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The Daily Sceptic
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News Round-Up

by Toby Young
22 March 2025 12:32 AM

  • “Heathrow accused of ‘colossal failure’ over fire shutdown” – Airline chiefs have accused Heathrow of “clear failure” after Europe’s busiest airport was shut down by a fire in a single electricity substation, reports the Telegraph.
  • “How Heathrow became reliant on a single electrical substation” – Questions are being asked about why Britain’s busiest airport was so vulnerable to a fire at a single substation and why back-up power was so woefully lacking, says the Telegraph.
  • “Heathrow fire lays bare Britain’s alarming exposure to single points of failure” – We are woefully unprepared for the security threats coming from our enemies, writes Jake Wallis Simons in the Telegraph.
  • “‘Delighted’: School that dismissed Enoch Burke wins inclusivity award” – Wilson’s Hospital is among 44 schools and centres given an ‘inclusion’ award by an LGBTQ+ youth advocacy group, in spite of kicking out Enoch Burke for being a Christian, reports the Irish Times.
  • “Enoch Burke’s says his bank account frozen as ‘drug barons’ ‘walk freely’” – “There are drug barons and murderers and thieves walking freely on our streets – but all of the stops can be pulled out for me,” Enoch Burke tells Gript. The Irish teacher dismissed from his school who discovered his bank account had been frozen yesterday.
  • “Christian teacher who said ‘LGBT is a sin’ loses court battle” – The High Court has dismissed Glawdys Leger’s claim for unfair dismissal after she was sacked by a primary school for saying homosexuality is a sin and transgender people are confused, reports the Telegraph.
  • “Police hunt 22 men after large-scale fight in Sheffield” – Police officers in Sheffield have released images of men they believe were fighting over Eritrean independence, says the BBC.
  • “Multiculturalism hasn’t failed, says ex-MP chased by pro-Palestinian protesters” – Jonathan Ashworth, the ex-Labour MP who lost his seat in Leicester at the last election after a challenge by a Muslim candidate, says he still believes in multiculturalism, according to the Telegraph.
  • “Nigerian dating conman won’t be deported because NHS is treating his family” – Immigration and Asylum Tribunal judges have ruled that Emmanuel Jack, who tricked women in ‘romance frauds’, can stay in the UK because it would be “unduly harsh” on his British wife and children to deport him, reports the Telegraph.
  • “Mass migration and anti-white discrimination has broken British patriotism” – How can we feel as if we’re all in it together when we plainly aren’t? asks Neil O’Brien in the Telegraph.
  • “The cancer of October 7th denial is spreading. Its antidote is this forensic account of Hamas’s crimes” – As denial that a massacre took place in Israel on October 7th multiplies on social media, a report led by the historian Andrew Roberts lays bare the terrible facts, writes Charles Moore in the Telegraph.
  • “Disney ‘tried to rein in Snow White star after Free Palestine tweet’” – Rachel Zegler’s rift with Israeli co-star Gal Gadot forced producers to have “heart-to-heart” with the actress ahead of the troubled film’s opening, according to the Telegraph.
  • “BBC apologises to Israeli embassy after asking for anti-Netanyahu speaker ” – The Corporation admitted it had made a “serious mistake” in requesting an anti-Netanyahu speaker on news programme, says the Jewish Chronicle.
  • “Revealed: The BBC stars who earn the most moonlighting gigs” – Clive Myrie is the BBC’s highest earner in 2024, thanks for external work he did outside his role at the corporation, receiving an estimated £225,000 on top of his BBC salary, reports the Mail.
  • “Ed Miliband’s Net Zero rush is dooming Britain’s economy” – A leaked report by the Economic and Strategic Analysis team at the Department for Business and Trade warns that Net Zero targets could provoke an economic shock on the scale of the 1973 oil crisis, writes Ross Clark in the Spectator.
  • “Forcing us to buy heat pumps, EVs and lentils is not economic growth. It’s breaking windows” – Work and money for glaziers doesn’t mean wealth for the rest of us, writes Matt Ridley in the Telegraph.
  • “Why Did This Man Mislead Us?” – The disturbing tale of how the scientific establishment tried to suppress the lab leak theory, as told by Andrew Sullivan on the Weekly Dish.
