- “Vaccinating teenagers against Covid is priority, says U.K. Epidemiologist” – Neil Ferguson says immunity levels are falling behind other countries that have jabbed 12 to 15 year-olds, reports the Guardian.
- “Arguing children need vaccines for their mental health and social development is scientifically illiterate and morally reprehensible” – Approving Covid jabs for 12-15 year-olds against scientific advice is bad enough, but suggesting it will benefit their mental health is an insult, given how this was disregarded in lockdown, writse Joanna Williams in Russia Today.
- “A Tale of Two Scientific Paradigms” – Here’s a new paper on conflicting scientific opinions on what “following the science” means for SARS-Cov-2 and the Covid pandemic.
- “So are vaccine passports on or off? Don’t ask Boris Johnson… or you’ll be even more confused” – The Vaccines Minister said they were happening, the Health Secretary said they weren’t. So along came the PM to clear things up… or not, writes Michael Deacon in the Telegraph.
- “Virtual consultations are ‘unsafe’” – The Queen’s former doctor has called on GPs to hold more face-to-face appointments and stop defaulting to “unsafe” virtual consultations as the country moves out of the pandemic, reports the Sunday Express.
- “U.K. cancels Covid vaccine deal with French firm Valneva” – The Government has served notice to terminate its contract over allegations of a “breach of obligations”, reports the Guardian.
- “The Covid numbers simply don’t add up” – “We should be demanding proof that the numbers on the Government’s coronavirus dashboard are accurate and asking to see the missing discharge data,” writes Diana Kimpton in TCW Defending Freedom.
- “26 of the 27 Scientists Dismissing Lab-Leak Theory Have Ties to Wuhan Institute of Virology” – Since a letter was written in the Lancet dismissing the lab leak hypothesis as a “conspiracy theory”, any mention of the theory on social media has led to immediate censorship, reports TrialSite.
- “Infighting now more worrying than Covid itself, claims Government scientific adviser” – A Government scientific adviser says academic infighting over Covid worries him more than “handling the virus itself”, reports the Express.
- “Why the NHS needs more bureaucrats” – NHS middle-managers get a hard time, but the truth is that the health service needs more, not fewer, of them, writes Sam Ashworth-Hayes in the Spectator.
- “PhD Cellular & Molecular Biologist Explains Why The Un-jabbed Are Not Selfish” – Dr. Christina Parks, Cellular and Molecular Biologist, explains that Covid vaccines do not and were never designed to prevent transmission of the virus, reports BodyCheck.
- “Quarantine hotels are useless, morally corrupt and must be scrapped” – The ‘Red List’ strategy has not saved the U.K. from a single mutant variant – they are a biological reality we must all learn to live with, writes Annabel Fenwick Elliott in the Telegraph.
- “Government approves ‘Red-List’ exemption for Champions League and European matches” – Prior to the exemption, matches involving English clubs and those from ‘Red List’ countries would have been played at neutral venues, reporst the Telegraph. The rules won’t be changing for anybody else just yet.
- “New York hospital to stop delivering babies as staff quit over vaccine rules” – Lewis county hospital is to suspend service next week because the Covid vaccine mandate for all New York health workers has produced a backlash, reports the Guardian.
- “Israeli Health Minister says vaccine passport system doesn’t have ‘medical justification’ in some cases – leaked footage” – Israeli officials have been caught admitting that in many situations, the country’s ‘Green Pass’ is not “medically justified”, but exists to pressure citizens into getting vaccinated, reports Russia Today.
- “Andrew Neil quits GB News after just eight shows” – The veteran broadcaster has stepped down as the channel’s Chairman and Lead Presenter after a breakdown in relations with its leadership, reports the Telegraph.
- “Extinction Rebellion must be stopped” – The internet and the social media have made it far too easy to whip up a mob on to the streets, writes Norman Tebbit in the Telegraph.
- “Meet Extinction Rebellion’s latest offshoot” – “These groups aren’t trying to convince ordinary people – ordinary people are just collateral damage in their pressure campaign against an already pretty green Government,” writes Tom Slater in the Spectator.
- “Now woke activists are burning books – and it’s become a frightening gamble to write one” – The return of censorship as our elites swallow the woke agenda is making life hell for writers and artists, writes Tim Stanley in the Telegraph.
- “In support of all the brave adults heading back to office” – Here’s an amusing clip on those who are reluctant to return to the office after months of working from home.
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Well done Chile!
It’s quite possible there was some reasonable stuff in there but they’ve obviously overreached – huge own goal.
Surely a mistake to try and cover too much. The US remains the model to follow – the main aim was to set out the limits of government/state power.
Considering that all of the the woke nonsense emanates from the USA, that’s a very dubious claim.
Not sure how that follows. I don’t see the role of a constitution as preventing “woke nonsense” but setting out a workable structure of government that strikes the right balance between the powers and reach of the state and those of the individual, which will undoubtedly be abused and come under attack and may fail, but it’s worth trying, and IMO the US is the best example and the one that has endured and provided the best outcome. Of course the US isn’t perfect, or how we’d like it to be, but it’s notable to me as the rich “liberal” “democracy” with the most robust active movement pushing back against wokeism and its ilk. The political right in the US, which has mainly provided resistance against covid folly and evil, is mainstream both in politics and media. Not so much in the UK and continental Western and Central Europe.
