- “Laurence Fox and Dan Wootton suspended by GB News over Ava Evans insults” – Dan Wootton and Laurence Fox have been suspended over insults against Ava Evans on Wootton’s GB News show, according to the BBC.
- “GB News should be taken off air, says Tory MP Caroline Nokes” – Tory MP Caroline Nokes has called for Ofcom to shut down GB News after it suspended Dan Wootton and Laurence Fox over a misogyny scandal, reports the Telegraph.
- “Why is a Tory MP calling for GB News to be ‘taken off air’?” – GB News is a problem, not because one of its presenters said something disgusting, but because it disrupts the ‘broadcast ecology’ and threatens the established channels and ways of doing things, says Tom Slater in the Spectator.
- “The establishment can’t stand that GB News exists” – If you keep calling decent people names like “authoritarian populists” don’t be surprised if they switch off your show and tune in to GB News, writes Allison Pearson in the Telegraph.
- “The establishment campaign to shut down GB News” – Adam Boulton has said the quiet part out loud: The elites want to defend their cosy media club, says Fraser Myers in Spiked.
- “The chilling calls to shut down GB News” – It is often when people are angry about something that authoritarians spy an opportunity to take a potshot at liberty, writes Brendan O’Neill in the Spectator.
- “Laurence Fox has got exactly what he wanted” – There are plenty of other independent platforms available for Lawrence Fox, potentially reaching an enormous audience, says Louise Perry in the Telegraph.
- “The campaign to destroy the French GB News” – The campaign to destroy GB News in Britain is precisely mirrored by a campaign to eliminate CNEWS, its French equivalent, writes Jonathan Miller in the Spectator.
- “Covid vaccines causally linked to increased mortality, resulting in 17 million deaths: Scientific report” – Data suggests COVID-19 vaccines haven’t saved lives but, instead, have resulted in 17 million deaths and increased all-cause mortality in 17 countries, reports the Epoch Times.
- “Fewer than half of trainee GPs go on to work full time for the NHS” – A new report has revealed that fewer than half of trainee GPs go on to work for the NHS full time, according to the Telegraph.
- “Intelligence, IQ and the ‘midwit effect’: An answer to some objections” – On Substack, Eugyppius addresses the objections to his post on ‘Vaccines and the Midwit Effect’.
- “Conference: Vaccine damage and WHO power grab” – On Substack, Thorsteinn Siglaugsson promos an upcoming conference in Reykjavik on October 4th. Philipp Kruse, Sasha Latypova, Vibeke Manniche, Katherine Watt and Max Schmeling will discuss the COVID-19 vaccination campaigns, restrictions and, not least, the proposed WHO power grab.
- “Beeb says stars are free to express opinions” – The BBC has backed Gary Lineker to give his views in a new report ordered after he compared Suella Braverman’s migrant boats crackdown to the policies of Nazi Germany, reports the Mail.
- “How close is Britain to leaving the ECHR?” – Will the U.K. Government pledge to leave the European Convention on Human Rights, asks Katy Balls in the Spectator.
- “Good riddance to the ‘Conversion Therapy’ Bill” – The Conversion Therapy Bill would have represented an attack on free speech, writes Freddie Attenborough in the Critic.
- “Stella Assange: Press freedom does not exist while my husband Julian Assange is in jail” – The most important aspect of the right to offend is the one that confronts those in power with the truths that they most eagerly wish to conceal, writes Stella Assange in the Evening Standard.
- “How identity politics fails aboriginal Australians” – On Spiked’s Brendan O’Neill Show, the Shadow Minister for Indigenous Australians, Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, talks on the dangers of the proposed ‘Voice to Parliament’.
- “Gangland violence grips Stockholm as rapper, 18, is executed” – An 18 year-old rapper executed on a sports field, a second man shot dead and a woman killed in a devastating bomb blast are just the latest victims of Stockholm’s gangland violence, reports the Mail.
