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News Round Up

by Jonathan Barr
7 May 2021 1:56 AM

  • “Anyone can see no-one’s obeying Covid rules anymore” – “Just as the public led the Government into lockdown, so it is leading the government out of lockdown,” says Ross Clark in the Telegraph
  • “Now AstraZeneca could be banned for under-40s” – According to the Daily Mail, advisors have written to Matt Hancock to suggest those under 40 should be given an alternative to the AstraZeneca jab as “the experts believe the risk of clotting now outweighs that of Covid in younger adults”
  • “Bald men are up to 2.5 times more likely to suffer severe COVID-19 than males with a full head of hair, study warns” – Researchers have found that men with biomarkers linked to hair loss are more susceptible to severe Covid, MailOnline reports
  • “NHS Covid jab booking site leaks people’s vaccine status” – The NHS digital website allows people to book an appointment for a vaccine by entering a few personal identity details, but that information is vulnerable to being hacked, the Guardian reports
  • “Early cancer diagnoses plummeted in England during Covid pandemic” – During the early months of the pandemic there were a third fewer cancers detected during stage one, when the chances of survival are at their highest, than during the same months of the previous year, according to the Guardian
  • “John’s Campaign Demands Removal of Requirement for Care Home Residents to Self-isolate after Medical Visits and Overnight Stays” – John’s Campaign have told Matt Hancock that they expect the isolation requirement to be removed for all types of visits when the guidance is updated on May 10th, or “they will issue proceedings without delay”
  • “Kirstie Allsopp brands plans to vaccinate British children over 12 while so many people around the world are at greater risk of Covid-19 ‘disgusting’” – The host of Location, Location, Location has branded the plan to vaccinate children while millions around the world are at greater risk “the pinnacle of Western overconsumption”, the Daily Mail reports
  • “Harry and Meghan call for ‘vaccine giveaway’” – Harry and Meghan wrote to the CEOs of Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson and Norovax urging them to “temporarily suspend” intellectual property rights on the jab, MailOnline reports
  • “How the West can help India” – Professor Jay Bhattacharya makes the case for sending some of the UK’s stockpile of vaccines to India in the Spectator. He also appears in this week’s Spectator Live
  • “A global conspiracy? This book makes me think again” – “Long experience in writing about science and medicine tells me that no one is clever enough – or wicked enough – to initiate such a horror, and then sustain it on a global scale,” writes Neville Hodgkinson in the Conservative Woman. But a new book has given him pause for thought
  • “Is Bill Gates ‘a nice man in a jumper’ or a power-hungry egotist?” – The upside of the Gates’ marital breakdown may be that Bill “finds himself distracted, even for a few months, which might give the rest of us respite from his pursuit of world dominance”, says Kate Dunlop at the Conservative Woman
  • “COVID-19 Weekly Bulletin” – The latest update from the Health Advisory and Recovery Team, covering vaccination of children, ivermectin and much else
  • “Time for Recovery” – The Recovery Group’s Facebook page, with many posts about the impact of lockdowns
  • “The Censorship Pandemic” – The Swiss Doctor lists some of the biggest instances of Covid censorship by major social media platforms
  • “What will the ‘New Normal’ look like this Summer” – Dan Astin Gregory unpicks what is known to date about life after June 21st for the Pandemic Podcast
  • “Why the Government needs accountability” – The Rev. Phil Sacre examines the issue of political accountability, why it is needed, and what has happened to it over the last 12 months
  • “Germany to allow AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine for all adults” – German authorities are reversing their previous decision to restrict the AstraZeneca jab to the over 60s, Reuters reports
  • “Covid pass a temporary measure, health minister says” – The Cyprus Mail claims that the measures unveiled by the country’s Health Minister, Constantinos Ioannou – a special pass to enter malls, churches and restaurants – will be temporary
  • “Don’t Vaccinate the Young and Healthy” – A group of 28 medical experts in Sweden has urged the public health authorities to vaccinate at-risk groups only, and not the young and healthy, Sputnik News reports
  • “Russia approves one-dose Sputnik V jab” – It’s slightly less effective than the two jab version, according to Deutsche Welle, but it still meets WHO standards
  • “Biden’s Vaccine IP Debacle” – Biden’s decision to endorse a patent waiver on vaccines may be the “single worst presidential economic decision since Nixon’s wage-and-price controls”, says the Wall Street Journal
  • “Over a dozen U.S. cities and counties are now pro-freedom ‘sanctuaries’ against Covid measures” – A number of cities and counties primarily located in states with heavy restrictions are designating themselves pre-freed ‘sanctuaries’, according to LifeSiteNews
  • “Rowan University To Offer Up To $1,000 To Students Who Are Fully Vaccinated” – Forbes reports on another case of vaccine bribery, this one from New Jersey’s Rowan University who are offering students who provide proof of vaccination $1,000 in credits. It is the most lucrative offer from a US college to date
  • “Total lockdown in Kerala from May 8th to May 16th” – A total lockdown has been declared in the Indian state of Kerala, the Times of India reports, in view of the rapid surge in Covid cases
  • “Tokyo seeks extension of COVID-19 state of emergency until May 31st” – Japan’s capital is asking the Government to extend the state of emergency until the end of the month, but the Japanese authorities are insisting that the Olympic games should still go ahead
  • “Restrictions return amid search for new variant’s mystery spreader” – A case of the B.1.617 Indian variant in Sydney, Australia, which made its way through the quarantine system and has led to the reintroduction of masks and restrictions on household gatherings in New South Wales, the Sydney Morning Herald reports
  • “International borders will not reopen ‘any time soon’” – In an interview on Sky News Australia, Finance Minister Simon Birmingham says that the country’s borders will not be opening “any time soon” as there is a “clear message” that Australians do not want to “risk Covid entering”
  • “It’s worse than we thought” – Megyn Kelly spotted an action figure of America’s favourite pubic health expert

