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by Will Jones
20 January 2021 3:36 AM

Lockdown Set to Last Beyond Easter

The goalposts are moving yet again, according to reports in the papers today. The Mail has the story.

Lockdown measures could last “beyond Easter” despite the rollout of the Covid vaccine after the deadliest day on record saw 1,610 new victims.

Ministers have been warned that, with the possible exception of schools, there is unlikely to be any relaxation of the lockdown at the first formal “review point” in the middle of next month. 

Reports yesterday claimed that Boris Johnson was targeting Good Friday on April 2nd as the earliest date for a significant lifting of the lockdown.

The PM has started “top secret” planning for millions to meet their families over Easter, according to the Sun.

But several sources told the Mail that even this date could look optimistic if the vaccine rollout ran into difficulties.

One attendee at a Government summit with business leaders on Monday claimed ministers had warned that heavy restrictions could remain until May or even June. 

Concerns yesterday grew that the rollout of the jab had already stalled as the number being vaccinated dropped for the third day in a row.

Around 204,000 people were given their first dose, slumping from 225,000 on Sunday, 277,000 on Saturday and a high of 324,000 on Friday.  

Meanwhile Britain maintains the worst Covid death rate in the world. Tuesday’s new daily record marked a sharp 30% rise on the 1,243 announced on the same day last week and is almost double the number of victims from a fortnight ago, when there were 860. 

More than 4.26 million people have received their first dose of a Covid vaccine through the NHS programme – one in every 16 people in the UK – which makes it one of the best covered countries in the world. 

But to hit the Government’s target of 13.9 million people by February 15th, which is the threshold at which officials will consider relaxing lockdown, Britain must manage 360,000 jabs per day from today onwards – 2.5million per week.

Last week it averaged 254,000 per day and hit a total 1.77million. The daily requirement will increase for every day that it isn’t hit.

The Covid Recovery Group of anti-lockdown MPs has started upping the pressure to get a move on. The Telegraph has more.

Boris Johnson faces growing pressure from Tory MPs to set out an exit strategy from lockdown based on vaccine rollout forecasts and using March 8th as the target date to start easing the restrictions.

Conservatives in the lockdown-sceptic Covid Recovery Group (CRG) highlighted scientific suggestions that the most vulnerable Britons will achieve a significant level of immunity from the virus three weeks after receiving their first dose of the jab.

Since the Government has pledged to vaccinate the 14 million most vulnerable Britons by February 15th, ministers should prepare to ease the rules three weeks later on March 8th, the MPs said.

Matt Hancock, the Health Secretary, reiterated this week that the mortality rate is expected to fall by 88% once the most vulnerable cohort, which includes all adults over 70 and the clinically extremely vulnerable, has received an initial dose of the vaccine by the middle of next month.

What the CRG haven’t factored in are the growing doubts about the efficacy of only one dose of the vaccine (on which more below).

There’s also the question of hospitals. Robert Peston points out in the Spectator that it’s not the over 80s who are filling up the ICUs.

If prioritisation was ordered purely on the basis of reducing pressure on the NHS, yet another ranking of vaccinations might well have been ordered. What’s relevant, for example, is that 52% of coronavirus sufferers in intensive care are aged between 50 and 69, 21.5% are aged 70 to 79 and just 4.6% who are over 80 (according to authoritative data from the Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre). 

If the imperative was to reduce pressure on intensive care, those aged 50 to 69 would be receiving the vaccine now, and those aged 60 to 69 (the age group most likely to be in intensive care) would be right at the front of the queue. In the end, the PM chose his very simple and easy-to-understand instruction, which may well be the best politics. But we won’t know till we are through this crisis whether it is the optimal route back to some semblance of normal life. 

Worth reading Peston’s piece in full.

Stop Press: Sign the petition on the Parliament website: “After the vaccine roll-out to high risk groups, remove all COVID-19 restrictions“.

Lockdowners Should Admit It: There Was No Christmas Surge

The BBC has run an analysis asking whether the much-hyped Christmas surge – supposedly resulting from mass household mixing over the festive season – actually materialised. No sign of it, they say.

It is almost a month since Christmas was ‘downsized’ across the country. But in many parts of the UK, people were allowed to meet in Christmas ‘bubbles’ – if only for just one day. So what impact did this have? The overall picture shows a sharp increase in cases around this time.

However, a closer look at the numbers suggests this trend was already happening and was probably caused by the new, more infectious variant of the virus rather than increased contact between people.

