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by Jonathan Barr
4 January 2021 4:31 AM

New Year, New Lockdown Restrictions

Andy Davey’s cartoon in today’s Telegraph

Appearing on The Andrew Marr Show yesterday, Boris Johnson warned the country that COVID-19 restrictions are “alas, probably about to get tougher”. The Spectator has a summary:

The Andrew Marr Show returned this morning, and with it came an in-depth interview with the Prime Minister. It will surprise no one to hear that the bulk of the interview focused on the coronavirus, and Boris Johnson signalled throughout that the new year could see fresh restrictions being brought into place. He did not go into any detail about what measures could be introduced under a potential “Tier 5”, but it was clear enough that his 5pm Downing Street press conferences were not yet a thing of the past

BJ: It may be that we need to do things in the next few weeks that will be tougher in many parts of the country. I’m fully fully reconciled to that, and I bet the people of this country are fully reconciled to that… Alas, [the tiering system] is probably about to get tougher, but we’ll review it.

Boris said that we need to see if the “extra steps that we’ve all taken in Tier 4 areas are going to work in driving the virus down” and insisted that the Government has got to keep things “under constant review”.

Rather than a national lockdown then the Government’s preference appears to be for a tightening of the Tier system – probably because imposing another national lockdown would require Parliamentary consent. Johnson would not go into any detail on what these tighter restrictions might look like, but the Telegraph appears to have been briefed:

England could be back in lockdown by the middle of this month, Government sources suggested, prompting fears that it will be kept in a straitjacket until at least Easter.

The Telegraph understands that discussions in Government about the return of shielding have already begun, and a further announcement on school closures could come as soon as this week…

Whitehall sources told the Telegraph that discussions are under way about the return of shielding – telling vulnerable people to stay indoors – and whether that could also be extended to people in specific age groups, such as the over-70s.

Last month, the “clinically extremely vulnerable” were told they should stay at home if they live in Tier 4 areas, but the latest discussions could see the return of national shielding measures with a wider group of people told to shield.

Senior Whitehall sources said they expected more parts of the country to be put into Tier 4 which already covers 78% of the population.

Many will agree with Sir Desmond Swayne when he says:

“What more pain do they want to cause us? What are they going to stop us doing now? Close down essential shops and the takeaways? 

“The whole thing is madness. It will be so ridiculous – what difference does it make if you are out in the fresh air for one hour or all day? It won’t make a blind bit of difference. It’s going beyond ridiculous.”

In an entirely predictable intervention, however, Kier Starmer called for new national restrictions to be implemented immediately. The Telegraph has more:

The Labour leader said the virus was “clearly out of control”, as he insisted that it was “no good the Prime Minister hinting that further restrictions are coming into place in a week, or two or three”.

“That delay has been the source of so many problems,” he said.

“So, I say bring in those restrictions now, national restrictions, within the next 24 hours.

“That has to be the first step towards controlling the virus.”

Stop Press: The Daily Mail is reporting that the Government’s ‘Covid-O’ committee, which makes decisions on lockdown restrictions, will meet today to decide on the next steps to take. Expect a Downing Street briefing at 5pm.

Not Going Back to School

Bob Moran’s cartoon in the Telegraph on June 25th 2020

In his conversation with Marr, Boris Johnson stressed that parents of primary school children should send their charges to school today, insisting that the risk is small and that the benefits of education are huge. Unfortunately, amid the warnings about the new strain, the decision to keep some schools closed, and the underlying threat that they might all need to be closed soon anyway, this has proved to be a tough sell. The teaching unions and Labour-controlled local authorities are doing everything in their power to obstruct this plan, as the Daily Mail reports:

Parents are facing chaos over classroom closures as primaries across the country stay shut today despite Boris Johnson insisting “schools are safe”.

The Prime Minister told families yesterday that children should return to school in all areas where they were due to open today and tomorrow.

But as COVID-19 rates soar, teaching unions said that a “snowball effect” was shutting scores of schools despite the official advice to stay open.

Yesterday council leaders in Cumbria, Brighton, Kent, Birmingham and Wolverhampton all formally requested permission for schools in their area to stay shut.

While it waits to hear back from Education Secretary Gavin Williamson, Brighton and Hove City Council has advised all primary heads to shut their schools, apart from for vulnerable children and those of key workers, and to move learning online.

In Southampton the city council warned that some schools “do not have enough staff to reopen safely to all children”, while Slough Borough Council in Berkshire said some primaries would stay closed amid “confusion across the board” caused by the Department for Education.

Councils in Liverpool, Manchester and Newcastle upon Tyne all pledged to support heads who needed to close their schools, while Preston City Council’s leader said primaries should remain closed “until they can reopen safely”.

Norfolk County Council also said it would support heads who needed to keep their schools shut.

The chaos has left thousands of parents facing a scramble to find care for their children.

It has worrying parallels with the first education shutdown in March, which was only announced by the Government after many schools had already closed of their own accord. Secondary school pupils in exam years are already due to return a week later than planned, from January 11th, while other years are scheduled to go back from January 18th.

And all London primaries were ordered to stay shut for the first two weeks of the January term after a U-turn on Friday.

The Government’s list of areas where primaries will stay shut also includes parts of Essex, Kent, East Sussex, Buckinghamshire and Hertfordshire.

Now nearly a third of the country, some 17 million people, are living in areas where primaries have been told to close by the Government, or where councils have said they will back heads who decide to close their gates.

Worth reading in full.

Stop Press: Lord McConnel, the former Labour First Minister of Scotland, has urged the Scottish Government to vaccinate teachers rather than close schools.

Stop Press 2: Kirstie Allsopp was trolled on Twitter for pointing out that primary school children were “at far more danger from journeys in cars, or swimming, or trampolining than Covid”. That’s surely indisputable?

Covid is a horrible disease but it is very, very, very rare for it to impact children. They are still at far more danger from journeys in cars, or swimming, or trampolining than Covid. Please do not let anyone persuade you otherwise.

— Kirstie Allsopp (@KirstieMAllsopp) January 2, 2021

Heartwarming Tale

We got this message from a reader yesterday in response to our story about paediatric wards not being full of children with Covid.

Just a quick anecdote on the number of children in acute care controversy. A relative works in paediatric A&E in a big London hospital. They had a ‘heartwarming’ experience over Christmas and New Year, with a family turning up at the hospital. Both parents went admitted into the Covid ward and were indeed ill with Covid. The children tested positive but were completely fine. However, there was nowhere for them to go so they stayed in the A & E paediatric ward and became special pets over the holiday period, until a parent was well enough to reclaim them. This was no doubt practical and kind, and I don’t suppose it is a widespread occurrence, but would add to the numbers.

Lockdowns Spread Bugs Faster Than Liberty

Shutterstock.com

William M. Briggs, statistician and co-author of The Price of Panic, has an interesting piece on his blog in which he explains that lockdowns are not simply ineffective – they actually increase virus transmission.

Suppose a bug is 100% transmissible. Everybody in contact with somebody infected therefore gets it, and passes it on with certainty to the next person they meet.

A lockdown will spread this bug faster than allowing people to remain at liberty.

Lockdowns are not quarantines in the old-fashioned sense of that term, where infected people were isolated, kept separate in every way from the non-infected. If you think lockdown and hear quarantine your ears are busted. Quarantines can make sense; lockdowns never do.

Lockdowns are merely forced gatherings. People in lockdown are allowed to venture forth from their dwellings to do “essential” activities, like spending money at oligarch-run stores. These stores are collection points, where people are concentrated. Some are allowed to go to jobs, such as supporting oligarch-run stores…

Lockdowns are not quarantines. Lockdowns concentrate people into fewer areas. Lockdowns are only pain.

Lockdowns allow people outside to mingle for a time, then it forces them back inside to mingle with a vengeance.

It’s clear that our 100% transmissible bug will spread much faster when people are forced to spend more time indoors with each other. Once one person gets it, he will spread it to those at his home immediately. If people were at liberty, and therefore more separated, the bug would still spread to everybody, but more slowly (the speed here is relative).

Now suppose the bug only has a 1 in a 1,000 chance of spreading per contact. Low. Lockdowns will still spread it more quickly than liberty. And for the same reason. Lockdowns force people together. The venues they are allowed to venture to are restricted, and therefore concentrate contact, and they force people inside their homes where it’s obvious contact time increases. Lockdowns concentrate contact spaces and times.

Transmission rate, then, has little to do with the efficacy of lockdowns. There is no efficacy of lockdowns preventing transmission, only in controlling where the transmissions will take place.

Worth reading in full.

The Great Reset: How Did a Corporate Boondoggle Become a Conspiracy Theory?

Unsplash

Writing for UnHerd, Gavin Haynes takes a look at “The Great Reset”, the title of both a tedious seminar hosted by the World Economic Forum in June and of a metastasising conspiracy theory.

In June of this year, the World Economic Forum hosted a video seminar called The Great Reset, to promote a book, also called The Great Reset. It was a crushingly tedious time for all concerned. Bookended with the mitherings of Prince Charles, the event mainly involved a panel of worthies, who all had that NGO tan that comes from endlessly staring at discussion documents about third world poverty from a luxurious Alpine apartment, sharing their thoughts on “sustainability”, “green jobs” and “the global south”.

Their Great Reset, as unveiled in their seminar, proposes a generational shifting of the track-lines of our economic development. It calls for de-carbonising, with the help of massive government stimulus; it wants an internationalist approach that clamps down on tax-dodging companies, paid for by new taxes on the wealthy. Lame, perhaps. But on the face of it, hardly sinister.

The stronger thesis of The Great Reset was best stated by the former Vatican ambassador to the US, Archbishop Carlo Vagano, who in November of this year wrote an open letter to President Trump: “Mr. President, I imagine that you are already aware that in some countries the Great Reset will be activated between the end of this year and the first trimester of 2021. For this purpose, further lockdowns are planned, which will be officially justified by a supposed second and third wave of the pandemic. You are well aware of the means that have been deployed to sow panic and legitimize draconian limitations on individual liberties, artfully provoking a world-wide economic crisis. In the intentions of its architects, this crisis will serve to make the recourse of nations to the Great Reset irreversible, thereby giving the final blow to a world whose existence and very memory they want to completely cancel.“

This is the Great Reset as it now exists within the conspiracy world: the premise that life as we knew it is being flattened so as to be re-forged into the bugman’s paradise – with special emphasis on COVID-19 being essentially fake, or at least wildly overstated.

Clearly, these two Great Resets – the lame version and the conspiracy version – are very different propositions. Yet there is also a sense in which they talk to each other, feed off each other. Above all, each provides an excellent strawman for the opposing team to attack.

The Great Reset, says Haynes, was just too good a phrase not to be taken up by conspiracy theorists.

