- “British Police ‘Are Giving in to the Mob’” – In the Free Press, Rupa Subramanya says Suela Braverman was right – the British police seem to care more about the feelings of some groups over others and lack the backbone to stand up to antisemitic mobs.
- “Police warn of ‘messy’ Armistice Day as guard of Cenotaph begins” – Scotland Yard has been forced to place the Cenotaph, Britain’s most hallowed war memorial, under 24-hour police guard for the first time ever, reports the Mail.
- “Met Police warn they will use force to stop Armistice Day being disrupted” – Scotland Yard says officers will take “robust, rapid and agile action” as up to a million people prepare to march in London, according to the Telegraph.
- “Forgive our mistakes at pro-Palestine Armistice Day march, police say” – Chairman of the Police Federation tells the Telegraph that “potential errors” could be made at Saturday’s protest. No, really?
- “Appalling cop-out from top cop ahead of Saturday’s pro-Palestine march” – How much more evidence is required to conclude that this supposedly ‘peaceful’ gathering is highly likely to descend into chaos? asks Isabel Oakeshott in the Telegraph.
- “Armistice Day” – The Pro-Palestinian march should not be allowed to go ahead on Armistice Day, writes 15 year-old Jack Watson on his Substack.
- “Nearly 75% of Tory voters back Suella Braverman’s call for Armistice Day protest to be banned” – Exclusive polling for the Telegraph shows that more than 72% of Conservatives believe the planned pro-Palestine march in London today should not go ahead.
- “Teenagers charged after cenotaph defaced with ‘Free Palestine’ slogan” – Two males have been charged with racially aggravated criminal damage after scrawling “Free Palestine” on the Cenotaph, reports the Telegraph.
- “Why must Jews watch their backs as London mobs cheer?” – In the Jewish Chronicle, Douglas Murray takes aim at the complacent commentariat who aren’t taking antisemitic attacks seriously, either here or in Israel.
- “It’s not safe to be Jewish on the anniversary of Kristallnacht” – An article by Debbie Isaacs, a psychotherapist, for Laura Dodsworth’s Substack.
- “Jews are not safe on Britain’s campuses” – In UnHerd, Etan Smallman say radical British students aren’t even bothering to conceal their antisemitism, instilling terror in their Jewish classmates.
- “I’ve felt scared: Jewish students face hatred on campus” – The Times reports on the fear that has descended on Jewish students across Britain’s universities.
- “Yesterday’s cancel culture zealots are today masquerading as free speech warriors. Don’t fall for it” – Now that people on his side are feeling the heat, Owen Jones has become a free speech warrior. Don’t give him the time of day, advises Tom Slater in the Telegraph.
- “The brass neck of Owen Jones” – The 21st-century Witchfinder General is trying to rebrand himself as pro-free speech, writes Fraser Myers in Spiked. Don’t be fooled.
- “Pro-Palestinian protesters in London call Hamas ‘freedom fighters’” – Activists at a Stop the War rally on November 4th denied that Hamas were terrorists and described the slaughter of over 1,200 Israelis on October 7th as an act of “resistance”, according to the Mail.
- “Egyptian TV presenter who ‘backed Hamas at pro-Palestine rally’ has visa revoked” – Moataz Matar is alleged to have pledged support for the terrorist group and will not be allowed back into Britain, reports the Telegraph.
- “‘We knew what would happen’: how Hamas attacked on October 7th” – A blow-by-blow account of how the October 7th massacre unfolded in the Times.
- “On visit to Israel, I have seen the horror that the world must not forget” – In the New York Post, Douglas Murray describes his visit to Kibbutz Nir Oz in the aftermath of Hamas’s terror attacks.
- “New York Times and CNN deny their Gazan freelancers knew about Hamas plan to attack Israel” – Photographers who were embedded with the Hamas terrorists on October 7th deny they were accomplices, reports the Telegraph.
- “The “genocide” canard against Israel” – Israel is very far from being “genocidal”, argues Andrew Sullivan on his Substack.
- “Emmanuel Macron calls on Israel to ‘stop bombing babies’ in Gaza” – French President Emmanuel Macron has called on Israel to stop bombing civilians in Gaza and called for a ceasefire, says the Mail.
