I studied at Trinity College, Cambridge. It is a grand college: has no sense of inferiority. They have dinners where they say they have more Nobel Prizes than France. I probably acquired a sense of indomitability from being an undergraduate there: I stayed as a graduate, and only later realised that those who came in from other universities felt obliged to work hard in order to prove their worthiness, whereas I was rather careless, still gilded by the gold of youthful glory. When I look back I sometimes wonder how I would have had to change my behaviour in order to become a Cambridge Professor. Certainly, what I did was wrong. I struggled against the system, in finals got my lowest marks (an unforgettable beta double minus and gamma minus) in the subject I now teach (“arrogant and ignorant,“ said the examiner) and survived only as an eccentric hangover of the old order.
What is Trinity? It is a Great Court, built on the site of two older medieval halls, and paid for out of some of the money Henry VIII acquired by dissolving the monasteries. The college, somewhat ironically, was called the Holy and Undivided Trinity: Henry VIII trying to indicate that he was doing something for religion rather than against it. And Trinity has thrown out a vast number of famous names: Francis Bacon, Lord Macaulay, Isaac Newton and Tennyson can all be seen in statuesque form in the chapel. There were also Bertrand Russell and Ludwig Wittgenstein, and among scientists, James Clerk Maxwell, J.J. Thomson and Ernest Rutherford. When I was an undergraduate, the Master was the renowned mathematician, Michael Atiyah. Later, there was Amartya Sen. Lord Byron went to Trinity – of course he did. He had a bear, wrote poems, enjoyed an irregular love life, died trying to liberate Greece.
It all sounds glorious. It was. Back in the 1990s, everything looked as it had probably done in the 1950s. A bus drove through the centre of town. There were bookshops everywhere. The rooms had bar fires and blankets on the beds. There were hardly any cafes. No one had a phone or a television. Everyone had a sheet of paper on the door for messages, whimsical and frequent. I knew where no one was, and so spent great amounts of time, like Diogenes, without lamp but with bicycle, drifting around in search of a man or woman. Only slowly were the cafes and quilts coming in, and the bookshops and buses going out. Trinity generously paid to increase the temperature in the University Library, to help the scholars dose at their books. (The irony: twenty years later they have lowered the temperature in the college, to keep the scholars alert for the coming climate apocalypse.) College bars were spruced up: when I arrived in Trinity, the college bar was a revolting place which I only entered twice. ‘Norman’, the barman, looked quite out of place when they built him a new airport style bar.
Enough of all that. The reason I am writing this is to say that Trinity is in trouble, and is in more trouble than has been made public. Last week, David Abulafia wrote in the Spectator that Trinity should not have sent some spears back to Australia – spears originally taken by Captain Cook’s men – and related this to the recent invigorating spraying-on and slashing-of the portrait of Lord Balfour in Trinity by an aggrieved young pro-Palestinian woman. Abulafia complained that Trinity’s response to the latter was “soggy”. The college said it “regretted the damage done” and wanted to offer “support” to anyone “affected” by the incident. The spears to suggest the college is soggily decolonising rapidly. But the “soggy” response is not simply to do with spears and paintings. It is also to do with – deep breath – COVID-19.
Every alumnus of Trinity receives a copy of the Annual Record. It is a compilation of speeches, notices and obituaries. But in 2020 something changed. The Annual Record, probably for the first time in its history, started to become a propaganda sheet.
Part of the reason is probably that the Master at the time was, and still is, Dame Sally Davies. She was appointed in 2019, and was the first woman to become Master. More significantly, she had no prior connection to the college. Contrast this with the previous Masters: Winter, Rees, Sen, Atiyah, Huxley, Hodgkin – all academics and originally undergraduates at Trinity. We have to go back to Rab Butler in the 1960s to find someone who was not an undergraduate and then was appointed Master: though his great-uncle had also been Master and Butlers have been tied up with Cambridge for centuries. Does this matter? Well, what we have is an institution which cares a great deal about institutional continuity. But then, a new Master is appointed in 2019: not really an academic; in fact, a doctor-turned-civil-servant, coming from Manchester Medical School, the University of London, the Civil Service and the Department of Health. As if this were not enough, [flourish with drum and trumpets] she was Chief Medical Officer previous to Chris Whitty.
