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Marcus Aurelius knew
11 months ago

“Elon Musk has vowed to spend “significantly” less time working for Donald Trump’s administration and focus on Tesla after profits plummeted to a five-year low, reports the Telegraph.” Oh, I thought Musk and everyone said that was fake news… Trump – pretty good Musk – not good at all Musk gets completely blown out of the water when the market enters one of its period weighing phases and fundamentals start to matter and the green charabanc falters and TSLA paper loses 99% of its current price to reflect the real value of the company, i.e. nothing more than a fancy logo for sale to a proper car manufacturer. Everything Musk does should be viewed through this lens. A very clever grifter he is, but it is yet to be proven just how much of his wings are made of wax. I maintain, Trump has figured him out, after initially falling for his line. Trump, in his time, has periodically played a totally stupid system of taxes and laws. Musk, on the other hand, has played everyone, in an extremely cynical and two-faced manner. There’s only so long that can last. The tide is going out, and Musk ain’t wearing any… Read more »

jimfahy
jimfahy
11 months ago

Nonsense from start to finish.

Marcus Aurelius knew
11 months ago
Reply to  jimfahy

Care to qualify that statement?

“period weighing phases”

I meant to write “periodic weighing phases”

As in the maxim, “the market is mostly a voting machine, but sometimes becomes a weighing machine”.

Lockdown Sceptic
11 months ago

Covid Jab Unsafe For Human Use – latest leaflet to print at home, deliver to neighbours, forward to your bad MP & friends online. Start a local campaign. Deliver 100 leaflets a week (5200 a year). Over 300 leaflet ideas on the link on the leaflet.

03b-Covid-Jab-Unsafe-For-Human-Use-MONOCHROME-copy
Monro
11 months ago

The French migrant returns deal is a total farce

Until Britain takes defence seriously, empowers the Royal Navy with strong rules of engagement, makes Britain indispensable to the forward defence of Western Europe, this country will get no change out of the eu on anything, least of all regarding France and immigration, fishing.

Strong defence pays for itself many times over, most particularly if the defence budget includes another Royal Yacht…….



Monro
11 months ago

Trump to let Putin keep land seized from Ukraine ‘Point three requires Ukraine to refrain from seeking membership of Nato’ First off, point three drives a coach and horses through the Helsinki Accords, to which the USSR was a signatory, agreed by the CSCE within which the Russian Federation is still a participating member state: ‘I. Sovereign equality, respect for the rights inherent in sovereignty The participating States will respect each other’s sovereign equality and individuality as well as all the rights inherent in and encompassed by its sovereignty, including in particular the right of every State to juridical equality, to territorial integrity and to freedom and political independence. They will also respect each other’s right freely to choose and develop its political, social, economic and cultural systems……They consider that their frontiers can be changed, in accordance with international law, by peaceful means and by agreement. They also have the right to belong or not to belong to international organizations, to be or not to be a party to bilateral or multilateral treaties including the right to be or not to be a party to treaties of alliance; they also have the right to neutrality. II. Refraining from the threat or… Read more »

CGW
CGW
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

You fervently promote the necessity for countries to have a strong defence force – and why not? But how should a country react when it is threatened by somebody else’s forces? NATO currently has only one enemy – Russia. If USA remains in NATO then China will undoubtedly be added to the short-list but Russia has been the number one target since the foundation of NATO. And it was Putin who at the time suggested to US President Clinton that Russia could join NATO, only for Clinton to be subsequently told by his advisors that that would be totally unacceptable: what would have been the purpose of NATO without an enemy? So how should Russia have reacted when threatened with placement of nuclear missiles aimed at its cities on its 2,000km border to Ukraine? How should Russia have reacted when its former citizens (citizens, mind you, not military) were being attacked daily by Ukrainian forces? How should Russia have reacted upon the West setting up peace agreements while knowing full well that those peace agreements were only put in place to provide more time for the West to train and equip Ukraine’s military forces? How should Russia have reacted on… Read more »

