• Log in
The Daily Sceptic
No Result
View All Result
  • Articles
  • About
  • Archive
    • ARCHIVE
    • NEWS ROUND-UPS
  • Podcasts
  • Newsletter
  • Premium
  • Donate
  • Log In
The Daily Sceptic
No Result
View All Result

News Round-Up

by Will Jones
2 June 2022 1:56 AM

  • “WHO insists Pride parades pose low monkeypox risk” – Andy Seale, from the agency’s department for HIV, hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections, said in a briefing yesterday there was “no reason to be concerned” about catching the virus at these events as the risk relates to indoor activities, reports the Mail. Of course, this assumes there are no indoor Pride-related activities…
  • “Britain’s monkeypox outbreak is linked to ‘gay bars, saunas and Grindr’, 86% of cases are in London and just two women have caught virus – as total U.K. infections rise to 196” – The U.K. Health Security Agency announced that contact tracing has linked monkeypox cases with “gay bars, saunas and the use of dating apps in the U.K. and abroad”, reports the Mail.
  • “Monkeypox could have been spreading across Europe undetected for two years” – The World Health Organisation says the “explosion” in cases suggests virus was emerging under the radar before health authorities noticed, the Telegraph reports. Really lethal, then.
  • “Who is responsible for inflicting unethical behavioural-science ‘nudges’ on the British people?” – There are four groups of stakeholders who could feasibly be culpable for these egregious actions, says Gary Sidley on Coronababble, and to date, all four seem to be shirking any responsibility.
  • “Do nine people dying a day from Covid in California justify emergency powers?” – The question to ask lawmakers is how low do daily deaths have to go before this is no longer an emergency, says Steve Kirsch.
  • “CDC Director Issues Alert on Pfizer’s COVID-19 Pill: ‘You Might Get Symptoms Again’” – Centres for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky warned that Pfizer’s COVID-19 pill Paxlovid can lead to a rebound in symptoms, reports the Epoch Times.
  • “Elon Musk tells Tesla staff they can work remotely – after doing 40 hours in the office” – Elon Musk has demanded Tesla staff ditch home working and hit out at his HR department for living in separate states to the factories they run, reports the Telegraph.
  • “Doctors seem more out of reach than ever – this must stop” – Far too many hospitals and practices still haven’t returned to pre-Covid services, which can literally be a matter of life or death for some, says Allison Pearson in the Telegraph.
  • “Seven reasons the Government should not sign a WHO pandemic treaty” – Brian Monteith at Time for Recovery says the Government is taking us down the road to a serious and costly folly, and offers seven reasons why such a course is the wrong one.
  • “JP Morgan boss warns of upcoming economic ‘hurricane’” – Jamie Dimon, the Chief Executive of JP Morgan, has warned of a looming “hurricane” as the economy struggles against fiscally induced growth, quantitative tightening and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, reports the Telegraph.
  • “We’re paying the price for the new cult of idleness” – Everyone wants to go on holiday but nobody wants to work – and the result is total chaos at U.K. airports, says Ross Clark in the Telegraph.
  • “Covid’s ecological cost” – Pandemic-related pollution is clogging the environment, with potentially deadly consequences, says John Pickrell in Australian Geographic.
  • “Vindication for ‘transphobic’ gender-critical campaigner named in Queen’s Birthday Honours list” – Transgender Trend founder Stephanie Davies-Arai, who will receive British Empire Medal, defends JK Rowling for speaking out against trans rights activists, the Telegraph reports.
  • “Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine Could Affect Normal Thyroid Function” – A new study reported in TrialSite News finds that the Pfizer vaccine might affect the thyroid function of healthy study participants.
  • “Europe lurches closer to energy crisis as Kremlin cuts off gas supply to Shell” – The British company becomes the latest to lose access to Russian fuel following a refusal to pay in roubles, the Telegraph reports.
  • “Let’s apply Covid scepticism to climate change” – From fake alarmism to flawed models, these two ‘crises’ have much in common, writes Ramesh Thakur in Spectator Australia.
  • “Steve Baker MP warns of risks of computer modelling ” – Baker’s warning appears in the foreword to a new paper from the Global Warming Policy Foundation on some of the problems with climate models in recent years.
  • “Climate Change to Blame for Monkeypox Outbreak, Says Professor” – It had to happen, didn’t it. Driving animals out of normal habitat, apparently. Read in Watts Up With That?
  • “Hypocritical woke activists are destroying freedom of speech” – Why are such different standards applied to protesters on the Left in this country, asks Ross Clark in the Telegraph.
  • “Not all masculinity is ‘toxic’” – There must be consequences to telling men that their instincts are wrong, that their behaviour is wrong, and that all their intentions are tainted by dint of their chromosomes, writes Douglas Murray in the Spectator.
  • “Suella Braverman is right about trans ideology in schools” – We are plunging younger generations into an identity crisis, says Frank Furedi in Spiked.
  • “The thoughtpolice are a law unto themselves” – Non-crime hate incidents were never approved by Parliament, they were declared unlawful by the courts, they are also opposed by elected ministers and by many police chiefs, and yet their use is only likely to be expanded, writes Fraser Myers in Spiked.