It’s not as though people didn’t mix: “A survey from the Office for National Statistics suggests that roughly half the population in Great Britain who were allowed to hold gatherings did so.”

This tallies with what the BBC found when it examined the question of a supposed Thanksgiving spike in America at the end of November. Shadow Health Secretary Jonathan Ashworth (among others) claimed: “We saw in Canada and the US, huge spikes in infections after Thanksgiving.” However, the BBC found: “Looking at the combined data for the whole of the US, there’s no clear indication that infection rates accelerated following the Thanksgiving holiday.”

So, were the lockdowners restrained and accurate in their predictions about the risks of mixing over Christmas, as they are always telling sceptics we must be? Let’s see.

The Health Service Journal ran a joint editorial with the BMJ – the second in their history – outspoken in its political advocacy and unequivocal about the risk of mixing over Christmas:

The Government was too slow to introduce restrictions in the spring and again in the autumn. It should now reverse its rash decision to allow household mixing and instead extend the tiers over the five-day Christmas period in order to bring numbers down in the advance of a likely third wave. 

Anouchka Grose in the Guardian wrote a particularly alarmist piece.

Anybody with any kind of conscience is beating their brain, calculating all eventualities that may result from showing up for lunch in a week’s time – one of which involves inadvertently killing your aged parents… Politicians have the option to look at the numbers, listen to the experts, explain the deadly consequences of big gatherings, develop rules for everyone’s wellbeing and trust that most of us will be happy to go along with them. This is precisely what happened in March, albeit after an extended bout of burbling and bluster. And, as one glance at the graphs shows, it worked. How hard can it be to convince people that the same magic could happen twice? Alongside the roll-out of the vaccine, we would see cases drop, rather than increase, in the new year. If Johnson isn’t prepared to do it, can we just agree among ourselves that Christmas is cancelled?

In the spirit of Ipso demanding a retraction of Toby’s Telegraph article on herd immunity following a complaint for supposed errors of science and failures of foresight, perhaps a complaint is now due to Ipso for this guilt-inducing piece of failed prophecy. How many Guardian readers needlessly sacrificed the chance of seeing their loved ones on Christmas Day after reading Anouchka’s article?

Less hysterical, but no less inaccurate, was this Observer editorial.

The Government was right to immediately impose tougher tier 4 restrictions on these parts of the country and elsewhere to restrict indoors household mixing to Christmas Day only. It is clear that without these measures there would have been a huge risk of a rise in infection and death rates in January and February as a result of intergenerational mixing over Christmas, particularly endangering older people and those with pre-existing health conditions. … The fact that vaccines are being rolled out to high-priority groups, with more comprehensive coverage months away, underlines how ill-judged it would be to trigger a larger-than-necessary spike in the death rate with the end of this period of social restrictions in sight.

But far from a not “larger-than-necessary” spike there was no deadly spike at all.

Perhaps the most egregious offenders were Independent SAGE. According to City AM:

[Independent SAGE] said the new variant requires a “complete rethink of all mitigation strategies”. Independent Sage has said all regions of England should be placed in Tier 4 to suppress the virus “as much as possible”, and Christmas Day mixing should be cancelled, apart from with pre-existing bubbles. … Independent SAGE continued: “Christmas Day mixing of households indoors for prolonged periods of time, as allowed in tiers 1 to 3 in England and across the devolved nations, sets the scene for thousands of super-spreading events. In the context of the new strain, this is incredibly dangerous.

Examples could be multiplied. Lockdowners love to point the finger at the failed predictions of sceptics. But do they check their own rear-view mirror? How much revisiting of their own prognostications have they done to see if they hit the mark? Or is it one rule for the sceptics and another rule for the lockdown zealots?

In truth, Christmas was an important mass experiment that put the claims of lockdowners and sceptics to the test. In the run-up to both Christmas and Thanksgiving lockdowners predicted a death surge following household mixing, larger or smaller depending on how long the mixing lasted. In both cases their predictions failed to materialise at all – even the BBC says so. And that means their theory of what “controls the virus” is faulty. Mass household mingling did not lead to “deadly consequences”. In fact, the infection rate began to slowdown in the week after Christmas, as the graph from the ZOE Covid Symptom Study App shows.

This is another strong indication that lockdown is not holding back the flood. Time for the lockdowners to accept it.