Of course, Klaus Schwab’s annual talking shop is hardly the only organisation vying to turn the crisis towards their agenda. The problem, it seems, was that they were only supposed to blow the bloody doors off; the title was just too good, too on-the-nose, to be ignored. The Great Reset was accidental over-sell, but only in the way that lighting [sic] striking the highest conductive point is “accidental”. By November, when the phrase really took off, societal disquiet was already rumbling, looking for an obvious point-of-contact with reality. Suddenly, a vague unease had a name.

But at the same time, both sides also refuse to concede that the term has multiple meanings. For the WEF and its allies, any opposition to their policies must therefore come from wackos. 

On the other side of the fence, those who deal in the fantasies can deploy their own motte and bailey. They point to the WEF’s actual plan as a safe harbour in reality – a stout Christmas tree of genuine fact, on which they can then hang their madder baubles. 

Between them lies the real argument, unloved and untackled. The crisis has already put down several waymarkers towards a world few of us signed up for: from the steamrollering of mom-’n’-pops in favour of Amazon, to the truly cashless society, to credit scores based on your Google history to the oft-floated “vaccine passport”. The bugman is always figurative: a kind of platonic ideal pointing towards the dangers of a technocratic 2020s. To take it literally is always to miss the point.

The WEF case rests precisely on explaining why we won’t end up in that future. But tackling the unease fuelling The Great Reset’s wide spectrum of critics would also mean addressing the sentiment underlying its opposition: that however buttery the buzzwords, human beings are rightly suspicious of those who make abstruse high-level plans for their ‘welfare’. Especially if they’re designed by pointy-heads from Davos with no skin in the game — whether they come bearing a thought, a plan, a scheme, or an outright conspiracy.

Worth reading in full.

Stop Press: Several readers have sent us an article that appeared in Principia Scientific pointing out the discrepancy between official UK Government data about how many people have died of COVID-19 and the data for statutory notifications of infectious diseases (NOIDS) in England and Wales. According to PHE, GPs are supposed to notify the local authority when one of their patients dies of a notifiable disease, yet only 13,844 deaths from COVID-19 have been recorded using this method in England and Wales. According to Principia Sceintific, this “shows beyond any reasonable doubt that the pandemic narrative peddled for the last nine months by politicians (in cahoots with the mainstream media) is gross misrepresentation and exaggeration”.

Not so fast. A bit of sleuthing (emailing some GPs) reveals a couple of reasons why GPs wouldn’t report the death of one of their patients from COVID-19 using this clinical reporting system.

  • They aren’t aware a patient of theirs has died of COVID-19 because said patient has been admitted to hospital via A&E.
  • All lab results are sent to PHE and a note is then inserted into the patient’s notes indicating that as PHE has already been notified a NOID is not required. A clinician has a legal duty to submit a NOID if they have clinical evidence of a notifiable disease, except if PHE has already been notified.

One GP responded thus:

It’s an extremely antiquated system. Useless in my view and should been abandoned years ago. The only thing you can get from it is trends over long periods, although that makes the massive assumption that reporting behaviour doesn’t change. I haven’t reported any Covid cases. In fact, we’re told we don’t have to. It’s a useless piece of data and should be ignored!

Response to Dr David McGrogan’s Article on Why Our Points aren’t Landing

Emotion trumps reason – and it was ever thus

Regular Lockdown Sceptics contributor Guy de la Bédoyère has written a response to yesterday’s article by Dr David MrGrogan.

David McGrogan’s judgement about the failed strategy of lockdown sceptics and the failure to address emotion is absolutely correct – for the most part, but he’s missed something out. What I’m most surprised by is that he’s surprised. I’ve been an active supporter of this website from the start, but I will freely admit that from the outset I thought we were probably making a futile gesture – sorry Toby – though it was one worth making, nonetheless.

There is nothing new or special about the phenomenon David describes. We don’t live in an age that is any more emotional than any other time. The French historian and political theorist Georges Sorel (1847–1922) was quite convinced that emotion and myth were the driving forces behind human action. He said a man “must have in himself some source of conviction which must dominate his whole consciousness, and act before the calculations of reflection have to enter his mind”.

Sorel added: “We do nothing great without the help of warmly-coloured and clearly defended images, which absorb the whole of our attention”.

In short, human beings are primarily driven by the forces of irrationalism and emotion. They always have been, from the ancient Egyptians exulting in the theatre of pharaonic rituals to the visceral response felt by most Britons of a certain age when they hear the Merlin engine of a Spitfire thundering overhead.

Both experiences were, and still are, defined by myth and the warm glow of righteous belonging.

Strikes and demonstrations, whatever their beef, are about breaking out of the humdrum everyday tedium, the chance to stand beside a brazier warmed by the fire and righteous zeal, or hurl abuse at a policeman, or topple a statue.

Brexit was fought with emotions, on both sides, and defined by myths. Rational arguments, whatever form they might have taken, had and still have no currency. Leave or Remain – both were myths but Leave got the emotion right.

So it has been with Covid. The last year has been a convulsion of triggered emotions, the chance to participate in a mass ritual of self-flagellating righteousness and zealous enthusiasm, the opportunity to share in the endless mythologizing of heroes, villains, and victims. To cheer on the crusading saints in the NHS, to be seen to suffer oneself and do without, to share in the pain, to exult in the excitement of action and participation in an epic tale of Homeric intensity.

It is exactly the same for Piers Corbyn and his own counter-army of anti-lockdown disciples. Their marches and protests, difficult though it might be to believe, serve the same purpose for the participants. Exciting days on the streets of London, tussles with the police, the endorsement of a fine and arrest. The chance to be hero – just for one day.

Sorel understood that the collective emotions of the masses were the key to action. It is remarkable how successful a cabal of our Government ministers and scientists have been in harnessing that force, though in an unprecedented way. Or is it?

In truth, the Covid nightmare has only revealed to us that we are as human beings have always been since time immemorial – driven by myth, inspired by action, and immune to rational thought. Data has been deliberately massaged, manipulated, selectively disseminated to have an emotional impact. Journalists in whole legions have been caught up in an endless cycle of vicarious participation in the cavalcade of emotion.

I’m not sure that talking about all the devastating consequences of lockdowns will have the effect David would like it to have, regardless of how many heartstrings are tugged in the process. The human tragedy is all too real but in an extraordinary way it’s only served to amplify the moral and heroic intensity of being in the middle of a disaster. Being a victim of the fallout can be for some the validation of personal sacrifice, membership, and an endorsement.

Whether a person is hiding at home, working in a hospital and cursing the public, or protesting about wearing a mask, each is – perhaps for the first time in their lives – at last in possession of feeling truly alive, the peaceful mediocrity of the past set to one side in favour of living dangerously.

The only difference about our era is the desperate need to present every position as rational, considered, and substantiated. Hence the mantra of one camp, ‘we’re following the science’. The anti-lockdown marchers are equally convinced by the rationale behind their actions.

Nothing could sum the idea up better than this comment by a French scholar called Pierre Rouanet almost 60 years ago:

The morals of heroism are based on a blind belief in the superior ethical worth of a cause and in the almost religious loyalty elicited by the latter. When reason intervenes, heroism becomes a calculation of alternatives rather than an unqualified devotion to a transcending reality.

That’s precisely why there is no transcending reality to Covid any longer, and maybe there never was. While the disease pervades every corner of our society remorselessly and unilaterally, forever beyond our control, we are each acting out parts in what has become the great emotional drama of our era, and which will in time become as mythologized as Brexit, the Battle of Britain, the Great Plague of 1665, and even the Trojan War – if it hasn’t already.

I’m afraid our efforts to be a rational voice in the hurricane were always going to be a struggle, but at least we have been heroes of a sort – haven’t we?

Poetry Corner

Author and poet Jonny Peppiatt suffered a bout of depression this year, like so many other people. He decided to write a short poem about its ugliest manifestation: suicidal ideation.

He says: “I was going to say that I hope you like it, but really all I hope for is that, should you choose to share it, it finds one person who is struggling and gives them strength.”

It waits for me

It waits for me, ’round the corner;
It waits for me to be alone;
It waits for me, when we part ways;
It waits for me, it’s there, I know.

I’ve faced it down from time to time,
I beat it once, twice, time again,
But it haunts me, still, ev’ry day,
And it’s just a question of when.

When will I face this beast of mine?
When will it be at that corner
I turn; at that very next step?
When will it be all I have left?

When will it take me in its arms?
Embrace me, hold me, whisper to me
What I’d told myself already:
That tomorrow need not be.

It waits to be my only friend
By my side; all else shut inside,
Shut away, away from me, away
From seeing what might be my end.

It waits for me to be alone.
And it knows it won’t need to wait
Much longer to truly have me
To itself.

But as I breathe, I know I must
Fight with all I am to conquer
This beast of mine, and his, and hers.
I’m not alone, I’m not deterred.

I’ll wait for it, I’ll face it down.
I’ll wait for it, I’m not alone.
I’ll wait for it, I’ll stand and fight.
I’ll wait for it, I’ll win, I know.

Round-up

  • “COVID-19: Beating fear with Science” – A thorough, evidence-based review of COVID-19 testing, health risks and precautions by George Michael
  • “Nicola Sturgeon to unveil even harsher lockdown to curb mutant virus” – The Telegraph reports that as Boris considers tighter restrictions, Nicola is making sure she gets in first so she can claim Boris copied her
  • “Why did the world react so hysterically to COVID-19” – Stockholm-based doctor Sebastian Rushworth has a typically astute explanation
  • “With luck, a tough first quarter will be followed by three stellar ones” – Roger Bootle sets out an optimistic economic forecast for 2021 in the Telegraph
  • “Old lady dispersed for feeding birds at Marble Arch” – Appalling video of the police moving on an old lady trying to feed some pigeons – clearly a danger to public health. Someone should produce a mash-up intercutting this heavy-handedness with “Feed the Birds” from Mary Poppins. Two very different Londons
  • “Hospitals have 13k FEWER patients taking up beds – so why are millions more in Tier 4?” – Lucy Johnston asks a good question in the Sunday Express
  • “Why Your Grandfather Never Complained about His Ailments but You Do” – An insightful article by Peter C. Earle on the AIER blog
  • “Don’t let the b******s grind you down” – Bill Wright calls for dogged stoicism, endurance and perseverance in the Conservative Woman
  • “Tesco offers to help aid Covid jab rollout by providing use of its distribution arm while Boots says it will open vaccination sites” – MailOnline reports on the high street chains’ offer to help with the rollout of the vaccine
  • “It’s official: workers don’t want to return to the way we were” – “Data shows that the pandemic has brought more flexibility and happiness to Britain’s workforce,” says Mark Price in the Telegraph
  • “How Media Fear-Mongers Misrepresent COVID-19” – John Hartung details how the MSM focuses on negatives and overlooks positives in its coverage of COVID-19. Twas ever thus
  • “Covid statistics suggest schools are likely to be closed soon” – Robert Peston in the Spectator regurgitates the SAGE data showing schools must close
  • “South African Covid variant could be resistant to vaccine, expert warns” – The Telegraph reports on another twist in the saga of mutant strains
  • “Lockdown policy ‘madness’: Israeli scientist tells i24NEWS” – A group of scientists and physicians are calling on the Israeli Government to abandon lockdowns and follow the Common Sense Model which, like the Great Barrington Declaration, focuses on protecting vulnerable groups
  • “Our overreaction has failed us” – In a counterpoint for Colorado Politics, Carrie Geitner says that its time for Governor Polis to acknowledge that lockdown restrictions have failed and bring them to an end
  • Police Patrolling in Hyde Park, asking for IDs – Subject Access provides the evidence

Platoon of Police patrolling Hyde Park demanding ID@JuliaHB1 @talkRADIO pic.twitter.com/MuyGNlm9RT

— Subject Access (@subjectaccesss) January 3, 2021

Theme Tunes Suggested by Readers

Three today: “Think About The Children” by Lucky Dube, “January Hymn” by The Decembrists and “Iron Hand” by Dire Straits

Love in the Time of Covid

We have created some Lockdown Sceptics Forums, including a dating forum called “Love in a Covid Climate” that has attracted a bit of attention. We have a team of moderators in place to remove spam and deal with the trolls, but sometimes it takes a little while so please bear with us. You have to register to use the Forums as well as post comments below the line, but that should just be a one-time thing. Any problems, email the Lockdown Sceptics webmaster Ian Rons here.