If you have any tips for inclusion in the round-up, email us here.

Tags: News Round-Up

Donate

We depend on your donations to keep this site going. Please give what you can.

Donate Today

Comment on this Article

You’ll need to set up an account to comment if you don’t already have one. We ask for a minimum donation of £5 if you'd like to make a comment or post in our Forums.

Sign Up
Previous Post

Hospital Drops Mask Requirement. Will Others Follow?

Next Post

Negative Vaccine Effectiveness: The ‘Fact Checks’ Were Wrong Last Autumn and They’re Even More Wrong Now

Subscribe
Login
Notify of
Please log in to comment

To join in with the discussion please make a donation to The Daily Sceptic.

Profanity and abuse will be removed and may lead to a permanent ban.

61 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
  • “WHO insists Pride parades pose low monkeypox risk” – Andy Seale, from the agency’s department for HIV, hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections, said in a briefing yesterday there was “no reason to be concerned” about catching the virus at these events as the risk relates to indoor activities, reports the Mail. Of course, this assumes there are no indoor Pride-related activities…

Yes. “Broken skin” and “prolonged physical contact”.

Surely there can’t be any large scale lockdowns for this (though the fact that the question is being asks suggests that maybe things have changed permanently – at least as far as the WHO tyrants are concerned)?

Last edited 2 years ago by Hugh
12
0
Alter Ego
Alter Ego
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

I wonder if we are not being pushed to fight on too many fronts at once.

We’re facing a full-scale assault on the lives and liberties of the overwhelming majority of people on this planet. And we’re the ones being overwhelmed.

Over the last couple of decades, we’ve been hit from every direction: kept frightened, anxious and/or angry. The war on terrorism that was declared back in 2001 has turned out to be a war of terrorism: on us.

In no particular order:

  • we’re told that the planet itself is at risk and that the solutions are something which will dramatically affect our lives – but that part is nothing to worry about at all;
  • we’re told that deadly and horrible diseases are spreading around the world, and that we must be locked up, masked and injected to save everybody;
  • we’re told to watch how we use pronouns, but not to worry ourselves about economic situations because they’ll sort themselves out with renewables (and it they don’t, it’s Putin’s fault – but he’s dying of something or other);
  • we’re told utterly absurd and mutually contradictory things about the nature of human beings, and encouraged to judge and attack each other on the subject.

There’s more, but that’s as much as I could bear to post.

How do we fight against all that? How do we forge alliances, when divisions are constantly being created?

Perhaps crusading, active scepticism is the main front, and annoying questions are the principal weapons: Who says? How do you know? What about (yes – that, too)?

31
0
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

Whataboutery? 🙂

” ‘Where shall I find courage?… That is what I chiefly need.’
‘courage is found in unlikely places’ ” (Tolkien).

“Suppose we have only dreamed, or made up all those things -trees and grass and sun and moon and Aslan himself… Then all I can say is that, in that case, the made up things seem a good deal more important than the real ones. Suppose this black pit of a kingdom of yours is the only world. Well, it strikes me as a pretty poor one. And that’s a funny thing, when you come to think of it. We’re just babies making up a game, if you’re right. But four babies playing a game can make a play-world which licks your real world hollow.” (C.S. Lewis, The Silver Chair).