- “Illegal migration is pushing Europe to the brink – and it isn’t racist to say so” – Britain is hardly alone in seeking to crack down on illegal arrivals, argues Camilla Tominey in the Telegraph.
- “National Grid to spend up to £19 billion to ‘rewire’ Britain for net zero” – Networks of new cables are needed to accommodate all those heat pumps and electric cars, reports the Telegraph.
- “The myth of cheap offshore wind has been exposed” – Net Zero Watch is calling for an investigation after it was reported that ministers are considering doubling the guaranteed prices of offshore wind.
- “Electric car drivers should pay for the damage they’re doing to our roads” – Potholes are becoming a national scandal, breaking suspension springs and distorting wheels thanks to the sheer weight of electric vehicles, says Ross Clark in the Telegraph.
- “‘Failing Conventionally: how the ESG gravy train has been derailed’” – Barry Norris takes aim at ESG in his Argonautica Blog.
- “The Green Paradox: Why unilateral emissions restrictions may actually increase fossil fuel production and will always fail to do anything about atmospheric CO2 levels” – Eugyppius takes a scalpel to the contradictions of the German Government’s energy policy.
- “Stanford Group Helped US Government Censor Covid Dissidents and Then Lied About It, New Documents Show” – A trove of newly released Virality Project reports confirms that the U.S. Government used a Stanford cut-out to censor true content about Covid vaccines, report Alex Gutentag and Andrew Lowenthal in Public.
- “A cautionary tale about Wikipedia censorship and the Twitter Files” – Becket Adams recounts in Spectator World how the investigative journalism prize his organisation awarded to Matt Taibbi for his work on the Twitter Files has been airbrushed from his Wikipedia page.
- “Actress unable to perform after stroke triggered by Covid jab” – In February 2020, Australian actor Melle Stewart was enjoying standing ovations in Belfast. But she is now unable to walk or talk following a devastating complication from an AstraZeneca Covid jab, according to the Mail.
- “Families of AstraZeneca vaccine victims fight to get jab listed on death certificates” – Three widows tell the Telegraph about their struggles to have the Covid jab recorded as the official cause of death of their husbands.
- “‘Ringmaster’ Yousaf ends up being the driver of the clown car in Covid Inquiry circus” – The Scottish First Minister amuses the Tories by getting in a tangle with WhatsApp message requests over pandemic, writes Madeline Grant in the Telegraph.
- “School will NOT provide litter trays for pupils who identify as CATS” – West Monmouth School (pictured) in Pontypool, South Wales was forced to send a letter home to parents to alert them to the fact that it’s refusing to provide litter trays for pupils identifying as cats, reports the Mail.
- “Former NatWest chief executive Dame Alison Rose loses £7.6 million payout” – NatWest has said it will not pay £7.6 million to its former Chief Executive, says the Mail.
- “Is California the new China?” – The Governor of California wants to introduce a Chinese-style social credit system, according to John Mac Ghlionn in the Spectator.
- “Owners of Miss Universe file for bankruptcy following diversity drive that allowed trans women to compete” – In the latest example of ‘Get Woke, Go Broke’, Miss Universe has filed for bankruptcy after it’s new ‘inclusive’ pageant proved unpopular, reports the Telegraph.
- “U.K. stocks suffer sharpest fall in four months as economy flatlines” – The City of London reeled yesterday after the ONS said the economy had flatlined in Q3, according to the Telegraph.
- “Michael Gove ‘falls out’ with Kemi Badenoch after affair with her acquaintance” – Kemi Badenoch, the business secretary, has fallen out with Michael Gove after he had an affair with an acquaintance of hers, reports the Times.
- “In praise of business – CapX” – Matthew Elliott, the founder of the Taxpayers’ Alliance and Big Brother Watch, gave a lecture on Thursday evening in which he launched his new think tank. This is a transcipt.
- “Harry and Meghan fuming over new cartoon appearance” – According to Collin Rugg on X, Prince Harry and Megham Markle are very unhappy about their depiction in a recent episode of Family Guy.
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