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The Daily Sceptic
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News Round Up

by Jonathan Barr
1 April 2021 1:55 AM

  • “Covid vaccine passports would be un-British, says Sir Keir Starmer” – The Labour Party leader has told the Telegraph that if “we get the virus properly under control, the death rates are near zero, hospital admissions very, very low, that the British instinct in those circumstances will be against vaccine passports”. This is either the first time the Leader of the Opposition has actually opposed a Government Covid policy or an April Fool
  • “Scotland’s unscientific mishandling of Coronavirus” – A letter published in Thinking Scotland from Douglas Brodie to all members of the Scottish COVID-19 Committee, pointing out that the “cure” of ineffectual, never-ending lockdowns is worse than the virus itself
  • “100,000 homeowners at risk of repossession as banks withdraw COVID-19 support” – From today, the Telegraph reports, lenders will be able to resume repossession proceedings, putting many borrowers at risk
  • “Lloyd’s of London boss dismisses calls for workplace Covid passports” – According to the Telegraph, John Neal, the CEO of Lloyds, reckons that by the time workers return to offices a significant proportion of them will have been vaccinated and “we’ll probably be very close to herd immunity”
  • “Vaccine certificates are ‘ID Cards on Steroids’” – Writing for politics.co.uk, Ian Dunt – yes, the ultra-lockdown zealot – argues that vaccine certificates could “constitute one of the most fundamental alterations between the individual’s relationship with the state in the modern period”
  • “The many scandals of the PCR test: Part 2” – The second part of Sonia Elijah’s investigation of PCR testing for the Conservative Woman examines the influence of the Corman-Drosten paper that established the testing protocol in January of last year
  • “This Holy Week, the Church needs to stand up” – Now is the time for the Church to “provide the spiritual leadership that is so desperately needed”, writes the Rev. Dr. William Phillip in the Telegraph, reflecting on the legal victory he and his colleagues won against the Scottish Government
  • “Tougher rules around face masks and social distancing needed as lockdown lifts, scientists say” – Sky News reports on some modelling developed by the universities of Cambridge and Liverpool which indicates that mask rules and social distancing restrictions should get tougher as lockdown relaxes
  • “Did Lockdown Work? An Economist’s Cross-Country Comparison” – In research published by the journal CESifo Economic Studies, Professor Christian Bjørnskov compares mortality in 24 European countries to evaluate whether lockdowns have suppressed the spread of Sars-CoV-2. Needless to say, the answer is no
  • “The Virus, Lockdown and the Right” – In a feature for Areo magazine, Professor M.L.R. Smith and Dr Niall McCrae take the political right to task for not opposing lockdowns (Toby is mentioned as an honourable exception)
  • “I hate everything about the lockdown. But most of all, how much we like being bossed around” – Writing for Conservative Home, Lord Hannan of Kingsclere is distressed by how many people actually seem to like being locked down
  • “Leading LSE academics call for post-Covid wellbeing agency” – A group of LSE academics, including former Cabinet Secretary Lord Gus O’Donnell, are recommending a broader approach to policy that includes measuring impact against wellbeing as well as against life expectancy
  • “COVID-19 Weekly Bulletin” – The latest update from HART, the Health Advisory and Recovery Team, covering Dr. John Lee’s appearance on Good Morning Britain and much else
  • “Why aren’t we using Ivermectin?” – Dr Tess Laurie is a guest on the Pandemic Podcast with Dan Austin Gregory to talk about the potential of Ivermectin and the difficulty in getting it approved for emergency use
  • “EU regulator slaps down Germany and says there’s ‘No Evidence’ to support AstraZeneca ban” – The European Medicines Agency has criticised Germany for suspending the AstraZeneca jab for the under-60s, revealing that there were just 62 cases of blood clots in 9.2 million vaccinations, MailOnline reports
  • “Belgium must lift ‘all Covid-19 measures’ within 30 days, Brussels court rules” – The Brussels Times reports that a court has ordered the Belgian State “to  lift ‘all coronavirus measures’ within 30 days, as the legal basis for them is insufficient”
  • “Macron locks down France” – France is going into a four-week lockdown on Saturday, MailOnline reports, complete with the closure of schools and shops, working from home, travel restrictions and a 7pm curfew. Does this means Macron will be a one-term President?
  • “Merkel and Macron in talks to use Russia’s Sputnik Covid vaccine” – With the AstraZeneca jab still dogged by safety concerns, the leaders of France and Germany are looking East for a vaccine, according to the Telegraph
  • “Finland withdraws COVID-19 lockdown plan after it was deemed unconstitutional” – Reuters reports that a constitutional court in Finland has ruled that the Government’s lockdown proposal was “too vague and not in compliance with the constitution”
  • “Despite vaccination success, Hungary sets daily record for Covid death” – According to EuroNews, Hungry recorded 302 Covid deaths on Wednesday, a new record for the country, despite an ambitious vaccination programme that is leading the way in the EU
  • “Joe Biden Unmasked” – President Biden’s “‘mask mandate’ isn’t Democracy”, says Dominic Green in Spectator USA. “It’s politicised bureaucratic overreach”
  • “We Must Not Be Forced Into Vaccinating Our Children From COVID-19” – “The recent push by the CDC, Dr. Anthony Fauci, and other television medical experts who suggest that we can only get to herd immunity by vaccinating our children is absurd and patently false,” writes Paul E. Alexander at AIER
  • “New York Rolls Out Vaccine Passport Program” – Jordan Schachtel worries about the implications of New York’s ‘Excelsior Pass’
  • “What should we make of the WHO Covid report?” – The report is “billed as a ‘joint WHO-China study'” and “it deserves to be read as such”, says Ross Clark in the Spectator, before going to interrogate its conclusions about the origins of SARS-CoV-2
  • “UK, US and other 12 nations share ‘concerns’ about WHO COVID-19 origins study” – Fourteen countries have expressed concern about the WHO’s report into the origins of COVID-19, according to Euronews, particularly the study’s “significant delay” and the investigating team’s lack of “access to complete, original data and samples”
  • “The Wuhan Whitewash” – The WHO report is best understood as “as a whitewash heavily influenced by the Chinese Communist Party and Westerners with conflicts of interest” says the Wall Street Journal
  • “The Anthony Fauci Phenomenon” – In the latest episode of his show, Tom Woods speaks to Steve Deace, author of “Faucian Bargain“, a new book about the dangers of putting public policy in the hands of a scientific elite
  • “What is the number of deaths from Covid we’re willing to live with?” – Julia Hartley-Brewer asked Robert Jenrick 10 times, but didn’t get an answer

