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The Daily Sceptic
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News Round-Up

by Jonathan Barr
30 May 2021 1:53 AM

  • “NHS staff to face compulsory Covid vaccination” – ‘No Jab, No Job’ is still on the cards for employees of the NHS, says the Sunday Telegraph
  • “Matt Hancock lied about crucial PPE putting thousands of frontline health workers at risk” – According to the Mirror, the Health Secretary said that a shipment of masks and gowns from China had been “sorted out and there was no problem”– but more than two weeks later it still hadn’t arrived
  • “Matt Hancock facing fresh questions over Covid in care homes” – Matt Hancock is feeling the heat, the Sunday Telegraph reports, “as it emerged that guidance from his department ordered hospitals to discharge patients without any mention of a need to test them first”
  • “Kate Middleton receives first dose of Covid vaccine: Duchess” – MailOnline reports that the Duchess of Cambridge has joined the ranks of the vaccinated
  • “NotForThem” – The campaign group UsForThem has published an open letter calling for a halt to plans to vaccinate children. It is open to all to read, sign and share
  • “There is no reason why new variants should prevent us from reopening” – “A world of endemic COVID-19 should take 2019 as its benchmark,” argues Professor Robert Dingwall in the Sunday Telegraph. “If we would not then have done something for influenza, RSV or any of the other respiratory viruses, we should not be doing it beyond June 21st”
  • “Lockdown-obsessed politicians are neglecting a generation of children” – “While the life prospects of a generation have been effectively shut down, reversing decades of progress in social mobility, Labour has busied itself with demands for more and longer lockdowns,” says Janet Daley in the Sunday Telegraph
  • “What Dominic Cummings was really saying: Make me King!” – “Almost every word spoken by Mr Cummings during his one-man show last week was based on a huge, slimy falsehood,” writes Peter Hitchens in the Mail on Sunday. “That shutting down the country saves lives”
  • “This selfish rugby star Henry Slade is all brawn but no brain” – The Daily Mail‘s Amanda Patell points an accusatory finger at Henry Slade for exercising his right to refuse the vaccine
  • “Henry Slade should not be made a pariah for deciding not to have Covid vaccine” – The Telegraph’s Oliver Brown defends the Rugby player from “the warped culture in which an athlete can be cancelled simply for asserting his civil liberties”
  • “COVID19 – the end of scientific discussion?” – COVID-19 has succeeded in “breaking my last vestiges of faith in medical scientific research”, says Dr. Malcolm Kendrick. “I cannot believe anything I read. I accept no mainstream facts or figures”
  • “Depression – the real pandemic” – “Much more serious than the disease,” says Kate Dunlop in the Conservative Woman, “was the authoritarian intrusion into private lives, the unilateral removal of civil liberties, and the stench of something gone horribly wrong” 
  • “In search of the lesser-spotted GP” – Writing for the Conservative Woman, Ralph Norfolk describes the difficulty his wife had trying to book an appointment with the local GP
  • “Our vaccine rebuttal competition – Honourable mentions, Part 2” – The Conservative Woman publishes a second batch of entries in its competition to find the best reason for not taking the jab
  • “Thanks kids – you’ve been amazing!” – Of course we should vaccinate the kids, Andy Lambeth argues, on the Lockdown Satire blog; it is a wonderful opportunity for them to “step forward and do their bit to protect the over 80s and the obese”
  • “James and Laura’s Chinwag #22” – It’s once more into the breach for James Delingpole and Laura Perrins as “they both give it both barrels on the subject of the lockdown and Boris Johnson’s useless regime…”
  • “Netherlands to further ease lockdown with cultural venues reopening” – Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte has announced that museums, theatres and large venues will be allowed to open from June 5th, but with limits on the number of visitors, Euronews reports
  • “Rapid Covid tester investigated for insurance fraud scheme” – Public prosecutors in Germany have opened an investigation into a testing company that reported far more tests than it actually performed, according to Deutsche Welle
  • “Health Canada extends expiry date for AstraZeneca shots” – Two batches of the jabs in Ontario were due to expire on May 31st, but the authorities have extended the sell-by date to June 30th, the Toronto Sun reports
  • “Facebook whistleblower fired after exposing company’s plan to police ‘vaccine hesitancy’ posts” – Facebook insider Morgan Kahmann has been sacked after he revealed documents related to the social media platform’s crackdown on vaccine sceptical posts, the Post Millennial reports
  • “China changes its own COVID-19 origin story, blames U.S. for outbreak” – Jordan Schachtel has compiled an assortment of claims from high-ranking Chinese officials and state-media outlets suggesting there may have been a lab leak at Fort Detrick, a U.S. military lab in Washington DC
  • “Wuhan: the questions China won’t answer about how Covid pandemic started” – Pressure is increasing on the Government in Beijing, says this feature in the Sunday Times, as evidence mounts in support of the lab leak hypothesis
  • “Vietnam detects hybrid of Indian and UK COVID-19 variants” – Authorities have detected a new variant which is part-British and part Indian, according to Reuters, and it’s thought to be “more transmissible than previously known types”
  • “Calls for vaccine shake-up to put young workers first” – Infectious disease experts in Australia are calling for supermarket workers and others to be prioritised for vaccination in a bid to slow the spread of COVID-19, the Sydney Morning Herald reports
  • “On Point with Alex Pierson: Dr Byram Bridle” – Dr. Byram Bridle, an Associate Professor of Viral Immunology at the University of Guelph, tells Alex about new studies into the side effects of the vaccines, including heart inflammation and blood clots
  • “Covid Reality on Kids and Masks, the Wuhan Lab, and Vaccines” – Megyn Kelly is joined by Dr. Nicole Saphier and Dr. Lucy McBride to discuss kids in masks, the politicisation of the lab leak theory and when the U.S. will attain herd immunity
  • “Victoria’s fourth lockdown is sheer lunacy” – If you still uncritically trust the Government of Victoria then you “deserve to be ruled by arrogant incompetent ingrates”, according to Sky News host Rita Panahi
  • “Absolutely enormous crowds on the protest march in London” – James Melville enjoyed the march in London yesterday