Sharing Stories

Some of you have asked how to link to particular stories on Lockdown Sceptics so you can share it. To do that, click on the headline of a particular story and a link symbol will appear on the right-hand side of the headline. Click on the link and the URL of your page will switch to the URL of that particular story. You can then copy that URL and either email it to your friends or post it on social media. Please do share the stories.

Social Media Accounts

You can follow Lockdown Sceptics on our social media accounts which are updated throughout the day. To follow us on Facebook, click here; to follow us on Twitter, click here; to follow us on Instagram, click here; to follow us on Parler, click here; and to follow us on MeWe, click here.

Woke Gobbledegook

We’ve decided to create a permanent slot down here for woke gobbledegook. Today, we bring you the news that The Merchant of Venice is a bit too much for Michael Morpurgo’s new book Tales from Shakespeare. The Sunday Times has the story.

Sir Michael Morpurgo is refusing to include The Merchant of Venice in a new children’s book based on Shakespeare’s plays because of its “antisemitic” and “offensive” attitudes.

Morpurgo, 77, who was knighted in 2018 for his services to literature and charity, admits his 21st-century sensibilities also grappled with male “bullying” towards women in The Taming of the Shrew, and the “little Englander” prejudices against the French in Henry V.

The War Horse author is retelling and modernising the stories of 10 Shakespeare plays for children aged from six to 18 in a book called Tales from Shakespeare, which will be published next year. His aim is to ensure that a generation of youngsters “switched off” Shakespeare, because they are drilled and crammed on compulsory texts for exams, grow up to love his stories.

The list of plays includes staples of the school syllabus such as Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, King Lear, The Taming of the Shrew and Macbeth. But Morpurgo said that when he reread Shakespeare’s plays last year he decided he could not “honestly” retell the story of The Merchant of Venice, even though the play appears on A-level syllabuses.

“I did not tackle Shylock. I avoided [the play] because it worried me too much if I am honest about it… there are assumptions right the way through about what it is to be a Jew, and how Jews are thought of, which are so important for our society that, for me, it was best not to go there,” he explained.

“The play can be antisemitic… I did feel this was Shakespeare’s play and I could not tell it honestly. It would be offensive.”

Morpurgo’s squeamishness about Shakespeare is not unique. His Tales from Shakespeare is intended as a modern version of Charles and Mary Lamb’s Tales from Shakespeare (1807), which he said “children used to grow up with” before they were old enough to appreciate Shakespeare in the original.

The Lambs rewrote the works for children, leaving out the bawdy and sexual aspects, among other things.

Thomas Bowdler also edited the plays in 1807 as The Family Shakespeare, to make them acceptable for women and children. It is from his acts of excision that we get the verb “bowdlerise”.

Chris McGovern, chairman of the Campaign for Real Education, said: “This is the dead hand of political correctness. It is cowardly not to face up to great literature. Of course there is going to be plenty to be offended by in Shakespeare, as well as in the Bible and the Quran. Children do not want to be protected all the time against great literature.”

At least if children discover that what they’ve been given is censored it might just encourage them to reach for the unexpurgated originals.

Worth reading in full.

Stop Press: West Midlands Police are recruiting an Assistant Director Fairness and Belonging and offer a salary of £74,340. How much does the Director get paid? The job description reads as if it came straight out of W1A:

Assistant Director Fairness and Belonging

Are you a forward thinking, creative individual looking to achieve ambitious outcomes? Do you have demonstrable ability to lead, develop and deliver a first class diversity and inclusion function?

We are looking to recruit a new Assistant Director, Fairness and Belonging to lead the implementation of the WMP Fairness and Belonging agenda, strategy and plan which underpins delivery of our workforce vision and values, and our “This Work Matters” strategy.

You’ll support and oversee improved inclusive culture throughout the workplace – encouraging the integration of initiatives in the force. The role will also see you managing all inclusion issues relating to operational force activity, as our recognised expert in this field. You’ll also lead and develop your people which includes a team of Diversity & Inclusion practitioners and the Fairness in Policing team, but your influence will be felt across the force.

Get your application in here.

“Mask Exempt” Lanyards

We’ve created a one-stop shop down here for people who want to buy (or make) a “Mask Exempt” lanyard/card. You can print out and laminate a fairly standard one for free here and it has the advantage of not explicitly claiming you have a disability. But if you have no qualms about that (or you are disabled), you can buy a lanyard from Amazon saying you do have a disability/medical exemption here (takes a while to arrive). The Government has instructions on how to download an official “Mask Exempt” notice to put on your phone here. You can get a “Hidden Disability” tag from ebay here and an “exempt” card with lanyard for just £1.99 from Etsy here. And, finally, if you feel obliged to wear a mask but want to signal your disapproval of having to do so, you can get a “sexy world” mask with the Swedish flag on it here.

Don’t forget to sign the petition on the UK Government’s petitions website calling for an end to mandatory face masks in shops here.

A reader has started a website that contains some useful guidance about how you can claim legal exemption. Another reader has created an Android app which displays “I am exempt from wearing a face mask” on your phone. Only 99p, and he’s even said he’ll donate half the money to Lockdown Sceptics, so everyone wins.

If you’re a shop owner and you want to let your customers know you will not be insisting on face masks or asking them what their reasons for exemption are, you can download a friendly sign to stick in your window here.

And here’s an excellent piece about the ineffectiveness of masks by a Roger W. Koops, who has a doctorate in organic chemistry. See also the Swiss Doctor’s thorough review of the scientific evidence here.

The Great Barrington Declaration

Professor Martin Kulldorff, Professor Sunetra Gupta and Professor Jay Bhattacharya

The Great Barrington Declaration, a petition started by Professor Martin Kulldorff, Professor Sunetra Gupta and Professor Jay Bhattacharya calling for a strategy of “Focused Protection” (protect the elderly and the vulnerable and let everyone else get on with life), was launched in October and the lockdown zealots have been doing their best to discredit it ever since. If you googled it a week after launch, the top hits were three smear pieces from the Guardian, including: “Herd immunity letter signed by fake experts including ‘Dr Johnny Bananas’.” (Freddie Sayers at UnHerd warned us about this the day before it appeared.) On the bright side, Google UK has stopped shadow banning it, so the actual Declaration now tops the search results – and Toby’s Spectator piece about the attempt to suppress it is among the top hits – although discussion of it has been censored by Reddit. The reason the zealots hate it, of course, is that it gives the lie to their claim that “the science” only supports their strategy. These three scientists are every bit as eminent – more eminent – than the pro-lockdown fanatics so expect no let up in the attacks. (Wikipedia has also done a smear job.)

You can find it here. Please sign it. Now over three quarters of a million signatures.

Update: The authors of the GBD have expanded the FAQs to deal with some of the arguments and smears that have been made against their proposal. Worth reading in full.

Update 2: Many of the signatories of the Great Barrington Declaration are involved with new UK anti-lockdown campaign Recovery. Find out more and join here.

Update 3: You can watch Sunetra Gupta set out the case for “Focused Protection” here and Jay Bhattacharya make it here.

Update 4: The three GBD authors plus Prof Carl Heneghan of CEBM have launched a new website collateralglobal.org, “a global repository for research into the collateral effects of the COVID-19 lockdown measures”. Follow Collateral Global on Twitter here. Sign up to the newsletter here.

Stop Press: The Guardian has run a vindictive, score-settling piece entitled: “Now the Swedish model has failed, it’s time to ask who was pushing it.” (It didn’t fail, obviously.) Cue a repeat of the smear that the GDB is a dangerous, libertarian project funded by the Koch Brothers. The author is billed as the “investigations editor” of openDemocracy. Let’s hope his other “investigations” have a little more substance to them.

Judicial Reviews Against the Government

There are now so many legal cases being brought against the Government and its ministers we thought we’d include them all in one place down here.

The Simon Dolan case has now reached the end of the road. But the cause has been taken up by PCR Claims. Check out their website here.

The current lead case is the Robin Tilbrook case which challenges whether the Lockdown Regulations are constitutional. You can read about that and contribute here.

Then there’s John’s Campaign which is focused specifically on care homes. Find out more about that here.

There’s the GoodLawProject and Runnymede Trust’s Judicial Review of the Government’s award of lucrative PPE contracts to various private companies. You can find out more about that here and contribute to the crowdfunder here.

And last but not least there was the Free Speech Union‘s challenge to Ofcom over its ‘coronavirus guidance’. A High Court judge refused permission for the FSU’s judicial review on December 9th and the FSU has decided not to appeal the decision because Ofcom has conceded most of the points it was making. Check here for details.

Samaritans

If you are struggling to cope, please call Samaritans for free on 116 123 (UK and ROI), email jo@samaritans.org or visit the Samaritans website to find details of your nearest branch. Samaritans is available round the clock, every single day of the year, providing a safe place for anyone struggling to cope, whoever they are, however they feel, whatever life has done to them.

Shameless Begging Bit

Thanks as always to those of you who made a donation in the past 24 hours to pay for the upkeep of this site. Doing these daily updates is hard work (although we have help from lots of people, mainly in the form of readers sending us stories and links). If you feel like donating, please click here. And if you want to flag up any stories or links we should include in future updates, email us here. (Don’t assume we’ll pick them up in the comments.)

