- “Thousands of police braced for far-Right riots” – Officers are on standby as far-Right groups prepare to target 30 immigration centres across Britain, reports the Times.
- “‘Nowhere to hide’ for influencers behind disorder – top prosecutor” – The Director of Public Prosecutions says his teams will consider seeking the extradition of social media influencers playing a role in the violent disorder gripping the U.K. from abroad, says the BBC.
- “Pubgoer attacked by masked men ‘left with lacerated liver’” – The man attacked by a mob of masked men outside a pub in Birmingham says he was taken to hospital with a torn liver, according to the Telegraph.
- “Wife of Tory councilor is arrested for racial hatred” – The wife of a Tory councillor has been arrested for stirring up racial hatred after saying rioters should set fire to migrant hotels, reports the Mail.
- “Parents fury as pro-Palestinian mob interrupt children’s science show” – A theatre descended into chaos when a group of protestors calling themselves ‘Parents for Palestine’ stormed the venue and began chanting in front of an audience of terrified children, some as young as seven, says the Mail.
- “Armchair thug is first to be convicted for riot Facebook posts” – A 28 year-old sign installer is the first man to be charged over Facebook posts relating to the violent disorder across the U.K., reports the Mail.
- “Politicians must not rush to call riots acts of terrorism, Government warned” – Jonathan Hall KC, the independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, said on the Today programme it would be unwise to charge any of the people arrested in the riots with terrorism offences, says the Telegraph.
- “Far-Right riots have spread through the U.K. – here’s how” – The Telegraph takes a look at how the violence has escalated since the stabbings on July 29th.
- “Almost half of public believe Starmer is handling riots badly” – A YouGov poll found that 49% of adults surveyed felt the Prime Minister was handling the riots poorly, says the Telegraph.
- “Jess Phillips under fire for ‘excusing masked thugs’” – Jess Phillips has come under fire after a post of hers on X appeared to justify masked mobs of Muslim young men roaming the streets of Birmingham looking for ‘racists’ to attack, reports the Express.
- “Why can’t Jess Phillips condemn the Birmingham mob?” – The reluctance of Starmer and Jess Phillips to call out Islamic-sectarian thuggery says more about them than anything else, writes Tom Slater in Spiked.
- “Britain’s multicultural disaster” – Thugs and agitators are piggybacking on a crisis caused by liberals, says Melanie Phillips on her Substack.
- “Keir Starmer: fanning the flames” – The political class who have been waving the matches of identity politics around the petrol can of mass immigration are now ‘shocked’ that it’s suddenly burst into flames, writes Frank Haviland in the European Conservative.
- “Keir Starmer is already horribly out of his depth” – Bringing the country together after these disgraceful riots is of utmost importance. The Prime Minister isn’t up to the job, says Mark Dolan in the Telegraph.
- “How to stop the riots” – On YouTube, Nigel Farage gives his take on the civil unrest sweeping the country.
- “Civil war comes to the West” – Severe social instability, economic decline and cultural decay are driving us towards civil war, warns Prof. David Betz in Military Strategy Magazine.
- “What can we say about the ‘far-Right’ riots?” – There’s an obvious reason the authorities won’t reduce immigration, says Noah Carl in Aporia.
- “When the elites loved rioting” – From the London riots to BLM, liberals and leftists have spent far too long celebrating street violence as virtuous, writes Tim Black in Spiked.
- “There is no cope” – The Right-wing cope for what’s happening in Britain is to go on about Keir Starmer. The Left-wing cope is to blame the “far-Right”. The reality is much, much worse, says Konstantin Kisin on his Substack.
- “Minister slams Elon Musk’s ‘deplorable’ civil war claims” – The owner of X is at the centre of a war of words with the U.K. Government after using his platform to make a series of claims about the riots, reports the Mail.
- “Elon Musk targets Keir Starmer again in another barrage of tweets” – Elon Musk has goaded Keir Starmer again by accusing him of presiding over ‘one-sided’ policing of the riots – even using #TwoTierKeir in a tweet to 196 million people, says the Mail.
- “Rioter steals tray of sausage rolls from Greggs” – From the ‘sausage roll burglar’ to the Frijj milkshake thieves and the Croc raiders, the Mail reports on looters who are risking years behind bars by ransacking high street shops.
- “Harris officially names Tim Walz as Vice Presidential running mate” – Vice President Kamala Harris has officially named Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her Vice Presidential running mate to help her challenge Donald Trump and J.D. Vance in November, reports ABC News.
- “Republicans attack Kamala’s VP pick over his record on trans rights and George Floyd riots” – Kamala Harris’s VP pick Tim Walz has been attacked by Republicans for his pro-trans policies and handling of riots following the killing of George Floyd, says the Telegraph.