Let me take you through the Annual Records. In 2020, there was not much about Covid, though there was plenty about ‘greening’ the college, and raising the LGBTQ+ flag during all of February. It was in 2021 that I began to wonder what had gone wrong. Baron Chartres, former Bishop of London, gave a feeble speech in March at the Feast for the Commemoration of Benefactors (held online) about how we should abandon ‘egocentricity’ and adopt ‘ecocentricity’ – also using the phrase ‘build back better’. He spoke of ‘lockdown’ as a ‘compulsory Lent’. Another speech was given by a Professor who was serving on SPI-M and SAGE, and who complimented the Master for having moved “from guarding the health of our nation, to ensuring the continued health of our college”. Then Dame Sally Davies herself gave a speech. Here are the relevant bits:
We could have entered lockdown earlier… I still do not understand why it took Europe, and Britain in particular, so long to accept the evidence that mask wearing protected others from catching Covid as well as themselves… Our Council agreed in June that… we would insist on mask wearing within college… By now the evidence is clear on this issue. Indeed, recently the American Centres for Disease Control shared the evidence that wearing two masks was better than one… Easter term arrived, sadly not with our students… Our chaplains have been leading masked and distanced welfare teas and pizza evenings, even Halloween events, and all within Government guidelines… A highlight of this Lent term has been the agreement by Council to commit Trinity College to achieve carbon Net Zero by 2050 and to divest from all fossil fuel investments in public equities before the end of 2021… Fellows have been asked not to come into college… We are lucky none of our Fellows died of Covid… We all recognise that this pandemic has exposed and amplified existing structural inequalities, physical and mental health deficits as well as the chronic under-funding of many services and sectors. The exit strategy for universities will, like other sectors, be linked to the suppression of the virus… Our purpose in Trinity is scholarship. [“Evidently not,” I wrote in the margin.]
There was also good news from the BA (that is, undergraduate) Society, which opened new posts for an Ethnic and Inclusion Officer and an Environmental Officer. Eid al-Fitr was celebrated for the first time by the college.
The speech next year was equally stimulating. There was more talk of “decarbonising”. Also, mention was made of visits to the college by those heroes of the modern higher thought, Justin Welby, Nancy Pelosi and Stormzy – I kid ye not.
Your college [declared the Master] continues to be a pioneer of sustainability in Cambridge… I have been working hard too… In 2020, as I watched the pandemic sweep across our world, I came to the realisation that government and health system responses were based on limited data. To respond effectively, they needed behavioural data, including movement, attitudes, behaviours, expenditure and more – yet, when we look for the status, this data is generally held in the private sector. So with support from Council, colleagues and the WHO, I set up the Trinity Challenge. I raised £7.8 million to run this charity and awarded £7.8.million prize money aiming to surface and foster innovation through a challenge, to strengthen our work as a global society… [blah, blah] Google, Microsoft, Facebook… [blah, blah] I want to thank McKinsey and Company… Please recognise that whatever politicians say about Covid, it is probable we will see new variants… Brexit is another storm that returns time and time again…
I am not sure what is going on. First of all, with the language: ‘status’ and ‘surface’ seem to have acquired new meanings. But it should now be obvious that a major academic institution has been captured by a sort of uncritical, average civil-service, new-liberal, corporate-agreeable, globalist opinion, which can only be intended to impose woeful conformity on the minds of our most brilliant young. I fear for the university. Cambridge was still eccentric and electric, varied and wayward when I was there. Now it seems to be emptying itself out from the river to the sea, by way of Kings Lynn. It wouldn’t surprise me if Oxford and Cambridge are entering a second 18th Century – when everything intellectually interesting will have to happen somewhere else (as it did in the 18th Century, just ask Adam Smith or Edward Gibbon). I say this, with the qualification that all our latest professors probably think of themselves as the Newtons, Macaulays and Bacons of our age: as they trot out their robotic ChatGPT opinions on climate change, humanitarian catastrophe, sustainability, inequality, masks and Brexit.
Dr. James Alexander is a Professor in the Department of Political Science at Bilkent University in Turkey.
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Because the Manchester NHS Trust contains nobody in a senior position who has any real world commercial experience they obviously missed the key point that the majority of takeovers fail. But never mind, the only people who suffer are patients
Fairly soon they won’t even have time to offer healthcare because they’ll be too busy doing another inclusivity course or learning about misinformation or promoting jabs or something. You’ll be directed to an AI chatbot who will talk you through your own surgery with a letter opener and a bottle of vodka for the anaesthetic…
We no longer have access to GP services. Even staff at the surgery come right out and tell you “we cannot offer you an appointment.”
Of course AI chatbots promoted covid vaccines. They are tools of those who sponsor and train them.