My friends, it’s worse than we thought. pic.twitter.com/rvYckZgjwI

— Megyn Kelly (@megynkelly) May 5, 2021
Tags: News Round-Up

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54 Comments
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Monro
Monro
1 year ago

Imagine how much money we could save and output we could improve if we got rid of both the civil service and Royal Air Force.

Would we miss them?

39
-5
Steve-Devon
Steve-Devon
1 year ago
Reply to  Monro

To your list of organisations for abolition, it is with a heavy heart that I would add the RNLI for its enthusiastic (and presumably paid) complicity in illegal immigration and the National Trust for abject wokeism.
In both cases their sensible and laudable founding principles would be better served by County or area based organisations that could focus on the core job in hand and be less susceptible to being hi-jacked by National political Dogma.

70
-2
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
1 year ago

5G Consistent pattern of adverse effects

latest leaflet to print at home and deliver to neighbours or forward to politicians, media, friends online. 

11b-5G-Consistent-pattern-of-adverse-effects-MONOCHROME-copy
37
-10
For a fist full of roubles
For a fist full of roubles
1 year ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

Your neighbours must really be getting fed up with all the rubbish you are stuffing through their letterboxes.

6
-50
Freddy Boy
Freddy Boy
1 year ago
Reply to  For a fist full of roubles

I hope it is rubbish ! Imagine if the 5G could actually damage health , it’s reassuring that at least you are here to tell us that’s it’s nothing to worry about , phew 😥

44
-1
EppingBlogger
EppingBlogger
1 year ago
Reply to  Freddy Boy

We can also live in the confident belief that the BBC and HMG would investigate objectively and tell us fairly if there were any risks from G5. Neither of them would be influenced by the big business lobbyists nor by the sunk costs narrative.

29
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

😀😀😀

10
0
Mogwai
Mogwai
1 year ago

Two more of the FEMALE terrorists released as part of the prison exchange deal. Yes, I guess it’s an actual fact that they do indeed exist, and to deny reality just makes one look very, very silly indeed. I think Israel needs to take tips from Egypt on how to reinforce their barrier after having people like this now freed and living next door;

”Part of the exchange today to free 2 year old Aviv Asher involved having to exchange Hamas terrorist Asraa Jabes.

The 38 year old Palestinian woman detonated a car bomb back in 2015 attempting to kill Israelis.”

https://twitter.com/OliLondonTV/status/1728222214011453515

”In exchange for the release of Israeli hostages like 5 year old Emilia Aloni today,, Israel had to exchange Palestinian prisoners, as part of the deal

One of the prisoners sent back to Palestine today was Shorouq Dwaiat.