Monro
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

‘Putinversteher’ is German shorthand for those who rationalize Putin’s actions under the guise of understanding.  ‘Western leaders are now publicly criticizing Putin’s refusal to engage in meaningful peace talks. “It is urgent that Russia stops with the pretences and stalling tactics and accepts an unconditional ceasefire,” Macron commented recently…..Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated last week that Trump was not “going to fall into the trap of endless negotiations” with Moscow. Trump’s initial attempt to broker a Ukraine peace deal by offering Putin an attractive off-ramp has failed. He must now decide whether he is prepared to employ sticks as well as carrots. At present, Putin has little interest in limited territorial concessions and remains committed to the destruction of Ukraine as a state and as a nation. Crucially, he has been encouraged by Trump’s reluctance to maintain US support for the Ukrainian war effort. This has strengthened the Russian ruler’s conviction that he can ultimately outlast the West in Ukraine. In order to force a change of mood in Moscow, the United States must increase the costs of the invasion while undermining Russian hopes of military victory. This can be achieved by tougher sanctions measures targeting the Russian energy sector along with increased… Read more »

CGW
CGW
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

As a Putinversteher I not only understand Putin, I consider him to be one of the very few highly educated and intelligent politicians in the world, certainly topping any Western examples – or can you name an intelligent Western leader? Referring once more to the points I made above, why should Putin “engage in meaningful peace talks”, especially with Western leaders who have consistently and repeatedly broken numerous agreements with Russia in the past? Russia is certainly a great power – just look at the size of the country on any world map – but it is not a country “destined to challenge the West”: it is very simply a country the West unjustifiably continues to challenge and attack, also militarily. The West is incapable of simply treating Russia with the respect due to any sovereign nation. It is the West that continues to want to dominate and subjugate countries around the world: a very sad state of affairs. And the latter state is typified by your closing statement above: “And that means war with NATO”. What means war with NATO? The fact that NATO has been attacking Russia for the past 3 years? How about peace for a change?… Read more »

Marcus Aurelius knew
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

“This can be achieved by tougher sanctions measures targeting the Russian energy sector”

Because the existing sanctions have been oh so successful?

Free Lemming
11 months ago

All this talk about shame and resignations after the ruling against the mentally ill trans lot is a distraction. A distraction to shift the public consciousness away from the murderer and rape of our children by successive governments that are murdering and raping our country – for which there is no shame and no resignations. They’re throwing titbits to the masses to dampen a growing anger. Expect to be thrown more such titbits.

stewart
11 months ago
Reply to  Free Lemming

I think the whole trans thing is just a giant smoekscreen. Something unimportant on which to keep the masses squabbling and distracted while all the important stuff gets decided quietly out of sight.

Free Lemming
11 months ago
Reply to  stewart

Quite. They are committing treason, of that there is no doubt. https://open.substack.com/pub/freelemming/p/treason?r=1t3odl&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web

For a fist full of roubles

Trump to let Putin keep land seized from Ukraine”  I don’t think Trump is in any position to stop Putin.

Art Simtotic
11 months ago

Keir Starmer finally breaks silence on gender ruling” 

Sir Two-Tier needing a Supreme Court Beak to tell him what the rest of us worked out in nursery-school.

Monro
11 months ago

Trump to let Putin keep land seized from Ukraine Putin is in a ‘fork’ (forked), forced to the negotiating table through weakness. Ukraine’s economy is secure. Putin’s economy is in meltdown so he has to negotiate, which means a ceasefire. ‘Ukraine’s sources of external financing are secured until 2027. By contrast, Russia is in a potentially weaker position, as it is highly exposed to price volatility in global oil markets. Russia has been running down its National Wealth Fund to pay for the war, is locked out of international bonds markets through sanctions, and has become more import dependent since it launched the full-scale invasion despite the incentives that sanctions create to turn towards import substitution. A further downturn in oil market prices could lead to an acute balance of payment problem for the Russian regime.’  https://peacerep.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Russo-Ukrainian-War-The-Political-Economy-of-the-Present-Balance-of-Forces-DIGITAL.pdf But he cannot have a ceasefire without European military training teams flooding into Ukraine….. And, without a ceasefire: ‘Russia’s defense industrial base (DIB) cannot sustain Russia’s current armoured vehicle, artillery system, and ammunition burn rates in the medium-term. Russia’s recruitment efforts appear to be slowing such that they cannot indefinitely replace Russia’s current casualty rates…..Putin has mismanaged Russia’s economy, which is suffering from… Read more »