Stop Press: A Guardian editorial today continues the increasingly deranged war against sceptics for daring to question the Government line: “A reckoning is due with ‘lockdown sceptics’ in politics and the media, who fomented public distrust of official advice and encouraged dangerous risk-taking.” Yet “official advice” is often wrong and changes all the time. Funny how quick some supposed supporters of free speech are to find reasons why wrongthink must be punished.

New Study Claims to Find Masks Work – Despite All the Evidence they Don’t

A new major study came out yesterday purporting to show that masks reduce transmission of SARS-CoV-2. Published in the Lancet and funded by Google, this is the kind of study that gets listened to. The headline result, reported in the Mail, is that a 10% rise in self-reported mask wearing is associated with a three-fold increase in the odds of keeping R below 1.

How, you might be wondering, can a study show masks are effective when so many other studies show they aren’t? Why is California, with mandatory face masks and a younger population, suffering worse than Florida (which is also more densely populated)? What about the Danmask study which shows that surgical masks give no statistically significant protection to the wearer against infection?

They get round the Danmask study by claiming that the point of masks is to prevent infectious people infecting others, not to protect the wearer.

These masks are intended to serve as a mechanical barrier that prevents the spread of virus-laden droplets expelled by the user. Therefore, their purpose is to reduce transmission events by the individual, rather than to protect the individual from infection. Accordingly, face masks are advocated as a source of collective benefit that is most successful with high amounts of adoption.

There is scant evidence they succeed in that respect either of course. But let’s move on to look at the study.

Figure thumbnail gr2

This is the main results graph showing how R differs by mask use. The first thing that stands out is the variance: each column interval contains a wide distribution of points. A second is that the average R values are within a narrow range: they all lie between 1.0 and 1.1. That’s not exactly a strong impact. Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that this graph shows the correlation claimed. Which is surprising because, as the graphs below show, international evidence is that mask mandates did not prevent strong autumn and winter surges, and that comparisons with non-mandate countries show no obvious benefit from masks.

Mask mandates and coronavirus infections (Source: Yinon Weiss)

Unfortunately, it’s not very easy to drill down into the detail of the study to find out how they have come up with the answer they did. It is a model-based study with a large number of assumptions, including an attempt to control for the role of social distancing using mobility data and a “smoothing parameter for political party identification based on aggregates of SurveyMonkey research surveys”. Oddly, R is not treated as a continuous variable but is simplified to be either below 1 or not: “Rt was aggregated to the week and dichotomised as epidemic slowing (1 if Rt<1) or epidemic at maintenance or growing (0 if Rt≥1)”. Anyhow, here’s my take insofar as I can work out what it is they’ve done.

Each point in the above graph is a US county. Individuals across the 50 states were invited to participate in an online poll between June 3rd and July 27th and 11% of those asked chose to do so, amounting to 378,207 people. Only 4·7% of the respondents reported they were “not likely at all” to wear a mask in the two settings considered (grocery store and visiting friends and family), suggesting a strong sample bias towards mask wearers in those who responded to the survey. Each county could have as few as 10 individual responses from it, and it appears only responses within a two week window were split into counties for this purpose: “Survey responses and validation interviews were aggregated by county (restricted to counties with 10 or more observations, n=1055) between July 2nd and July 14th, 2020”. This suggests the sample size for each point in the graph was not large. The study also used raw case data, which isn’t great when testing was being ramped up during the summer.

None of this reassures me that the results are sound. My suspicion is that the study suffers from a number of serious problems hidden among its modelling assumptions and complex statistical techniques. Here’s one that stands out. There may be more – do email us if you spot any.

In July, at the time of the study, the southern United States – where mask mandates and usage are generally less common – was experiencing a summer surge in infections, while other states, with typically higher masks usage, weren’t so much. A snapshot at this point in time would therefore have been likely to find a correlation between not wearing masks and a higher R, but that would just be an artefact of when the survey was done rather than anything universal. Indeed, an earlier study which looked at how masks affected R in different American counties had to be withdrawn shortly after it was published because the beneficial effect it had claimed to find was at that moment being undermined by a new autumn surge.

It’s worth recalling why masks don’t work. Masks are poor at preventing transmission because of the high risk of contamination and because they are often made of cloth (which has poor filtration properties) and not properly fitted. They can prevent some droplets from escaping but not aerosols, so it does not take long for the air in a poorly ventilated space to reach a dangerous viral load if infected persons are present, regardless of any face coverings. This study does nothing to change that underlying problem.