Julia asks Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick TEN times "what is the number of deaths from Covid we're willing to live with" before restrictions are no longer in place: "Do you not know the number? Is it above your pay grade?"@JuliaHB1 | @RobertJenrick pic.twitter.com/dfSNe0JJjR

— TalkTV (@TalkTV) March 31, 2021
Tags: News Round-Up

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25 Comments
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NeilParkin
NeilParkin
2 years ago

More powerful voices for sanity, but ‘Nett Zero’ is a runaway steamroller. It has its own momentum and the lies are stronger than the truth. The only way to stop it is to convince one person at a time. The more people who realise the narrative and the facts don’t join up, will eventually topple this. How much damage will have been done to our society and economies by then though.?

94
-1
rms
rms
2 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

While I completely agree “the more people who realise the narrative and the facts don’t join up” and I do occasionally find the opportunity to speak with people who “believe” the narrative, I find when I point out the disconnect with the facts/data/reality most people get very angry. Carrying the conversation further, when I try to get a discussion about comparing the risk of what the computer says vs. the risk of what we seem to be doing to mitigate what the computers say about “climate change”, the concept of comparing risk mitigation alternatives goes way over their heads (even though I never use those words).

I fear that depending on convincing one person at a time is not quick enough. I of course am probably wrong.

The issues are unnecessarily, probably deliberately so, conflated. Relies on “I believe” and “Don’t you believe?”.

Last edited 2 years ago by rms
58
-1
ebygum
ebygum
2 years ago
Reply to  rms

Don’t family ties make it worse as well….whether it’s Covid or Climate?…
I never agree with my niece on these two things, she’s a total believer in both, and as much as I love her, she is a fine example of a ‘sheeple’……
I do say what I think, but quietly, and then leave it alone, because I love my sister (her mum) and couldn’t bear a fall-out.
I imagine this scenario is played out all over the country….

68
0
Roy Everett
Roy Everett
2 years ago
Reply to  ebygum

“Family ties” can be a curse when there is a difference between deeply held opinions. It becomes problematic whether or not a family member suffers from mental illness or simply has an eccentric worldview: indeed the difference can sometimes be unascertainable and a matter of convention, religion, or climatism.  In these situations I am reminded of Dinsdale Piranha, who, though a really nice guy (deep down) was episodically convinced he was being stalked by a ten-foot long hedgehog called Spiny Norman. Now imagine the problem facing Dinsdale’s wife. So long as Dinsdale’s position was that he “knows”[1,2] that the hedgehog was imaginary and that he was seeking help, he was merely neurotic, and she could probably cope with Dinsdale, and would be quietly be confident that there is no hedgehog. However, if Dinsdale’s position is that he “knows” that the hedgehog is real, he is psychotic and will believe that he is correct and his wife is either mistaken, stupid or psychotic. His wife now has a dilemma. If she openly denies his reality she will provoke a divorce. If she openly agrees with his reality while privately rejecting it she is colluding in his delusion and will make it worse but will remain sane herself, though at risk of cognitive dissonance. If she herself comes to sincerely believe in the reality of the hedgehog she preserves the relationship but at the expense of becoming brainwashed and will wind up in a happy folie à deux in which both are psychotic and will never recover without external assistance[2]. This process can be extended to groupthink, mass formation and psychotic delirium[3], and applies as much to climate and corona as it does to giant hedgehogs.
There is no happy and healthy relationship between a non-psychotic person and a psychotic person. “It is difficult to get a person to believe something if their marriage depends on not believing it”, as Upton Sinclair nearly said.
[1] Eric Berne: Games People Play
[2] Thomas Anthony Harris: I’m OK – You’re OK
[3] Michael Cook: French philosopher decries corona ‘madness’

