- “Rishi Sunak is just the start. The great lockdown scandal is about to unravel” – Fraser Nelson in Telegraph foresees a moment of reckoning as “the pseudo-scientific sheen is finally being stripped off the decision to shut down Britain”.
- “Rishi Sunak wins support for criticism of over-powerful Covid lockdown scientists” – MPs and former Cabinet colleagues have rallied behind the ex-Chancellor for saying it was a “mistake” to empower SAGE members, according to the Telegraph.
- “How Sir Patrick Vallance ‘rolled his eyes’ to crush dissent at controversial Covid rules” – Professor Robert Dingwall tells the Telegraph that the SAGE group of scientists advising politicians on lockdown became a “powerful clique” who presented lockdown as an “inevitability”.
- “Shutting Novak Djokovic out of the U.S. Open is an outrageous injustice” – Oliver Brown in the Telegraph says the Serbian has been denied the opportunity to claim a 22nd grand slam by Covid vaccination rules that are simply an affront to logic.
- “Is Novax Djokovic being Trolled by Moderna?” – The Naked Emperor wonders whether Moderna’s sponsorship of the U.S. Open has anything to do with Djokovic’s ban for being unvaccinated.
- “Post-vaccine myocarditis is not ‘mild’, warn doctors” – TCW Defending Freedom prints the letter from the Health Advisory and Recovery Team (HART) warning the UKHSA that vaccine myocarditis risks should not be downplayed or underestimated.
- “Never forget their thuggery” – James Allen in Spectator Australia senses change in the air as the New York Times runs an editorial to the effect that during the pandemic no schools should ever have been closed; he adds there is “simply no legitimate defence for Covid authoritarianism and over-reach”.
- “The New Conservative cancelled” – Frank Haviland was dismayed to find the New Conservative banned from Twitter for retweeting a Mark Steyn interview with Dr. Aseem Malhotra, who merely “quoted Pfizer’s initial trial data back to them”.
- “COVID-19 acquired in U.K. hospitals – what does it all mean?” – Carl Heneghan and Tom Jefferson at Trust the Evidence look into the data and find a large proportion of COVID-19 hospital cases were acquired in hospital.
- “GCSE results day 2022: Grades remain close to pandemic high” – Top grades fall by only 2.6 percentage points this year despite a government pledge to clamp down on inflation, the Telegraph reports.
- “How lockdown has made Britain sicker” – Tom Calver in the Times says we have “time to reflect on the results of a once-in-a-lifetime social experiment in lockdown – and the worrying side-effects, some predicted, some unforeseen, for Britons’ health, that are only just coming home to roost”.
- “COVID-19 Vaccines and Informed Consent” – Dr. Robert Malone features the work of lawyer John Allison on the fundamental right to make decisions about bodily health and medical treatments.
- “Another week with deaths far above normal in Europe” – Alex Berenson on the disturbing fact that excess deaths are now higher continent-wide in 2022 than either 2020 or 2021 – even with Covid deaths far lower.
- “Prince Harry arrives for private jet flight in an electric car” – The Mail reports that the Duke of Sussex had got on the $9 million Bombardier to head to a polo event on Wednesday, having pointlessly travelled to it in an electric vehicle – and then had staff retrieve his kit in a gas-guzzling Range Rover after he forgot to pack it.
- “You Can Be Sure That Net Zero Carbon Emissions from Electricity Generation Will Never Be Achieved. Here’s Why.” – Francis Menton in WUWT says if you have a chance to make a bet, “you’ll be extremely safe betting against Net Zero generation of electricity any time during your life”.
- “Sam Harris, religious fundamentalist” – Brendan O’Neill in Spiked slams the famed atheist for his hypocritical backing of media censorship when the aim was to remove Trump from power.
- “Exeter University trigger warning for ‘problematic’ Huckleberry Finn” – Report in the Times that a university has put a trigger warning on the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, describing the representation of a slave as “problematic in a number of ways”.
- “Anti-slavery MP Edmund Burke put on ‘transatlantic slave trade register’” – A review into statues and portraits of figures in Parliament sees the 18th-century philosopher caught up in slave links because of his brother, reports the Telegraph.
- “Golf balls ‘are the product of colonial exploitation’” – The Telegraph reports on the latest woke lunacy from the University of St Andrews, which claims the game was “imposed” around the world by the British Empire.