Off topic, I saw a TV ad last night for some dog collar thing that tracks your dog in case it runs off or whatever (not a bad idea from I’ve seen of dogs disappearing into the woods where I live). They referred to their potential customers as “pet parents” rather than “dog owners”. I’m not an animal person but I do sort of get the idea of looking after a pet, but “pet parents” is a bit creepy and reinforces the idea of them being surrogate children. Interested to hear views on this.
It seems to me that a lot of people have a need to care for something eternally childlike. A way to avoid reality?
I do understand however that animals also provide a great deal of real therapy. They’re so uncritical. Unless it’s a cat, of course.
Yes it’s true what they say; “Dogs have masters, cats have servants.”
A version of this that I heard: A priest should either have a cat or a dog. A cat will remind him how insignificant he is. A dog will show him the meaning of unconditional love.
Ancient Egyptians regarded cats as gods. Cats have never forgotten this.
And dog backwards..it’s not a coincidence?? LOL!
Indeed.
The last few years have probably rendered me paranoid – I wonder if it’s some creepy ploy to raise the status of beasts or lower the status of human beings.
Totally.
It’s like a jungle sometimes. It makes me wonder how I keep from going under…
Uh-uh-uh-uh-uh
Grandmaster Flash – The Message.
A great toon Mogs.
I do enjoy my music.
Gigs coming up:
Richard Hawley at the greatest gig venue in the world.
The Lumineers at the Peace Hall.
Slow Readers Club and Ist Ist – a double bill at the greatest gig venue in the world.
I think there might be a couple more, not sure.
Edit: the irrepressible PiL at the greatest gig venue in the world. That will be a stonker.
Always be wary about any change of language. Language, more specifically words, have power. Look at how the globalists use language that is designed to appear truthful, caring, serious and the rest. In a way, and please forgive this sidetrack into what many regard as land of woo, these are a sort of spell. An enchantment that when repeated often enough (‘safe and effective’ for example) become the reality for those who can’t see what is being done. Anyway, just my thoughts and perhaps it’s possible to find out the purpose of this re-positioning of words.
The thing is though that with the globalists their arrogance and lack of self-awareness is their downfall. There is now no shortage of proof which demonstrates the sheer contradictions to any amount of BS words they might care to spout. Their lies are easily exposed. I don’t think words have the same level of power that they did a few years back. Not by a long shot. The seeds of mistrust in authority have been sown due to people waking up to the plandemic and clot shot fiasco. Once people see beyond the curtain which reveals one fraudulent and harmful agenda then they’re more likely to look beyond other narratives. I personally think it’d be highly unusual to be sceptical of only one story that we’re told by TPTB but question no others.
“I personally think it’d be highly unusual to be sceptical of only one story that we’re told by TPTB but question no others.”
Absolutely Mogs. Once suspicions are aroused around one Jackanory it is only a short time before people become red-pilled.
“Always be wary about any change of language.”
Absolutely Aethelred and never cede the language to our oppressors.
Now how could “pet parents” be expanded I wonder? Is it meant to equate people with pets perhaps? We’ll upgrade the pets and downgrade the yumans.
This mangling and inverting of language is deliberate and insidious. Let us not fall for it.
Too true, HP!
I’m a huge animal fan..people, not so much! LOL!
I always have a dog..can’t imagine life without one..can’t imagine not walking somewhere every day after so many years of doing it..whatever the weather….
but I’m not a pet parent…!!
That just seems to me to be the thin end of the wedge..along with tutu’s and frocks and clothes for dogs….
My dog is a dog..and I treat him like one..(although he is sitting next to me on the sofa as I write, so maybe he does get away with some stuff….)!!
Yup, all that makes perfect sense to me.
Then you won’t be a fan of ‘doggie buggies’ then! LOL I hadn’t even seen little dogs being pushed around in special buggies until I moved here. It seems chahuahua owners in particular are a fan of them. It’s strange but I always assumed that ”just taking the dog for a walk” involved the dog’s feet actually touching the ground.
Actually the other day I saw a cat being walked on a lead and I’ve seen 2 bunnies being pushed in a buggy. My friend said she saw somebody walking a chicken on a lead and I’ve also saw a ferret ( or similar small furry ) being walked. Better than being cooped up permanently though and I do like eccentric people!
Oh and some lady walks around the park with a beautiful parrot on her shoulder..
A doggie buggy for a fashion accessory is just vile. A doggie buggy to take an elderly dog who can only potter short distances out for a walk is a different matter as it can really improve the quality of that dog’s life. One German Shepherd in the village used to be out 3 or 4 times a day with her owner until her back legs went & limited her world to her garden. Getting out & about in her buggy lifted her spirits as she was once again able to meet her doggy friends & interact with the world.
