- “Bank of England’s Covid money-printing spree ‘drove up inflation’” – Experts claim quantitative easing is partly to blame for double-digit price rises, the Telegraph reports. In other news, bears have been spotted defecating in wooded areas.
- “The U.K. is blinding itself to the truth about Covid’s origins” – British institutions beholden to China or concerned about the effect on science appear uninterested in investigating the lab leak hypothesis, writes Matt Ridley in the Telegraph.
- “Gareth is no anti-vaxxer, but his wife’s death certificate says she died from the AstraZeneca vaccine. After nearly two years of being ignored, he just wants her story to be heard” – Lisa Shaw, an award-winning radio presenter on Radio Newcastle, was just 44 when she died in May 2021. Until she was admitted to hospital due to complications from the AZ vaccine she had been fit and healthy, the Mail reports.
- “The Honest Doctor’s Story Made National Television” – Watch Covid whistleblower Dr. James Miller’s interview with Fox News – with the Daily Sceptic‘s headline emblazoned across the screen.
- “What Is a Safety Signal and Why Does It Matter?” – Ramesh Thakur examines vaccine safety signals for Brownstone.
- “Forget it! Our politicians will not argue against the WHO’s Animal Farm-inspired power grab” – Our current governments can choose to sign away the sovereignty we lend them, but not for long enough, argues Pablo Roman Schollaert.
- “Just Stop Oil snobs are snookering themselves” – The Crucible protest has exposed these eco-fanatics for what they really are: attention grabbers lacking in any real ideology, says Ross Clark in the Telegraph.
- “Revealed: Just Stop Oil zealot who disrupted snooker game is Exeter University student, 25, who was jailed for blocking oil terminal, has glued himself to gallery painting and crowdfunds so he can stage eco-stunts” – Edred Whittingham is a PPE student who was sent to prison last year for blockading the Kingsbury Oil Terminal, the Mail reports.
- “Is the Bud Light Disaster a Turning Point?” – To survive in the new world of economic reality, U.S. companies need to get back to doing old-fashioned commercial business, argues Jeffrey Tucker in the Epoch Times.
- “Colorado becomes first transgender tourism state: Democratic Gov signs bill that allows children to travel for puberty blockers — even if drugs are banned where they live” – Colorado will become the first state to legally protect teen transgender treatment ‘tourism’ as part of a trio of bills signed by its Democratic Governor, the Mail reports.
- “Health Secretary urges watchdog not to ‘scrub language of biological sex’” – The Health Secretary has told the U.K.’s healthcare watchdog NICE that it must not erase women by using and promoting gender neutral language, reports the Christian Institute.
- “U.K. College of Policing continues to threaten free speech” – The College of Policing, which advises police forces in England and Wales, has been accused of watering down Home Secretary Suella Braverman’s free speech charter, according to Reclaim the Net.
- “Has the Government lost interest in campus free speech?” – A bill was introduced in the 2021 Queen’s Speech that introduced a bold approach to restoring academic freedom and meaningful debate at universities. Why isn’t it yet in the Statute Book, asks Lois McLatchie for ConservativeHome.
- “Summer festivals and holiday travel could fuel return of Mpox, officials warn” – Those eligible for vaccination against
monkeypoxMpox have, naturally, been urged by the U.K. Health Security Agency to get jabbed ahead of summer, the Telegraph reports. - “The problem with apologising for slavery” – Britain’s institutions are taking a perverse kind of pride in self-flagellating over the slave trade, writes James Heartfield for Spiked.
- “Doctor Who has degenerated into a right-on lecture” – The BBC’s naff sermons make for joyless, predictable television, says Laurie Wastell in Spiked.
- “Judy Blume bowed to trans activists and betrayed J.K. Rowling” – One day after voicing her support for J.K. Rowling, the veteran author walked back on her comments, writes Maureen Callahan for the Mail.
- “SEC green-lights vote to probe PayPal over political censorship” – The Securities and Exchange Commission agreed to a proposal by conservative investors to investigate PayPal’s discrimination against customers based on political and religious views, reports Reclaim the Net.
- “WhatsApp and Signal unite against online safety bill amid privacy concerns” – Encrypted chat apps sign an open letter warning of an “unprecedented threat to the safety and security” of U.K. citizens, the Guardian reports.
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