Second Vaccine Doses Cancelled

A reader sent us the email he sent to his MP, Laura Trott, to complain about his mother being denied the second dose of the vaccine as promised.

I am emailing on behalf of my 85 year-old Mother who is a constituent of yours.

My Mum had her first Covid vaccination on December 22nd at the Princess Royal University Hospital at Farnborough. Her second vaccination was scheduled for today and she arrived at the hospital at the scheduled time. She was then told she couldn’t have her vaccination and her appointment had been rescheduled for March 2nd. A delay of 43 days, over six weeks. Apparently a “letter is in the post” informing her of this but it didn’t arrive in time.

We are both furious.

Firstly, it is unconscionable to build up the hopes of an elderly person at times like this and then let them down, especially as she has friends no older than her who live in different postcodes but have now had their second vaccination, given at the originally pre-arranged times.

Secondly, she was told at the time of the first vaccination that she would be having the second 27 days later and gave implied consent for this, knowing that the vaccinations are supposed to be given three weeks apart. She did not consent to having them given 10 weeks apart.

Thirdly, there is no trial data to show what the efficacy of the vaccine is if it is not given three weeks apart. It now feels like she is part of a live experiment.

This is all totally outrageous. Not to mention that she also made an unnecessary journey which we are all supposed to avoid at the moment so that we can protect the NHS, because of a fault by the NHS. And to a hospital too, where her chances of picking up a nosocomial infection may have been non-trivial.

If you are able to tell me why she couldn’t get her second vaccination as originally scheduled (and yet her friends have), I would be grateful.

Stop Press: The Spectator reports on a study by Sheba Medical Center in Tel Aviv that suggests a single dose is not as effective as the Government has been told.

Researchers studied the level of immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies in the blood of 102 of the first 1,000 staff at the centre to be given both doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. While the first dose did produce antibodies, they discovered that levels of antibodies jumped by between six and 12-fold after the second dose. After the second dose, they said, antibodies were higher than in people who had developed immunity by recovering from the virus itself…

Pfizer has warned the UK government that its Phase 3 trials did not provide data for anything other than its recommended regimen of two doses, 21 days apart. The government argues that it can protect more people in a shorter time by delaying the second dose. However, Israel’s COVID-19 tsar has suggested that the first Pfizer dose may be less effective than originally thought, which could potentially complicate the UK’s current strategy of delaying the second dose.

Oddly, delaying doses of the second vaccine is an official policy that the Guardian is happy to publish pieces railing against. I guess some scepticism of the Government line is acceptable in the Guardian provided it enables the writer to signal that he or she is even more pro-vaccinations and pro-lockdown than Matt Hancock.

The Communist Deregulationists

Today we’re publishing a new piece by the academic economist who writes for Lockdown Sceptics. It’s about the unhappy provenance of the Government’s Covid policy and its tragic incoherence with the deregulation agenda.

Now consider the absurdity of the Government’s current deregulation agenda. They are looking at rules around work breaks, while literally closing restaurants and pubs. They think they are actually going to rejuvenate the British economy by closely examining builders’ smoke breaks – while at the same time massively restricting physical movement and banning many services entirely.

The distance between rhetoric and action is so large as to be bizarre. If you took the Johnson government at their word you would assume that Britain was on its way toward some sort of libertarian experiment in free market economics. Yet if you look at what the Government is doing it is far closer to what the Chavez and then Maduro government did to Venezuela.

I do not write this for rhetorical effect. Personally, I think many economists exaggerate the positive impact of deregulation. True, it is sometimes needed, but often it is simply done to check an ideological box; I do not believe that regulations on disabled toilets impact the economy one iota. I do not think, however, that economists exaggerate the negative effects of communistic interventions in the economy. Imposing extreme, top-down controls on how people live, on how they work, on how they buy and sell is a sure path to total impoverishment.

There is simply no analogy outside of communist control economies for what the Johnson Government is doing to this country. Even when the Churchill Government took over the British economy during World War 2, the controls were nowhere near as onerous. Rations were imposed, so that the troops got more, say, petrol than the average British subject, true, but ultimately people could move basically as they pleased and non-rationed goods could be bought and sold freely. The system was also rational: the Government needed to move certain goods from the domestic consumer market to the front and the ration system did that well.

By contrast, the current communistic-style regulations are – as they usually are in communist countries – utterly absurd. They change seemingly with Johnson’s mood. No one knows what they will be tomorrow, much less next week. Business owners and consumers cannot even try to plan around them because they flail around wildly. Better regulations to utterly demolish British living standards could not be dreamed up by the country’s worst enemies.