Like everything, they have a place.
Yes that’s lovely. But it must have been a big buggy for a Shepherd though. I’ve never seen a big dog in one, only the little ankle-biters. Here you’re only allowed to take your dog off it’s lead in designated doggy parks that are fenced off, so the dogs have a grand old time playing and socializing. I can imagine that a dog that can no longer go far would really suffer mentally through lack of social contact if you couldn’t get it some place where it can interact with other dogs, like nature intended.
It was & low to the ground so that she could get on & off easily & interact. Sadly she is no longer with us but it made the last year or so of her life so much better.
LOL! They are a phenomena aren’t they….? As I live near a popular coastal town I have to say I now see more visitors with dog buggy’s than kids in pushchairs?…I suppose it’s a natural progression, and different from when I was a kid…now kids get everything and are over-indulged so later in life doing the same with your dog seems normal?
Only had 9 days in my whole life without a dog – those 9 days were just awful.
But like you Mrs G, life without a dog isn’t a life for me. My boy is most definitely a dog, a very well treated dog but first & foremost a terrier & a useful hot water bottle in the winter
A few years ago I had a pedometer that linked to my iPad..when the dog was much younger..I remember getting a message after wearing it for a few days saying ‘Congratulations you have walked the distance of the Hawaiian peninsula’.LOL..I’m not sure how far that might be, it might only be a short peninsula, but after 40 years I must have clocked up some miles..and although my dogs are always slim and fit..my thighs never get any smaller!!!
I must have clocked up a fair few miles myself over the years!
I reckon that it will be all the thigh muscle that you’ve built up over the years….
To be serious, ask yourself what is the difference between the ‘love’ and ‘affection’ and ‘companionship’ a person can get from an AI device (robot, whatever) and the love and affection and companionship a person can get from a dog or a cat. I think the answer is profound.
Indeed no comparison. But just seems weird to use the word “parent”. Obviously there is some overlap, but your human children and animal pets are surely in different categories.
15 years ago, I would have agreed with you, and I never wanted to own a dog or a cat. But five years ago I inherited a Siamese cat (whom I had already grown to love) and in essence I now see no different category between the personality/soul/spirit inhabiting the cat’s body and a personality/soul/spirit inhabiting a human body. My cat is more emotionally intelligent than many humans I know.
I rather like cats but I can’t see myself feeling the same way about one as I do my children.
That’s what I used to think!
LOL, yes the American term, ”fur baby” is quite cringey, but it comes from a place of love so I can’t be too judgmental. Better to be a bit OTT than neglect your pet. Also, for people that have no kids I can see how a pet would become a substitute for one.
Indeed neglect is despicable, and certainly caring for a living thing is important. Still feels weird to me to expressly use the term “parent” and it’s new to me.
I also find it hard to reconcile thinking of them as your children unless you’re a vegan. If you eat meat or use animal products produced from the animal industry then doesn’t that mean you think of them as beasts, not souls.
They are beasts or souls (or both) regardless of whether you eat them or not. I’m a vegetarian but I buy meat for my cat, and I’d rather not contribute to killing animals but cats can’t live without meat, so I just have to come to terms with that reality.
Well, to put it bluntly I could not eat humans, unless I suppose I had no choice for survival.
You shall own nothing and be happy.
well you don’t see this very often. A politician in Japan speaking out about his own severe adverse effect from being vaxxed;
”I am suffering from malignant lymphoma after receiving the Messenger RNA vaccine three times. I am a member of the Japanese parliament. A video of me discussing the effects of the vaccine with Professor Yasumasa Inoue, an expert in molecular biology, was banned by Google.
Does your country allow companies to censor vaccine information? Will you allow violations of my right to pursue the cause of my illness?
Japan is the country where the highest number of people have received the Messenger RNA vaccine worldwide and also has the highest number of excess deaths. I am concerned that Japanese citizens are suffering and dying from the effects of the vaccine.”
https://twitter.com/kharaguchi/status/1662231755234091008
Also Japan. It’s a head-scratcher alright…
https://twitter.com/goddeketal/status/1662633896515600384/photo/1
Is it possible to stop printing anything else about trans, net zero, climate change, thanks.
Why’s that, Marebobowl? These are among the dominant issues of our times.
Indeed! Very appositely, this was posted by Dr Robert Malone yesterday, an interesting take on what’s happening by Dr Robert Lindsay – first half is useful definitions, second half carries the punch.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6rk1mYiOAw
I do like to listen to a well read academic….