To borrow a phrase, hold fast that which is good. No matter what lies they tell you, never lose sight of reality. No matter who tells you the lies, never be afraid to tell them that their reality is so much rubbish.

One of our people, a prophet of our times, shared with his prayer group a word of knowledge (prophecy) that he had received. This was on the 10th of September 2001. The word was: “God is going to do a new thing”. So it turned out. The events of the next day marked a decisive turning point in history. For those of us who believe, the things that have happened since have happened by God’s will (i.e. He has allowed them to happen for His own purposes). Tolkien again: “It is not for them to decide {the times they live in] All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us”. Courage, pilgrim.

Enjoy the platinum jubilee (or minister for republic, or whatever people are doing in Oz. You can always enjoy that kanga-fight…).

7
-1
MrTea
MrTea
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

‘He has allowed them to happen for His own purposes)’

People often forget that God is in complete control of Satan/evil and that God directs Satan to inflict all manner of misery and evil on humanity for reasons that are his own. God seems to delight in all sorts of evil, sometimes he kills and wounds simply for the fun of a bet as described in the book of Job.

2
-2
Alter Ego
Alter Ego
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

The term “Whataboutery” invalidates a perfectly legitimate question, which can often be used to expose hypocrisy!

3
0
TheRightToArmBears
TheRightToArmBears
2 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

And it would all stop if we all ignored whatever government said.

4
0
J4mes
J4mes
2 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

And when you assess each of your bullet points, you’ll see they all come to the same conclusion: isolation of the individual and relieving the individual of any influence or empowerment.

Point 1 – the green agenda; this will stop us from travelling further than our immediate area.

Point 2 – deadly diseases; lockdown/restrictions from socialising. The latest monkey pox scam will seek to stop people from having sex – we could well see Orwell’s Anti-sex League being mobilised to stop procreation.

Point 3 – censorship; the new ‘online safety bill’ will separate us from the truth about the tyrants. It will stop us from communicating with one-another openly and honestly. This will force us to isolate for fear of being reprimanded and being further ostracised.

Point 4 – LGBT; the ‘Trans-human’ theory which seeks to de-humanise us and divide us into small labels. MK Ultra mind-games in movies, computer games, TV shows have been for years pushing us to devalue life, promoted hatred and normalised violence – always towards white people.

As you say; there’s more – much more, but we start to get tangled in all the tentacles of this evil.

9
0
Milo
Milo
2 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

Agreed AE – been saying this for some time on here. It is exhausting, hard to follow and keep up with, and seems to me to be a deliberate distraction tactic on part of TPTB to make people spread themselves so thinly they cannot keep up with checking all the falsehoods and so just give up and surrender to the narrative.

Perhaps we should organise into battalions – squadrons just responsible for discrete areas, some on climate, some on Ukraine, some on economy, some on WEF, some on Convid etc etc

5
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  Milo

Nice idea Milo. Indeed much of what is being thrown at us is exhausting but I will never “surrender to the narrative.”

3
0
Alter Ego
Alter Ego
2 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

I find I have to let some things go through to the keeper.

On climate, for instance, I just assume (on the basis of experience) that I’m being told alarmist bullshit.

I don’t campaign actively on the subject, because I don’t do the proper fact-checking myself.

I’m very grateful to the people here and elsewhere who do expose the errors systematically; and when I get the time, I’ll get myself up to speed.

In the meantime, I do enjoy asking, “Are you sure that poor people won’t end up paying the price for all this?”

It sends them off on a tangent that suits me and irritates them. They can’t really say, “We don’t care about poor people”; even if (in fact) they don’t.

1
0
Alter Ego
Alter Ego
2 years ago
Reply to  Milo

a deliberate distraction tactic on part of TPTB to make people spread themselves so thinly they cannot keep up with checking all the falsehoods and so just give up and surrender to the narrative.

It’s actually a standard pattern of tyrants.

Most people find it safer and easier to surrender to it all, hoping that it won’t affect them too badly and that it will just go away in the end.