Absolutely enormous crowds on the protest march in London. These are normal folk who are concerned about their jobs, livelihoods, freedoms that have been lost because of the Covid restrictions. They are not covid deniers.#londonprotest#NoVaccinePassportspic.twitter.com/VzK8GoQSGT

— James Melville 🚜 (@JamesMelville) May 29, 2021
Tags: News Round-Up

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42 Comments
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Monro
Monro
3 years ago

The hopeless muddle and confusion, lack of leadership and plain lying at the head of government described by Mr Cummings makes plain that the state is poorly equipped to run anything; public sector root and branch reform is urgently required.

Even the much vaunted success of the vaccination program, a success, let it be said, against a backdrop of infections falling off a cliff, was masterminded by the private sector, bypassing normal NHS process.

The British Army? Well, yes, but they have all voluntarily subjected themselves to the Manual of Military Law. Conscripted Armies work nothing like as well.

The public sector health service management has been hopeless at even producing a coherent definition of what constitutes a ‘covid case’

‘We deduce that a reported “case” is most probably simply the result of a positive PCR test. The new guidance is meaningless unless it provides a clear threshold for the limits of detection. For many whose test turns up positive, there may be nothing recorded about any clinical symptoms.’ 

‘The PCR test positivity counts should include a standardized threshold level of detection, and at a minimum, the recording of the presence or absence of symptoms. As a disease, the COVID-19 case definition should constitute a disorder that produces a specific set of symptoms and signs. The in-hospital case definition should, therefore, record the CT lung findings and associated blood tests.

Only when an international standard is agreed upon will we be able to make comparisons, and answer the question of when is Covid, Covid?.’

https://www.cebm.net/covid-19/when-is-covid-covid/

‘Lions led by donkeys’. Apparently it is originally a Russian expression 

Last edited 3 years ago by Monro
14
-2
eastender53
eastender53
3 years ago
Reply to  Monro

Great idea. We can get Philip Green and Fred Goodwin to run the lot!
It is possible to run an organisation under ‘public’ ownership efficiently and to the benefit of the region or country owning it. Swiss Railways would be an example. It’s a special company owned by the Swiss Federation and the Cantons. Singapore also has a number of GLCs where the public purse invests in, oversees, and benefits from the businesses.

5
-1
Monro
Monro
3 years ago
Reply to  eastender53

Terrific example:

‘It is worth noting that Swiss Rail receives a large sum from taxpayers every year. In 2018, the company received CHF 3.5 Billion of public funding, CHF 2.7 billion of it booked as income. Without this large lump of taxpayer help Swiss Rail would have made a loss of CHF 2.2 billion in 2018.’