What should DS be printing things about, in your view?
I think the majority of the screeching is not actually from trans people – but from people offended on behalf of trans people.
You’re right. Kathleen has said herself, most of the screaming, hysterical banshees are not even legit trans people in the first place. Just hateful and aggressive mentally ill people jumping on the bandwagon.
You’re right. We need to focus on where the noise is coming from, not so much on what the noise is about.
Are there any updates on the recent new rules in The EU that you can’t spend more than 1000 euros in cash ! & in July The USA is going to start digital currency which will phase out cash , ?
-2 non believers on here then
https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/fight-this-sinister-power-grab-by-the-unelected-unaccountable-who/
An excellent article warning of the dangers of the amendments to the International Health Regulations and the proposed new Pandemic Preparedness Treaty.
If Fishy nods these through – more than likely – we are well and truly F#cked!
“Many of the proposed IHR Amendments are of deep concern. These include making WHO emergency guidance legally binding (upgraded from the current ‘advisory’ status) on member states and their people, and simultaneously removing the IHR clause requiring the WHO to uphold ‘full respect for the dignity, human rights and fundamental freedoms’ of individuals.”
The Plandemic has tested the water for the Chunts pulling our strings ! The semi concentration camps that Trudeau & Australia trialed will be full of the non compliant ! The uk also has a couple of new super hotel type prisons to give us sceptics time to change our minds !
https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/the-bank-of-englands-cbdc-consultation-and-how-to-respond-part-1/
Excellent article outlining the part the Bank of England is going to play in confirming our slavery.
OCHA Syria@OCHA_Syria
The humanitarian crisis in #Syria is one of the most severe crises in the world, with more than 70% of the country’s population in need of assistance, but the 2023 #Humanitarian Response Plan is less than 8% funded.
Urgent additional funding is needed to prevent further decline.
https://mate.substack.com/p/as-arab-states-seek-peace-us-insists?utm_source=direct&r=nrwh&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web
TWO WORDS…AMERICAN SANCTIONS!!
“…and the Russians are dying..it’s the best money we ever spent…”
You at least have to hand it to the snake that is Lyndsey Graham..he doesn’t pretend it’s a war about democracy…or peace…or Ukraine for that matter…..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fuPTNKhhVmA
“..things get to terrible places one tiny step at time…”
Brilliant reminder from Jordan Peterson (last year)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16uBwZxtzi0
Er…what’s this..? How did this escape my notice?
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/skycovion-covid-19-vaccine-authorised-by-mhra#:~:text=SKYCovion%2C%20the%20COVID%2D19%20vaccine,the%20UK%27s%20independent%20medicines%20regulator.
News story
SKYCovion COVID-19 vaccine authorised by MHRAThe new COVID-19 vaccine from SK Chemicals, has been authorised after meeting the MHRA’s required safety, quality and effectiveness standards.
From:
MHRA
Published
26 May 2023
Chris Littlewood has a good thread about it…..
https://twitter.com/chrislittlewoo8/status/1662870234435403778
I just can’t believe what I am reading.
The UK Government has approved this SKYCovion COVID Shot based on a nothing burger.
I’ll make some salient points about it.
Its efficacy was not part of the clinical trials.
If it does provide protection, they don’t know what it will be, because it’s still in clinical trials.
If they give it to you, you will be the lab rat in this ongoing trail.
They don’t know how it affects pregnant women, or the foetus, no trials have been conducted.
But medical staff should consider the risk/benefit before injecting.
How exactly can you consider a risk/benefit against no information on the risks??
Between 1-100 & 1-1000 people reported a cardiac disorder as an Adverse Drug Reaction.
Blimey..here we go again!!
How people cannot put two and two together and come up with the depopulation agenda is beyond me. It’s bloody blatant.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdPZVSnv_8Q&list=WL&index=5 Posted by Ivor Cummins. Essentially the same copy of Rob Roos MEP’s footage, also issued by JC recently.
The latest video from Dr John Campbell regarding a paper on a WHO database that states COVID vaccines can cause multiple sclerosis:-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9S2jooTxkQ
Looking at an article from 2020 regarding a pause of the Astrazeneca trial because one of the participants developed transverse myelitis following COVID vaccination, I can see the trial was also paused in July 2020 because a participant had developed multiple sclerosis. The condition was deemed unrelated to COVID vaccination.
https://www.statnews.com/2020/09/09/astrazeneca-covid19-vaccine-trial-hold-patient-report/