It doesn’t follow at all, it’s just a fact: This is a genuinely American phenomenon and is mostly about inherently American issues which don’t really exist in other parts of the world, except insofar ardent fans of the so-called American left are cosplaying what their idols do.
Taking a bit of a broader perspective, the USA is also traditionally a very aggressive power principially hell-bent on destroying all political systems which differ from the American one, except that this doesn’t always work and/ or sometimes turns out to cost more money and effort than the American public is willing to spend on it (eg, in Afghanistan).
My point was about the best approach to construct a constitution, or what I think one should contain/focus on, as it seemed to me they had made the mistake in Chile of chucking in all sorts of stuff that’s currently trendy that IMO has no place in a document/structure that’s meant to endure over time. Nothing to do with wokery per se.
As far as the USA goes, they are indeed not overly pleasant to their enemies nor to those that are not close allies. More pleasant to their own citizens. This they share with most great powers now and throughout history (though many of them were not that nice to their own people either).
The USA isn’t exactly pleasant to their allies, either. Eg Eisenhower breaking the neck of the British empire by siding with Egypt during the so-called Suez crisis. But that’s sort-of besides my point which is still that the woke movement is as American as hamburgers and black friday. That’s a political movement the political organization of the USA gave birth to. Which is not exactly an argument for combatting it by aping this political organization.
“ That’s a political movement the political organization of the USA gave birth to.”
Well, correlation is not causation, and I don’t really see wokeism as anything especially American or a consequence of anything in their structure of government or bill of rights. They tend to have more extremes there than in many other places. I’m not sure why they seem to have wokeism there so badly. Maybe a follow on from the legacy of slavery and racism then anti-racism, a victim culture developed/was encouraged/exploited. A big topic I think. But as I said, the opposition there is more robust – by comparison we’re just rolling over here. I’d still rather live in the USA than anywhere else except England, though these days that’s not saying much.
Regarding US allies, I would rather be an ally of the US than China, though that’s not saying much either.
But not because of the constitution.
In Chile they are sufficiently poor, they are more prone to properly question and think about these things before spending money. It seems we in the UK won’t have to worry about woke politics for much longer either.
And of course, when you write “poor” you’re probably referring to so-called “public finances” being poor, in other words, the government is not effective at the taxing the people. I would hazard a guess that regular Chileans are better than many in “The West” at preserving their wealth and keeping “their government’s” hands off it, and as such, there is much more of a culture of being sceptical about governments, and they are more practised at making better financial decisions (and decisions in general) for themselves.
Measures of a country’s wealth are an essentially arbitrary thing, because they will never properly take individual wealth into account; individuals are not citizens of a country by any natural mechanism.
And “poor” countries will have less well-developed mechanisms to measure it anyway. And the measures come from governments.
As Oscar Wilde said, “Patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel.”
Do my layperson’s ramblings make sense?
It got firmly rejected, but do not presume they won’t keep voting on some proposals till this woke bilge is passed.
To be honest, there did seem to be some bits that might have been good for indigenous people who get a pretty raw deal in South America. The trouble is that the young new Prez wanted to appeal to everyone and I suspect there is a large contingent of highly conservative voters in Chile who still have pictures of Generalissimo Pinochet on their dining room walls and couldn’t stand this sort of lefty posturing. Still, they’ll work on a new draft and try and ram it home in another year.
They serve great ice creams in Santiago – I managed to drop mine three steps out of the ice cream parlour because it was such an enormous serving, a mini-Andes Mountain Range of ice cream.
The Chileans need to prepare to vote again so that next time they can return the correct result.
This is a new sort of democratic process where you keep hitting the round peg repeatedly until finally it assumes a squarish shape and slots into the square hole. There…done. Democracy in action.
That’s it exactly.
The tyranny of Pridehttps://www.spiked-online.com/2022/09/04/the-tyranny-of-pride/It’s time for a fightback against rainbow authoritarianism.
Yellow Boards By The Road
For the love of humanity … My patience is running thin for turkeys that vote for a fifth Christmas. .
Tuesday 6th September 11am to 12pm
Yellow Boards
Junction A321 Lower Wokingham Rd &
B3348 Dukes Ride
Crowthorne RG45 6NZ
Wednesday 7th September 3pm to 4pm
Yellow Boards
Junction B3034 Forest Road &
A330 Hatchett Lane
Ascot SL5 8QE
Stand in the Park Sundays 10.30am to 11.30am – make friends & keep sane
Wokingham
Howard Palmer Gardens Sturges Rd RG40 2HD
Bracknell
South Hill Park, Rear Lawn, RG12 7PA
Telegram http://t.me/astandintheparkbracknell
62% reject poverty and discrimination, shock horror!
(I wonder if the UK will be recognised as a “plurinational” state, with the rights of the indigenous populations to their land and resources recognised?).
I don’t think it will be too long before the Albanian brothers claim, via some convoluted, Orwellian and historical chicanery their indigenous rights to these islands.
Thank goodness there is at least one country with its head screwed on right.
Let me guess …. 36 yr old President Boric, who himself cannot possibly be very experienced at that age, is a WEF Young Leader?
I’m not sure that he is…I did a search, several searches, and couldn’t find a connection. Still he’s young enough to be invited in…