  • “Covid five years on: Banging pans with the neighbours and other stuff you prefer not to think about now” – The pandemic was a time of fear, uncertainty, and weird shit you did which you’d rather forget five years later, says the Daily Mash.
  • “Man comes out of Covid self-isolation after five years” – A writer has sheltered in his home, terrified of getting Covid, for five years because he is immuno-supressed, says the Mail. Is it David Aaronovitch?
  • “Ben & Jerry’s claims Unilever ousted its boss over political activism” – The ice cream maker has accused its parent company of trying to silence its activism, reports the BBC. We can but hope.
  • “Trump agrees U.S. will become ‘associate member’ of the Commonwealth” – President Donald Trump on Friday indicated he would accept an offer from King Charles to join the British Commonwealth, according to the Mail.
  • “The World Happiness Report is a sham” – The World Happiness Survey – a so-called scientific poll of different populations – is a fraud, writes Yascha Mounk in the Spectator.
  • “Blow for Reeves as borrowing defies forecasts before Spring Statement” – The public sector borrowed £10.7billion last month – the fourth highest February figure on record and more than the £7 billion analysts had pencilled in, says the Mail.
  • “Britons left £2 trillion worse off by ‘flawed’ accounting change” – The Office for National Statistics faces scathing criticism after it admits to overvaluing UK households by £2.2 trillion, reports the Telegraph.
  • “Rich cyclists are getting brand new bikes – courtesy of you, the taxpayer” – Middle-class men on six-figure salaries are shamelessly exploiting the tax break Gordon Brown put in place for cyclists, according to the Telegraph.
  • “Half a million customers debanked to avoid ‘expensive’ payouts” – Lenders have been accused of debanking hundreds of thousands of “innocent consumers” to avoid money laundering checks, says the Telegraph.
  • “Scientist forced out over gender beliefs wins two-year legal battle” – With the help of the Free Speech Union, Peter Wilkins, a scientist who’d worked at Porton Down for 15 years, has won a claim for constructive dismissal at the Employment Tribunal after repeatedly being told by colleagues that his gender-critical views were “unacceptable’. He is expected to be awarded substantial damages. The Times has the story.
  • “‘Boob God’ plastic surgeon in legal battle with former patient” – Dr Riccardo Frati is suing Katy Morgan for breaching a confidentiality agreement which she claims she signed while heavily medicated, says the Times. Luckily, she has the FSU in her corner.
  • “Tommy Robinson doesn’t know how lucky he is” – Tommy Robinson is actually rather lucky: in many ways, his treatment behind bars is far better than the typical inmate receives, writes David Shipley in the Spectator.
  • “BBC issues support email to LGBT staff over Trump” – The Corporation has issued an emotional support notice for colleagues affected by events across the Atlantic, after the election of US President Donald Trump – with the Beeb gushing that its “commitment to diversity, inclusion and belonging remains unwavering”, according to the Spectator’s Steerpike.
  • “Why are so many Oxford students being told they have ADHD?” – Ninety eight per cent of Oxford university students who took part in a test were told they had learning difficulties, reports Noor Qurashi in the Spectator.
  • “Andrew and Tristan Tate ‘return to Romania to clear their name’” – The brothers have returned from the US to fight for justice, says the Times.
  • “Why ethnic-minority boys are more drawn to Andrew Tate” – The discourse surrounding Adolescence misses some much deeper social issues, writes Rakib Ehsan in Spiked.
  • “Wetherspoon boss: Diversity policies have become weaponised” – Sir Tim Martin, the owner of Wetherspoon, says his pubs’ staff reflect their local communities, which is why they’re so white, according to the Telegraph.
  • “From the NHS to the police, how the obsession with gender captured the public sector” – Data collected by public bodies has been “corrupted” as a result of conflating gender with sex, a new report by Professor Alice Sullivan says, posing risks to individuals, reports the Telegraph.
  • “Covid five years on – according to the BBC” – As you’d expect, the person BBC London interviewed (for several minutes) to mark the fifth anniversary of the lockdown is a drag queen.