2
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JXB
JXB
2 years ago
Reply to  rms

Jonathan Swift: you can’t reason someone out of something they haven’t reasoned themselves into.

Same problem with CoVidians.

36
0
stewart
stewart
2 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Covid madness also felt like an unstoppable runaway train at one point.

I trust chipping away at the Net Zero stupidity will work. We have the fact that it is insane and will cause a lot of damage on our side. Like with Covid.

55
-1
ebygum
ebygum
2 years ago
Reply to  stewart

I agree Stewart..those boosters are not flying off the shelf are they? We just have to keep chipping away, as you say…

25
-1
The Dogman
The Dogman
2 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

I hear you. I was at a corporate Town Hall this week and they were pushing it ridiculously hard. There were so many blatently absurd statistics quoted that I had to leave the room and pretend I needed the loo otherwise I think I might have exploded. And everyone seemed to lap it up. God help us.

36
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Dr G
Dr G
2 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

An example of the problems faced by the “enlightened”.
Good friends of ours, decent people, have purchased an EV.
Do we point out the child labour, Uyghur slave labour, “climate change” garbage to them and destroy the friendship, or allow them to feel they are “saving the planet” and keep on happy terms.
I’m yet to figure that one out.

26
-1
JXB
JXB
2 years ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

The steam roller is about to run out of road particularly when the lights go out.

22
-2
rms
rms
2 years ago
Reply to  JXB

Maybe. I think there is a good chance that when the lights go off the mainstream media, especially BBC, will focus on “victims and their hardships”, recollections of the 1970’s from “old” people who now sort of fondly remember when this happened before, etc. If any connection to “cause” they’ll mention without elaboration “climate change” a few times without touching the true cause(s) of failure to delivery power. They will jump to “solutions” which means more “renewables” and ask why is the government holding back fixing this, looking for those to blame, etc.?

Last edited 2 years ago by rms
5
-1
JohnK
JohnK
2 years ago

It would be a surprise if climate model forecasts were any better than weather forecasts when it come to accuracy versus time. https://www.timeanddate.com/weather/forecast-accuracy-time.html might be of interest, but it’s well known that forecasts are guess work after a week or so.

21
-2
Paramaniac
Paramaniac
2 years ago
Reply to  JohnK

Yes, easily debunked by the fact that if mathematical models had ANY predictive powers then someone would have applied them to the stock market and become the richest man (or woman) on planet earth.
That’s not occurred yet for a very good reason, they don’t work.

13
0
The old bat
The old bat
2 years ago

It might be rather unkind, but I really hope we have a particularly nasty winter with plenty of power cuts, because I think that would have some good outcomes, even if it seems like hell at the time. Three that come to mind are;
It will make people question the ideas of net zero and AGW. Especially if MSM starts printing stories of people freezing to death.
It gives people a new focus to take their minds off covid.
It will show the severe limitations of EV’s when people can’t charge them up.
We need people to wake up and get angry, very angry. Mind you, we could all be nuked or broadsided by a massive solar storm as well. I think the world will be a very different place by next spring, assuming we are all still here.

40
-1
Nigel Sherratt
Nigel Sherratt
2 years ago
Reply to  The old bat

The great majority of us will survive even a harsh winter. The most damaging effects are on the poor in developing countries who are denied affordable energy. Botswana is selling coal to Europe at the moment ironically.

https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/europe-seeks-million-tonnes-per-year-botswana-coal-says-president-2022-05-10/

11
-1
Nigel Sherratt
Nigel Sherratt
2 years ago

Monckton has published a paper (with distinguished colleagues) pointing out that the ECS is miscalculated because the feedback is only applied to the difference between a theoretical earth without an atmosphere and current measurements. His team’s contention (which seems correct) is that the feedback calculation should be based on the whole temperature rise from absolute zero. His flat line calculation (currently no warming for eight years by least squares linear regression) has some value but is partly to have a bit of fun at the expense of the eco-loons.

https://phys.org/news/2015-01-peer-reviewed-pocket-calculator-climate-exposes-errors.html

Last edited 2 years ago by Nigel Sherratt
8
0
Nigel Sherratt
Nigel Sherratt
2 years ago

On Earth Day 2017 weekend seven shots were fired at the NSSTC building at UAH. The eco-loons don’t plan to give up their scam without a fight.