- “Harris’s VP pick who made ‘weird’ Trump go viral” – In the Telegraph, Andrew Buncombe profiles Kamala Harris’s pick for Vice President.
- “Kamala Harris has caved in to the Left with Tim Walz running mate pick” – By selecting Tim Walz as VP – who supports a ceasefire in Gaza – Ms. Harris appears to have prioritised young and minority voters, writes Rozina Sabur in the Telegraph.
- “Does Tim Walz really moderate the Kamala Harris ticket?” – Tim Walz makes the contrast between the Democratic and Republican ticket this autumn even more stark, says Kate Andrews in the Spectator.
- “German court due to rule on ‘From the River to the Sea’ case in test of free speech” – A Berlin court has convicted a pro-Palestinian activist for leading a chant of “From the River to the Sea” four days after the Hamas attacks on Israel, reports the Guardian.
- “Neonatal nurses ‘resigning amid Lucy Letby fallout’” – According to the Telegraph, a new Channel 5 documentary has revealed that neonatal nurses are quitting Britain’s baby units out of fear of being accused of harming infants.
- “GP industrial action ‘could push one million extra patients to A&E’” – Health service modelling reveals that industrial action by GPs could push more than a million extra cases to A&E departments, according to the Telegraph.
- “U.K. COVID-19 Inquiry – Module 1: the resilience and preparedness of the United Kingdom” – The U.K.’s 2011 pandemic preparedness plan was flawed by its narrow focus on influenza, overreliance on ineffective antivirals and groupthink, say Prof. Carl Heneghan and Dr. Tom Jefferson on the TTE Substack, summarising the first report of Baroness Hallett.
- “Paper showing Covid and flu vaccines do not reduce hospitalisation was published today” – On Substack, Steve Kirsch talks about his new paper showing that Covid and flu vaccines don’t reduce hospitalisation or death rates, while Medicare data reveals differing mortality risks by vaccine brand.
- “The WHO is no longer fit for purpose” – The WHO is engaged in a silent coup against the governments of the world, warns Ramesh Thakur for the Brownstone Institute.
- “Law restricting right to strike will be repealed” – The Government has confirmed it will ditch Tory legislation designed to curb disruption from walkouts, reports the Times.
- “Surge in super-wealthy preparing to leave U.K. over Labour tax fears” – Financial advisers have seen a surge in wealthy clients preparing to leave the U.K. after Labour won the General Election, says the Telegraph.
- “Scottish Qualifications Authority chief apologises for blank results emails as pass rate falls” – Thousands of pupils were sent blank emails instead of their exam results in a “shambolic” blunder by Scotland’s exam body, reports the Mail.
- “Stock market crash ‘only half complete’, warns JP Morgan” – According to a JPMorgan strategist, the “carry trade” unwind that helped spark the recent bloodbath in U.S. stocks likely isn’t close to over, says Business Insider.
- “Why is Britain so ugly?” – It does not need economic miracles to make Britain beautiful; it needs determination, hard work, good design and the spine to tell whining architects to take a running jump, writes Sean Thomas in the Spectator.
- “‘Don’t use us as an experiment’: the villagers at the centre of Miliband’s bet on solar” – Labour’s green revolution threatens to harm livelihoods as well as landscapes, says Ruby Hinchliffe in the Telegraph.
- “The physics of Net Zero” – You can’t boil an egg in a swimming pool. Or run Britain on breezes, writes Richard Lyon on Substack.
- “Amateur, unreliable IBA poured kerosene on bonfire of boxing’s failed sex tests” – The Telegraph’s Oliver Brown reports on a chaotic IBA press conference that spiralled out of control as it attempted to address the disqualification of Olympic boxers for having male chromosomes.
- “Turning violence against women into a spectator sport” – Letting biological males box women at Paris 2024 is a new low for our irrational elites, says Brendan O’Neill in Spiked.
- “Musk says ‘no choice’ but to shut X San Francisco HQ” – Elon Musk says that recent laws passed by California leave him with “no choice” but to move the flagship offices of X and his rocket firm SpaceX to Texas, according to the BBC.
- “Elon Musk sues brands and trade group over ‘illegal boycott’” – Elon Musk has declared “war” against the World Federation of Advertisers and its member companies by launching a lawsuit over an alleged “illegal boycott” of his social media platform X, reports the Mail.
- “Let’s get ready to Rumble!” – On Substack, Bill Rice Jr. reacts to news that Elon Musk and Rumble have filed a lawsuit against the ‘Massive Censorship Cartel’.
- “Digital Editor” – Looking to join a marketing agency fighting the woke? Believe that hard work pays off? Uncommon Sense is looking for a Digital Editor to join its busy team.
- “Christopher Hitchens 2009 vs Keir Starmer 2004” – A video on X shows Keir Starmer in 2024 confirming the worst fears of Christopher Hitchens about shutting down criticism of Islam in 2009.
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