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  Monro

PeaceRep is a leading developer of PeaceTech and peace data!

CGW
CGW
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

Ukraine’s economy is secure. What ?! It is not secure one second without the massive financial support provided by the West. Its civil servants – not to mention its military – are all paid courtesy of USA, UK and EU. Ukraine’s population has been halved (?) by the exodus due to the war and war losses.

And Russia has sufficient customers around the world and more than just oil to sell, not to mention the fact that our Arabian benefactors will hardly support any drop in oil prices which is not to their benefit.

And what is Russia’s place again in the world’s economical ratings? Fourth? And how are Western countries doing?

Monro
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

‘The core metric for understanding this conflict is “money and people”: the mobilisation of financial resources and labour power through effective social organisation and institutionalisation to strengthen the capacity of the state.

On this measure, Ukraine shows considerable strength, though it is conditional on sustained external support.

The state capacity built during the war bodes well for its transition to civilian reconstruction.

Russia, by contrast, faces narrowing options: its resource-based model is approaching its limits due to the downward trend in oil prices, and the longer the war drags on, the more this creates a zero-sum logic between its civilian and military economy. The test of the regime’s brittleness is however “still to come” – and could take the form of how it handles a banking crisis.

he likely exit of the United States from the stage of Ukraine support does not make Ukraine doomed to defeat. But neither side have a viable theory of “total victory” at the present time, though there may be an argument that Russia’s economic challenges put Ukraine in a stronger position if the war does continue in a high intensity form into 2026.’

https://peacerep.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Russo-Ukrainian-War-The-Political-Economy-of-the-Present-Balance-of-Forces-DIGITAL.pdf

CGW
CGW
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

The core metrics for any conflict are money and power. Good luck with your beliefs! (But you really do not need to repeat them on a daily basis.)

Hardliner
11 months ago

Here’s the Government’s take on the Majestic Wines issue. It is basically a straight lie. The article also points out that not one Labour Cabinet member has ever run a business…scary

THE ALCOHOL DUTY REFORMS HAVE MODERNISED AND SIMPLIFIED THE DUTY SYSTEM, PRIORITISING PUBLIC HEALTH AND INCENTIVISING CONSUMPTION OF LOWER STRENGTH PRODUCTS.

“WE CONTINUE TO WORK CLOSELY WITH THE WINE SECTOR TO DRIVE GROWTH, SUPPORT HIGH-QUALITY JOBS AND IDENTIFY OPPORTUNITIES TO EXPORT THE UK’S FANTASTIC WINES ACROSS THE WORLD

huxleypiggles
11 months ago
Reply to  Hardliner

If anybody cares to wade through this garbage they will understand why Majestic have reacted as they have. How much time and therefore money, taxpayers money don’t forget, has this utter stupidity cost? We even have a paragraph detailing “Equalities Impacts.” And the copy I have quoted is the second half of the regulations there is as much again preceding this. A clearer example of the mindless, pig ignorant garbage that government is pissing about with. It’s enough to make anyone believe that this government is determined to destroy all businesses involved / relying on alcohol as a source of income. No, surely not… Proposed revisions Schedule 7 is amended so that the revised rates are: £9.61 per litre of alcohol in the product for duty on all alcoholic products less than 3.5% alcohol by volume £10.02 per litre of alcohol in the product for duty on still cider at least 3.5% but less than 8.5% alcohol by volume £10.02 per litre of alcohol in the product for duty on sparkling cider at least 3.5% but not exceeding 5.5% alcohol by volume £21.78 per litre of alcohol in the product for duty on beer at least 3.5% but less than… Read more »