BBC News is looking at Covid five years on. As you might expect, the person BBC London interviewed (for several minutes) about it, is a drag queen pic.twitter.com/t7Z67boZUj

— ripx4nutmeg (@ripx4nutmeg) March 21, 2025

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Tags: News Round-Up

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70 Comments
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iane
iane
3 years ago

My advice to Alex? Don’t stand near train tracks or busy roads when anyone else is around!

Last edited 3 years ago by iane
60
-2
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
3 years ago
Reply to  iane

Twitter is evil, Jack Dorsey is evil. Climate Change, like Covid, is a complete and utter scam. Any politician who pushes this is extremely stupid or extremely evil

1979 – The Beginning Of Time
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K02fDpOu4AA

stand in South Hill Park Bracknell every Sunday from 10am meet fellow anti lockdown freedom lovers, keep yourself sane, make new friends and have a laugh.
(also Wednesdays from 2pm)

Join our Stand in the Park – Bracknell – Telegram Group
http://t.me/astandintheparkbracknell

35
-2
NeilofWatford
NeilofWatford
3 years ago

That’s fine
GETTR is the new Twitter, without the deplatforming. Telegram is the new Facebook.
If you’re on Facebook, TicTok etc, you’re being steadily, remorselessly propagandised.
Shake the dust off your feet as you leave these apps.

68
0
Julian
Julian
3 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

Isn’t there the risk that moving to other platforms we just form an echo chamber? It’s important to have platforms that respect freedom of speech, but I think it’s valid to use whatever platforms we can to get our message across as best we can to the widest possible audience.

24
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Julian

If it were a case of just moving to avoid hostile views, that would be a legitimate point. But the problem is that Facebook and Twitter actively censor and harass dissenting opinions, with the intention of making dissenters from elite dogmas feel isolated and alone.

So it’s necessary to find platforms that aren’t as manipulative. It might not yet be practicable for everyone to give up Twitter and Facebook, but we need to support the alternatives while they build up.

The blame rests with the big tech censors – they initiated the attack on freedom of speech on their platforms.

41
0
Julian
Julian
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

I think we have to do both – use and support platforms that allow free speech, but continue to use any platform we’re able to in order to reach as wide an audience as possible.

Big tech need to be reined in but I can’t see any realistic prospect of that happening. The much maligned Donald Trump might have done something in that regard, but who else will?

18
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I agree we have to do both.

In the absence of elected politicians who will rein in big tech, the only tool we have, however imperfect, is to “vote with our feet” and help build up rivals to the censored platforms, that commit to tightly limited censorship and opinion manipulation.

10
0
mwhite
mwhite
3 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Correct, see,

Dr. Sam Bailey – YouTube

and

Dr. Sam Bailey (odysee.com)

2
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  mwhite

The advantage is you can draw people from the censored to the [relatively] uncensored platform, and simultaneously highlight the censorship itself.

2
0
me too
me too
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

All these ‘platforms’ you know, began as very sensible sheep.

0
0
Richard Austin
Richard Austin
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Is any new platform not initially an echo chamber? After all Facebook probably started with half a dozen mates at University that Whalberg knew. A platforms strength is in its rules and its members. Some forums on Facebook are clearly echo chambers of course such as something like “Johnson Is an Idiot” or “Corbyn Is Antisemitic” which are both factual but rather limiting.

Last edited 3 years ago by Richard Austin
1
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Richard Austin

The issue is whether the echo chamber’s received opinions are enforced and protected by the administration. If not, then the predominant ideas can at least be challenged. The problem on Facebook and Twitter is that dissenting opinions are censored and harassed, administratively.

(Johnson is functionally an idiot, but Corbyn isn’t an “antisemite” – at least in the sense that (intentionally) smears him by association with Nazis. If Corbyn is an “antisemite” then being an “antisemite” is not necessarily a particularly bad thing to be – just a political opinion you hate. If you join the smearing of Corbyn et al as “antisemites”, then you can’t complain when people you might agree with are smeared as “islamophobes” or “racists”. And I write that as someone who could not be further from Corbyn on most issues.)

4
0
mwhite
mwhite
3 years ago
Reply to  Richard Austin

In many cases youtube is being used to advertise the uncensored material on other platforms adding links to the full versions.

0
0
me too
me too
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Be a Human. Humans don’t need ‘platforms’.
Do not pay (feed) them.

