Months of forced closures during lockdowns followed by staff shortages due to the ‘pingdemic’ means it’s not just shops that are struggling to survive but hospitality businesses too. The number of bankruptcies is already on the up and is expected to peak as Government support runs out. The Telegraph has the story.
The insolvency firm Mazars said the end of pandemic subsidies over the next six months and staff recruitment woes meant those businesses which had just about managed to stay afloat during the pandemic were now starting to feel the pain.
Partner Rebecca Dacre said: “It is clear that we have yet to see the full extent of the pandemic’s financial hit on hotels and restaurants.
“Businesses that are just keeping their head above water are likely to be taken under by the end of Government support schemes, the repeated cost of reopening and restocking, difficulty recruiting staff and lower occupancy or covers due to people’s changing habits or working patterns.
“Those businesses that have benefited from U.K. tourism this summer may still find themselves looking for support after the holiday season ends.”
Hotels and restaurants struggled to repay the loans even as Government support schemes remained in place, allowing them to furlough staff and avoid landlord action for unpaid rents. The Government had also put in place a block on so-called winding up petitions, preventing lenders from asking courts to close businesses which owe them money and sell their assets.
This block is due to be lifted at the end of September, at the same time as the furlough scheme will be completely wound down. Next March, a suspension on landlord action for rent arrears will be lifted. …
The noodle chain Wagamama has become the latest to feel the pinch of labour shortages, warning a fifth of its restaurants are having difficulty hiring chefs.
Chief Executive Thomas Heier said that he was struggling to fill vacancies at 30 sites. He said competition from delivery and logistics companies had drained the pool of available workers. …
It follows a wave of closures during the pandemic, with names such as Byron, the burger chain, and Italian eatery Carluccio’s having collapsed. Both were later rescued, although many of their sites were closed.
Worth reading in full.
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“Who put the toddlers in charge?
..people who have never been told ‘no’ a…The rot began with the green lunatics”
This article seems to suggest issues are recent yet the erosion and removal of boundaries starting decades ago would have a greater influence such as changes in school discipline and the relationship between parents and teachers, relaxation in censorship of sexual and violent media content, encouraging use of credit cards (debt) to get what you want etc.
Having people behave like toddlers provides a justification to those who consider themselves the adults to take control.
As commented in an article yesterday, people need to be responsible for themselves. That includes not succumbing to propaganda and being manipulated into behaving irresponsibly just because you are led to believe anything goes.
Madness Felling Trees For Wind Farms – latest leaflet to print at home and deliver to neighbours or forward to politicians, media, friends online.
What’s really going on?
Russian seven point ‘peace’ plan:
Ukraine’s recognition of its military defeat, complete and unconditional Ukrainian surrender, and full “demilitarization”;
Recognition by the entire international community of Ukraine’s “Nazi character” and the “denazification” of Ukraine’s government;
A United Nations (UN) statement stripping Ukraine of its status as a sovereign state under international law, and a declaration that any successor states to Ukraine will be forbidden to join any military alliances without Russian consent;
The resignation of all Ukrainian authorities and immediate provisional parliamentary elections;
Ukrainian reparations to be paid to Russia;
Official recognition by the interim parliament to be elected following the resignation of Ukraine’s current government that all Ukrainian territory is part of Russia
The adoption of a “reunification” act bringing Ukrainian territory into the Russian Federation; and finally the dissolution of this provisional parliament and UN acceptance of Ukraine’s “reunification” with Russia.
https://t.me/medvedev_telegram/464
Good luck with that…….
Meanwhile, in other news……
‘…..elements of the all-Russian pro-Ukrainian Russian Volunteer Corps (RDK) and Freedom of Russia Legion (LSR) continued attacks on Russian border settlements, primarily Tetkino, Kursk Oblast and Kozinka and Spordaryushino, Belgorod Oblast on March 14
LSR forces conducted a low-altitude helicopter landing near Kozinka.