Worth reading in full.

Burn the Sceptics!

Brendan O’Neill in spiked has written a cracking piece likening the mob justice being meted out to sceptics to the witch hunts of yesteryear.

We have entered a new era of demonology. The hunt is on for heretics and witches who might be held responsible for our current predicament, for the plague of Covid. As in pre-modern times, sinful speakers and thinkers, those who dare to bristle against the political or scientific consensus, are being demonised and publicly shamed as assistants of the plague, as Covid’s willing helpers. They have ‘blood on their hands’, the lockdown fanatics cry, blissfully unaware of how similar they sound to those who in earlier times of disease would drag eccentrics to the stocks in the warped belief that those eccentrics either brought the plague or at least aided its spread.

It is hard to think of any other political constituency in recent times who have been as thoroughly demonised as lockdown sceptics. Climate-change sceptics are up there, of course. Deniers of the cult of genderfluidity have had a severe hammering, too. But that all pales, if not into insignificance then at least into the background, in comparison with the war of barbs and defamation against anyone who questions whether lockdown is the right response to COVID-19.

These people are branded “Covid deniers”. They are “dangerous”. Their words kill. They have blood on their hands. They have a “hell of a lot to answer for”, says chief demonologist Neil O’Brien, Tory MP for Harborough, inflaming the idea that these people and their sinful speech benefit the plague and directly help to cause injury and death.

So successful has been the campaign of demonisation against lockdown sceptics that even that title – lockdown sceptic – has been sullied beyond recognition. It is now taken to include not only thoughtful people who question the policy of complete shutdowns, but also those who doubt the existence of Covid-19 and anti-vaxxers who think the Covid jab will come with a microchip so that Bill Gates can monitor our every move for the rest of time.

This lumping together of everyone from Oxford scientists Sunetra Gupta and Carl Heneghan to the anonymous bloke on Twitter who swears blind he knows five people who have been made gravely ill by the vaccine confirms that the aim here is to vilify scepticism across the board. Raise so much as a peep of criticism of the current Covid strategy and you’re as bad as the morons who say Covid isn’t real.

The demonisation of lockdown sceptics intensifies daily. They are branded “agents of disinformation” (the Observer) who are “dangerous” (the New Statesman). They are killing people, we are told. The reason COVID-19 is spreading again, and killing large numbers, is “because this metropolitan clique of elites put forth falsehoods and misinterpretations”, says one columnist (my italics).

This is, to be frank, unhinged. It is unreasonable in the extreme to blame the spread of Covid on sceptics who have very little influence in public discussion. Virtually the entire political establishment, the vast bulk of the media and every online ‘influencer’ favours lockdown. The message we receive constantly – on TV, online, in the press – is to stay home, be good, don’t kill people. It is a fantasy to believe that the voices of isolated and demonised sceptics are cutting through this conformist fog and inspiring people to recklessly spread the plague.

The crushing of dissent in the dubious name of public health is becoming a major threat to the functioning of a free society, he argues.

This demonisation of sceptics must stop. The majority of us who question the policy of lockdown accept that Covid is real and dangerous. spiked has described the Covid pandemic as a very significant health challenge from the very beginning. We also accept that restrictions on everyday life will be necessary. What we question is the policy of blanket lockdowns, the use of the politics of terror to scare the population into complying, and the war on dissent. It is perfectly legitimate – essential, in fact – to question these things.

You want to talk about sin? Okay. It is a far greater sin to crush dissenting opinion than it is to say things about COVID-19 that later prove to be wrong. The destruction of free discussion harms society far more than incorrect opinion or predictions do, because it limits the space for critical interrogation of public policy and for entertaining the possibility that what we are doing is wrong. That is what spiked wants: the entertainment of possibilities, the cherishing of open and rigorous inquiry, and the flourishing of heresy. Time will tell if lockdown was wrong, but we know right now that the campaign of demonology is wrong.

Worth reading in full.

Stop Press: Freddie Sayers in UnHerd adds his voice to the defence of the lockdown heretics.

As Hume put in his Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, to be sceptical is “to begin with clear and self-evident principles, to advance by timorous and sure steps, to review frequently our conclusions, and examine accurately all their consequences”. At the time, this was radical. It encompassed everything progressive about the Enlightenment and the emergence of the scientific method. But it also seems eminently sensible. Who wouldn’t want to be a sceptic today?