And Finally…

Watch Triggernometry‘s latest episode, a discussion with comedian, satirist and Free Speech Union Advisory Council member Dr Andrew Doyle. Together with presenters Konstantin Kisin and Francis Foster (also members of the FSU Advisory Council), he takes a look back at 2020 – a year in which all the worst fears of free speech defenders were realised.

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Eternal Lockdown, Wooden Horses and Shiny Things

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2.2K Comments
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Londo Mollari
Londo Mollari
5 years ago

First!

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Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago
Reply to  Londo Mollari

BBC’s Fake News About Children In Hospitals
Mahyar Tousi

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3_zV1AaMIA

As Peter Hitchens says never stop writing your MP – it’s the only protest we’ve got.
Pass every fact you have to them – forward every article from Lockdown Sceptics

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Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

The Great Reset: there are no conspiracies, just coincidences.

World overreacts to a virus, copying communist China in illegal and immoral lockdowns.

Big Tech profits massively from lockdown – censoring any lockdown scepticism

Locksdown clearly don’t work – but they continue

China’s Number One critic Donald J Trump has election he was clearly winning stolen by Democrats, who paused vote count and wheeling in thousands of unsolicited “mail in ballots” – over 90% of which went to Biden.

there are no conspiracies, just coincidences.

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-7
adamsson
adamsson
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

That’s right it’s not a conspiracy theory when they tell you they are doing it.
Build. Back. Better.

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jonathan Palmer
jonathan Palmer
5 years ago
Reply to  adamsson

How on earth did the WEF become a conspiracy theory?
When major political figures across the world all started to use their slogan build back better.
The article is right it’s not a conspiracy theory,it’s a in your face agenda.
Last year WEF signed an accord with the UN.The UN are pushing agenda 21/30.Our government is fully signed up to this.
These propose a revolutionary new way of life of zero carbon and sustainable living.
Government policy apart from Covid has all been heading this way
As we are about to head into a 3rd ruinous lockdown maybe those who run this site should stop publicising sneering lazy articles and do a bit of real journalism.

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jb12
jb12
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Excellent.

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Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Stephen Priest is mixing up conspiracy theory with conspiracy fact.

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0
Banjones
Banjones
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

”… those who run this site…”
Perhaps you should bear in mind that this is not a national newspaper, and you are not paying for it (unless voluntarily). Rather than sneer yourself, you should take yourself off to a site that more suits your exacting standards – and pay for their ”journalism”.

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jonathan Palmer
jonathan Palmer
5 years ago
Reply to  Banjones

I think I could do it better.Dont you think after 9 months of this maybe journalists should start digging a bit.
As for the MSM they are all bought and paid for.Why as the astronomical costs of lockdowns mount why is there no questioning of even the financial impact.
I’ve heard Toby and because he can’t see an endgame he dismisses any talk of a conspiracy.
You can show all the graphs and complain about all the effects of lockdown and it will have no effect because the government have another agenda.

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bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

If you want your freedom back you have already lost it.

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LMS2
LMS2
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Toby and James Delingpole have sort of fallen out on this subject, though are still friends.
James is very much in the “this is being done deliberately” camp, but Toby still subscribes to the “cock up” theory.

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John001
John001
5 years ago
Reply to  LMS2

It could be a mix of both. Some people worth £100s of billions trying to take over the world plus a large dose of the tragi-comedy ‘Carry On Corona’.

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J4mes
J4mes
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

When the festive celebrations were effectively outlawed the game changed. It was the check-point on a game of chess and because we complied, they learned they can get away with anything. I think the check-mate moment is when they cancel elections then start cracking down on dissent.

I think it’s already too late and websites like this have done a great job soaking up opposition to focus our minds on charts and fluff while the real criminals go unhindered by scrutiny.

I wonder if, at the point our doors are being kicked down by Corona Cops for Crimes against Corona, the likes of Toby and Peter Hitchens are still telling us this is a political cock-up or political careerism (and use statistics to prove it).

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Boris Bullshit
Boris Bullshit
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Yes its started to seriously irritate me too. I don’t know what their problem is….can they just not bear to think this can be about anything more than government incompetence? How much further down the road does all this have to go before they acknowledge that darker global forces are at work here. They seem to be in a time warp….thinking its a bit like John Major’s stupid ERM cock up.

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J4mes
J4mes
5 years ago
Reply to  Boris Bullshit

I made the same complaints around a month ago about the likes of Peter Hitchens endlessly calling this a ‘blundering foolish disaster’ while he continuously ignores appeals from his followers to acknowledge the Great Reset and Agenda 21/30. I went as far as to call him false opposition which generated quite a kick-back from skeptics on this site (I’m growing used to this now).

The video linked below is more valuable than months of charts and statistics on this site, and it’s all contained within 12 minutes:

https://worldtruthvideos.org/watch/the-entire-covid-scam-explained-in-under-12-minutes_G5BJNy1SQ2UWIqD.html

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Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

4th January from worldometers

UK .……. 58,784 Cases…. 407 deaths
France … 4,022 Case…….. 378 deaths
Italy ……. 10,800 Cases …..348 deaths
Germany.  8,039 Cases ……527deaths

Strange

over 10 times more cases than France with a similar number of deaths

Germany over 100 more deaths 50,000 fewer cases

https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries

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Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  adamsson

The biggest conspiracy is the one being pushed by Stephen Priest and it looks like 77th Brigade out in force to give it the thumbs up.

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leggy
leggy
5 years ago
Reply to  Rowan

I think he was being sarcastic.

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Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  leggy

Was he?

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Ken Gardner
Ken Gardner
5 years ago
Reply to  Rowan

I thought he was being ironic. Maybe we’re all a bit touchy this morning?

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OKUK
OKUK
5 years ago
Reply to  adamsson

Or 6uild 6ack 6etter as someone memorably spelt it here! And if ever Hammer House of Horror Films was in need of someone to fill the starring role of a cloven-hooofed Satan, then I think Karl Schwab is the guy. I mean, if you met him in real life what would you think? Effing weirdo, obviously and you’d run a mile from having anything to do with him!! So why is virtually every world, religious, philanthropic and business leader on the planet kowtowing to this weirdo who has never been able to claim ownership of an original thought?

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Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

Of course, there are conspiracies. Is Bill Gates just a coincidence?

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Ken Gardner
Ken Gardner
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

Sorry down voted due to fat finger trouble. I completely agree!

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Jane in France
Jane in France
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

I notice the article in the Guardian mentioned in the Round-up is sponsored by openDemocracy, part of the Open Societies organisation founded by George Soros, the popular bogeyman of conspiracy theorists. I wonder if it’s significant that Soros’ organisation should be pro-lockdown.

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Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  Jane in France

Just a coincidence, surely.

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0
Carlo Emilian
Carlo Emilian
5 years ago
Reply to  Rowan

How close are Soros and Gates??

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0
iane
iane
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

The trouble is that, with most MPs, this is just bashing your head against a brick wall. Whilst the great lumpenproletariat is onside, Bozo and Hangcock can do what they want.

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Nessimmersion
Nessimmersion
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

Media hysteria is the main reason sceptics have not gained much traction so far:

FB_IMG_1609770287879.jpg
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LMS2
LMS2
5 years ago
Reply to  Nessimmersion

Actually, images like that, preferably with some numbers, are more likely to reach people who still believe in the government’s CV19 narrative.
It is a visual representation, which can appeal on an emotional level, which scientific papers, statistics, etc, can’t.
People are responding emotionally, not with their intellect. To change their minds, you have to do it emotionally first.

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Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

TOBY The Great Reset: Bannon Interviews Archbishop Vigano – ‘Biden An Irreparable, China-Complicit Disaster’

https://thenationalpulse.com/exclusive/the-great-reset-bannon-vigano-biden/

The exclusive transcript of an interview conducted by War Room show host and former White House Chief Strategist Stephen K. Bannon with His Excellency Carlo Maria Viganò, Archbishop. The National Pulse is publishing the interview – which primarily concerns the Catholic Church, the deep state, and the key actors involved – without edits.

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Londo Mollari
Londo Mollari
5 years ago
Reply to  Londo Mollari

There are two related but separable parts to the anti-lockdown argument. One is the overreaction to the epidemic itself. The other is the actual case against lockdown. Even if the numbers were as painted by the government and its liars of influence in the media, there would still be a viable case against lockdown. After all, nobody thought to do this in the 1918-19 Spanish flu outbreak. It would – quite rightly – have been considered insane. That’s why I am thinking of getting hold of the postcards shown at the link below. Totalitarianism my be the least of our worries. i think we are heading for a Soviet style collapse resulting in the sort of “hidden famine” that afflicted Russia during the 1990s. However, it will be much worse for us as Russians were used to things not working and grew food, went to the public libraries to keep warm and so on. We live in a society which believes that food comes not from allotments or from farms but from supermarkets.

https://my-sgf.co.uk/

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Just Stop it Now
Just Stop it Now
5 years ago
Reply to  Londo Mollari

Londo, yes please contact Back to Normal for some postcards. We well on our way to our target of distributing to 1m households across the UK, reaching those who get their news from the main stream media.

We are a grassroots group of ordinary citizens which is growing rapidly day by day. As a welcome side effect, hundreds of lockdown sceptics are able to get in touch and make friends with others in their local area for sane chat and moral support!

https://my-sgf.co.uk/

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0
Waldorf
Waldorf
5 years ago
Reply to  Londo Mollari

In one part of Siberia for a time in the 1990s, the cost of a cinema ticket was one egg. Money had lost its meaning.

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Cheezilla
Cheezilla
5 years ago
Reply to  Londo Mollari

Many of the places we might have gone to keep warm have been closed.

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bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheezilla

They are blocking all the exits. Not a conspiracy, a fact.

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0
bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  bebophaircut

Drool Brittania.

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PatrickF
PatrickF
5 years ago
Reply to  Londo Mollari

48th!

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Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago
Reply to  Londo Mollari

What Is A Covid-19 Case?
Dr. Sam Bailey https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2aR2UInnug

Dr Sam starts from scratch and explains what is a Covid-19 case and unravels the web.

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0
Major Panic in the jabby jabbys
Major Panic in the jabby jabbys
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

excellent!

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Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
5 years ago

The very definition of insanity… “It looks like locking down people and tiered systems don’t work, so we’ll be introducing more lockdowns and tiers.”

I’ve said it before and I’ll keep saying it: these people belong in prison for criminal incompetence at the very least.

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Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

Go on saying it. It’s true.
And there will be a reckoning.

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ElizaP
ElizaP
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

I darn well hope there will be a reckoning – and they land up paying for what they’ve done to the rest of us. But I’m cynical enough to think the chances are they will get their day of reckoning somewhere we’re not able to witness it and feel vindicated (ie just after they’ve died – when they do their Life Review). One of my few consolations to think just how much anguish they will go through then for what they’ve caused us to experience and I can’t speak for anyone else – but I have no intention of forgiving them.