- “Starmer is targeting private schools because he doesn’t have an education policy” – Why is it fair to put VAT on schooling but not university or private healthcare fees, asks Mark Lehain in CapX.
- “Rishi Sunak to block new 20mph zones” – Rishi Sunak is expected to block councils from introducing new 20mph zones as part of a “plan for motorists”, reports the Telegraph.
- “ULEZ activist in dinosaur suit uses tipper truck to block camera van” – Anti-ULEZ activists, dressed as a dinosaur and dog, used a tipper truck to block one of Sadiq Khan’s mobile ‘spy’ vans used to enforce London’s Ultra Low Emission Zone, according to the Mail.
- “More people sign anti-20mph petition than voted Labour in Senedd election” – Mark Drakeford’s new 20mph speed limit has gone down like a cup of cold sick over in Wales, reports Guido Fawkes.
- “The six ways renewables increase electricity bills” – It is almost impossible for renewables to reduce consumer bills, writes Andrew Montford in Net Zero Watch.
- “New Zealand farmers set for Right-wing protest vote over climate change policies” – Reuters is predicting the possible election of a Right-wing government in New Zealand on a platform of repealing climate policies which are devastating the countryside.
- “No Farmers No Food: Will You Eat The Bugs? – Documentary” – EpochTV host Roman Balmakov’s documentary, No Farmers No Food, shows that climate policies are being used to push farmers out of business, cause a decline in animal husbandry and promote the human consumption of insect protein.
- “Meet the man behind Sweden’s Covid response” – On X, UnHerd’s Freddie Sayers talks to Anders Tegnell, in charge of Sweden’s Covid response, about his decision to not mandate masks because they were unscientific and provided false reassurance.
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https://youtu.be/Xs7GRfOR1T4?si=5Cpube8Rg5ssoRQC
Laurence Fox apologises.
Idiot.
This could sink GB News.
The BBC received 10,000 complaints after that black actress said at the Coronation that the Windsors were “too white.”
And what happened to that ignorant woman? The BBC?
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12570503/gary-lineker-bbc-stars-climate-change-opinions-social-media.html
But Lineker mouthing off is absolutely fine.
OMG totally dumb. It’s not like it’s even going to make a blind bit of difference but now he’s gone and given the callous woman even more upper hand and reason to be smug and self-satisfied. She’s going to be loving this isn’t she?
I reckon Miri has Fox sussed.
She has Russell Brand sussed too.
So what does Miri say about Brand?
https://miriaf.co.uk/the-re-branding-of-russell/
Thanks
Just another lot of speculation – who knows? It’s equally plausible that everything is exactly as it seems with Brand. Truth can be stranger than fiction.
I don’t know much about Brand and don’t care much about the details of his personal life. He has led people to be more questioning about things and that seems like a positive thing to me.
Who is “Miri” and what has she “sussed”? Or does the fact that I need to ask mean I’m not one of the initiated and won’t understand the answer?
Yes, he says the name like it’s common knowledge and it’s assumed we all know. Is Miri like Alexus or ‘The oracle’?? LOL Context is always appreciated..
I’ve no idea how to link, but I just googled “Miri” and got her.
What does she say about Fox?
Do you mean this person?
https://miriaf.co.uk/
This is her take on the situation –
The point of Fox (and his ilk, such as Brand and Tate) is to entirely discredit the alternative movement by giving the mainstream the ammunition they need to declare, “look, THESE are the kind of people who lead this movement! Raging misogynists and rapey ex-heroin addicts who make appalling gaffes and crude remarks, when they’re not seducing schoolgirls or committing lewd acts with other men in public toilets” (if you haven’t seen “that” video regarding Russell Brand, count yourself lucky).
she goes on – and on….
Yet there appears to be a deep and unsettling tribalism in “the truth movement” which stops many people within it from doing that, and this is profoundly to the movement’s detriment. If we want to be a credible, integrity-based movement that represents real and robust opposition to the mainstream, then we need leaders and representatives who embody those traits, too, and who – when they are on the world stage addressing millions of people – present themselves in the most credible and persuasive way possible.