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Priceless.
Can anyone tell me what an associate professor is? Something that merely and correctly was once called a Senior Lecturer.
Since the word “Professor” has been so massively devalued (think Witty and Vallance for starters…..), why would anyone want to be associated with it?
Is an “associate” something or other just an apprentice?
Hunter gatherer by 2040, an Ice age looming then?
No, just civilisational collapse at the hands of a doomsday cult.
‘Carbon footprint and methane of pets’. Oh ha ha. My husband and I fart ten times more than our dogs, and their carbon footprint is shared with ours – they haven’t yet bought their own house and car anyway.
‘The NHS collapses…’ well, I thought it already had, to be honest.
As I sit indoors watching the blustery, rather chilly wind battering my poor delphiniums, I honestly wonder where summer has gone (well, it never really started) and ponder if we are in for an absolute stinker of a winter, with snow and frost like ’47’ or ’63’
Anyway I will be ordering plenty of coal asap.
England will revert to hunter-gathering by 2023 in response to the engineered food crisis.
Actually I know someone who used to go poaching for pigeons and things. I hope I won’t be needing to get tips from him…
“Moving on, Bournemouth Council deputy leader Mark Howell suggested to an environment committee in January that the “issue of the carbon footprint and methane of pets” needed to be addressed to meet a carbon neutral target.”
Blimey, don’t give the CCP ideas…
I can well believe the bartering notion; how else will those of us ineligible for a QR code (if linked to digital currency) manage to transact?
We have a water filter now as I don’t fancy the tap water. Have even started gathering herbs to make my own cough and cold remedies.
No immediate plans to snare rabbits, though – but where does the child labour come in?
Well they are using children in the lithium mining industry for all these lovely ‘green’ cars the world wants so much.
Too bad they won’t have the electricity for them. I suppose they could always go back to coal fired power stations…
Lithium is extracted from brine in South America and mined in Australia https://www.volkswagenag.com/en/news/stories/2020/03/lithium-mining-what-you-should-know-about-the-contentious-issue.html
It’s cobalt from the Democratic Republic of Congo that use child labour.
but where does the child labour come in
Medieval trait would be my guess. This means children would basically be treated like smaller adults at about 14. OTOH, they wouldn’t be working in the sense of 19th century chimney sweeps, more also go hunting (or do soldiering in auxiliary roles).
Quoting from the recent paper of the retired German professor: According to the IPCC, both humans and animals will need to stop breathing by 2100 to save the planet.
I will definitely have stopped breathing by then.
They are right, thanks to Net Zero lunacy.
And it is the aim of the Ecozealots to reduce Humanity to Hunter/gathering to be in harmony with Mother Earth.
The problem is re hunter / gatherer skills, 99.9% of the population wouldn’t know where to start. I wonder how many could skin a rabbit or a pheasant or could gut a bird or fish.
Planning ahead, I have invested in a large book off amazon with all these skills in it. I won’t be able to rely on YouTube any more on how to do this stuff. I consider it a small insurance policy. I will then barter my expert knowledge for remnant tins of beans with fellow survivors of this impending apocalypse, because I’ll be buggered if I’m eating pigeon. It tastes like shit.
Actually I enjoy pigeon. Quite liverish but very gamey and tasty if cooked nice and pink.
These meat eaters can’t agree on anything!
They have enough of a mental puzzle removing the packaging from their ready meals!
I am quite at home preparing small game for the table, and have been known to collect road kill pheasants as long as they aren’t too damaged. I suppose I could do larger animals, but you need some strength to deal with things like deer, (or some kit to lift it with), strength I don’t have.
However, I have a bit of a rare skill in that I can train a horse to harness. I used to use a horse and vehicle for local shopping and the pub in the 70s. Happy days.
The problem is re [a lack of] hunter / gatherer skills
No the problem is the exact opposite:
That the great mass of humanity is now willingly throwing away millennia worth of technological progress (especially that brought about by the fossil fuel powered Industrial Revolution) and heading rapidly back to its materially and socially hugely primitive and insecure hunter gatherer roots.
All under the auspices of the false, ultra-materialist (worshipping the physical earth instead of the non-physical spiritual dimension) and nihilistic Green religion.
99.9% of the population wouldn’t know where to start. I wonder how many could skin a rabbit or a pheasant or could gut a bird or fish.