‘A total of seven shots were fired into our National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) building here at UAH over the weekend.
All bullets hit the 4th floor, which is where John Christy’s office is (my office is in another part of the building).’

https://www.drroyspencer.com/2017/04/shots-fired-into-the-christyspencer-building-at-uah/

9
0
Brett_McS
Brett_McS
2 years ago

Prof John Christie put together a chart of the results of running all the major climate model temperature ‘predictions’ starting from the same base at ~1970. All overstated the subsequent temperature record except for the one from Russia, which was pretty well spot on. The Russian computer model is based on zero influence (ECS=0) of CO2.

17
0
JXB
JXB
2 years ago

Anyone following this subject and getting their info from sources other than MSM and Government and Eco-Propaganda, as I have for the last 25 years, will recognise this as old ‘Fake News’.

All the climate models have consistently over-estimated warming compared to reality, the Urban Heat Island effect and the artificial warming bias in the surface record was researched and reported (published) years ago by Anthony Watts. The purported rate of global warming flat-lined after 1996, then about 15 years ago went into slight decline prompting ‘global warming’ (measurable) being abandoned as the war cry to be replaced by climate change (not measurable).

Years ago the Climate Sensitivity was put at around 1C per doubling of CO2, ignoring all other compensating factors which when taken into account meant the warming effect of C02 was approaching zero.

The parallels of the CoVid ‘Science’ and Climate ‘Science’ are irresistible, even now to the point that at last, the ‘not consensus’ are beginning to speak out and report the facts, the uncertainties and irrefutable data from observation which underline the non-evidence based claims.

May we expect grudgingly the MSM and other ‘experts’ to start claiming they knew all along it was a fake and they really never said Mankind was causing global warming/climate change just as so many are lining up to deny they ever said vaccinations were 100% effective, or that lockdowns and masks worked?

Dare we hope we are in the final days of the climate scam and Net Zero?

22
0
allanplaskett
allanplaskett
2 years ago
Reply to  JXB

Dare we hope we are in the final days of the climate scam and Net Zero?

I fear we are in the mere beginning of it. Famine in the sub-Sahara, is coming now, and will produce a great northern march. If we dislike forcible illegal immigration we ain’t seen nuthin’ yet. Climate change, plus historic colonialism, will be blamed for the desperate emigration. The censorship and suppression of debate we have seen so far are a mere foretaste.

3
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
2 years ago

Net Zero is like a false god. Politicians say they believe in it despite all scientific evidence showing the Climate Change agenda is a pack of lies.

Grand ‘Renewables’ Delusion: Hard Reality Keeps Smashing Wind & Solar ‘Transition’ Myth
https://stopthesethings.com/2022/10/08/grand-renewables-delusion-hard-reality-keeps-smashing-wind-solar-transition-myth/
by stopthesethings 

Embrace humanity, Reject the cold anti-human agenda.

 Yellow Boards By The Road  

Monday 10th October 11am to 12pm 
Yellow Boards 
Junction A321 Sandhurst Rd & 
B3016 Finchampstead Rd 
Wokingham RG40 3JS

Wednesday 12th October 11am to 12pm 
Yellow Boards 
Junction A327 Observer Way & 
Reading Rd Arborfield 
Wokingham RG2 9HT

Thursday 13th October 11am to 12pm 
Yellow Boards 
Junction A3095 Warfield Road & 
Harvest Ride Warfield 
Bracknell RG42 2QH

Stand in the Park Sundays 10.30am to 11.30am – make friends & keep sane 

Wokingham 
Howard Palmer Gardens Sturges Rd RG40 2HD   

Bracknell  
South Hill Park, Rear Lawn, RG12 7PA

Telegram http://t.me/astandintheparkbracknell

6
-1
RTSC
RTSC
2 years ago

The Climate Change scam is the UN’s Agenda 2030 in action. The intention is to transfer wealth from the developed, western first world to the undeveloped third world….. to pay for the “original sin” of colonialism.

The likes of China and India, who are ignoring the instruction to cut CO2 and are growing their fossil fuel energy production, are simply exploiting the opportunity it gives them.

The UN is controlling the Agenda. There is no evidence to support it, but (as we have learned from Covid) if any Opposition is silenced and the sheeple are bombarded with fear-based propaganda, they will act as the Praetorian Guard.

6
0

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