Those who resist are exhausted by the number of battles they are forced to wage.

1
0
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
  • “Doctors seem more out of reach than ever – this must stop” – Far too many hospitals and practices still haven’t returned to pre-Covid services, which can literally be a matter of life or death for some, says Allison Pearson in the Telegraph.

I ask again, why have Labour collaborated in ruining “our” NHS (or their NHS as they think of it)?

13
0
twinkytwonk
twinkytwonk
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Labour, conservatives, lib Dems are all different groups working for the same employer.

15
0
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
Reply to  twinkytwonk

Lib Dems did at least oppose the “vaccine” mandates. Not much else any of them did right though.

4
0
MrTea
MrTea
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

The opposition parties often declare themselves to support an opposition view in order to help maintain the illusion of democracy, but when in power their oppositional views normally vanish in a puff of smoke.
See the LibDems and their oppositon to University fees that morphed into support for maximum fees when in power.

7
0
TheRightToArmBears
TheRightToArmBears
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

That was a conjuring trick to kid the electorate.
LibDems love telling people what to do.

4
0
TheRightToArmBears
TheRightToArmBears
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Labour is a branch office of the mafia that controls government. Labour loves controlling people, so they won’t abolish a single one of the petty restrictions on people’s lives. It is in their DNA to add more and then add more after that.
Labour are just another brand of toxicity.

4
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  TheRightToArmBears

The Labour Party are toxicity on steroids.

2
0
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
  • “We’re paying the price for the new cult of idleness” – Everyone wants to go on holiday but nobody wants to work – and the result is total chaos at U.K. airports, says Ross Clark in the Telegraph.

It seems that for many jobs now one has to have a smart phone and an up to date passport. And if you want to qualify for a driving job, you need to wait many months to obtain the appropriate licence. And as the world faces a food crisis, it beggars belief that farmers are still being paid not to farm land. The whole thing is an utter shambles, caused by the shambles of the last two years. And the Labour party has collaborated in creating conditions that work against people labouring. Is there any political party left with a modicum of sense (and a chance of getting anywhere)? I suppose there are always independents, and a few exceptions within the main parties…

The controlled demolition of the free world.

28
0
Silke David
Silke David
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

I saw a report, maybe from 2019, from Germany and the trouble trades have to recruit. The school leavers of today do not want to do physical work, get their hands dirty or start work earlier than 9am.

1
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

There is no “shambles” in paying farmers not to produce food it is quite deliberate.

Charlie Windsor has visions of turning this country into a sort of slow-mo Constable painting where HIS peasantry take HIS farm products to market in their 3mph ramshackle EV’s and doffing their sustainably sourced woollen caps to him and the rest of the “betters” along the way.

Bucolic in one direction alone. The peasantry return from market for a bowl of gruel while Charlie and his slapper dine on the finest organic produce that his slaves, whoops peasants have produced.

Ain’t life grand!

3
0
Alter Ego
Alter Ego
2 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

I think you forgot the part where this makes him a sort of secular saint, making up for the fact that people don’t actually like him.

1
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

Thanks AE. Quite correct.

1
0
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
  • “Europe lurches closer to energy crisis as Kremlin cuts off gas supply to Shell” – The British company becomes the latest to lose access to Russian fuel following a refusal to pay in roubles, the Telegraph reports.

You know, the idiots at the Guardian and elsewhere who were so dismissive of the late, great Christopher Booker’s warnings about future blackouts – and not least the great moonbat George Monbiot _ really do owe us an apology.

13
0
Alter Ego
Alter Ego
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

The arrogance of Western “decision-makers” is breathtaking.

The Russians are in a position to talk back – with effect.

Until we find a way to do so, we will be punished for their arrogance in damage done to our lives, while they continue to live like the gods they believe they are.

12
0
PhilButton
PhilButton
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Don’t bet on ever getting one. Many in the media and politics are more stupid than you might think.
In his day as Energy Secretary, that is, before being outed as father of his secretary’s child, Cecil Parkinson, on a visit to CEGB National Control, asked:
‘When you’ve made all this electricity, where do you store it?’