Last edited 3 years ago by me too
0
0
Lucan Grey
Lucan Grey
3 years ago
Reply to  Julian

There are only echo chambers now because the fanatics don’t want to hear what you have to say.

4
0
thinkcriticall
thinkcriticall
3 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

Gab is the only free speech platform.

3
0
Bella Donna
Bella Donna
3 years ago
Reply to  thinkcriticall

Mewe is OK

0
0
Richard Austin
Richard Austin
3 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

I’ve had a few perfectly valid, perfectly accurate (I double checked everything mentioned) posts on Facebook marked as failing “Fact Check” which they got horribly wrong. This echoes my experience last year where I had them apologise for getting banning posts I’d made which they admitted were correct. They had still deleted them though – all four in one week. I welcome any platform which allows free speech and only censors where it is truly necessary (any admin of a forum knows this one as I do).

6
0
186NO
186NO
3 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

I totally agree – I don’t “do” social media , but it has occurred to me that one “positive” outturn from this sham/shambles is that you can now see the immoral/unethical/illegal/dictatorial mindset of Zuckerberg/Google and other media outlets acting as pure propaganda organs for corrupt politicians; what they trot out – whether it is fact checking bollox or ” incompatible with our policy on…” is so easily verifiably rubbish.
I appreciate it will take a very great number of people to switch before the click bait advertising revenue starts to diminish to the point where it starts to hurt. What will be truly scary is if access to the WWW becomes….restricted ….”discuss”?

3
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  186NO

“What will be truly scary is if access to the WWW becomes….restricted ….”discuss”?“

It already is. Look into how Parler was taken down by denying it access to server space, or racist/antisemitic groups and sites are denied access to basic finance services. As we’ve seen, the techniques pioneered on especially unsympathetic thoughtcriminals such as these are then conveniently available for use against other political dissenters.

1
0
milesahead
milesahead
3 years ago

Whoever first wrote this, it becomes increasingly relevant: ‘In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth will be seen as a revolutionary act’.

62
0
Richard Austin
Richard Austin
3 years ago
Reply to  milesahead

Generally attributed to Orwell but I’m not at all certain it was him and there is some debate on this. Sounds very Orwellian however.

1
0
dpj
dpj
3 years ago

Sadly it probably won’t be the case but I would love it if he was deliberately provoking twitter but making posts that were factually accurate but he knew would draw attention of ‘fact checkers’ to gather evidence as part of a class action law suit vs Twitter.

26
0
Aleajactaest
Aleajactaest
3 years ago

Don’t use Twatter, don’t use Farcebook, don’t use Gargle, don’t use Amazon, don’t use Netflix, don’t use TikTok, dont use Snapchat, don’t use PayPal, don’t use LinkedIn.

33
0
Julian
Julian
3 years ago
Reply to  Aleajactaest

I’m not a fan of the organisations you mention, but I think we should consider using whatever platforms we can to get our message across.

18
-1
me too
me too
3 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Something like the ‘speakers corner’.
Firstly, we are not the centre.
Secondly, do not think that a machine is good.

0
0
Julian
Julian
3 years ago

“Social media companies that have audiences which dwarf any other are now actively censoring reporters at the behest of governments,”

I think it’s much more sinister than that. Social media companies (and major news and media organisations) are actively and relentlessly pursuing political agendas. It’s true that with covid these have coincided with government agendas, but if for example the UK had pursued a Sweden type approach, and/or had not authorised the covid vaccines, does anyone seriously think that the MSM and Big Tech would not have gone after them remorselessly?

43
0
Encierro
Encierro
3 years ago
Reply to  Julian

News censoring reports is nothing new. Obviously at times of war it was done, Also in the reporting of relatively minor things like UFOs was restricted by the US government.UK I also believe asked for some UFO reports to be with held too.

1
-3
Julian
Julian
3 years ago
Reply to  Encierro

Well, during WW2 the danger was real, not fictitious. UFOs I know nothing about. Yes, Ofcom restrict broadcasters with what they can say about covid. My point is that I don’t think the MSM need telling to push the covid narrative. They are pretty well all on board with it.

11
0
rayc
rayc
3 years ago
Reply to  Julian

So you think these mobile morgues getting filled up now in Florida are fictitious?