Dinger64
11 months ago

“It’s not racist to criticise Islam”

That’s because Islam is a religion not a race! there are many white Muslims in the world
Point two: islamaphobia is an invented word, a phobia is a fear of something an example being spiders, if you have arachnophobia does this mean you hate spiders? no it means your frightened of them, phobia is a fear not hatred
How about Confusionismaphobia? does this mean we hate all Chinese?

Mogwai
11 months ago
Reply to  Dinger64

I don’t know why people don’t use the word ‘Anglophobia’ more, as this seems way more appropriate and accurate regarding what we’re seeing on a daily basis. Shamefully, this would apply also to many white English traitors;

”Hatred or fear of England or its people, culture, customs, influence etc.”

https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/anglophobia

EDIT: According to the definition in the link, ‘phobia’ can also mean ‘an aversion toward’ something, so perhaps it’s dependent on the context.

soundofreason
soundofreason
11 months ago

Local Covid lockdowns ‘made no difference’, study suggests” – Local lockdowns and regional restrictions did not change people’s behaviour during the coronavirus pandemic, a new study suggests, says the Telegraph.

Dr Chantal den Daas, senior lecturer in health psychology…

“It is really important to build an understanding of what could have been done differently and how we can effectively influence public behaviour in the future should we be faced with another public health crisis.

And right there is the problem. She should not be seeking to influence public behaviour.

A study into behaviours in the 1918 ‘Spanish ‘Flu’ published in 2007 included

Our analysis also suggests that individuals reactively reduced their contact rates in response to high levels of mortality during the pandemic.

People don’t need to be manipulated or coerced in an epidemic. The presentation of actual data concerning an epidemic is enough. People can then make their own decisions. Note one of the authors of that study: Neil Ferguson who in the infamous Report 9 concluded:

In the (unlikely) absence of any control measures or spontaneous changes in individual behaviour,…

huxleypiggles
11 months ago
Reply to  soundofreason

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/04/22/public-ignored-scotlands-covid-restrictions-study-suggests/

However, let’s not forget that none of these re-examinations are necessary – there was No Pandemic.

I wonder why there is so much fuss about the events commencing March 2020 all of a sudden? This publicity wouldn’t be linked to the upcoming matters due in July would they?

The next one?

Surely not.

CGW
CGW
11 months ago

Update on the prosecution of Reiner Füllmich: https://expose-news.com/2025/04/22/german-secret-service-dossier-reveals/.

For exposing the truth about the covid “pandemic,” Dr. Füllmich was under special surveillance since 2021, a German secret service dossier provided by a whistle-blower and presented to the court reveals.

The dossier specified that Füllmich was to be stopped “at all costs”; that “it is necessary to prepare a criminal case against Füllmich, [including the] collaboration of prosecutors and suitable third parties,” and recommending “the recruitment and involvement of trusted persons amongst Füllmich’s closest circle.”

After ongoing abuse and obfuscation, the court is now obstructing Dr Füllmich as he gives his final, closing statement.

Heretic
Heretic
11 months ago

‘If we want to unite the Right and change politics, we need to get behind Reform’

Well now, it seems Olukemi Olufunto Adegoke Badenoch’s relatives may be helping Reform unite with the Tories.

Reform UK council candidate helps Nigerians get UK study visas – while Nigel Farage demands crackdown and blasts UK universities for being ‘drunk on foreign money’ | Daily Mail Online

Notice how Reform candidate Christopher Adegoke hides his eyes behind sunglasses or an overhanging baseball cap, and keeps his mouth firmly closed, except for this one photo. Perhaps to conceal any family resemblance, or suggestions of nepotism?

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