8
0
TSull
TSull
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

The MoneyBot doesn’t apologise.

1
0
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
  • “Steve Baker MP warns of risks of computer modelling ” – Baker’s warning appears in the foreword to a new paper from the Global Warming Policy Foundation on some of the problems with climate models in recent years.

Computer modelling is not observational science.
Historical science is not observational science.

If there’s one positive thing that can come out of this shambles, I hope it is a greater awareness of the corruption and politicisation of science and misuse of data that has been a problem for many years. Too much of what is described by the usual suspects as science has, I’m afraid, been more akin to advanced fantasising, and in too many cases with catastrophic consequences as a cabal of self-interested people in politics, science and universities lay waste to the free world. It should be a legal requirement for politicians to take a holistic approach, it really should. The cast iron political law of unintended consequences…

10
0
MrTea
MrTea
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

When your model can’t accurately hindcast you know the model is crap, yet such models are routinely accepted as being able to predict the future.

3
0
PhilButton
PhilButton
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Steve Baker is one of the exceptions, a politician who does actually understand basics of science.

5
0
TheRightToArmBears
TheRightToArmBears
2 years ago
Reply to  PhilButton

But he is a member of the Tory party.
To become a candidate he had to tell the party of all the skeletons in his history. He then had to swear to do as he was told to by the party, or be outed as a whatever skeleton he had confessed to.
There are no rebels in the Tory party.

1
0
Milo
Milo
2 years ago
Reply to  PhilButton

Steve Baker for PM

Seems to be one of the very few remaining prepared to call a lot of the rubbish being peddled out for the rubbish that it is. Points out the emperors new clothes.

Last edited 2 years ago by Milo
1
0
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
  • “Hypocritical woke activists are destroying freedom of speech” – Why are such different standards applied to protesters on the Left in this country, asks Ross Clark in the Telegraph.

Can anyone confirm if it is a “non-crime hate incident” to go after someone shouting “Tory scum”?

12
0
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
  • “Suella Braverman is right about trans ideology in schools” – We are plunging younger generations into an identity crisis, says Frank Furedi in Spiked.

I’m afraid that this is something that has been done to young people for many years:

“Dr. Philip Ney has written extensively on Post Abortion Survivor Syndrome (PASS). His book “Deeply Damaged” discusses the extensive trauma experienced by surviving siblings, before and after they know that they are missing a brother or sister. These psychosomatic and neurotic tendencies can definitely result in a dysphoric or same sex attraction expression. Additionally, some studies have tracked a significant correlation between abortion and autism rates. Abortion is not good for the health protection of nation, and likewise leads to increased anti-social/criminal rates and decreasing labor rates especially among young men (See “Redeeming Economics” by John Mueller).”

Deeply Damaged: An Explanation for the Profound Problems Arising from Aborting Babies and Abusing Children: Amazon.co.uk: Ney, Dr. Philip Gordon: 9780920952108: Books

People like Frank Furedi (who is husband of the dreadful British Pregnancy Advisory Service spokesman Ann Furedi who apparently supports infanticide) need to acknowledge this.

Last edited 2 years ago by Hugh
6
-2
MrTea
MrTea
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Autism is much more to do with the neurotoxin aluminium than is in most vaccines than anything else.

5
-1
Ceriain
Ceriain
2 years ago

“Monkeypox could have been spreading across Europe undetected for two years”
– The World Health Organisation says the “explosion” in cases suggests virus was emerging under the radar before health authorities noticed, the Bill Gates funded Global Health Security Team at the Telegraph reports.

Fixed that for you, Will.

More propaganda from Tedros, experts at SAGE, and Prof John Edmunds.

13
0
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

They’re involved with the Guardian as well aren’t they? And then there’s the CDC that is in bed with big pharma. Are there any newspapers that are untainted by these people? (Well, The Light of course, but you know what I mean). Whatever happened to anti-monopoly laws?

11
0
Ceriain
Ceriain
2 years ago

Simple answer to getting all the public sector workers, refusing to go back to the office, back to the office:

Turn the f*cking remote software off!