Apparently, quite a lot of people. Scepticism is suddenly perilously out of fashion. More than that, it is now deemed dangerous. The reason? The rise of the “lockdown sceptics”, who in recent weeks have taken a battering for having made claims about the virus that turned out not to be true.

In a sense, this is what should happen in the scientific method – commentators and experts being held to account for predictions they make. But the ferocity of the attacks has left us at a place where all questioning groups are subjected to the same moral condemnation. Whether they are pundits peddling conspiracies, credentialed scientists recommending alternative approaches, or intellectuals worried about the political implications – “Lockdown sceptics” is used interchangeably for them all. Any dissent will mark you out as part of the global “anti-science” movement. So sceptic has become a dirty word.

Worth reading in full.

Hong Kong Mortality in 2020 Lower Than Previous Two Years

A reader who lives in Hong Kong has sent us this comment that he received in an email from his GP yesterday:

Very early in this process we described the competing epidemics. The epidemic of disease and the epidemic of anxiety. As of today, 0.13% of the Hong Kong population have had a confirmed case of COVID-19. To reframe this data, 99.87% of the population have not been infected. Indeed the combined population mortality from COVID-19 and Influenza was lower in Hong Kong in 2020 than in 2018 and 2019 due to the lower death rate last year from influenza. This statement is not in any way intended to belittle the importance of this serious epidemic. Data from other countries shows what happens when health systems are overwhelmed. However, whilst 99.87% of us have not been impacted directly by the disease 100% of our population have been impacted by the psychological and social fallout of the public health measures used to control the disease. As an example of this process our MindWorX team have produced a number of resources including the following articles on the challenges of online learning and the impact of school closures on social development in children.

A Student’s Lockdown Lament

A reader has sent us the following note which her 19 year-old daughter, a student studying history and French at a top UK university, submitted to the House Committee on Human Rights in response to its recent call for submissions about the impact of the lockdown.

So far over half my university teaching has been delivered online and over the course of the pandemic I have seen my mental health decline exponentially. I am someone who would consider themselves pretty politically engaged and I have never felt so let down or angry at politicians of all parties than I do now. During the lockdowns, I have become depressed, anxious and unable to sleep.

I have been completely deprived of a university experience – and by this I do not mean partying, but basic socialising, necessary and important for my growth. On top of this, the teaching I have received online, through no fault of my university, simply does not cut it. The idea that you can have debates or group discussions in the same manner on Zoom is laughable and frankly insulting, especially when it is a tutorial group or class of people you have never met in real life. Yet I am expected to pay the same amount of money for this sub standard education, and have no real choice in the matter as the Government has decreed it an acceptable standard of learning. Presumably because they do not want to bail out the universities.

For the majority of the lockdown, I wake up every day and think: What is the point of me going on? Any enjoyment I might have had in life is gone and my future is undeniably bleak. Armed with my pitifully delivered degree, I will be sent out into what will undoubtedly be one of the toughest job markets in living memory, saddled with record amounts of debt, accrued through any number of Government schemes brought out during the pandemic. It is difficult to talk to my friends about this or support one another, as we all pretty much feel similarly numb and hopeless.

Throughout the pandemic, politicians and the media have made numerous references to the blitz spirit, and the sacrifices made by people my age who went to fight in world wars. I would like to remind them that these people came back mentally scarred, something which resulted in record suicide and domestic violence rates for the time. I do not seek to compare my experience to theirs, but I would expect comparable results. My generation will be mentally scarred from being socially deprived, something not helped by the toxic media narrative that sees us all as selfish. Government policies have consistently been made by the middle class and middle aged for the middle class and middle aged, with no thought to the future economic burden on the young. All this, despite the minute likelihood of any of us becoming seriously ill with Covid.

To summarise, currently I feel hopeless, undervalued and betrayed. Government policy has stripped me of any joy I had for my degree or my future.