Le News March 2019

I have been to Singapore and talked to Singaporeans. It is not a happy country.

GLCs were such a success that: ‘In the 1980s, government divestment was pursued in order to withdraw from commercial activities that no longer needed to be undertaken by the public sector, and to avoid competing with the private sector. The government commissioned a committee to review its ownership of businesses and to recommend businesses for divestment. This led to the Michael Fam report of 1987, which identified 41 GLCs to be divested over the next 10 years, another 6 to be further reviewed, and 43 others to retain government ownership. Within 15 years, the government divested about 60 GLCs…..’

‘The Role of Competition in Singapore’s Economic Growth and Public Policies’ 2016

Goodwin and Green? Goodwin resigned (was removed) and Green was forced to pay £363m into the BHS pension fund.

In contrast, after thousands of people have died unnecessarily, who, in the public sector management of this humanitarian disaster, caused by incompetent health service management, has paid any price whatsoever?

That is one important difference between public and private sector, risk and reward; the public sector only has the latter.

1
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RickH
RickH
3 years ago
Reply to  Monro

Yawn – again! (and again … and again …)

Have you really not grasped the fact that the wealth of the monopolistic private sector – in the form of Big Pharma, the Gates Foundation etc. etc. has been a major driver in all this?

Which is not to state an equally brainless alternative thesis – just the f.ing obvious.

Do give up on this irrelevant and incontinent political tub-thiumping. There’s enough Covid shit out there, without you creating another pile.

Last edited 3 years ago by RickH
5
-3
Monro
Monro
3 years ago
Reply to  RickH

Private sector wrong doing can be punished, while the public sector, responsible for thousands of deaths through sheer incompetence, get off scot free.

4
-1
Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  Monro

Public sector MOST DEFINITELY SHOULD NOT GET OFF SCOT FREE. Unfortunately the normal run of things has been subverted by the emergency powers and sheer nobbling of normal checks and balances this government [which runs the public sector] has granted to itself. In what other times would people like PM and Hancock get away scott free with the conflicts of interest and in Hancock’s case lying and profiteering that they have completely got away with over the course of the last 14 months????

5
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TheFascistCoronaFraud
TheFascistCoronaFraud
3 years ago
Reply to  Monro

I find this idea that people going about their normal business are responsible for thousands of deaths very worrying. Did these people not die of old age? The average age of Covid death is 82 in the UK – higher than average life expectancy. Is it not the case that every year, flu season comes and finishes a load of people off who are on death’s door already? Pretending we can suddenly implement policies to avoid all such deaths is nonsense. It results in what we have – the whole nation of mainly healthy people being forced to live a dystopian nightmare in some doomed to fail attempt to prolong the lives of those who are already close to death. Stupid people who think they can play God are dangerous

2
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AnnabelleG
AnnabelleG
3 years ago
Reply to  TheFascistCoronaFraud

I have to agree with this — and I am in the older age group –
What they heck are they doing – and what is wrong with the people who are sitting back letting them do it……To the young I say Just say NO

2
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Monro
Monro
3 years ago
Reply to  TheFascistCoronaFraud

In the care homes many died of a common cold coronavirus introduced as a consequence of the hospital clearances.

The common cold is lethal to the elderly and infirm, well known for years, evidenced:

‘Unexpectedly Higher Morbidity and Mortality of Hospitalized Elderly Patients Associated with Rhinovirus (common cold) Compared with Influenza Virus Respiratory Tract Infection’

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5343795/

It may very well be that these deaths were only brought forward by a matter of weeks or months, but, equally, it may not and, in any case, unnecessary loss of life rightly incurs stiff sanctions for the perpetrators elsewhere in public life, corporate manslaughter and so on.