16
0
PhilButton
PhilButton
2 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

Change the firewall settings

4
0
Julian
Julian
2 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

Well, I’m no lover of slackness and inefficiency in either the public or private sector, but was the public sector super-efficient before covid and WFH? Surely addressing management and incentives and employment policies is what is needed. Getting people back to the office won’t solve fundamental issues in how organisations are run.

4
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  Ceriain

P45.

0
0
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago

Good morning all, and what a beautiful morning it is. Happy diamond jubilee (even if she did advise us to get the monkey gunk (no, not those monkeys))!

Let the downticks begin (if they’re not having the day off for the anniversary (69 years since the coronation on 2nd June 1953))…

Last edited 2 years ago by Hugh
15
-1
MrTea
MrTea
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

She has been about as much use as a chocolate tea pot.
She has never so much as lifted a finger to object to all the damage being done to the UK by the political dross (despite her coronation oath) on her watch and she has raised one of the most dysfunctional broods on planet earth.
Bloody woman is just a parasite living off the backs of the working class.

15
-4
Julian
Julian
2 years ago
Reply to  MrTea

I think she works quite hard and I don’t think many could have stuck to the task as she has. Her wealth and its impact on the working class is IMO negligible compared to the huge amounts our governments waste on crap, especially recently.

She is meant to be apolitical, and largely has been, until her recent interventions in the vaccine and covid business, for which I cannot defend her.

Someone has to be head of state and whoever it is will be unsatisfactory in many ways. I’m not keen on her offspring – far too woke for my liking, but then that’s the modern world for you.

7
-3
BurlingtonBertie
BurlingtonBertie
2 years ago
Reply to  Julian

An interesting article delving into the history of the current branch of the Royal family, which suggests that they have a history of favouring issues which support their lifestyle & world view.
New Revelations Shed Light on Nazi Roots of House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha – the Canadian patriot

2
0
Hugh
Hugh
2 years ago
Reply to  Julian

For me, her principle achievement is her work to try and make a success of the Commonwealth. Not many imperial powers have had such a good relationship with the nations who have become independent from them, and that was in no small part because she was determined that we should.

1
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Give it a rest Hugh.

0
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  MrTea

That’s more like it.

When can we do Ekaterinburg ll?

0
0
TheRightToArmBears
TheRightToArmBears
2 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Brenda had only one job, and she failed at that.
All she had to do was protect, preserve and hand on our sovereignty to her successors. Heath asked for her assent to a bill giving it to Brussels, and she cheerfully gave her assent.
She is supposed to be a political genius, doing it for decades.
If she had told Heath “You are asking me to break my coronation oath. Take this bill back to the Commons and ask them publicly if that is what they really want me to do. If they tell me to do it then I will, but not before.”
If she had done that then Heath would have had to publicly admit his treachery, and we would not have been sucked into the Eauvpit.

Last edited 2 years ago by TheRightToArmBears
6
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  TheRightToArmBears

Spot on.

0
0
MrTea
MrTea
2 years ago

‘Monkeypox virus is linked to gay bars and grindr with just two women catching the virus’

98% of Tory MPs are shitting bricks, those two women are probably Tory MP’s wives.

8
0
TheRightToArmBears
TheRightToArmBears
2 years ago
Reply to  MrTea

I’m surprised there are so many heterosexual Tory MPs.

0
0
Julian
Julian
2 years ago

Regarding masks in healthcare places, I believe the guidance HAS been withdrawn: [Withdrawn] New recommendations for primary and community health care providers in England – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)

6
0
MrTea
MrTea
2 years ago

‘Climate change to blame for monkeypox outbreak’

Has the terrible heat caused the bummers to go at it even harder than usual thus causing the spread?

1
-1
TheBluePill
TheBluePill
2 years ago
Reply to  MrTea

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. Pointing your fingers and screeching at a minority group, for a virus that is nothing to be concerned about (especially if you haven’t had your immune system decimated) is exactly what TPTB want.

13
0
J4mes
J4mes
2 years ago

I think it is fitting that today, the start of the jubilee, we pay attention to the power structure of this country. People have been lead to believe the royals are a benign power who’s role is entirely ceremonial and they’re good value for money because of the tourism they bring.

