BBC Comes to Terms With Collapsing EV Market
17 May 2024
by Sallust
Memories of 2020 are now fading, meaning it can be easy to forget how on that Remembrance Sunday some bravely defied the lockdown to gather at war memorials. But we must not forget, as the tyranny must not be repeated.
Not seeing loved ones at least once a month and living alone significantly increases people’s risk of dying, academics at the University of Glasgow have found. Does this help explain pandemic deaths?
The Munk debate on the 'crisis of liberalism' missed the plot, says Bruce Pardy. "No one mentioned Covid restrictions. No one mentioned the weaponisation of the legal system. No one mentioned government censorship."
The spreading dominance of the woke agenda was a key enabling environment in 2020 for the Covid interventions, says Ramesh Thakur. "Wokism is a war on Western civilisation and empirical science."
The 'graph of doom' used to justify the second lockdown was known by the Government to be wrong, evidence submitted to the Covid Inquiry has shown. So why was it used?
As the Covid Inquiry continues to suggest that locking down earlier would have saved lives, Nick Rendell reminds us that infections were already falling before lockdown and any response would have seemed to 'work'.
What the Covid 'Inquiry' is really about, says Alex Kriel, is power, and in particular ensuring that the elite’s vision of the technocratic biosecurity state is not only not derailed but is institutionalised.
The real Covid scandal is emerging right in front of the inquiry’s nose, writes Fraser Nelson: Britain could have escaped the horrors of lockdown, but nobody pulled apart the doom models driving it.
Anti-lockdown has gone mainstream with a feature in New York magazine titled 'Covid Lockdowns Were a Giant Experiment. It Was a Failure'. But there's still some way to go, says Jeffrey Tucker.
Helen MacNamara, who is giving evidence to the Covid Inquiry today, was the Government ethics chief who was at the heart of a very unethical lockdown-busting party at the height of the pandemic.
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