‘The UK government was clearly aware that the 400,000 residents of care homes in the UK, many of whom live with multiple health conditions, physical dependency, dementia and frailty, were at exceptional risk to coronavirus.9 Yet at the height of the pandemic, despite this knowledge, it failed to take measures to promptly and adequately protect care homes. Contrary to the claim by the secretary of state for Health and Social Care that a “protective ring” was put around care homes “right from the start,” a number of decisions and policies adopted by authorities at the national and local level in England increased care home residents’ risk of exposure to the virus—violating their rights to life, to health, and to non-discrimination. These include, notably:

• Mass discharges from hospital into care homes of patients infected or possibly infected with COVID19 and advice that “[n]egative tests are not required prior to transfers / admissions into the care home”.
• Advice to care homes that “no personal protective equipment (PPE) is required if the worker and the resident are not symptomatic,” and a failure to ensure adequate provisions of PPE to care homes.
• A failure to assess care homes’ capability to cope with and isolate infected or possibly infected patients discharged from hospitals, and failure to put in place adequate emergency mechanisms to help care homes respond to additional needs and diminished resources.
• A failure to ensure regular testing of care home workers and residents.
• Imposition of blanket Do Not Attempt Resuscitation (DNAR) orders on residents of many care homes around the country and restrictions on residents’ access to hospital.
• Suspension of regular oversight procedures for care homes by the statutory regulating body, the Care Quality Commission (CQC), and the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman.’

https://www.amnesty.org.uk/files/2020-10/Care%20Homes%20Report.pdf

Last edited 3 years ago by Monro
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TheFascistCoronaFraud
TheFascistCoronaFraud
3 years ago
Reply to  Monro

People in the public sector (ie in Westminster) who have encouraged people to be injected with bio-reactive experimental agents for a virus which is already extinguished, that’s criminal. They deserve to be punished because their unscientific, reckless and indefensible actions have caused death where none would otherwise have occurred ie vaccine deaths and Covid vax experiment injuries like blindness and paralysis and many more, plus all the issues to come from priming the immune system to attack itself when they encounter similar coronaviruses, which is near enough set into stone as a likelihood from this misguided, Satanic inversion of true health practice called a vax rollout. Those who smeared and blocked progreess involving already licenced drug treatments, they are criminals. People who have functioning immune systems are not murderers of people who do not have functioning immune systems. When you reach old age, the chance that you will die increases exponentially. It is not the fault of the young that elderly peoples’ immune systems start to malfunction, it is part of God’s plan

Last edited 3 years ago by TheFascistCoronaFraud
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Monro
Monro
3 years ago
Reply to  TheFascistCoronaFraud

I don’t believe there can be any question but that lives were lost unnecessarily through incompetence/negligence. How many actual life years have been lost is beside the point.

‘Via its Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), the government in mid-March adopted a policy, executed by NHS England and NHS Improvement, that led to 25,000 patients, including those infected or possibly infected with COVID-19 who had not been tested, being discharged from hospital into care homes between 17 March and 15 April—exponentially increasing the risk of transmission to the very population most at risk of severe illness and death from the disease. With no access to testing, severe shortages of PPE, insufficient staff, and limited guidance, care homes were overwhelmed. Although care home deaths were not even being counted in daily official figures of COVID-19 deaths until 29 April, some 4,300 care home deaths were reported in a single fortnight during this period.’

https://www.amnesty.org.uk/files/2020-10/Care%20Homes%20Report.pdf

0
0
Prester John
Prester John
3 years ago
Reply to  Monro

Scot free? Not so, ‘lessons will have been learnt’ and gongs are handed out.

1
0
LMS2
LMS2
3 years ago
Reply to  RickH

“the wealth of the monopolistic private sector ” which should have been forcibly broken up into competing companies rather than allowed to become monopolies. The U.S. did this years ago with oil companies, I believe.
These huge monopolies completely distort the market, and have far, far too much power. Unfortunately, politicians are being bought by them, willingly, and will not do anything about them.

2
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eastender53
eastender53
3 years ago
Reply to  Monro

Swiss Rail. Thanks for reinforcing my point. Public transport is an essential service. As such it should not be placed in the hands of those for whom greed is the prime motivator. The balance of efficient management with social subsidy is the ideal model.

Been to Singapore? Was that for a pint in the Long Bar? I lived and worked there (for arguably the highest profile brand in Singapore) for 15 years. There is no question it has a questionable record in some areas, such as the ISA and electoral bondary manipulation, but most Singaporeans are rightfully proud of it’s position of strength amongst it’s neighbours. Most of the divested GLCs were initial government startups that were always scheduled to be sold off when self sustaining. If you look at essential services such as the MRT and SBS these operate under a ‘hybrid’ model. SIA, which I know well, was ‘divested’ to fend off competition complaints from other airlines. It’s great strength is very low debt, brought about by judicial initial State investment. Temasek Holdings and GIC are still there in the background.