…….and on……and finally you have it,’ controlled opposition’…..
I hope I’m not belabouring the point, but I will say it again: they give him a platform because he discredits the cause he claims to represent by being the kind of person he is – louche, profane, crude, etc., and I do think that’s his real character, not an act – as I’ve talked about before, there are different “levels” of controlled opposition.
Basically ‘our side’ has to be whiter than white [sic], almost godlike in our pursuit of ‘the truth’ and we should condemn anyone on our side who deviates from that one iota. All a bit up it’s own bum for my liking.
Thanks for that, Wyrd. I don’t know about you but I’m fed up with hearing this ”controlled opposition” accusation being thrown around all over the place. It just sows division. Actually perhaps the ones hurling that term around are the ones it applies to most! Look at how many say this about Robert Malone. I’d say he’s proven himself to be a force for good many times over but I know many will dispute that.
100%
..agreed..what is she saying then that only perfect people can be in the ‘gang’..anyone with a bit of history, or an opinion or lifestyle she doesn’t like can’t join?
Thanks Mogs – Malone comes to mind every time someone chucks that term around. What Miri and her ilk seem to want is a mirror image of TPTB to fight them but on the ‘good’ side, entirely missing the point that TPTB template is dyfunctional, old, worn out and way passed its sell by date. You can’t fight like with like: you fight like with different, amorphous, anarchic, funny, witty, earthy, inspired, alternative, creative and fundamentally human. That’s what TPTB want to censor and control.
https://youtu.be/DTRE8LPXKHU?si=gaS2MnkG4AYjUcQK
Darren Grimes put this monologue out last night and it’s very good. The clip of lard arse Adam Boulton explaining that MSM is a club with no room for GB News is Gold.
She says, if you;re given column inches in mainstream media you’re either useful to the powers that be or you’re controlled opposition.
Regarding Robert Malone we need to be mindful of how his approach can reinforce the narrative & limit the parameters of debate whilst still appreciating the positive truth messages which he puts out.
A bit of nuanced discernment.
Sadly the likes of Fox do harm the truth side because of his character & profile – he’s far too easy a target for discrediting us. Too easy for the parasites to get ahead with their narrative. We need to be ahead of them not playing catch-up.
JJ Couey presented to us on Tuesday & touched on this topic – very useful & thought provoking. Some good questions posed too by some well known folk who are regular attendees such as Dr Jim Thorpe & John Beauduin Snr
https://rumble.com/v3ljg6i-dr-jonathan-jay-jj-couey-phd.html
Indeed. I admire what Fox has done – speak up for what he believes in regardless of the personal cost – and agree with a lot of what he says. But he is not my “leader” and I am not sure he would claim to be. Are TPTB happy to give people like Fox and Brand attention to distract us and discredit us? Well, maybe, but that says more about TPTB than Fox and Brand, and anyway I don’t buy it. They want to shut down GB News, they want to shut down Rumble. If they really thought Fox and Brand were assets they would not be worried about doing that.
This whole argument gets impossible to manage and results in distrust everywhere. Does anyone “give” a platform, or is it just that they haven’t found a way to stop it?
Mainstream opinions are so mainstream that “most people” would be shy of putting their hand up to voice a differing opinion. Think of a classroom, the usual suspects, probably 1 or 2 out of a class of 30, are ready to speak out with an answer right or wrong. Some of the rest haven’t got a scooby, some aren’t paying attention, and some know the answer but lack confidence to speak. Some will come up with the answer the teacher wants to hear even if it is wrong and they don’t believe it themselves.
So it probably takes a whackier than “normal” personality with knowledge and brass cojones to put a head above the parapet. If I wanted “controlled opposition” would I hire a big mouth loose cannon?