0
-24
Julian
Julian
3 years ago
Reply to  rayc

Aren’t you being just a little obtuse? The evidence points to the existence of a novel virus of some kind that causes illness and death. What is pure fiction is the idea that covid is a deadly pandemic requiring unprecedented intervention, and the idea that any of this intervention makes any difference, and the idea that the evil fascists responsible for it believe for a second that it does make a difference.

I’m not up to date with what’s happening in Florida. Is there something unprecedented happening there, and if there is, do say what you think anyone could do about it that would make it go away?

26
-1
186NO
186NO
3 years ago
Reply to  Julian

FFS it is not a “novel” virus; it has been demonstrated ( Dr David Martin/Dr Richard Fleming and a load of other medics) that SARS COV2 is a chimeric, genetically engineered and therefore a synthetic product of GoF research, as admitted IN WRITING by Baric and Zhengli in 2015 (?highlighted in this presentation: https://youtu.be/3GzzBD1kJ0g?) – 8 successful results derived from a combination of Bat and Rat hosted viruses then distilled into 2 variants containing the inserted spike protein which when tested on humanised mice was shown to be pathologically lethal to humanlike tissue; SARS COV2 was then “released” on the world, method as yet unknown but almost certainly covered up by the CCP.

It appears that its only difference is the existence of genetic code that does not appear in any other known Coronavirus – how did this code become part of the Coronavirus – “ccucggcgggca”? I think Baric and Zhengli and certain other folks, Fauci/Farrar/Vallance/Daszak etc know

4
0
marebobowl
marebobowl
3 years ago
Reply to  rayc

Yes, with people double vaccinated. We all know this.

2
0
ebygum
ebygum
3 years ago
Reply to  rayc

Not fictitious, but perhaps overblown. I’d like to wait and see what is actually happening first before commenting. Sadly though it’s another strike against vaccine efficacy as Florida is in the top five vaccinated States!

2
0
me too
me too
3 years ago
Reply to  rayc

Again. This troll. I was missing it…

1
0
rtaylor
rtaylor
3 years ago

The quicker people leave that stupid platform the better. If they’re so in need to spend time online, use decentralised platforms like Peertube (for video) and Matrix’s Elements. Both open sourced and free.

9
0
Encierro
Encierro
3 years ago

Maybe one day “they” will come after hosts for sceptic websites too.

4
0
arfurmo
arfurmo
3 years ago

What does “that must be dosed IN ADVANCE OF ILLNESS.” mean?

5
-7
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  arfurmo

prophylactic

11
0
arfurmo
arfurmo
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

I’m still none the wiser as to what he means.
“Think of it — at best — as a therapeutic with a limited window of efficacy and terrible side effect profile that must be dosed IN ADVANCE OF ILLNESS.”

I can understand ““Think of it — at best — as a therapeutic with a limited window of efficacy and terrible side effect profile”

But “that must be dosed IN ADVANCE OF ILLNESS.” makes no sense

4
-9
Julian
Julian
3 years ago
Reply to  arfurmo

Normally you take medicine that mitigates illness once you’re ill. The covid “vaccines” are given to people before they get ill with covid.

17
0
arfurmo
arfurmo
3 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Thanks Julian .

3
0
Lucan Grey
Lucan Grey
3 years ago
Reply to  arfurmo

He means it’s a vaccine, but using the definition of vaccine as “substance intended to induce an immune response”.

It’s intensely amusing watching people froth at the mouth over their preferred word definitions. Of course religions have split in two over less, and this is no different.

These vaccines are not sterilising vaccines. They are symptom reducing vaccines.

Last edited 3 years ago by Lucan Grey
2
-6
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Lucan Grey

But they are also a new, experimental type of treatment, for which we have literally no idea what the long term consequences might be, so calling them plain “vaccines”, as though they are just like the old familiar treatments that exposed the body to something like the pathogen to trigger an immune response, is intentionally deceptive.

The reason word definitions are fought over so passionately is that they have real world implications.

8
0
186NO
186NO
3 years ago
Reply to  Lucan Grey

and are therefore prophylactic products just like Vitamin A, C, D, Zinc and Magnesium which when I last looked did not especially kill people.

4
0
Bella Donna
Bella Donna
3 years ago
Reply to  186NO

I take them daily and have done since this covidmania kicked off.

