- “Too many people worked from home during pandemic, says Sunak” – Too many people ended up working from home during the Covid pandemic, Rishi Sunak has told the Covid Inquiry, according to the Telegraph.
- “Return of Covid lockdown measures backed by extraordinary number of people” – New polling has suggested that around a fifth of the British public would back the return of Covid measures, reports GB News.
- “Final batch of Pfizer documents released shows FDA knew safety monitoring system was ‘not sufficient’” – The FDA knew when it licensed Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine that its safety monitoring system was not sufficient to detect heart problems associated with the shot, reveals the Epoch Times.
- “Why does the WHO make false claims regarding proposals to seize states’ sovereignty?” – In the Brownstone Institute, Drs. David Bell and Thi Thuy Van Dinh raise the alarm about the WHO’s proposed amendments to the International Health Regulations.
- “Hamas is only winning in the minds of idiotic young Westerners” – The pernicious impact of TikTok activism, as well as prejudice among Gen-Z, has been throwing fuel to a decades-long propaganda campaign against Israel, writes Richard Kemp in the Telegraph.
- “I’ll have a chat if Boris Johnson gets in touch, says Nigel Farage” – Nigel Farage has hinted that he could join the Conservatives if there was a change of leader, reports the Telegraph.
- “BBC bosses ‘talk to Gary Lineker’ after star slams Rwanda plan” – BBC chiefs are talking to Gary Lineker after he taunted Tory MPs following criticism for his blasting of the Government’s Rwanda plan, says the Mail.
- “BBC faces ‘catastrophic loss of trust’ without action against Lineker” – The BBC has been warned it faces a “catastrophic loss of trust” if it fails to take action against Gary Lineker over a series of social media posts in which he mocked Tory MPs, reports the Telegraph.
- “Gary Lineker, like a Right-wing Trojan horse, is destroying the BBC from within” – The Beeb’s survival hinges on its ability to report and portray without prejudice – including convincing its own staff to play along, says Ella Whelan in the Telegraph.
- “How HR is draining the economy” – Once regarded a corporate backwater, human resources has grown into a deleteriously influential force, argues Mattie Brignal in the Telegraph.
- “A radical Right-wing trio” – A new generation of radicals in France see their political mission as nothing less than saving European civilisation, writes Gavin Mortimer in the Critic.
- “COP28 summit ‘on verge of failure’ after UAE abandons fossil fuel pledge” – The COP28 summit is on the “verge of complete failure” after the UAE ditched a commitment to phase out fossil fuels, reports the Telegraph.
- “JSO activists told they can continue ‘peaceful’ protests before trial” – Just Stop Oil activists, who took part in a slow march across Waterloo Bridge, have been told by a judge that they can continue taking part in “peaceful” protests before their 2025 trial, according to the Mail.
- “Heather Mills blames ‘corporate greed’ as vegan food company collapses” – Heather Mills has announced her vegan food company has gone into administration and blamed Brexit and “corporate greed” for its demise, reports the Mirror.
- “Vivek Ramaswamy: The climate change agenda is a hoax” – Wide Awake Media has pulled a clip of U.S. presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy not holding back in calling out the climate scam during NewsNation’s fourth GOP primary debate.
- “Al Gore’s tiresome crusade: So long, so wrong” – From the late 1980s until today, Al Gore is singing the same tune, says Robert Bradley Jr. in Master Resource.
- “Britain’s arbitrary authoritarianism” – Hate-speech laws in Britain are making private conversations a crime, even when there’s no one around to be offended, warns Laurie Wastell in the Critic.
- “Democracy in decay” – In TCW, John Wycliffe introduces a new series on the decay of ‘representative democracy’ in the globalist age and the need for more ‘direct democracy’ to redress the balance between the people and the establishment elites.
- “The treason of the intellectuals” – Anyone who harbours a naive belief in the power of higher education to instil morality has not studied the history of German universities in the Third Reich, say Niall Ferguson in the Free Press.
- “Student settles in discrimination case with Council for Psychotherapy” – James Esses has reached a settlement with the U.K. Council for Psychotherapy after he was thrown off his masters course and lost his membership of the council for expressing gender-critical views, reports the Mail.
- “Scotland’s wind turbines have been secretly using fossil fuels” – A report by Straight Arrow News, shared on X, reveals that dozens of giant wind turbines in Scotland use diesel generators to function.
If you have any tips for inclusion in the round-up, email us here.
Profanity and abuse will be removed and may lead to a permanent ban.