DOGE U.K. – and Other Hopes and Dreams for 2025
1 January 2025
Declined: Chapter Two
1 January 2025
by M. Zermansky
If Keir Starmer gets his way and bans 'legal but harmful' content on social media, how long will it be before climate contrarianism is classified as 'misinformation'? asks Tilak K. Doshi.
According to a National Grid executive, Labour's energy plans mean consumers in the England's Southeast will either have to ration their electricity use or face blackouts. When will the insanity end? asks Ben Pile.
No, Britain's weather is not becoming more extreme, says Paul Homewood, and the Met Office's manipulation of statistics to try to prove it is is shameful and dishonest.
Day-to-day weather, with all its extremes, is "just weather", says the IPCC. With their backing, we can now shrug off the BBC's melodramatic climate reports and misinformation, writes Mark Ellse.
The Government is using the excuse of 'climate change' to justify the largest taxpayer 'investment' in wind and solar farms in British history.
If Keir Starmer really intends to govern "unburdened by doctrine" why did he put a swivel-eyed climate zealot in charge of Britain's energy policy?
Kenyan farmer Jusper Machogu, recently smeared as a climate change 'denier' by BBC Verify, explains why Net Zero hysterics, not sceptics like him, should be the ones facing criminal prosecutions.
In its latest hit job on a climate change 'denier', BBC Verify has targeted a Kenyan subsistence farmer. His sin? Challenging the green blob's efforts to stop Africans benefitting from cheap energy. Ben Pile investigate.
Paul Homewood received a letter from the Deputy Director Strategy at the Department for Energy Security & Net Zero acknowledging that plans to decarbonise the electricity grid by 2030 – or 2035 –are unworkable.
According to a BBC report, a group of macaques on Monkey Island in Puerto Rico got along better after a hurricane. Could it be that extreme weather isn’t all bad? asks Sallust.
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