A prominent Russian milblogger criticized the Russian military command because Russian border regions cannot “breathe free” in the third year of the war and claimed that “someone” committed a “strategic miscalculation” by deciding to withdraw Russian forces all the way back to the Russian border when withdrawing from northern Ukraine in the first months of the war, making the border the frontline.
The milblogger called for the Russian military to implement “corrective measures” that would somehow push the frontline at least 40 kilometers from the Russian border and into Ukraine.
Another milblogger criticized Russian forces for not establishing barricades in certain border settlements to prevent attacks from Ukrainian territory.
These criticisms highlight the Kremlin’s current dilemma in light of such cross-border incursions.’
Remind me, just how effective was the Maginot line, exactly?
What is Macron up to?
Meanwhile Macron has been making statements about the possibility of French troops in Ukraine;
https://www.france24.com/en/france/20240314-%F0%9F%94%B4live-macron-interview-after-uproar-ukraine-ground-troops-comment-france
What sort of a game is Macron playing? Is he simply saying that the West now only has 2 options;
Maybe as he is coming to the end of his last term as French President he wants to establish his position in history?
He has lost control of the National Assembly so is searching for something to do……..
I’m not sure anyone takes him seriously any longer.
‘The West’, in fact the U.S. and Germany are the two key players, are simply intent on a stalemate.
That strategy seems to be going well, if only as a consequence of Russian military incompetence:
‘The current Russian offensive in the Kharkiv-Luhansk sector, by contrast, involves attacks along four parallel axes that are mutually supporting in pursuit of multiple objectives that, taken together, would likely generate operationally significant gains………Russian tactical performance in this sector, however, does not appear to have improved materially on previous Russian tactical shortcomings……’
He has a Napoleon (aka short man) complex.
Like Zelensky, Sunak, Tiny Tatar Putin, and a whole host of other petite world leaders, male and female. Odd, that.
P.S. Today’s Matt cartoon on the front page of the Daily Telegraph:
https://twitter.com/MattCartoonist/status/1768330966748086666?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Etweet
The Germans simply went round the line. The Russians wouldn’t have the Belgians interfering like the French did.
True.
On the other hand…….
‘…..the all-Russian pro-Ukrainian Russian Volunteer Corps (RDK) and Freedom of Russia Legion (LSR) continued attacks on Russian border settlements, primarily Tetkino, Kursk Oblast and Kozinka and Spordaryushino, Belgorod Oblast on March 14’
Time spent on reconnaissance etc. etc.
They are reported to have been comprehensively defeated with 1500 casualties and substantial armour losses. The Russians have moved civilians out of the affected villages and are now stationing troops in force.
The sad and unneccessary attrition of Ukrainian manpower and Russian traitors continues apace.
You mean these reports?
‘Democratic Russian forces are promising a mass strike against imperial military objects in Belgorod within an hour.
The “green corridor” established yesterday expired at 7AM local time this morning.’
10:38 am · 15 Mar 2024
·
No
You mean like this military target in Belgorod.
Also in today’s news Queensland tells Long Covid people they’ve got post viral syndrome but the UK long Covid grifters disagree. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/03/15/doctors-no-such-thing-as-long-covid/
The Telegraph article seemed very familiar.
“When people ask me about my views on long Covid, my standard answer has been that I don’t think it’s any different from post-viral syndrome”
From “Covid: Why most of what you know is wrong” by Sebastian Rushworth 2021.
“Man driving ‘runaway’ electric Jaguar arrested a week later”
Ah yes, so he (probably) was just a virtue-signalling attention seeker. And looking for an easy way of disposing of his expensive electric boondoggle, it seems.
He should have followed the excellent example of the Finns, who packed a Tesla with dynamite in a quarry and blew it up. Great stuff!
Insane Tesla Model S EXPLOSION!! 30kg of dynamite! (youtube.com)
tells us:
So, wait until they can’t be voted out before betraying the people. Let’s hope the EU voters remember this at their elections.