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bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  ElizaP

Don’t hope for one, make it happen.

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Ovis
Ovis
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

The regime could not behave in the manner it now is, if any of them had the slightest intimation that accountability will ever be possible for them.

They may be wrong, but right now they are pretty confident.

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gipsy2222
gipsy2222
5 years ago
Reply to  Ovis

I have had a bad 24 hours getting depressed about all this nonsense. But I want to survive so that I can bear witness and bring these people to justice. They will not be allowed to get away with an enquiry that only asks if they should have locked down sooner (seems to be the plan). They will have to justify why they followed the ever wrong Ferguson, why there is still no cost-benefit analysis etc.

10
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neilhartley
neilhartley
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

There won’t be. Was Tony Blair tried for war crimes? No, he’s still lauded over by the rest of the establishment despite the dodgy dossiers and a million (?) deaths.

10
0
charleyfarley
charleyfarley
5 years ago
Reply to  neilhartley

I agree. It’s more likely that most of them will end up in the House of Lords.

0
0
Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  neilhartley

In 2011, Tony Blair and George W Bush were tried in absentia by an international tribunal in Kuala Lumpur and both were found guilty of war crimes. It was a symbolic verdict rather than anything else, but both are nevertheless convicted war criminals.

https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2011/11/28/kuala-lumpur-tribunal-bush-and-blair-guilty/

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Mr Taxpayer
Mr Taxpayer
5 years ago
Reply to  neilhartley

Blair sent me off to commit those war crimes and even today if i met him I’d put violence upon him. However his advice on how to manage this pandamic has been spot on throughout. Imagine the cognitive dissonance I’m dealing with!

0
0
Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

It’s not incompetence, they are fully complicit in a conspiracy to depopulate the planet. The vaccines are the main tool of the depopulators and the senseless Covid restrictions are there solely to coerce us into baring our arms for the lethal injections.

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Old Bill
Old Bill
5 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

Very true, but this time, in the interests of ‘harmony in the Union’ each individual leader will think up a new name for ‘lockdown’ and hand it to the country next door. I think they are starting off anti-clockwise, so England can have a ‘firebreak’, Scotland can have a ‘tier 5’ and Wales gets whatever the fishwife thinks of for this latest game.
Next time they will go clockwise.

It’s a bit like playing pass the parcel except there is no present and the music never stops.

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rexmantle
rexmantle
5 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

“The very definition of insanity”. Yep.

Here is something very different saying pretty much the same thing. Well worth a look at.

https://usquiss.com/masters-of-beasts/

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0
Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
5 years ago

Interesting take. It is true that society has been suffering from a general lack of purpose. Jordan Peterson’s success all over the western world proves it.

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Londo Mollari
Londo Mollari
5 years ago

This scientific paper suggest that – as has been frequently said – Covidianity has the characteristics of a religious belief. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022103120304248#bb0295

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Cheshirecatslave
Cheshirecatslave
5 years ago

I believe the rot set in with the New York 9/11 bombings when society went equally crazy. I recall thinking it was a horrible event, but sadly horrible events with great loss of life happen frequently, wars, plagues, famines, natural disasters and others briefly dominate the headlines usually. The 9/11 bombings set us on a slippery slope to restricted liberty and surveillance.

I was at college when the IRA terror campaign was at his height. We just kept calm and carried on like we did during the 1968 flu pandemic. The state did not terrorise us.

What has happened to people to turn them into quivering jellies? life is full of risks. We need to be sensible and carry on for even hiding under the bedclothes all day is risky as you could become ill from not moving around.

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Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheshirecatslave

What has happened? Social media. Before we used to talk about things directly, in person, through very unregulated media, either face to face, or phone calls, or instant messaging. We could talk and argue freely. The few nutters that did exist were quickly shut down with ridicule.

But then social media came along. All discussions were suddenly public on a world wide scale. Everything we could say and hear was monitored and regulated. The nutters had a place to meet and come together. Then ridicule was banned, because it’s mean. And then the free exchange of ideas was heavily restricted. And now you go on Twitter and not only do you have a hard time finding someone to agree with your position of dissent, but Twitter is doing all it can to isolate you and give you the impression that you’re alone in thinking how you think.

This is the root of all evil in my opinion: blocking the free exchange of ideas and providing a platform that encourages and protects damaging ideologies.

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0
Cheshirecatslave
Cheshirecatslave
5 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

That’s an excellent point.

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0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

Correct.
Nor could lockdown have happened without the Internet – to pump the poison into every ear, night and day, and to provide enough distraction to sustain the illusion that one is not in prison.

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Waldorf
Waldorf
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

To be fair the Internet also makes it possible to seek out sceptical sites or counter-narratives. For example that woman filming a near-empty hospital in Gloucester. Perhaps that is why she was arrested.

13
0
ElizaP
ElizaP
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

I’ve long argued Lockdown would not have been imposed if it hadn’t been for the Internet. Though, obviously, currently using it myself – I’m well aware that a Lockdown could not have physically been conducted for the other Big Virus events in that bit of my lifetime that preceded this century. Re this century and the last Big Virus was 2016 and no Lockdown for that one either – but there will have been a noticeable number more people that got personal computers in that last 4 years and a noticeable number more firms that could manage (or said they could manage) to conduct at least some of their business online since then. Hence I think we are currently about Peak Computer – and that’s how they’ve managed to do this to us.

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katz
katz
5 years ago
Reply to  ElizaP

It’s BBC and Sky news more than the internet. If everyone stopped watching state-controlled fear-mongering ‘news’, this would all fall apart. The internet gives me access to alternative views and news and has made me turn off my television. In an age where mainstream news is biased and can’t be taken at face value, I’m very glad of my window to these alternatives.

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0
Aslangeo
Aslangeo
5 years ago
Reply to  katz

Take the attitude people took in the communist block – anything produced by state owned media is a fairy tale and just block it out

3
0
Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
5 years ago
Reply to  katz

If it was just the BBC and Sky News, we’d all be able to go on Twitter and Facebook and call out their madness. But we can’t, because it’s Twitter and Facebook that stop dissent. There’s a reason why the BBC and Sky News don’t have comment sections.

1
0
Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
5 years ago
Reply to  katz

And just to illustrate what effect social media has:
I was just in an argument on YouTube with someone who was saying Trump is racist. I asked for a quote, and of course i got none back. So i then proceeded to share a link to a YouTube video of all the openly racist crap Biden has said over the years. And YouTube shadow banned it, which means i can see it, but it’s hidden for everyone else.

So tell me, how can anyone have a honest conversation on social media? Not only are they blocking messages they don’t like, they won’t even tell you that they’re doing it. They’ll just let you believe that you posted your message and no one is responding to it, but in reality you have been censored.

1
0
LMS2
LMS2
5 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

Always worth re-posting.

😁

Eoe1MZ_UwAI0xNX.jpeg
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0
Ossettian
Ossettian
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheshirecatslave

Me and my girlfriend had booked a week’s holiday in NYC in early October 2001. We decided not to cancel. Work colleagues were surprised, but not because they thought it was dangerous: they thought much would be closed and we’d have a miserable time.

Our hotel was just south of Central Park. We’re not ghouls and had stayed in the financial district on our previous visit so had no reason to go anywhere near the destruction.

The atmosphere was fine: we were upgraded to a suite because some people had cancelled but apart from that we wouldn’t have known something so evil had so recently happened. We went to a performance of “The Mikado”: it was packed and the atmosphere was as we’d have expected at any earlier time.

Not a single person during our entire week there, apart from the hotel receptionist telling us we’d been upgraded, made any reference to the building collapses.

So I don’t think society went crazy: it was the decision of the US government to exploit the destruction that did the damage.

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CapLlam
CapLlam
5 years ago
Reply to  Ossettian

I was told I was crazy for going through CDG in Paris in 2015 on the way to NYC as they had just had a terror attacked 10 days beforehand.
I had ok problems , saw no extra police or anyone with big guns walking around , just a normal day at the airport.

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0
Elisabeth
Elisabeth
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheshirecatslave

i’ve seen some references indicating the 9/11 was also planned and executed by the Deep State globalist filth. But that’s probably just my tinfoil hat speaking.

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Skippy
Skippy
5 years ago
Reply to  Elisabeth

Need to retune your tin foil tricorn, it’s picking up Fox

2
-3
Fingerache Philip
Fingerache Philip
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheshirecatslave

I think it started with Diana’s death, and yes CCS, I have thought for decades that our society has turned into a load of namby namby wimps that is afraid if the wind blows on em.
PS: A tv weather forecaster over the weekend actually said (twice) that “it would be cold for the time of year”!!!

11
0
jonathan Palmer
jonathan Palmer
5 years ago
Reply to  Fingerache Philip

I don’t think it started with Diana’s death;It was just that event which exposed the change that had happened.The old stoic attitude summed up in the stiff upper lip had gone

12
0
Fingerache Philip
Fingerache Philip
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Fair point.

0
0
Waldorf
Waldorf
5 years ago
Reply to  Fingerache Philip

Off air they may well think Covid is BS as well.
It has been reported that Jimmy Savile’s Jim’ll Fix It was referred to as Jim’ll F££k It in certain quarters at the BBC. It does suggest they knew.

12
0
iansn
iansn
5 years ago
Reply to  Waldorf

Its Beff, NN. Beff Wigby, mouf like a horse

0
0
Waldorf
Waldorf
5 years ago
Reply to  Fingerache Philip

I worked for the BBC at the time, though not in London. I came into work the next morning, not having checked the news and only heard of it then. I was surprised and a little saddened if only because Diana was about the same age as me and it was an indication of the transitoriness of life. I noticed my colleagues were unbothered by the deaths and one or two were even in “screw them” mode. Of course if they had had to do something to camera it would have been this massive tragedy etc.

8
0
Waldorf
Waldorf
5 years ago
Reply to  Waldorf

Despite the BBC’s public persona not everyone was PC in their attitudes to it – one colleague was annoyed that she had started a relationship with an Egyptian, and it “served her right”.
Years earlier another colleague was vocally hostile to Salman Rushdie over the death threats following The Satanic Verses. As far as she was concerned, he had brought it on himself and who was he to mess with a major world religion? This was not the official BBC line at the time, of course. I should add that she was not a Muslim.

1
0
Fingerache Philip
Fingerache Philip
5 years ago
Reply to  Fingerache Philip

Of course it was.
When it was deemed a good thing to see big hairy a××ed men “blairtin” in the street over a woman that they never or were ever likely to meet was stomach churning.

2
0
Staincliffe
Staincliffe
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheshirecatslave

I was a student in London during the 1970’s IRA campaign. Having missed the last tube one night, a group of us were walking home to Hammersmith down High St Ken. One of our group took a detour down a side street to a parked police van and he started chatting to the two policemen in the front. After a few minutes he called us all over and we were told to get in the back of the van, we were getting a lift home! He had the banter because most of the men in his family were in the police. Wouldn’t happen now of course. We’ve seen what happened recently when members of the public try to engage in a normal human way with the TSG.