0
0
eastender53
eastender53
3 years ago
Reply to  eastender53

Forgot to add. Guess who benefitted from a lot of the ‘selling off’? That would be a Lee-ding question!

0
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Monro
Monro
3 years ago
Reply to  eastender53

‘Out of 136 countries considered, Singapore currently ranks the 26th most income disparate. This makes them the second most income unequal country in Asia. According to the Singapore government, over 105,000 families live in poverty. This translates to about one in 10 family homes, or 378,000 people.’

https://borgenproject.org/tag/poverty-in-singapore/

0
0
Catee
Catee
3 years ago

So our illustrious leader has hitched himself to Nut Nuts, I can’t work out whether that would be….
1. She gave him an ultimatum, ‘marry me or I spill the beans’.
Or
2. So he can prevent her spilling the beans in the future due to ‘marital privilege’.

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Catee
Catee
3 years ago
Reply to  Catee

Either way there’s a new vacancy at No 10/11……..Mistress wanted

Last edited 3 years ago by Catee
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Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  Catee

prob both!!

5
0
Prester John
Prester John
3 years ago
Reply to  Catee

Please, it is ‘Princess Nut Nut’, drop the ‘s’: to commemorate the marriage, and the end of their child’s bastardy, and to democratise the monarchy, and make up for recent emigration, we should petition HM The Queen to gazette her in the style ‘HRH The Princess Nut Nut’, and her husband “HRH The Prince Nut Job”.

0
0
SilentP
SilentP
3 years ago

The Amanda Platell attack on Henry Slade is the most disgusting article I have read throughout this entire episode.

It does unintentionally contain one true statement when the vile woman says that the benefits of the jab are incalculable.

33
0
DanClarke
DanClarke
3 years ago
Reply to  SilentP

Yes she’s gone a bit OTT on all of that, maybe she’s desperate to get back to OZ

11
0
NeilofWatford
NeilofWatford
3 years ago

And the BBCs report is where, exactly?

12
0
DanClarke
DanClarke
3 years ago

That march, they are magnificent, unlike the muzzled sheep who are wet.

17
0
AnnabelleG
AnnabelleG
3 years ago
Reply to  DanClarke

Just so – They are magnificent –

0
0
JayBee
JayBee
3 years ago

https://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2021/05/24/to_protect_your_liberty_smash_the_total_virus-elimination_narrative_778309.html

Jeffrey Tucker seems to have left AIER? Squashing the Lancet’s Zero Covid study here. Why is the Lancet still being taken serious?!

5
0
Paul B
Paul B
3 years ago

“Boris Johnson and Carrie Symonds wed in secret ceremony: how the UK reacted to their marriage” DT. Well DT we shall never know because not a single article has comments allowed, odd.
I saw a bit of what the UK thought about them yesterday on the RT stream, thousands of people shouting abuse at Downing St.

12
0
chris c
chris c
3 years ago
Reply to  Paul B

Beauty and the beast

(for very small values of beauty)

0
0
Milos
Milos
3 years ago

How long it takes to make and test a typical vaccine. About ~10 years.
(slide 4; IFPMA, Switzerland). Presentation dated 2019, just one year before it became acceptable to make, test, and start vaccinating people in 6-12 months. So, the consensus on vaccines was that it takes about ~10 years to put them on the market.

Even if you spend huge recourses on vaccine development (which could have been better spent in public health and ended up saving more lives, and especially more years-of-life) for covid19 which is bit more worse than seasonal flu – there are still bottlenecks in research and testing that cannot be hurried up.
We already know that most of the vaccines are not safe in the short term with brain bleeding and hart inflammation with a large rate, even among younger and healthier people (which is how they were spotted). Who knows how many short term effects were missed.
Also, no one will know on mid-term and long term affects for many years.

aa.jpg
Last edited 3 years ago by Milos
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Moist Von Lipwig
Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago

Amanda Platell is both scum and a moron.

Henry Slade has a history of adverse reactions to vaccines so he has a rational justification for not being vaccinated.

14
0
Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  Moist Von Lipwig

He does not need to justify himself to anybody. His body, his right to choose. End of.

17
0
AnnabelleG
AnnabelleG
3 years ago
Reply to  Moist Von Lipwig

How dare this woman comment on someone else’s medical decisions – but there again looking at her it looks as if she is not adverse to having injections of various substances injected into her face…. Also he does not need to justify why he does not want to be jabbed with an experimental drug that has not even finished its trials.