Is that Delingpole

I personally think honest mistakes are fine and I’m very forgiving of people, even leaders who make them but personally I’m not a fan of the likes of Russell Brand and Laurence Fox even when some of what they’re saying is very much what I agree with. Discussing the shaggability of a journalist is a no no for me from a leader of a political party I might be thinking of supporting, even if I heard it in a pub! But that’s just me – others might be fine with it and I’m fine with that.
Ditto! Don’t know whats being talked about here? Try to keep it plain guys, where not all professional sociologists,
It’s stating to get a little clique’y in here!
…I agree the hypocrisy is off the scale…and I am sure he is right that it’s not about what he’s said, it’s just something they can latch on to….to promote the agenda…
but..as he says..it’s a personal apology, and I think that’s right..he said a stupid thing, and he has every right to apologise to make himself feel better…
Agreed – I think it was a good and sincere apology and a good thing for him to have done. People may argue that apologising in response to mob pressure is always wrong, but IMO this apology strengthens his (and our side’s) moral position.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2023/09/28/rishi-sunak-to-block-new-20mph-zones/
Anybody believing this needs to order a boiler right away.
…and get a spare for future use…
An important point which doesn’t seem to be getting talked about anywhere; so given the fact the vast majority of people in many countries have now been jabbed at least once, are walking round making spike for an indeterminate length of time and that the DNA plasmid contamination can also have significant long-lasting effects, does this not make all drugs and vaccine trials going forward meaningless because there won’t be a true control group? Most people are now GMOs! How does this impact the future trialing of medication/vaccines? It’s not like us lot, the unjabbed, are going to be rocking up to participate in any trials ever so won’t this make results from clinical trials invalid? No wonder they’re using mice.
This infographic explains clearly the problem;
https://twitter.com/0000handa/status/1707376204444307782/photo/1
Agree, but this is not a new issue in general terms. The vast majority of the population has been jabbed with so many things, over so many decades, that the waters are well and truly muddied for any clinical trials, possibly for generations.
Constant ill health is now normalised, like brain damage (“neurodiversity”).
That’s a very interesting point Mogs. We now have two cohorts – mRNA injected and non mRNA injected with further sub- cohorts comprising the single, double, triple jabbed etc.
Exactly. These jabs are novel and completely unlike any other vaccines that people are used to having, and the fact we still don’t know the long-term effects; no ‘off switch’ for spike production, no ability for the body to degrade and expel the mRNA, possibility of reverse transcribing and permanently integrating with and changing the genome, which could then be passed on to future offspring…this is far from being your common or garden annual flu jab or Hep B booster if you work in health care. As the illustration shows, how could any drug or vaccine possibly be deemed ‘safe’ when there are now way more variables than prior to 3/4 of the world ( or whatever ) being injected with this toxic crud?
Hang on, we hero-worship Anders Tegnell, but although he did not believe in masks, he still believed in social distancing, from this interview. I’d love to know why he believed that in social distancing, and whether he still believes it Of course it depends on what we mean by social distancing- I think the queuing in super markets was just irritating and could have made it worse, but overall if any of it had made any difference in countries like the UK, Italy, France etc then we would have seen an inflexion in the Gompertz curves, which we didn’t. Also the comparison between states of USA etc etc
So I was as lockdown sceptical as it was possible to be. However having some knowledge of modes of transmission, I remember well from the outset there was very valid reasons to think fomites were the primary mode of transmission. Even for those sceptical of the whole thing, that seemed a reasonable assumption to make. It turns out they aren’t for Covid-19 but that wasn’t known. We get most colds through touch (example scenario, on the tube touching metal handrails/poles someone has coughed near, then we rub the eyes). And as annoying as Boris was with his silly ditty about hand washing, it wasn’t bad initial advice. Nor the social distancing IF you followed the rest of the hygiene advice (primarily not touching your face). Of course Covid came to be seen as a very very odd virus in its mode of transmission and a lot remains unexplained in relation to “traditional” thinking about viral replication and spread. it still seems to me there is some missing and misunderstood factor. I believe rather than transmitting from ill person to ill person, it has a way of laying latent. Or rather it is extremely weak transmission wise, but nevertheless can transmit rapidly, but it is also persistent able to uniquely persist on the margins of the body, inhabiting pockets and residing in small quantities at the entry points of the body’s outer membrane. For most people it was fought off. But if you felt low or your immune system got compromised (low vitamin D) it might take hold – and that could be later than when you first got infected. Environments with high viral load would also ensure transmission more surely. It could only be effectively transmitted when viral load is high and the person was then most likely, to some extent symptomatic. The possible delay to receipt and full blown symptomatic infection created the impression of asymptomatic transmission when looked at from one direction.