0
0
Cheshirecatslave
Cheshirecatslave
5 years ago

An interesting article about young people’s views on the current situation. many are on our side despite it being in the ‘Guardian’. one young woman sensibly points out that all viruses are dangerous for the frail.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jan/03/generation-z-and-the-covid-pandemic-im-100-more-politicised

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0
JanMasarykMunich
JanMasarykMunich
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheshirecatslave

Good news. I hope the young are going to say no to any vaccine.

2
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheshirecatslave

I’ve always felt that Generation Z are more sceptical than the millenials. From what I remember reading, Gen Z were more likely to back Brexit than Remain.

0
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago

Doing nothing is heroic.
Being an arrant coward is heroic.
Being vindictively intolerant towards those who disagree is heroic.
Being totally indifferent to the sufferings of others is heroic.
Being a horrible person is heroic.

I find that a bit odd.

46
0
Waldorf
Waldorf
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

A similar state of mind was present in Nazi Germany, where shopping a neighbour to the Gestapo was a praiseworthy act.

23
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Cristi.Neagu
Cristi.Neagu
5 years ago
Reply to  Waldorf

And in Soviet Russia… and in 1984… Seems like grassing on your neighbors is a staple of authoritarianism…

15
0
Waldorf
Waldorf
5 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

On one TV documentary a German woman was interviewed decades after the war. Gestapo files revealed she had contacted them about a female neighbour. The neighbour had a masculine dress style in photos of her and was perhaps a lesbian. The Gestapo took her away and she died in a concentration camp. When the grass was interviewed she professed not to remember the incident and did not seem to feel guilty at all.

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Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  Waldorf

We’ll get loads of that sort of behaviour when this is over – in denial and still believing that they were doing things for the “greater good”

20
0
Nigel Sherratt
Nigel Sherratt
5 years ago
Reply to  Bart Simpson

Or that they were lockdown sceptics all along (like their youth in French resistance).

9
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  Nigel Sherratt

Lots of that too and we should be reminding them “no you were not.”

2
0
Sceptical Steve
Sceptical Steve
5 years ago
Reply to  Waldorf

The documentary was “The Nazis, A Warning from History” by Laurence Rees.The unapologietic grass was Resi Kraus, who tried to bluff her way through the interview, right up to the point where Rees showed her it was her signature on the Gestapo document!

4
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Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

Stasi snitches sometimes got a brick through the window, or worse.

3
-1
iansn
iansn
5 years ago
Reply to  Waldorf

Strongly recommend you all watch Der Hauptmann (The Captain) on Amazon. A true story at the end of WW2. It shows what people are capable of.

2
-1
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Whereas dobbing your neighbour to the gestapo is a virtue.

23
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

And virtue signalling is acceptable and encouraged.

9
0
bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  Bart Simpson

Snitching is Virtue Signalling.

5
0
iansn
iansn
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

all vigorously encouraged by the fucking twat halfcock. Where is he? hardly been heard of for days, no doubt he has been breaking all the rules with family and friends. Rules are for the many, not the few.

1
0
Ken Gardner
Ken Gardner
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Yes I agree, it does seem a bit odd. But isn’t that the point really? All normal standards of tolerance and reasonableness have been turned upside down. This is why sceptics are finding it hard to win hearts and minds.

2
0
bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

CULT OWNED W.H.O WARN THERE’S WORSE TO COME!

Warn the W.H.O. that there is worse to come for them.

1
0
Londo Mollari
Londo Mollari
5 years ago

Face mask refusal says so much because courageous behaviour is the pre-requisite for all other virtuous behaviour. https://www.lewrockwell.com/2020/12/allan-stevo/face-masks-refusal-says-so-much-because-courage-is-the-prerequisite-to-all-virtuous-behavior/

16
0
Girl down Under
Girl down Under
5 years ago

I have been admiring some of your letters and emails to your UK MP’s and thought I would share mine to a number of NSW ministers following an incident at a recent press conference. I emailed it a little while ago and have asked for a response from each. It is a little long, I have trouble keeping expressing myself and staying on tract but I reckon they will get the gist. I have split it as it is too long. 4 January 2021 The Hon. David Elliott, MP The Hon. Gladys Berejiklian, Premier The Hon. Brad Hazzard, MP The Hon. James Griffin, MP Dear Minister Elliott, I am writing to you to express my dismay at the language you used in a recent press conference. According to various news reports the phrase uttered was, “a bastard act”, together with an expression of “having no sympathy”. This was in relation to a young woman and various family members and friends who chose to attend a venue at that time which was outside the area of the recent public health order – to attend her wedding. An event that had been postponed twice before due to covid restrictions. I can only… Read more »

8
0
Girl down Under
Girl down Under
5 years ago
Reply to  Girl down Under

This is the next bit: Might I add at this point Minister, 3 hospitalisations over the Christmas and New Year period, none in ICU in the whole of NSW and no deaths for months. I believe at today’s date, there is one in hospital not in ICU and no new positive test results. We bore the ruling over Christmas and New Year with good grace, thousands turning out to get tested, voluntary mask wearing went through the roof. The people in the northern zone accepted their lot with good grace. We in the southern zone likewise, upset we could not travel to see our aging relatives, children and grandchildren over that time took it on the chin, even with the strange ruling that 10 people from the greater Sydney area could come into our homes. Whether the government’s seemingly obtuse level of understanding of the psyche of the people of NSW is deliberately ignorant or arrogant it is having a huge impact on the mental health of the community. I certainly feel it. There is no point advertisements being shown on TV expressing concerns about domestic abuse in the home when collectively we as a community are being gaslighted on… Read more »

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0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Girl down Under

Magnificent.
The voice of a decent human being.
That is my highest accolade.

10
0
Girl down Under
Girl down Under
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Bless you and thank you Annie, a lovely honour from such a wonderful wordsmith.💖

2
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Girl down Under

You are proof that we encircle the world!

4
0
Steve Hayes
Steve Hayes
5 years ago
Reply to  Girl down Under

How can anyone characterise a marriage as a bastard act? Has Elliott being taking lessons in vocabulary use from Humpty Dumpty?

7
0
Girl down Under
Girl down Under
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

I think he was referring to the fact that they broke the public health order by leaving the area to go into the city which at that time was not allowed. Someone dobbed and the police arrested, I believe about 23 people who were from our area. They were all fined $1,000 each. I agree though I see the comment as well as relating to being married. I doubt the couple were allowed to spend a wedding night together as greater Sydney region was only allowed into our area on 24th, 25th, 26th December. I have not slept well for a couple of nights over this.

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0
Steve Hayes
Steve Hayes
5 years ago
Reply to  Girl down Under

The term bastard act denotes the having of a child without being married.

1
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Can’t be many politicians about whose parents were married, then.

3
0
Steve Hayes
Steve Hayes
5 years ago

I spent three days (and two hours) in hospital last week. This provided me with an opportunity to observe some of the effects of the coronavirus responses. Yesterday I mentioned one from admission – the abandonment of the observance of the ethical requirement for informed voluntary consent. Today I like to offer an observation from the point of discharge. It had started to snow and a patient who was about to be discharged was worrying that his sister-in-law, who was coming to collect him might have an accident in her car. I asked him why he hadn’t opted to be taken home by ambulance in the first place. He told me that they (meaning the hospital) are overwhelmed. I obviously looked surprised because he immediately referred to a BBC story that he had viewed on his phone. The story showed a line of ambulances outside a hospital, which “proved” the NHS was overwhelmed. “You have been in this hospital for days, and you been all over. You have seen parts are closed down. You seen there are hardly any patients. You have seen the staff are not even busy,” I said. “But its on the news!” he interjected. “So, you… Read more »

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0
Steve Hayes
Steve Hayes
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Is it not revealing that Ferguson is still a government scientific advisor and still has such a platform for his views in the media?

29
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

It isn’t just that, it’s the seizure of people’s brains. This moron was simply incapable of seeing what was before his eyes.The real world had ceased to exist. No wonder the Fascists have an easy ride.

20
0
jonathan Palmer
jonathan Palmer
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Our one started when the government became the biggest spender in the print media and Ofcom banned any dissent on the airways.

7
0
JohnB
JohnB
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Yep, the Ofcom banning was key. I still haven’t found anyone remotely believing the bollox who has even heard of it.

3
0
ElizaP
ElizaP
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Hadn’t thought of it that way – but you do have a point. “Seeing is believing” – rather than “Thinking is believing”.

5
0
iansn
iansn
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Same story different situation. A delivery driver was outside my shop, he was looking for an address around the corner. He showed me the parcel I said its for a pub around the corner in a different road 200 yards away. He looked at his phone, the phone showed the post code was here, so he walked along the row of shops to see if he could find it. He came back I said I know from actual knowledge the pub on the address is around the corner and I could show him. He refused to believe me, insisting it was here. That’s what it has come to. People beleive google and TV in preference to their own eyes. None so blind as those who cant see

17
0
Sceptic Nurse
Sceptic Nurse
5 years ago

Did anyone else have a chuckle about this yesterday, it was one of the headline stories on the BBC news app.
This time last year that would have been satire – like something from “The Shovel” Australian website.

Twelve fined for playing dominoes in Tier 4 breach – “in a dark room” no less.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-55503852
“Twelve people have been fined after they were caught playing dominoes in a restaurant in east London.
Police officers found the group hiding in a dark room when they entered the building in Whitechapel on Tuesday.
The owner initially claimed those inside were workers, before admitting they were playing the game.”

4
0
Sceptic Nurse
Sceptic Nurse
5 years ago
Reply to  Sceptic Nurse

Oh I do get angry too, I spend much of my day angry, anxious, frustrated, despairing. But I consciously try to give myself respite from time to time, for my own fragile mental survival. The article yesterday was one of those “if you don’t laugh you’ll cry” moments.

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Elisabeth
Elisabeth
5 years ago
Reply to  Sceptic Nurse

twelve gamers against how many police officers? They could have shoved dominoes down every single cop’s face and hog tied them in the public square! I have some odd fantasies at times…

5
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Sceptic Nurse

Luminous dominoes?
Domine, adjuva nos peccatores.

3
0
Skippy
Skippy
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Snake eyes for me

1
0
mikewaite
mikewaite
5 years ago
Reply to  Sceptic Nurse

Re reading “Night Soldiers ” by Alan Furst (Public library closed). There is a passage about the thoughts of a Gulag prisoner which sums up how I feel:

“Suddenly in this necropolis of ice and flatness and gray light , he had a reason to live, for the first time in his life. At last, there was something he wanted. He wanted to hurt them as they had hurt him. How simple and childlike life turned out to be once it was pared down to the basic elments ”

Even have the ice and gray light as I look out this morning.
Hope you are taking this all in GCHQ because soon you will have to decide whose side you are on, the side of the persecutors , or the side of history.