7
0
RickH
RickH
3 years ago

“Infectious disease experts in Australia are calling for supermarket workers and others to be prioritised for vaccination in a bid to slow the spread of COVID-19, the Sydney Morning Herald reports”

Now – we do know that supermarkets are not vectors for infection.

If anyone hasn’t picked that up, then they are, too be polite ‘a bit thick’. Now democracy has its normal downsides – but people as thick as that shouldn’t be able to make these sort of decisions.

The old definition of insanity applies in spades.

10
0
AnnabelleG
AnnabelleG
3 years ago
Reply to  RickH

Poor Australia – it has lost the plot.

1
0
RickH
RickH
3 years ago

““COVID19 – the end of scientific discussion?” 

Kendrick’s article raises important questions about the corruption of science.

12
0
eastender53
eastender53
3 years ago

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-57294438

What does this actually mean? Very few? There are only 870 people in hospital ‘with’ Covid in England, so the definitive small sample size. How many with no jab, one jab, two jabs? What ages?

Without this qualifying data how can this ‘show’ that vaccines are effective?

9
0
Milo
Milo
3 years ago

If it hadn’t been for James Melville’s twitter post reproduced above, a body could have been forgiven for thinking that the march in London yesterday didn’t take place. If this was a march about ANY OTHER ISSUE MSM would have been all over it like a rash with extensive coverage. Proof, if proof were needed that media dancing to government’s tune.

As for Henry Slade – I take my hat off to him for refusing the jab. Let’s see who is still capable of playing rugby at the top of their game in 2-3 years time. So Duchess of Cambridge has had a jab of something at the Science Museum – wonder if they have a crate of vials filled with saline in a fridge in there somewhere for all those VIPs rocking up to get their jabs there as opposed to in a walk in clinic with the rest of the plebs. I’m not anti-royal ordinarily, although I bitterly object to the role they have played in the jab rollout, and find it very hard to believe that they are being jabbed with the same stuff as the rest of the population. After all, you cannot have future king and mother of future king keeling over with ADE or blood clots can you????

Last edited 3 years ago by Milo
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Noumenon
Noumenon
3 years ago
Reply to  Milo

Princess Michael of Kent?

6
0
AnnabelleG
AnnabelleG
3 years ago
Reply to  Noumenon

Yes…….

1
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
3 years ago
Reply to  Milo

I think the Ekaterinburg solution would be the best for this lot given that Charlie is up to his neck in the Reset.

3
-1
AnnabelleG
AnnabelleG
3 years ago
Reply to  Milo

I agree – I am bitterly disappointed The Royal Family have decided to get so involved in politics and especially in promoting a drug that has not finished its trials . It is wrong and totally unethical of them.

3
0
AnnabelleG
AnnabelleG
3 years ago

Thank you James Melville –
MSM are a disgrace

2
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Spanish Scientists “Were Experimenting with How Far They Could Push Renewable Energy” Before Countrywide Blackout

23 May 2025
by Will Jones

We Were Too Polite to Stop the Woke Takeover

23 May 2025
by Mary Gilleece

News Round-Up

24 May 2025
by Toby Young

The Tweets Cited by the Judge to ‘Prove’ Lucy Connolly is “Racist” Do Nothing of the Sort

23 May 2025
by Laurie Wastell

Trump Slaps 50% Tariffs on EU – as He Tells Starmer to Get Drilling for Oil

31

We Were Too Polite to Stop the Woke Takeover

23

Doctor Who Star Ncuti Gatwa “Axed” and BBC Show to be “Put on Pause” Amid Falling Ratings and Woke Storylines

29

Spanish Scientists “Were Experimenting with How Far They Could Push Renewable Energy” Before Countrywide Blackout

20

News Round-Up

19

Do Researchers’ Views on Immigration Affect the Results of Their Studies?

24 May 2025
by Noah Carl

Starmer’s EU Reset Tethers the UK to the EU’s Green Dystopia

24 May 2025
by Tilak Doshi

We Were Too Polite to Stop the Woke Takeover

23 May 2025
by Mary Gilleece

The Tweets Cited by the Judge to ‘Prove’ Lucy Connolly is “Racist” Do Nothing of the Sort

23 May 2025
by Laurie Wastell

Starmer Has No Intention of Cutting Immigration

22 May 2025
by Joe Baron

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