I lost interest in pursuing this theory or validating it early on once it became clear that it had an even lower IFR than I originally thought so was even less consequential than I thought (and right from the outset I had reason to think it likely to be about the same as seasonal flu when all the regime “experts” were saying it was 10x more deadly – when actually it very quickly became known – but not widely accepted – it is akin to the common cold)
So I think Tegnell was simply reflecting this early quite reasonable part of the thinking on Covid relating to fomites based transmission.
“…it still seems to me there is some missing and misunderstood factor.”
Well maybe, but I would suggest that there is at least a strong possibility that the missing factor is testing and obsessing and panicking constantly about the spread in a way that we don’t for other diseases, we just shrug our shoulders and carry on.
Sweden didn’t put stickers and signs everywhere ordering people to keep a distance, I’m pretty sure.
People were just told to keep a healthy distance from each other particularly older people when out in public.
Almost certainly an overreaction but comparatively to others and in the context of the global panic, quite restrained.
Keeping a distance is not the most uninstinctive of actions. When I hear someone sneezing or coughing profusely, I generally take a few steps back if I can. Dunno if it makes a difference, but that’s what my instinct tells me to do.
He made on the whole sensible suggestions that anyone worried or vulnerable could follow, and might make some difference on an individual level (if you were happy to keep distance pretty much forever of course). Because of how insane things became everywhere else, I think it can sometimes be difficult to look back favourably on anything that was said or done. But if they’d just stuck to a similar sensible line here, I’d have been fine with that, it’s just that the rest of the ridiculous measures make me want to reject them all.
No wonder Germany has gone to the dogs. All I ever read is bad stuff coming out of that country. Bring on the AfD! But this does not bode well as it’s not just German citizens that suffer but those in the whole of the EU;
”Germany’s Minister of the Interior, Nancy Faeser, wants to massively expand foreigners’ right to vote. In the future, refugees who have been living in Germany for six months will also have the vote, BILD reports. Asylum seekers from Afghanistan, Syria, Somalia etc… should participate in the elections. Because these are countries with very solid democratic and civil traditions? Other non-EU citizens (for example from Turkey) will also have the right to vote.
Here we enter “Germanistan”, the title of the new book by journalist Henry Broder.
To combat the demographic crisis, “Germany needs 1.5 million immigrants a year”, economist Monika Schnitzer tells Welt. Anyone who knows anything about how the European Union works knows that you cannot create a Commission without the Germans and that it is the Germans who decide the most important dossiers. Including migration.
We are not in the field of statistics here, but of post-modern morality. Of a morality that provides for the abolition of nation states and their identities.
They want to atone for their history by being overwhelmed by history.
Italian minister Matteo Salvini declared: “There are German institutions that give millions of euros to German NGOs to bring immigrants to Italy.”
2 million euros per year from 2023 to 2026. This is how much the German NGO that brings migrants to Italy “United4rescue” should receive from the Bundestag, the German Parliament. Now, NGOs are fighting with the ministry and the government to get those funds.”
https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/377470
Looks like they are blatantly buying votes from ‘grateful’ immigrants.
Clearly taking lessons from the Bliar outfit.
Bliar’s Labour Party saw mass immigration as a means to remain in power. Their other popular vote creating trick was to try to get as many people as possible on to some form of state benefits. The benefits trick usually failed . Tax Credits were a joke for years.