8
0
JohnB
JohnB
5 years ago
Reply to  mikewaite

They’ve already decided.

Those of them with any sort of qualms about shitting on their fellow citizens will have been assigned to monitoring the Middle East. Or Russia. Or alien signals …

2
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago

C. S. Lewis, writing The Screwtape Letters during World War 2, gives the devil Screwtape some striking observations about cowardice: We have made men proud of most vices, but not of cowardice. Whenever we have almost succeeded in doing so, the Enemy [God] permits a war or an earthquake or some other calamity, and at once courage becomes so obviously lovely and important even in human eyes that all our work is undone, and there is still at least one vice of which they feel genuine shame. The danger of inducing cowardice in our patients, therefore, is lest we produce real self-knowledge and self-loathing with consequent repentance and humility. And in fact, in the last war, thousands of humans, by discovering their own cowardice, discovered the whole moral world for the first time. In peace we can make many of them ignore good and evil entirely; in danger, the issue is forced upon them in a guise to which even we cannot blind them. There is here a cruel dilemma before us. If we promoted justice and charity among men, we should be playing directly into the Enemy’s hands; but if we guide them to the opposite behaviour, this sooner… Read more »

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0
Cheshirecatslave
Cheshirecatslave
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

I was abandoned by my cleaner and a friend I relied on in March as they were so cowardly. There would have been zero risk to them as with church closed, I only went out for walks. I wish I were much braver than I am, but I hope I’m not as cowardly as that.

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0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheshirecatslave

The fact that you wish for courage shows that you are on the side of heaven. We must all pray for more of that most excellent virtue.
As for the house, they say that after the first five years, the dust gets no worse.
I am testing that out.

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0
Cheshirecatslave
Cheshirecatslave
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Thank you, I’m now blessed with an excellent cleaner and companion and the house is the tidiest it’s been in years. what has made me really angry is people who hide their cowardice or laziness behind ‘I’m protecting you, it’s for your own good.’

7
0
ElizaP
ElizaP
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheshirecatslave

You can bet your life they told you (and themselves) they were doing it “for your own good” – ie that they’d be risking infecting you if they came round. Well – that’s for you to decide – and not them making your decision on your behalf.

4
0
Cheshirecatslave
Cheshirecatslave
5 years ago
Reply to  ElizaP

That’s exactly what my former friend said. I felt the decision was mine to make not hers, I could see she was trying to justify her own actions.

2
0
danny
danny
5 years ago

I know that Gavin Williamson is a plank of wood and will cave in, but technically at the moment, surely all of those councils that have written to him “requesting” formal closure of their primary schools, have not yet been given legal authority and son should not be making plans to do so?

8
0
CapLlam
CapLlam
5 years ago
Reply to  danny

I know that Cumbria was refused permission last night. Our councils has left the decision up to the individual schools to close or not. Some have closed , some haven’t.
I have a little one who goes to nursery and she is due back on Wednesday and as far as I’m concerned she is going providing they don’t shut everything beforehand. She misses her friends and has already missed out on a lot by not being able to go last year.

5
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  CapLlam

God bless her!

4
0
CapLlam
CapLlam
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

She is ready to go back , they closed the nursery a week before Christmas as they had a child test positive in the baby room!! Who’s gets an under 2 tested! That’s beyond crazy.

I got a call to say that they were closing early for Christmas and that she should isolate for 10 days as she had come in to contact with a member of staff who had a child in the room where the child was. So a complete over reaction to her potentially coming in contact with it.
I completely ignored the instructions and we still went about doing our normal things even seeing my parents who are “high risk”

4
0
Jo Dominich
Jo Dominich
5 years ago
Reply to  danny

Here the schools are open. The only problem or concerns from Headteacher is about staffing levels.

1
0
Steve-Devon
Steve-Devon
5 years ago

One aspect that struck me again yesterday was hearing politicians, Uberfuhrer Johnson and would be Uberfuhrer Starmer, talking about losing control of the virus, as if they ever had any control over it in the first place. My wife who is a bit more easy going about all this than me picked up on this one and was unusually scathing of them talking about the virus as if it was a wayward teenager that had gone too far this time! It is as if the story of King Canute and the tides had never happened, we do not look up at the rain clouds and say that the weather is out of control and we must lock down the population. Control freakery gone mad. Johnson is too lazy and inept to work out what is really going on and has let everyone especially the health tyrants walk all over him but Starmer seems even more sinister, he is clever enough and must know what is really going on but is cynically playing this for every political point he can squeeze out of it, no matter the cost to the people of this country. As for me I am off to… Read more »

36
0
Andrea Salford
Andrea Salford
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve-Devon

That whole ‘controlling the virus’ narrative makes my blood boil and ‘bumbling’ Boris talking about ‘wrestling it to the ground’ and ‘when it changes attack we have to change our defence’ as if he’s Churchill leading his war cabinet – more like Churchill the nodding dog on the dashboard of the SAGE juggernaut. His stupid bloody floppy haired gormless face at the Briefings when he reads out our next terms of imprisonment from the teleprompter, I swear he’s no idea, even though Joe Public is already pre-informed just from reading the propaganda MSM that his SAGE psychos have already leaked to condition us. I hate every sick sign of this scam and the idiots normalising it.

42
0
JohnB
JohnB
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve-Devon

Yep, did some chain-sawing yesterday. Physical effort and concentration remove the blues like little else. 🙂

5
0
Jez Hewitt
Jez Hewitt
5 years ago
Reply to  JohnB

Now there’s a physical activity that concentrates minds.

Throw in a little decapitational fantasy and it may very well be the most rewarding of activities on earth at present.

I’m gonna get practising too.

1
0
Cheezilla
Cheezilla
5 years ago
Reply to  JohnB

I just had a few fantasty chain-sawing moments concerning certain individuals…….

0
0
Laurence
Laurence
5 years ago

Interesting correlations if you look at the Worldometer Coronavirus website (for population size over 40,000,000):

Correlation of number of tests: number of deaths is 0.721 (fairly strong)
Correlation of number of cases: number of tests is 0.823 (very strong)

The first figures in particular is interesting – it means either the tests themselves are causing deaths (extremely unlikely !) or the number of deaths attributed to COVID is, to a very large extent, simply the result of testing more people.

And guess who’s at the top of the list of tests per million: the US then the UK !

7
0
Steve Hayes
Steve Hayes
5 years ago

Tony Heller has a nicely sarcastic video on the claims that mask wearing and social distancing have eliminated flu. “Science” Reaches Peak Idiocy 

http://newtube.app/TonyHeller/E3Dsxoj

12
-1
adamsson
adamsson
5 years ago

I want that mug

10
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  adamsson

With all those ghastly faces on it? Yukyukyuk.
Get one with just birds.

12
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  adamsson

Me too!!!

1
0
J4mes
J4mes
5 years ago
Reply to  adamsson

Try not to shop with Amazon…

7
0
PatrickF
PatrickF
5 years ago

Further restrictions:
Sun creams to be banned, as we can only go out after Sun set.

2
-1
PatrickF
PatrickF
5 years ago
Reply to  PatrickF

True!

2
0
sophie123
sophie123
5 years ago
Reply to  PatrickF

With you there

1
0
Puddleglum
Puddleglum
5 years ago
Reply to  PatrickF

I wish I could uprate this more than once!

1
0
steve_w
steve_w
5 years ago

only 3 covid admissions in the last 4 days in the entire of Buckinghamshire and 3 died ‘with covid’

https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/details/healthcare?areaType=nhstrust&areaName=Buckinghamshire%20Healthcare%20NHS%20Trust

over that time about 100 people have died of other things

I expect the 3 that died are false positives, what with 3/100 being right in the middle of PHE’s false positive estimate and they are testing patients multiple times

8
0
CapLlam
CapLlam
5 years ago
Reply to  steve_w

I checked mine we have 5 admitted across over 500 beds, 131 currently in hospital and 6 on Ventilators. This is across a vast area with 2 hospitals. Our largest day of admitted patients was in Nov with 17. The average is around 5 a day over the 2. hospitals

We are tier 4 but I saw plenty of people out walking along our prom yesterday enjoying the cold sunshine.

3
0
steve_w
steve_w
5 years ago
Reply to  CapLlam

and most of the 131 in hospital will be in for other things and just tested +ve

2
0
CapLlam
CapLlam
5 years ago
Reply to  steve_w

Yep and most probably don’t have symptoms just tested +

3
0
PastImperfect
PastImperfect
5 years ago
Reply to  CapLlam

Ventilators? Why no early stage intervention with HCQ or Ivermectin?

1
0
PastImperfect
PastImperfect
5 years ago
Reply to  CapLlam

Ventilators? Why no early stage intervention with HCQ or Ivermectin?

1
0
PatrickF
PatrickF
5 years ago

The full page NHS advert in yesterdays Sunday Telegraph
reveals that CV19 is a green gas.
Surely, the only test we need is to exhale.

16
0
Ianric
Ianric
5 years ago
Reply to  PatrickF

A virus so deadly it needs an advertising campaign.

2
0
Julian
Julian
5 years ago

I took issue in large parts with the McGrogan article above the line yesterday, and I take issue with commentary on it above the line today

We HAVE used emotional arguments as well as rational ones

It’s NOT OVER in any way – we have not yet been defeated (indeed people are getting more sceptical all the time) neither is it at all sure that it will be over politically this or any other year

We are on the back foot because our enemies have spent a MILLION times more than we have on propaganda

Stop the defeatism.

We have a mountain to climb, but the message is not the issue, it’s getting the message in front of people often enough

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Andrea Salford
Andrea Salford
5 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I agree with you, there was a tone I can’t put my finger on but it was just ‘off’ to me, a bit of subliminal finger wagging and defeatism. Both the article and reply seemed to be trying to nudge the narrative.

15
0
kenadams
kenadams
5 years ago
Reply to  Julian

With the couple of friends I still have left, I have moved onto the emotional arguments now. They are still impervious to all of the empirical evidence (it baffles me, it really does), but I think I am starting to get some traction.

School closures is definitely something that a significant minority think is a bad idea.

5
0
Cheezilla
Cheezilla
5 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Well said!

0
0
PatrickF
PatrickF
5 years ago

I live in Kent, next door to a Spire Hospital and a Care Home. Each day, I look in vain for the lines of ambulances to overwhelm them and concerned BBC journos waiting to hear my eyewitness evidence.

16
0
Pebbles
Pebbles
5 years ago
Reply to  PatrickF

How about you write to them directly and infiltrate their comments section…?