0
0
186NO
186NO
3 years ago
Reply to  Bella Donna

Likewise !

0
0
Sandra Barwick
Sandra Barwick
3 years ago

He’s already got 100,000 readers on Substack. Think that must be rising fast,

19
0
BoycottEuropeanEmpire
BoycottEuropeanEmpire
3 years ago

Twitter is an incredibly sinister outfit. Truly ghastly people.

26
0
Ruth Learner
Ruth Learner
3 years ago

Yeah me too dot com – but I celebrated instead of whinging. Twitter is divisive in the extreme – an echo chamber at best and a mindless boxing ring at worst – not much in between. The mere fact it’s become the number 1 censoring arm of corporate govt is enough to boycott it en masse – but people are vain and count ‘followers’ and ‘likes’ etc. It’s called addiction and how the shit show works.

9
0
marcusc
marcusc
3 years ago

My life is so much better after being banned by twitter for the fifth time and me not bothering to make another account 🤔🤣🤣

5
0
186NO
186NO
3 years ago
Reply to  marcusc

Good for you!!

Try letters – not censored (yet)

2
0
Richard Austin
Richard Austin
3 years ago

It occurs to me if you, to use that dreadful Woke phrase, “deplatform” yourself from these platforms, as many of the comments suggest, are you not doing what they want you to do and silencing debate? Is it not better to fight back?

0
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Richard Austin

As discussed below, the best approach seems to be to do both. Continue to argue as far as is allowed on the censored platforms, while also actively supporting and building up the alternatives.

If you do the former without the latter, you are accepting battle where the odds are massively tilted against you, forever. If you do the latter without the former, then you are missing a chance to get the message out to a wider audience, albeit in a hampered and limited degree.

In the end, though, these platforms live or die by the market. If people want free speech then they have to prove it by selecting free speech platforms for market success. By preferentially using them.

I’m actually not convinced most people really want free speech, though. It seems likely most just want only the opinions they hate to be silenced. Understanding that free speech for yourself requires you to tolerate the expression of opinions you hate seems beyond the intellect and maturity of most.

Last edited 3 years ago by Mark
5
0
Hester
Hester
3 years ago

Anyone with a brain or an ounce of humanity should get off twitter it is nothing more than putrid cess pool of ignorant, vain spewings by a very sad population and which lines the pockets of billionaires who get richer by encouraging hatred. If people just stopped using twitter the thing would die and people would be much better off.

5
0
Lister of Smeg
Lister of Smeg
3 years ago

…and yet, The Taliban and many other nasty pieces of work still have their account and have never been banned.

6
0
186NO
186NO
3 years ago
Reply to  Lister of Smeg

“Enuff said”

1
0
Lister of Smeg
Lister of Smeg
3 years ago
Reply to  186NO

Note also he’s a former employee of the NYT. You have to wonder if a) he was sacked or constructively discmissed from that position for being a lockdown sceptic, and b) he was only banned from Tw@tter after he wasn’t working for the NYT, because a current employee being banned would be ‘bad optics’.

2
0
186NO
186NO
3 years ago
Reply to  Lister of Smeg

Granted; but then again the NYT have done a piece (just this week?) on the rush to install the RT-PCR test regime and the realisation that it resulted in the epidemic that “wasn’t” …I wonder if they had meaningful contact with certain US government officials and ad agencies…still come back to the pandemic busting piece ..maybe they have seen the light?

Last edited 3 years ago by 186NO
0
0
marebobowl
marebobowl
3 years ago

Another in the long list of censored, suppressed, and banned. Soon you will have no where else to look for alternative information. This was predicted and it is happening. Censorship, banning and suppression of information has no place in a “free” society.

4
0
Bella Donna
Bella Donna
3 years ago

Zuckerberg & Co., don’t like facts or the truth.

1
0
Manjushri
Manjushri
3 years ago

Welcome to global corporate fascism at its finest.
A handful of powerful global elites now control everything including experimental injections, main stream media, social media, nearly everything we buy and our governments.
Next phase of ‘The Project’ is tyranical global feudalism.
God help us all.

4
0
me too
me too
3 years ago

Good for him. God has ways to transforming evil ito good

1
0

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