Round-up

  • “Brussels gives tentative backing to EU coronavirus ‘passports’ to boost travel” – Another step closer to vaccine coercion with the Telegraph reporting an EU Commissioner saying it is “perfectly imaginable” vaccination certificates could facilitate travel in the future
  • “Wuhan doctors admit China lied to world about Covid so millions could celebrate New Year” – File this Sun report under “things we already guessed”
  • “The moral degeneracy of sacrificing children on the altar of Covid” – Laura Perrins in Conservative Woman is appalled by the burden children are bearing under the lockdown measures
  • “Show your smile! Why your face nappy makes baby unhappy” – Thomas Lane in Conservative Woman on another problem with masks
  • “Final Report on Swedish Mortality 2020, Anno Covidius” – Thorough exploration of the data on the systems perestroika blog showing 2020 was the worst year for adjusted mortality only since 2012
  • “Published Papers and Data on Lockdown Weak Efficacy – and Lockdown Huge Harms” – Excellent reference page from Ivor Cummins
  • “Each person is priceless, but the NHS has to put a value on every life” – Tim Wallace in the Telegraph defends the standard principles of health economics that got Lord Sumption into hot water
  • “Sir Van Morrison mounts legal challenge over Stormont ban on live music” – Report in the Belfast News Letter on a new judicial review
  • “Covid Lockdowns Will Result In 1 Million Excess Deaths Over Next 15 Years, Scientists Find” – Tyler Durden in ZeroHedge on the NBER working paper “The Long-Term Impact Of The COVID-19 Unemployment Shock On life Expectancy And Mortality Rates“
  • “Yes there are heroes in our NHS, but there are problems too” – Allison Pearson in the Telegraph wants to see more solutions and less shroud-waving from our national healthcare provider
  • “One in four young people feeling ‘unable to cope’ as lockdown takes toll on mental health” – Telegraph report with a further indication of the mental health impact of the lockdowns

Theme Tunes Suggested by Readers

Four today: “Whiskey Bent And Hell Bound” by Hank Williams Jr, “Look wot you dun” and “Mama weer all crazee now” by Slade, and “I’m Still Standing” by Elton John.

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, it’s the news that a Dutch woman has created a gender-neutral deck of cards without any kings, queens or jacks. The Mail has the details.

Card fan Indy Mellink, 23, initially came up with the idea while explaining the rules of a game to her cousins – at which point the “subtle inequality” of having a king be more valuable than a queen dawned on her.

After some encouragement from her father, Indy decided to design her own deck with gold, silver and bronze in place of the King, Queen and Jack cards.  

She said: “If we have this hierarchy that the King is worth more than the Queen then this subtle inequality influences people in their daily life because it’s just another way of saying ‘hey, you’re less important’.

“Even subtle inequalities like this do play a big role.”

After tinkering with a traditional deck of cards, Indy eventually produced a system that replaced the traditional King, Queen and Jack with gold, silver and bronze.

The first 50 of her new decks were quickly snapped up by friends and family members.

After the success of her initial packs of cards, Indy then had more of her GSB (Gold, Silver, Bronze) decks created and has been selling them online. 

Within a month she had dispatched around 1,500 of the gender-neutral decks as far as Belgium, Germany, France and the United States. 

Since seeing her decks take off in popularity, Indy has been testing them out on card players who had never been conscious of sexual inequality in cards before. 

Stop Press: Andrew Roberts in the Telegraph signals his approval of Government plans to give the public a say over what happens to statues and monuments.

Stop Press 2: David Davis MP proposed a Freedom of Speech (Universities) Bill yesterday. It’s a 10-minute rule bill so won’t reach the statute books, but his heart is definitely in the right place.

Here is my speech introducing the Bill to the Commons earlier today 👇🏻 pic.twitter.com/wbmt9HJzle

— David Davis (@DavidDavisMP) January 19, 2021

“Mask Exempt” Lanyards

Dr Theodore Noel demonstrates why face masks don’t prevent aerosol transmission

We’ve created a one-stop shop down here for people who want to obtain a “Mask Exempt” lanyard/card – because wearing a mask causes them “severe distress”, for instance. You can print out and laminate a fairly standard one for free here and the Government has instructions on how to download an official “Mask Exempt” notice to put on your phone here. And 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.

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 and Prof Carl Heneghan and Dr Tom Jefferson’s Spectator article about the Danish mask study 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.

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. 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…

Bob Moran’s cartoon in the Telegraph on January 15th
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1.9K Comments
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Hugh
Hugh
5 years ago

It’s an utter disgrace what they’ve done to the young.

Things were pretty bad for too many young people before 2020 – and I think of the nearly half of young women aged 16 to 25 who had had some sort of mental health problem – a higher rate than army veterans who have served in combat zones – or the nearly one in four fourteen year old girls who had reputedly self-harmed within the last six months.

And now these inhumane and criminal government restrictions have made it all far worse. It truly is wicked!

