- “Australian medical regulator finally relaxes Covid gag order on doctors” – An Australian directive to health practitioners banning criticism of the Covid vaccines has finally been dropped, says Rebekah Barnett on Substack.
- “NY Times fact check fail on excess deaths” – On Substack, David Zweig continues to fact check the fact checkers, and things are even worse than they initially appeared.
- “The architecture of isolation: The French connection” – In their latest historical review of infectious disease management, Dr. Tom Jefferson and Prof. Carl Heneghan highlight the ‘Manual of Practical Hygiene’, underscoring the importance of hospital design in controlling infections.
- “Tory MPs terrified Farage could try to make a comeback in February by-election” – The Wellingborough by-election in February could provide an opportunity for Reform U.K. – and Nigel Farage – to make a political breakthrough, says the Express.
- “Keir Starmer found to have helped hate preacher Abu Qatada fight back against deportation” – Sir Kier Starmer has come under fire for representing a notorious hate preacher in court, according to GB News.
- “Scotland pioneers the 84.5% tax rate” – In the Spectator, Ross Clark draws parallels between Scotland’s new tax rates on high earners and the tax policies of Jim Callaghan’s Labour Government in the 1970s.
- “The SNP’s tax and spend delusion” – From next year, many teachers are to be classed as high earners, thanks to the Scottish Government’s latest stealth tax raid, says Iain Macwhirter in the Spectator.
- “Anti-snooping laws planned for Sunak’s Britcoin after major backlash” – Britons who use digital pounds issued by the Bank of England will have their privacy “guaranteed” under new laws designed to allay snooping fears, reports the Telegraph.
- “Britain’s declining birth rate is becoming a problem too big to ignore” – Worrying about Britain’s lower than replacement birth rate does not make you an ethnonationalist or a conspiracy theorist, argues Fraser Nelson in the Telegraph.
- “History weighs like a nightmare on the living if they are ignorant of basic facts” – Weaponising history has been made easier by the common ‘postmodern’ view that there are no objective historical truths only a cacophony of ‘narratives’, writes Robert Tombs in the Telegraph.
- “The boiler tax exposes the truth about heat pumps” – The U.K.’s boiler tax is a genuinely terrible idea – and MPs are quite right to revolt against it, says Matthew Lynn in the Telegraph.
- “Why the green elites hate Christmas” – Nothing horrifies plummy greens more than the thought of millions of plebs buying gifts, getting sloshed and eating dead birds, writes Brendan O’Neill in Spiked.
- “Why the law on assisted dying must change” – The law needs to change and acknowledge a person’s right to end their life, says Mary Dejevsky in the Spectator.
- “‘Assisted dying is a slippery slope – just look at the U.S., Canada and Holland’” – The Church of England has warned that in those countries where assisted dying is legal, such as Canada, stringent safeguards have been dropped over time, reports the Telegraph.
- “‘I was sacked as a teacher for standing up to gender ideology’” – In the Mail, Kevin Lister, who was sacked after 20 years as a teacher for standing up to gender ideology, gives his verdict on the Government’s new trans school guidance.
- “Why drag is not the same as pantomime” – The difference between drag and pantomime is that in pantomime people are pretending, says Charlie Bentley-Astor in the Critic.
- “French feminism is being corrupted” – American activism has seeped into French culture, laments Dora Mouton in UnHerd.
- “Australia’s eSafety Commissioner initiates civil penalty proceedings against X” – Just days after the EU initiated formal legal proceedings against social media company X, Australia has followed suit, writes Rebekah Barnett on Substack.
- “Harvard finds more instances of ‘duplicative language’ in president’s work” – Harvard University says it has found two additional instances of insufficient citation in the scholarly work of Claudine Gay, according to the New York Times.
- “It’s a Christmas nightmare for men who were friends with Jeffrey Epstein” – It’s a whole new kind of festive countdown as the world awaits the publication of a list of Jeffrey Epstein’s friends, says Helen Rumbelow in the Times.
- “Who lied about what? And why?” – On The Glenn Show, Glenn Loury and John McWhorter speak to the two people behind the new George Floyd documentary, The Fall of Minneapolis.
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It is properly typed ‘DIE Regulation’ by the way – the intent is in the mnemonic.
The marxo-fascists always want someone to DIE.
I think they want everyone to die.
Smith alleges to have been called an N-word and the person she accuses of this “strongly denied” this. An investigation “found otherwise, on the balance of the evidence”, whatever that specifically means. As already stated in the text, he was then forced to humiliate himself formally in a letter to her, banned from contacting her and sentenced to 12½ days of forced labour.
Smith is upset that the guy who believes to be innocent has not shown enough remorse despite of the letter he was forced to write and demands that he must be expelled from university instead because “Durham is a very small place. He is a very intimidating guy, and he scares me.” As he’s banned from contacting her and the university administration will certainly act on this if he doesn’t comply, Smith is either lying or scared by her own, so-far baseless phantasies.
This ‘lady’ certainly doesn’t deserve any sympathy.
I was going to write that people of Uni age should strongly consider a degree apprenticeship but you might end up at some woke corporation – probably still better off than uni though. Better still go to a college and get a trade qualification. The most non-woke bunch of people I know are the builders, plumbers, electricians etc at the golf club I swim at (where I live, golf seems to be largely a working class sport).
As a Durham alumni I can only be ashamed of what that University has become. I was once proud to have graduated. Now it’s something I try to keep quiet.
Same. They’ll be calling me up to beg for money again soon. Based on this, they can go jump off Prebend’s Bridge. So long as Durham insists on being a leftwing, political institution, instead of a calm, rational, logically based place of learning, I don’t want anything to do with it. I got my degrees back in the 80’s and 90’s when it was still a bastion of reason, but people only recognise what it is today, and that is something shameful.
Go to Uni, get to be Uni-form.
DEI – That’s Division, Exclusion and Intolerance isn’t it?
Freshers Unfair, surely?