There is absolutely no need to harm any animals in order to sustain human existence, and it is a very positive thing that most people would find carrying out such horrible activities to be repulsive (even though most are not yet vegetarian, at least they’re heading in the right anti-cruelty direction).
You know how cows spend their entire day eating grass? You have time to do that?
Give me animal protein and iron and fat any day. Just only kill what you can eat.
‘You know how cows spend their entire day eating grass? You have time to do that?’
Not only do I not have the time, but (literally) not the stomach(s) for it…
‘Give me animal protein and iron and fat any day’
What’s wrong with non dead-animal protein, iron and fat (including milk, cheese and eggs as well as legumes, grains, nuts etc)?
‘Just only kill what you can eat.’
Well instead of getting all daubed, furred and speared up for an exhausting few days hunting down some elusive and unpleasantly bloody and internally organed living creature, why not just pop into your local Morrison’s for a tasty cheese salad sandwich washed down by a bottle of chilled fizzy apple juice?
In spite of the Stone Age vibe on this thread (one shared by the same ‘woke’ eco movement which is confusingly also being vehemently criticised) I’m not prepared to give up on civilisation just yet!
I get squeamish when my wife asks me to put a roast in the bag chicken in the oven. I’ll take responsibility for the non-hunting tasks I think; I’ll do the cave paintings.
As much as I like the idea of returning to a hunter gather lifestyle – I’ve already scoped out where I’m building my hill fort to retreat to with my loyal band of vaccine survivors – I think we will all be wiped out when the nuclear power stations melt down because we’re all too busy chasing rabbits with spears.
Does anybody believe we’d be allowed to hunt for our own food without some woke activist scaring off the prey and telling us all to be vegans?
They’ll get a flint tipped arrow in their face. I’ll be a crack shot by then.
We’ll all be dab hands with a sling given the abundance of masks that could so easily be converted.
Yes – plenty of toxic blow darts lying around too.
I am considering a crossbow. I have a niece whose partner is ex forces and I might have a word about shooting lessons.
YES! I want one of those.
Considering that animal right’s activists are the natural inverse of apex predators, I doubt these people will bother us for long. They’ll probably all get eaten by stray cats.
Just like magic one has appeared on this page already telling us we don’t need to eat animals to survive.
you jolly well will need to eat animals to survive when the shit hits the fan. I’d like to see these vegan types scrabbling around for the odd crab apple and digging for burdock roots. They’ll starve to death over one winter.
Of the few people I know who are veggie I don’t know any who have much knowledge about food and diet.
I’ve been a vegetarian for about 35 years. Now, I feel like the fourth industrial revolution has bum rushed the show and I find myself on the side of the carnivore. Won’t make me eat meat though. However, when the shit hits the fan I will feel no compunction about dispatching radioactive squirrels.
I award this thread the Thread of The Week Award, Awarded Weekly on A Week By Week Basis
Agreed! Good ones are few and far between these days!
Someone should write a sitcom about a group of liberal hunter-gatherers living in post apocalyptic Britain trying to appease the gods of climate and covid and gender politics whilst hunting for plant based meat substitutes.
A mini series – it would be implausible for them to survive six episodes.
The pilot episode will consist of 5 fresh faced graduates who’ve just moved into a flat together. None of them can cook and they’re debating about which supermarket is most likely to offer the best selection of meat shaped non-meat products (because although people don’t want to eat meat it still needs to look like a meat product).
Anyway, the episode ends with them all dead from starvation having only been able to agree, as the hunger set in, that they would be helping the planet by being dead.
Roll credits…
Under Agenda 2030 we will all be banned from the rewilded countryside, instead holed up in ‘smart cities’ in tiny boxes eating mass produced bugs and lab meat. I am a country person from birth and at 69 would rather take my own life than exist instead of live.
It’s going to be pretty difficult to go hunter-gathering the vegan burgers we’re all supposed to be eating.
‘Look at Airports across the UK. That’s the new normal, The Great Reset, that’s Build Back Better’
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CGF6podo7gE
Mark Steyn gives his take on the big bag build-up at airports across the UK as travel chaos ruins summer travel plans for thousands of people.
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“Saffron”, a name that conjures up images of upper class airheads. “Associate Professor of Geography” a title which says they don’t want to leave school and contribute to the productive part of the economy. Together they make me think of ensuring my daughter will avoid applying to this university as its academic standards are non-existent.