Reveals exactly what technocrats and bureaucrats think of the popular vote: a nuisance to be endured and quickly ignored.
There’s the rub – how do you judge what is opposed to fundamental values when Britain now recognises no fundamental values, apart from the claim that it is tolerant of all opinions and cultures, a value Gove intends to diminish.
Yes, only the CONservatives can save us from outright tyranny. Oh, hang on…
Don’t know about anyone else, but I’m sick to my back teeth of being treated like an utter damn fool who’s incapable of understanding they’re having the p*ss taken out of them.
I don’t understand what you mean. I don’t have access to the entire Spectator article, but from the first couple of paragraphs, it seemed perfectly sensible to me. What am I missing here?
https://petermcculloughmd.substack.com/p/why-c-19-vaccines-dont-prevent-infection : The fundamental con is that the definition of “vaccine” has been changed, perhaps to exploit the common belief that they prevent infection by whatever. In reality, all this product can do is to mitigate the symptoms, if infection happens.
It may well be that improved understanding of other ways to improve the operation of the immune system to do a proper job in the first place is safer and more effective – but less lucrative in the pharma trade perhaps.
Of course, there have been many attempts at excessive intervention into human rights based on that.
My respect for Claire Fox is growing.
Her ‘battle of ideas’ is a brilliant conceit, encouraging debate on all topics.
The Mayor of Tower Hamlets has bowed to pressure and ordered the removal of Palestinian flags from council buildings and lampposts, reports the Jewish Chronicle.
However they have been flying in LB Neham for weeks. When the Council was finally persuaded to act they were removed and promptly replaced. These are high enough on lamp posts that commercial grade equipment would have been necessary to fit them. Being on bust roads it cannot have been done in secret.
The latest iteration has them on a principal route intp East London – Romford Road.
“British countryside can evoke ‘dark nationalist’ feelings in paintings, warns museum”
Oh, just f*ck right off.
“Why COVID-19 vaccines don’t prevent infection”
That’s what the former President of Haiti thought, too, and refused forced covid vaccinations for Haitians.
“In the wake of one of the most devastating moments in Haiti’s arduous history, there has been a bright spot.
One week after Haiti’s president was assassinated, the country’s first shipment of COVID-19 vaccines finally arrived.
President Jovenel Moise was shot a dozen times in his private residence on July 7. Despite the political chaos, social disruption and a national “state of siege” that followed the killing, Haiti has now launched a mass COVID-19 immunization drive for health care workers and people over age 65. Haiti is one of the last countries in the world to make the vaccine available.”
Haiti Begins First Mass Vaccination Campaign Amid Rising Violence And Poverty : Goats and Soda : NPR
You may remember that the President of Haiti was one of five African leaders who opposed mass covid vaccinations of their people, and either died or were assassinated not long after: Jovenel Moise of Haiti, John Magufuli of Tanzania, Hamed Bakayoko of Ivory Coast, Ambrose Dlamini of eSwatini, and Pierre Nkurunziza of Burundi. All replaced by leaders who welcomed mass, even forced, covid vaccines.
“Is the CofE about to say sorry for Christianity?” – In the Spectator, William Moore reacts to a report by the Church of England’s Oversight Group declaring that the Church should say sorry, not just for profiting from the evils of slavery, but for “seeking to destroy diverse African traditional religious belief systems”.
And here is an example of those “diverse African traditional religious belief systems” in action today:
50 Dead After ‘Anti-Witchcraft Rituals’ in African Country (infowars.com)
“There are no laws concerning witchcraft practices in Angola. If individuals are suspected of sorcery, they are compelled to consume a poisonous herbal concoction known as ‘Mbulungo’. If they die as a result, it is considered to be proof of their guilt.
Last month, suspected death-cult leader Paul Mackenzie was arrested for the alleged murder of hundreds of his followers in Kenya. They had committed suicide due to Mackenzie’s preaching that they would encounter Jesus by starving themselves.”
Tommy Robinson is a fu£#king star!