

Net Zero fines ‘set to drive up price of petrol cars’” 

…All hail to the the Kommissars’ 5-year plan to outlaw private motoring and dismantle the auto industry. Just think how the Politburo Teslas will have the M25 all for themselves, while working parties of proles slave away emptying gullies and filling in potholes with their bare hands to the tune of the Internationale booming out from the PA system sponsored by Alphabet under license from Microsoft. Drones funded by Lords Alli, Gates and Schwab to provide air supremacy.

Meanwhile God-speed to Politburo private jets flying on aviation gasoline adulterated with cooking oil cast-offs.

The People’s flag is deepest rainbow.

Arum
Arum
1 year ago
Reply to  Art Simtotic

Unfortunately, in the short term at least, it’s a win-win for the government. They put up the price of petrol cars, they slap extra taxes on flying, but people still pay. Because cars are so useful, because foreign holidays are so nice. The crunch will come when/if they actually follow through and make these things illegal. I wonder if they have actually made any plans for what happens then? (beyond their permanently relocating to the holiday home in Tuscany, that doesn’t count as a ‘plan’).

pjar
1 year ago

Asylum seekers ‘drain money from Dutch state for generations’

Pity the poor Dutch… they should take a leaf out of our book, where every immigrant adds immeasurably to the richness and culture of our nation, in so many ways, not least financially.

Or, so we’re told…

huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  pjar

Well “diversity is our strength.” Apparently.

Whoever coined the phrase was being quite cute, the “our” being the establishment. “Our” was never intended to represent the masses but they attempted to con us this was so and quite successfully I believe.

Myra
1 year ago
Reply to  pjar

The latest statement by the Dutch government is to cap the population at 20 million by 2030…. Current population 18.3. With current housing shortage, health care crisis, etc. etc….What could possibly go wrong?

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago

“Why Britain could face ‘Babygeddon’: Experts’ warning over birth rates” – Britain is running out of babies, and this is predicted to lead to catastrophes, including the collapse of the NHS and pension system, and the atrophy of education, writes Christopher Stevens in the Mail. The ‘problem’ is not so much a lack of babies, even though 2020 was a fairly slow year for the UK (most babies born in 2020 would have been conceived in 2019), 2002 and 1977 were ‘worse’. It’s also not that many more are dying. It’s also not that we’ve got too few births per female of child-bearing age. The birth rate was lower in 2002 and nearly as low in 1977. The ‘problem’ is that we’re living longer and spending longer in economically unproductive retirement. Society won’t accept that death is naturally inevitable. For example, if elderly people suffer heart attacks why in God’s name do we try to resuscitate? If I go through the pain and fear of dying why revive me and make me do it again later? Of course this is easy to say when I’m not in the heat of the moment. I believe it was Bob Hope who overheard… Read more »

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

The problem is partly that most of those that are born are called mohammed and will be brought up to hate Britain, britishness and the British.

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  Jack the dog

If the working-age population is not generating wealth then it can’t be taken in taxes and used to look after the elderly. People on benefits who could be working and generating wealth are most of the problem. Also elderly folk who did not prepare for their retirement by building up capital – but it’s too late to fix that one – we were told the lie ‘don’t worry, the state will provide’, but it can’t unless there’s new wealth to tax.

pjar
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

Apparently, over 50% of the population are net receivers of money from the exchequer, in immigrant communities it’s even worse? Take out receipts from ‘London’ and we quickly slide down the wealth table, from fifth richest in the world to third world status. Unless they’re all bright-eyed, bushy-tailed entrepreneurs coming to build companies that will add significantly to the economy (which seems unlikely on current evidence) why would you want more? And, even if they were all medics, come to save the NHS, their contribution to the balance of payments is negligible, at best, since their pay comes from the public purse anyway…

EppingBlogger
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

My father worked until over 80 and I did until 70 or 73 depending how you judge it. He started at about 6 and I was working all the time not at school from 10.

after age 50 I found it difficult to get job interviews. My wife was thwarted by a Riyal Society that demanded a degree for an admin job she was ideal for – clearly their way of legalised age discrimination, perhaps also to filter out non lefties.

We need a better arrangement for employers and workers so work changes can be made later in life without the difficulties presented by employment law.

transmissionofflame
1 year ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

My dad worked until he was 89 and basically no longer able to work for health reasons. I think it kept him in good shape physically, mentally and emotionally. He “retired” at the “normal” retirement age and did part time jobs for the next 25 years. It worked for him. I don’t know what I will do – I have no firm plans other than to keep working for as long as I find it helpful. I am lucky in that I can work part time if I want to, which I have started doing. We have quite a few staff working part time – some seniors and others who have made a lifestyle choice for other reasons. It works for us – and we want to keep good people.

pjar
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

This always mystifies me…

First of all, why is it apparently such a shock that people born in the baby boom 60-80 years ago are just now reaching their 60s and 80s? If only there had been some way to know, so that we might have planned for it. A census every decade, or something, perhaps?

And then again, those in their 60s and 89s will be dead soon, mostly in the next 20 years, or sooner with a decent cold snap… releasing all that money they’re hoarding.

So, why do we need to relentlessly add to the population? Even yeast knows perpetual growth is not sustainable.

We seemed to do perfectly well with the population we had 50 years ago. Indeed going even further back, in Victorian era, with a population of just 18 million we conquered and held territory across the globe…

Dinger64
1 year ago

Why should such a piffling amount of snow make the news headlines? Its winter ffs!

huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  Dinger64

I couldn’t agree more Dinger. Manchester Airport is shut apparently and I doubt there is more than a dust covering at Ringway. I suppose the fear factor has to be invoked at any and every opportunity.

Absolute Bollox.

soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  Dinger64

Ah, well, you see, we weren’t expecting it because global boiling.