In 2015 she went on a stabbing spree, stabbing 1 Israeli man and attempting to stab another.

She received a 16 year sentence.

While Israeli hostages are simply innocent civilians the Palestinian prisoners being exchanged are terrorists.”

https://twitter.com/OliLondonTV/status/1728221322625356207

37
-16
Matt Dalby
Matt Dalby
1 year ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Hopefully the Israeli’s managed to attach miniature satellite trackers to the terrorists and will get them in the next airstrike.

18
-6
soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago

“China discovers close virus to Covid in bats 1,000 miles from Wuhan” – The discovery of a new wild coronavirus that has the same freak mutation as COVID-19 is being hailed by some scientists as proof SARS-CoV-2 was not made in a lab, reports the Mail.

Yeah, this must be true ‘cos there’s no way the virus could spread as far as 1,000 miles. Stands to reason dunnit?

Er.

28
0
AethelredTheReadier
AethelredTheReadier
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

Those bloody scheming bats, they’ve clearly been planning this for millions of years in those caves in China. Clever barstewards…

25
0
Dinger64
Dinger64
1 year ago
Reply to  AethelredTheReadier

At last, their cunning plan is being put into action! Today, the cave, tomorrow, the whole cave system!

Why the hell don’t we just keep the f#@k away from them? They politely stay in deep dark caves all day, then when we’re asleep the come out to eat, surely they are doing their bit to keep away from us! Why don’t we do the same for them?

Last edited 1 year ago by Dinger64
4
0
A. Contrarian
A. Contrarian
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

If this is true (and there are lots of reasons to doubt it – it’s had 4 years minimum to spread to other bats FFS), then maybe it’s not a “freak” mutation after all. Perhaps it’s fairly common and not actually something world-ending to panic about.

Last edited 1 year ago by A. Contrarian
6
0
soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  A. Contrarian

The ‘freak’ mutation they’re talking about is a particular sequence which is often used in laboratory constructed genetic material. It’s presence in the Covid bug was part of what drove the lab-created-leak theory – as distinct from the naturally evolved bug leaked from the lab or the ‘wet market zoonosis theory. The sequence hadn’t been seen in nature so finding it was a bit like finding a zipper in a leather jacket and saying it evolved in a natural animal skin.

Given that the other theories on the origin of Covid require a bug that evolved in another animal to make the leap to humans and given that the Covid bug has changed over time (Original, Alpha, Delta, Omicron etc etc ad nauseam), it does not seem impossible that a lab-created Covid bug spreading through mankind (considerably further than 1,000 miles) might not cross the species barrier from humans to bats and continue to evolve there – complete with its man-made ‘zipper’ (OK the analogy does break down there).

3
0
Myra
Myra
1 year ago

Not entirely sure what the bat story is trying to prove.
Finding a bat with a virus 1000 km from Wuhan.
How funny…
“Compared with birds, bats are relatively short-distance migrators, with maximum migration distances being <2000 km”

12
0
Matt Dalby
Matt Dalby
1 year ago
Reply to  Myra

I think the point of the story is the fact that the virus was genetically very similar to Covid and this is meant to be proof that it didn’t leak from a lab. It’s theoretically possible that someone from Wuhan caught covid from a bat while on holiday and returned home before becoming ill. Obviously the evidence in favour of a lab leak is still far stronger than the evidence for a natural origin.

10
0
AethelredTheReadier
AethelredTheReadier
1 year ago
Reply to  Myra

It’s a red herring, in my view, designed to bring the Covid story back to what they originally said it was and take blame away from any pesky little lab just innocently GoF’ing its little way towards designing better and nastier viruses. In fact, in honour of Prince Philip, since it was his wish, I feel we should call the next ‘virus’ Philip so people can claim a mild does of the ‘Philips’ or ‘I’ve been Philiped’ etc.
Knowing the way that China deals with its perceived problems I can imagine a bat eradication plan…similar to how they dealt with the little birds eating the grain in the ‘Great Leap Forwards Backwards’. It’s a peculiarly Chinese govt thing which is to blame everyone and everything for the myopic shortcomings of their paranoid grip on power.