For those who have never had the pleasure of working in the British Civil Service Tax Credits were comedy gold, a complete F U from day one although they caused massive distress to millions.
The ‘one-eyed loon’ had the great idea of paying benefits from a part of the Civil Service that had never paid out public money previously – the Tax Office. Trust me a massive psychological departmental about turn was required to make Tax Credits work. Problem : Civil servants are incapable of massive psychological about turns. And like most “revolutionary” changes asked of Civil service departments if they start off badly they don’t recover.
History lesson over.
https://capx.co/starmer-is-targeting-private-schools-because-he-doesnt-have-an-education-policy/
A simpler explanation is that the left wants to destroy private education because indoctrinating kids in state schools, and enforcing left wing orthodoxy among teachers, is a key part of their approach to getting and retaining power. It has certainly worked well so far.
Pay your £5 and speak up
Several independent/private schools have already hit even MSM headlines with their curricular wokery, but if Starmer thinks this is going to endear him to the right-on middle class ‘midwits’ (to nick a phrase from Eugyppius) he’s in for a shock. As others elsewhere have noted, they’ll just pull all the bursary and outreach work they do for state schools (which part of their charitable status requires, I think) so it’ll hit the very kids he’s claiming to help. Ah, so that’s it…….
Certainly true that even independent and private schools are not immune to the mind virus; good point.
Few of the middle class people I know would ever admit to voting Tory – they all seem to go along with whatever lunacy and evil Labour propose – but then I seem to know an especially dense bunch.
“Gangland violence grips Stockholm as rapper, 18, is executed”
Importing crime into places like Norway and Sweden is like having the vaccine, once its in, it cannot be removed!
As an aside, gov.uk – UK Health Security Agency – have released another useless word salad, published 28/09/2023 about the effectiveness of NPI – non pharmaceutical interventions – during the scamdemic.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/covid-19-non-pharmaceutical-interventions-to-reduce-transmission
‘Despite the high number of primary studies, reviews and opinion pieces published on this topic, there are still many uncertainties and unknowns about the effectiveness of NPIs and it remains critical to develop a robust evidence base to inform pandemic preparedness and future response. A first step is to better understand the type of evidence that was generated during the pandemic on the effectiveness of NPIs as implemented in the UK.’
‘The aim of this mapping review was to identify and categorise the evidence available. The next steps are to critically appraise and synthesise the evidence identified on the effectiveness of individual NPIs implemented in community settings to reduce the transmission of COVID-19 in the UK. There is also a need to review and assess the evidence on the economic impact of NPIs as well as their wider impact, including on mental health and health inequalities….’
Perhaps proper risk assessments should have been undertaken before the tyrannical measures were put in place…but then again, none of the measures were actually for the benefit of the people.
Andrew Montford’s article on the ways renewables increase electricity bills is roughly right in its conclusions – they certainly do increase bills. But there are some glaring errors in his analysis.
For example, he imagines an example of a grid with gas- and coal-fired power stations, in which the gas-fired ones have lower fuel costs. (In the real world, it is the other way around, but let’s go with Andrew’s example.)
He claims that the market price of electricity tends to settle around the fuel cost (not total costs) of the coal-fired units. This assumes that operators will bid to sell electricity at their fuel cost and not their total cost, which is clearly untrue. If it were true, the high cost generators would very quickly leave the market completely. Of course the operators will bid into the market at a price that exceeds their fuel cost, to try to cover their other costs. They will bid whatever they think they can get away with, which depends on what they think other operators will bid. To analyse how much they will bid, you would be into the realms of game theory, not an over-simplified idea that they will simply bid at their fuel cost.
In reality, the market will over time settle down so that the highest cost units get just enough money to cover ALL their costs, so that they are disincentivised from leaving the market.