I’m of the view the ceremony is ritualistic for an ancient masonic cult who most definitely do pull the strings of power in the UK and globally. The translation of corona is “crown”. Charles, as we know, is deeply involved in the Great Reset. See proof here.

The queen herself has become unusually vocal about the modern politics being waged against the people of this country. She’s promoted the green agenda during Cock26 and she has promoted the false narrative that it is selfish of people to refuse being jabbed by the clotshot. See proof here.

What’s the next generation up to? Well he’s shouldering establishment extremists such as David Attenborough and throwing tax payer money around to push the destruction of our society. See proof here.

4
-1
Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
2 years ago
Reply to  J4mes

Charles was great friends with Jimmy Savile.

I really don’t want someone as morally corrupt as that as our King.

1
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  Nearhorburian

He’s an absolute infantile, genocidal nutjob.

1
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  J4mes

Bloody right.

Ekaterinburg ll please.

1
0
Dave
Dave
2 years ago

https://www.spiked-online.com/2022/06/01/the-thoughtpolice-are-a-law-unto-themselves/
Since the peelers are still going to pursue this illegal and undemocratic action, the only thing I’d suggest is the equivalent of a DDoS attack on them. Find NCHI everywhere. Report everything. Especially utterances from politicians and celebs. See if we can swamp the system

2
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
2 years ago

“WHO insists Pride parades pose low monkeypox risk”

Using the infallible hux conversion modelling we can conclude that within a relatively short period this will be inverted and any gathering of two or more will lead to mass deaths on a scale not seen since the last Ferguson model.

Very predictable 😴

4
0

NEWSLETTER

View today’s newsletter

To receive our latest news in the form of a daily email, enter your details here:

DONATE

PODCAST

In Episode 35 of the Sceptic: Andrew Doyle on Labour’s Grooming Gang Shame, Andrew Orlowski on the India-UK Trade Deal and Canada’s Ignored Covid Vaccine Injuries

by Richard Eldred
9 May 2025
1

LISTED ARTICLES

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Sun-Dimming Quango has £800 Million of Taxpayer Money to Blow – and a CEO on £450k

8 May 2025

UK “Shafted” by US Trade Deal

8 May 2025

News Round-Up

9 May 2025

The Sugar Tax Sums Up Our Descent into Technocratic Dystopia

8 May 2025

Voters Reject Net Zero, Opinion Poll Shows

8 May 2025

Sun-Dimming Quango has £800 Million of Taxpayer Money to Blow – and a CEO on £450k

28

The Sugar Tax Sums Up Our Descent into Technocratic Dystopia

24

News Round-Up

21

What Does Renaud Camus Actually Believe? Part Two: Is He Really a Conspiracy Theorist?

35

EXCLUSIVE: Britain Forced to Spend £1.5 Billion to Mitigate Wind Turbine Corruptions to Vital Air Defence Radar

21

Nature Paper Claims to Pin Liability for ‘Climate Damages’ on Oil Companies

9 May 2025

What Does David Lammy Mean by a State?

9 May 2025

In Episode 35 of the Sceptic: Andrew Doyle on Labour’s Grooming Gang Shame, Andrew Orlowski on the India-UK Trade Deal and Canada’s Ignored Covid Vaccine Injuries

9 May 2025

News Round-Up

9 May 2025

The Sugar Tax Sums Up Our Descent into Technocratic Dystopia

8 May 2025

POSTS BY DATE

June 2022
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  
« May   Jul »

SOCIAL LINKS

Free Speech Union
  • Home
  • About us
  • Donate
  • Privacy Policy

Facebook

  • X

Instagram

RSS

Subscribe to our newsletter

© Skeptics Ltd.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Register

Create New Account!

Please note: To be able to comment on our articles you'll need to be a registered donor

Already have an account?
Please click here to login Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
wpDiscuz
No Result
View All Result
  • Articles
  • About
  • Archive
    • ARCHIVE
    • NEWS ROUND-UPS
  • Podcasts
  • Newsletter
  • Premium
  • Donate
  • Log In

© Skeptics Ltd.

You are going to send email to

Move Comment
Perfecty
Do you wish to receive notifications of new articles?
Notifications preferences