- “NHS bosses ordered to reveal fate of 9,000 young transgender Tavistock patients” – In the wake of the Cass review, the Health Secretary demands that the NHS reveal the fate of 9,000 transgender young people treated by the controversial Tavistock clinic, reports the Telegraph.
- “Labour women tear into Wes Streeting as Cass report ignites fresh trans row” – MP Rosie Duffield and author Julie Bindel call out the failure of male leaders to listen to gender-critical women, says the Telegraph.
- “The Cass report lays bare what we all knew about the trans brainwashing cult” – The indoctrination of impressionable youngsters by dangerous cranks has been revealed thanks to the Cass report, says Allison Pearson in the Telegraph.
- “The Cass review is a devastating blow to trans ideology” – The NHS has been experimenting on confused, vulnerable kids. Heads must roll, says Jo Bartosch in Spiked.
- “The Cass report and the unforgivable puberty blockers scandal” – The medicalisation of children who might simply have been distressed by the idea of puberty and growing up is a scandal of epic proportions, writes Debbie Hayton in the Spectator.
- “Why was gender ideology allowed to run amok for so long?” – After the Cass review, we need to recapture our institutions from this cruel, homophobic cult, says Tom Slater in Spiked.
- “Fans of Graham Linehan say he’s been vindicated by the Cass report” – The creator of TV’s Father Ted, who believes those who support the gender transition of youngsters are child abusers, says he is “proud as punch” following a bombshell review into NHS transgender treatment, reports the Mail.
- “What Strasbourg’s climate ruling means for Europe” – The Spectator’s Alexander Horne examines the ripple effects of the ECHR’s landmark decision on climate change litigation.
- “Tory backlash against European Court of Human Rights climate ruling” – The Energy Secretary leads a Tory revolt against the European Court of Human Rights after it issued a landmark ruling that governments have a duty to protect people from climate change, reports the Telegraph.
- “Is climate change really a human rights matter?” – Every yard gained by a well-meaning extension of the ECHR‘s purview is a yard lost to the democratic process, warns Andrew Tettenborn in the Spectator.
- “The international Left-wing elites are well on their way to crushing democracy” – The ECHR’s Net Zero judgment shows why the U.K. must now leave the court without delay, writes Allister Heath in the Telegraph.
- “NHS gender treatment for children based on ‘remarkably weak evidence’” – A scathing new report – the Cass Review – concludes that children given NHS transgender treatment have been set on a path of irreversible change despite scant medical data, says the Mail.
- “Fewer than 4% of reports under new SNP hate crime law were actual crimes” – In the first statistics published since the new laws came into force, Police Scotland says that it has received 7,152 online hate reports, according to the Telegraph.
- “Lord Hope calls for repeal of Hate Crime Act” – Former Lord President and Supreme Court justice Lord Hope of Craighead calls for Scotland’s new hate crime legislation to be withdrawn, describing it as the result of “gesture politics”, says Scottish Legal News.
- “If only they had gone and cut the bloody doors off” – The pandemic showed Scotland’s leaders didn’t think carefully or act practically with policies, and the current hate crime debate suggests not much has changed, write Prof. Carl Heneghan and Dr. Tom Jefferson.
- “MHRA still won’t release critical data on vaccinated pregnant women” – On Substack, Profs. Norman Fenton and Martin Neil take aim at the MHRA’s reluctance to release crucial data concerning COVID-19 vaccine safety for pregnant women.
- “Crossed harms” – On Substack, Dr. Tom Jefferson and Prof. Carl Heneghan delve into disparities in the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine harm lists, decry data transparency flaws and sound the alarm on widespread impacts.
- “The NHS is killing us – it is an enemy of Britain” – Being born British should not risk a death sentence but, as long as we go on believing in the National Health Service, it will be, says Allison Pearson in the Telegraph.
- “Exactly what are WHO member states voting for?” – If the WHO wants to calm down fears of potential misuse of the pandemic label via a new governance process, then they need to provide clarity on what they are actually talking about, says the REPPARE team for the Brownstone Institute.
- “Why the public doesn’t support decriminalising abortion” – Is this trend towards liberalising abortion really a sign of progress? asks Melanie McDonagh in the Spectator.
- “‘It would be monstrous to decriminalise abortion. I speak from experience’” – The Telegraph’s Isabel Oakeshott is horrified that any parliamentarian should want to decriminalise the killing of unborn babies that are so well developed that they could survive outside the womb.
- “Honour-based violence has soared in Britain” – The scourge of ‘honour-based’ violence has shown a disturbing upward trend, with a staggering 60% surge in reported incidents over just two years, writes Bella Wallersteiner in CapX.
- “EC backs Frontex chief who says ‘nothing can stop migration’ into EU” – The European Commission has voiced its support for the chief of EU border agency Frontex after he said that it would be impossible to stop migration, reports Brussels Signal.
- “Why New Zealand is cracking down on immigration” – New Zealand’s infrastructure is groaning in response to the surging number of international newcomers, writes David Cohen in the Spectator.
- “Fury as SNP quietly bans wood-burning stoves in Scotland newbuilds” – The Scottish Government has quietly banned wood-burning stoves in new-build houses, sparking fears for pensioners and remote Highland communities relying on off-grid forms of heating, reports the Mail.
- “Sadiq Khan’s Ulez has spectacularly backfired” – According to the sat nav maker TomTom, congestion in London last year was actually worse than it was before Ulez and the pandemic, writes Ross Clark in the Spectator.
- “How woke policing betrays ordinary people” – The cops now care more about offensive tweets than burglaries, says Neil Davenport in Spiked.
- “No, the Foreign Office is not too ‘rooted in the past’” – A new report from top foreign-policy mandarins reveals the idiocy of modern officialdom, writes Frank Furedi in Spiked.
- “The behavioural sciences and the populist revolt” – On The Corbett Report, Ben Pile delves into the disconnect between the globalist technocratic jet set and the public, exploring why they are losing the battle for hearts and minds.
- “Peace in Ukraine, the destruction of Hamas, standing up to China: Europe should rejoice at the prospect of the re-election of Donald Trump – it will soon be emulating his policies” – Donald Trump is probably the forerunner and convener of a Western G6 composed entirely of people who sound like he does, writes Conrad Black in Brussels Signal.
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