17
-1
EppingBlogger
EppingBlogger
1 year ago
Reply to  Myra

Are you sure you meant 2000 Km range?

1
0
soundofreason
soundofreason
1 year ago
Reply to  Myra

Laden or unladen?

2
0
Dinger64
Dinger64
1 year ago
Reply to  soundofreason

Laden with a coconut, like the swallows!

Last edited 1 year ago by Dinger64
2
0
WithASmallC
WithASmallC
1 year ago

Which bit of “stop messing about with bat coronaviruses” don’t they understand from last time? Leave it alone.

17
0
WithASmallC
WithASmallC
1 year ago

I haven’t seen any news outlet prioritise the horrific stabbing of little children in Ireland as the story. It’s all about the riot. Yet if it was a gunman in America shooting little kids at school it would be front page news.

37
0
Matt Dalby
Matt Dalby
1 year ago
Reply to  WithASmallC

He was an Algerian immigrant, what more reason do you want for the lack of media attention.

42
-1
A. Contrarian
A. Contrarian
1 year ago
Reply to  Matt Dalby

Was he far right? Or was it all caused by systemic racism and colonialism and not his fault at all?

12
0
Dinger64
Dinger64
1 year ago
Reply to  A. Contrarian

Mental health problems! The go to get out clause for embarrassed governments!

3
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
1 year ago
Reply to  WithASmallC

“Yet if it was a gunman in America shooting little kids at school it would be front page news.”

Unless the shooter was black or a muzzie.

Last edited 1 year ago by huxleypiggles
18
-2
AethelredTheReadier
AethelredTheReadier
1 year ago

“An about-turn on tobacco” It’s interesting to look at the whole Tobacco story. Tobacco was a herb much revered by the Native American Indians and other indigenous peoples. It is considered the ‘master teacher’ plant in fact and for reasons more to do with spiritual and shamanic uses. It was never meant to be a plant to be abused the way it has been but of course the fact that it contained a highly addictive substance, just like caffeine did for coffee and tea and sugar also, meant that it was the perfect consumer drug with a ready, willing and addicted clientele. I used to be one of them and back in the day loved nothing more than a ‘roll up’ and a cup of coffee or a pint. They just seemed to go so well together! During Native American ceremonies, Tobacco is used but not a pack of Marlboro or Camels, but a rawer purer version that hasn’t been adulterated with chemicals to make it burn better and faster .

Of course, tobacco became a huge industry and the marketing of tobacco was one of the success stories all the way through to the eighties or whenever it was banned. I do remember going into a pub, aptly named The Blue Flame, near Bristol but out in the sticks, sometime in the early 2000s to smoke in a pub legally for the last time. Nowadays, I can’t stand the smell of commercial tobacco but sacred raw tobacco is different. It is stronger and you don’t take the smoke into your lungs but only into your throat – don’t ask! Conversely, it is also one of the most powerful shamanic purification tools, the smoke being blown over people to dispel bad energies. And if you think about it, it does dispel gnats and other flying biting mites. Anyway, just thought I’d share that with you on this murky November morning…

19
0
DHJ
DHJ
1 year ago
Reply to  AethelredTheReadier

In “The Cosmic Serpent”, anthropologist Jeremy Narby comments that Amazonian tobacco can contain up to 18x the nicotine of tobacco used for industrial cigarettes and is not contaminated by chemical fertilizers or the added ingredients. It’s considered a remedy and cancer rates amongst Shaman that use copious quantities of the Amazonian variety were non-existent.

11
-1
MichaelM
MichaelM
1 year ago
Reply to  AethelredTheReadier

Very interesting – thanks for sharing…

7
0
ekathulium
ekathulium
1 year ago

We need an “about turn” on all the other drugs too: “save our youth! End Prohibition!”
Just as the alcohol prohibition gave rise to Al Capone, so the continued drug prohibition has given rise to mobsters like Escobar in Colombia and Guzman in Mexico.
Since then, they have suborned police and all institutions of government, drug money has corrupted all the banks and gangsters have infiltrated corporations until all the power sources in America have devolved to criminals. Thus has America become a Mafiosi state.

6
0

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