He then imagines you add a “new lower-cost source of generation, such as a state-of-the-art gas-fired power station”. He (correctly) says this means the coal-fired stations get to run less often, which he says will increase their fuel costs because they are switching on and off more often. He says that means the market price of electricity will increase, rather than go down.
Actually, the coal-fired stations are indeed running less often. But they are not switching on and off more often. In fact, they are switching on and off less often. More importantly, the expensive coal-fired stations are running less often – and when they are not running, the market price of electricity will of course be lower as it will be set by lower cost generators.
Disappointing analysis from Andrew really.
LOL!
Allison Pearson
@AllisonPearson
Dear World at One,
You seem upset the UK is allowing drilling in our part of the North Sea because it will make more emissions.
Do you get what’s going on?
The UK is importing £14.5billion of gas pa from Norway. That’s 77% of all gas imports. Norway IS drilling like billyo in its part of the North Sea!
We are outsourcing our carbon emissions to Norway. And Pretending to hit net zero while damaging our country’s energy security.
Clear enough for you? Stop virtue signalling. It’s embarrassing.
@BBCNews
#radio4
Brilliant.
It’s not funny, because this crap is tearing the fabric of societies apart..but…
https://www.naturalnews.com/2023-09-26-panasonic-ev-factory-kansas-power-coal-plant.html
New $4B Panasonic electric vehicle (EV) battery factory in Kansas requires so much power that the facility will need its own COAL plant to run…
A coal-fired power plant in Kansas that was slated for closure will remain open after all to provide needed power for, wait for it: a new electric vehicle (EV) battery factory producing “clean” energy storage products.
Duh! They haven’t thought it through. All they need to do is plug in some of the batteries they’re making.
Um.
How to sell homelessness and poverty as cool….??
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-09-28/california-homes-and-apartment-are-too-expensive-is-a-pod-a-good-alternative
Can’t afford California housing? Try living in a tiny sleeping pod. All 4 feet of itAnd even though $500 to $900 may sound like a lot for such limited space, the rates are far cheaper than most alternatives on the traditional rental market.
“Several AI founders and indie hackers here,” he wrote, and “the downstairs lounges are actually nice.” He said the building was occupied by about 20 people and featured five bathrooms and two showers.
Aside from saving money, Lewis wrote, the benefit of pod living included that “there’s a lot of cool people here too.”
Of course..it’s great..now eat ze bugs!!??
My quote for the day….
James Delingpole
@JMCDelingpole
They’re killing you, starving you, poisoning you, imprisoning you, stifling you, treating you like cattle, destroying everything that makes your earthly existence enjoyable or meaningful. And you’re going: “Ooh look. Someone said something on the telly box!”
“ULEZ activist in dinosaur suit uses tipper truck to block camera van”
Can we just give another DS shout out to the heroes doing this – that costume must have been hot!
I have the utmost respect for the Blade Runners and anybody else engaged in defeating the Khant. I saw this vid last night.
Isn’t it strange how the ULEZ operators don’t have English as a first language
https://youtu.be/WKIvgGuxq3M?si=eDLb7VnAOIIIbr2X
This short video of Burnham sort of promising no ULEZ in Greater Manchester is interesting. The reality is that Burnham is about as honest as that mass murderer known the world over whose surname also begins with ‘B,’ Bliar.
https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/wind-farms-are-killing-whales/
Paul Homewood”s excellent weekly piece on the eco loon madness.
I wonder if the Just Stop Oil know they are driving whales to extinction? Probably not, they’re just a bunch of zomhbies.
UK illegal immigrant numbers are insignificant compared with USA
Elon Musk on X: “Went to the Eagle Pass border crossing to see what’s really going on https://t.co/ADYY2XvAKT” / X (twitter.com)
“Gangland violence grips Stockholm as rapper, 18, is executed”
But I thought Sweden was an amazing country where everyone lives in the countryside nicely spaced apart so that viruses can’t spread and what’s more every single one of them is so obedient and sensible and good that lockdown wasn’t required to defeat covid?
Where did the Angus Dalgleish story go?