3
0
Dodderydude
Dodderydude
5 years ago
Reply to  PatrickF

I had reason to drive in the vicinity of the Wrexham Maelor Hospital on Saturday and yesterday. On neither day were there any ambulances to be seen on the surrounding Wrexham streets or any emergency sirens to be heard. The roads were all pretty quiet other than ‘shopping’ traffic. If I’d not been dealing with an emergency myself taking my very ill dog for treatment at the emergency vets (not a good experience with all the inhuman social distancing measures), and if I was more familiar with the area, I would have readily gone to the hospital to investigate the reality of how ‘overwhelmed’ they were.

3
0
Spikedee1
Spikedee1
5 years ago
Reply to  Dodderydude

Hope your dog is okay? Don’t know where I would be if it wasn’t for my best mate poppy the cocker spaniel.

2
0
Dodderydude
Dodderydude
5 years ago
Reply to  Spikedee1

Thanks for your concern, Spikedeel, much appreciated.

Poor Lily (14 year old border collie) has leukaemia and wasn’t her usual self on Friday night to the point I thought she was ‘done for’. The vets diagnosed a severe infection and kept her in ’til Sunday morning. I was still concerned about her this morning but she has been picking up since.

1
0
Julian
Julian
5 years ago

I read yesterday that Piers Ocrbyn is to stand in the London Mayoral elections

I have developed huge respect for PC’s tireless efforts to protest against lockdown, but I think this is a shame as it will split the anti-lockdown vote between him and David Kurten, who is strongly anti-lockdown

15
-1
Andrea Salford
Andrea Salford
5 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Shame it can’t be a national vote – I would vote Corbyn this time (who’d a thunk it).

6
-1
Bella Donna
Bella Donna
5 years ago
Reply to  Andrea Salford

I would too. Every week he has been on a march against Lockdowns and for Freedom of Speech. He’s been arrested 7 times by the Stasi Police with heavy fines imposed. Yet at 71 years of age when he could be sitting in a comfortable chair by the fire he’s out on the streets, in my book he’s a real hero!

12
-1
Marialta
Marialta
5 years ago
Reply to  Bella Donna

I will be 71yrs in March – ‘sitting in a comfortable chair by the fire’ in a pair of slippers is not my style: plenty of older people are fully active and this bloody situation has brought us onto the streets with a vengeance!

1
0
JanMasarykMunich
JanMasarykMunich
5 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Yes, they need to come to a deal. Maybe Piers should back Kurten, who possibly has better chance of winning.

6
-1
steve_w
steve_w
5 years ago

apparently season 1 killed 40,000 and season 2 killed 40,000

but ‘excess’ deaths for season 1 were 53,000 and season 2 were 16,000

A lot of misattribution going on

11
0
Steve-Devon
Steve-Devon
5 years ago
Reply to  steve_w

Every other death is now a covid death, if you follow the official line, if we abolished covid deaths, we would be pretty close to having achieved eternal life (under full lock-down of course, Heaven or Hell?).
I have just had a twitter exchange about Covid deaths, many people do believe that the announced NHS covid death figures are totally deaths that would not have happened but for covid. But as we know if you take the ‘so called covid deaths’ away from the total registered death total we would currently have the lowest death rate we have ever seen in modern times.
At the moment ONS total registered deaths are running at about 14% above 5 year average, not an unusual % for a winter respiratory disease situation but it still spooks people. However, as we head into 2021 there seems a chance the total registered death figure will come much closer to the 5 year average, if this does happen we need to do all we can to broadcast this fact to everyone.

14
0
steve_w
steve_w
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve-Devon

unfortunately with FP and multiple testing of the same people – cases, hospital admissions and deaths will remain high until spring

excess deaths may get down to zero (over 5 year average) but may not due to the continuing death toll from missed cancer screenings etc

I don’t see a way out until march/april or until the govt declares victory because of the vaccine and scales back testing

the KCL zoe app shows the ‘second wave’ is about 30% of the first – in the height of the cold season

if the govt looked at Zoe data and excess deaths they would have a very different picture

6
0
John
John
5 years ago

It is no longer CoViD19 according to this statement from a councillor in Leicestershire
“If schools and colleges and universities reopen, it is my opinion that Covid B117 will spread rapidly and uncontrollably, and many young people, including children, will die as a result.”

6
0
RichardJames
RichardJames
5 years ago
Reply to  John

Correct your grammar please; “sadlidie” not “die”. You also forgot that all restrictions have to be announced “with a heavy heart” like my useless MP.

8
0
Jo Dominich
Jo Dominich
5 years ago
Reply to  John

Evidence provided for this idiocy?

2
0
Basileus
Basileus
5 years ago

Daily Mail: Britons could launch class-action lawsuit for BILLIONS in compensation for Government ‘falsely imprisoning’ nation during lockdown, law lecturer predicts
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8914971/Britons-launch-class-action-lawsuit-Government-falsely-imprisoning-nation-says-lawyer.html

Yes please.

53
0
mhcp
mhcp
5 years ago
Reply to  Basileus

Maybe the next Big Short is actually on insurance companies.

5
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Basileus

I wish, oh I wish.
But I’ll have my share of the payout in blood.

5
0
Awkward Git
Awkward Git
5 years ago
Reply to  Basileus

Already being prepared:

https://cacuk.world

2
-1
PhantomOfLiberty
PhantomOfLiberty
5 years ago
Reply to  Basileus

This story is two months old – has anything been heard about it since? It would only be a gesture initiative since if anyone successfully sued the government it would be you and I that had to pay. Worth it to embarrass them?

0
0
Crystal Decanter
Crystal Decanter
5 years ago
Reply to  Basileus

The Judiciary is corrupt though

2
-1
Monro
Monro
5 years ago

The law of unintended consequences WHO declares pandemic, UK government insouciant ‘best prepared in Europe’ France threatens to close borders Lockdown Government decides to protect the population from a virus by clearing hospital beds Viruses spread from expelled patients into nursing homes and the wider population Hospitals closed to nursing home patients Deaths spiral in nursing homes Mass gatherings banned, schools and universities closed Healthcare staff numbers reduced due to childcare responsibilities Lockdown extended Media campaign in support of lockdown Mass testing to get out of lockdown finds many more cases, extending lockdown Healthcare staff further reduced by need for self isolation Media campaign so successful, big majority of voters supports lockdown Nationalists engage in competitive restrictions to attract voters Health and education unions support lockdowns to attract new members New strain identified, international neighbours panic, close borders New test used, finds only 36 positives in 15,500 lorry drivers 800,000 newly unemployed More mass testing, even more ‘cases’ More lockdowns Etc Etc…… ……….May council elections……..Conservative disaster ……….London Mayoral elections….Conservative disaster, Piers Corbyn romps home, preaches revolution ……….Scotland Assembly elections…..Conservative disaster, SNP leader romps home, preaches revolution if no independence referendum ‘May you live in interesting times’ is apparently a Chinese… Read more »

18
0
Ossettian
Ossettian
5 years ago
Reply to  Monro

They can always postpone the elections.

5
0
Waldorf
Waldorf
5 years ago
Reply to  Ossettian

Didn’t they postpone last year’s? Medical martial law – the gift that keeps on giving.

5
0
Monro
Monro
5 years ago
Reply to  Ossettian

Only so many times that you can play that trick without it becoming counterproductive.

Scotland definitely will not postpone……so, therefore, unlikely that England will.

If London tries to postpone, it gives more time, momentum to Piers Corbyn

The law of unintended consequences applies……

4
0
RichardJames
RichardJames
5 years ago

Have I got a real doozie for you! We are currently looking after a sprightly elderly individual who normally is perfectly capable of going to the shops by himself (he is over 90 years old, but fully-mobile). He has unfortunately been suffering from a chest infection but is on antibiotics (which weren’t working well) but nowhere near sadlidying. He was saying that he still felt really unwell, so we contacted the doctor at the request of his relatives who live many miles away. The doctor came on a home visit, arriving at ten pm. She was a wonderful young woman and did an excellent job after swaddling herself in a top-to-toe layer of PPE including mask and face-visor, apron and gloves. After she had upgraded his antibiotics and told us that there wasn’t much to worry about (although we are still keeping a close eye on him) the doctor left to go to her next patient at about 11pm. We could not praise her enough; at least the poor girl was doing her bit rather than Tik-Tok dancing during her working hours. She then disrobed in the cold street beside her vehicle and dumped her used PPE into a big… Read more »

34
-1
chaos
chaos
5 years ago
Reply to  RichardJames

I throw used PPE over the fence of the local care home.

9
-2
Richy_m_99
Richy_m_99
5 years ago
Reply to  chaos

Is that what is meant by help the aged now. PPE contributions.

2
0
JanMasarykMunich
JanMasarykMunich
5 years ago
Reply to  RichardJames

That must be one hell of a lot of waste when it is happening every time.

7
0
RichardJames
RichardJames
5 years ago
Reply to  JanMasarykMunich

Not kidding! There was an apron, gloves, mask, visor and overshoes. No idea what it cost, but it can’t be exactly cheap. Some mate of a government minister is making a fortune.

0
0
ElizaP
ElizaP
5 years ago

I think you may well have a valid point there – re it giving meaning and purpose to Lockdown adherents. Personally though – I think that makes them extremely selfish at our expense (ie all those of us suffering in one way or another from Lockdown). I was pretty much reconciled to my life having no meaning or purpose personally – and just got on with getting what enjoyment it’s possible to get from it and I don’t see anything wrong with just living a meaningless/purposeless life and “making the best of it” and it’s a sight better option than sheer cruel selfishness of trying to enforce Lockdown on the rest of us to derive one’s meaning/purposefulness. Basically – I guess you’re making the point that most people are selfish sadists and that is a thought I shall doubtless ponder on for the rest of the day – whilst impatiently waiting/waiting/waiting for my meaningless/purposeless life (of an infinitely preferable variety to Lockdown Life) to come back again.

26
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  ElizaP

Your life bad a purpose. That purpose was to live.
Zombies lack that purpose. Living death is all they ‘want’.

24
-1
Waldorf
Waldorf
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Wasn’t that what Saw was trying to do? Give people purpose?

3
0
Nigel Sherratt
Nigel Sherratt
5 years ago
Reply to  ElizaP

Miguel de Unamuno
For the present let us remain keenly suspecting that the longing not to die, the hunger for personal immortality, the effort whereby we tend to persist indefinitely in our own being, which is, according to the tragic Jew (Spinoza), our very essence, that this is the affective basis of all knowledge and the personal inward starting-point of all human philosophy, wrought by a man and for all men and this personal and affective starting point of all philosophy and all religion is the tragic sense of life.

6
0
AshesThanDust
AshesThanDust
5 years ago
Reply to  ElizaP

Oh, well said. And it’s that joy of living life for its own sake that we are denied.

8
0
steve_w
steve_w
5 years ago

presumed R value from Zoe app

peaked on 18th December – about right for a seasonal virus. Peak annual deaths (last 5 years average) comes on January 5th – a couple of weeks after

R.png
6
0

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