Oh, and I said last year that if restrictions continue beyond st Swithin’s day, we’ll have worse than 40 days of rain. Lockdowns continuing beyond Easter is insane and suicidal.

Last edited 5 years ago by Hugh
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Liewe
Liewe
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

With three kids in their 20s, I will never forgive those who traded my kids’ futures for their supposed “safety”. Then the cowards have the gall to call me selfish.

182
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jonathan Palmer
jonathan Palmer
5 years ago
Reply to  Liewe

Lockdowns are political.They have nothing to do with a not very dangerous virus.
Our fellow Britons have been subject to a huge psychological attack by the government and the bought and paid for media.
Direct your anger at the real culprits.

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-1
Binra
Binra
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Politics of a kind that makes all that we THOUGHT to be politics, a sideshow – or a matrix of mainstreamed control. So perhaps politics is not the best word. But it isn’t about a virus – in any biological sense at least.

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Jez Hewitt
Jez Hewitt
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Paid for by us, the cheeky fucks.

14
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Banjones
Banjones
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Yes, I agree with you. I don’t know a single middle-aged or elderly person who wouldn’t willingly have simply continued life as normal (for themselves and their children’s or grandchildren’s sake) and taken the chance of catching this ‘virus’. Especially as we all knew pretty quickly that the vast majority of us were at no risk.
Listen to Wittery in May:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=adj8MCsZKlg&feature=youtu.be

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fiery
fiery
5 years ago
Reply to  Liewe

I certainly wouldn’t want or expect anyone to put their lives on hold for me and bitterly resent the fact my final chance to achieve the things I couldn’t when I was younger has also been taken away.

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awildgoose
awildgoose
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Amen Hugh.

Every evening I try to say a short prayer and send positive thoughts to the youth that have had their lives upended by this insanity.

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Hugh
Hugh
5 years ago
Reply to  awildgoose

Inanity as well.

God deliver us from these inanities and insanities.

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Nottheonly1
Nottheonly1
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

God got you into that.

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-10
Binra
Binra
5 years ago
Reply to  Nottheonly1

The extension of a true blessing is better to live and share in than feeding a grievance. It also brings the underlying nature of grievance in to an honesty of being that the thinking mind wont allow, because grievance sets the mind in conflict from which truth is the first casualty.

8
-1
Nottheonly1
Nottheonly1
5 years ago
Reply to  Binra

Unless a mind comes clean of programs and conditions it will remain prisoner in a world it does not understand. Grief as impression/expression of loss is of no lesser value than its inseparable counterpart of joy. The attempt to isolate grief is similar to the desire to remove negativity from life. Everything has its place in life. A battery does not work with a single positive pole. It takes both polarities to ‘create’ electricity.

As a non-theist, I have no problem with people believing in any God. It is people who believe in God who are insecure when someone does not share their view. Man created God in his likeness and it is this succumbing to authority that is now exploited by those who put people under house arrest and take away everything a human being needs to be at peace.

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Binra
Binra
5 years ago
Reply to  Nottheonly1

Grief indeed serves a function in a mind that grasps and is prisoner to its world. ‘Everything’ and ‘nothing’ can indeed be set as polarities – but one has no existence except that you give it yours. The underlying electrical nature of the universe of manifestation is a polarised expression from a zero.point infinity. Within desire for experience your view is integral to the whole – (Thank you) but if it is out of accord with who and what you are it will render a fragmented and dissonant experience. You are free to engage this forever if that is indeed your freedom. That ‘God Creates Only God-in Extension’ is not recognisable to a mind set in mask of division that rules out wholeness to ‘separate holes’. Realigning in true Authorship undoes the false substitution or indeed the false god of a man made ‘power’ set over Life. We can let this be so by desisting active belief in such ‘power’ in any moment of willingness. ‘Believing’, and ‘God’ are words. Such words can be woven into masks by which to signal virtue while hiding secret hate and fear. True word can be invoked and spoken for vanity. The mind of… Read more »

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Nottheonly1
Nottheonly1
5 years ago
Reply to  Binra

Hello and good to hear from You. The quintessential difference in world views can best be described in an albeit simplistic fashion: There are those who will say that they are born into this world. Some, however understand that they are born out of this world. This, by Alan Watts firstly introduced into the Western hemisphere view point has but forgotten. Especially at a time, in which the bonds and ties to the profoundly sick society keep the mind in constant conflict. It is not a matter of freedom of believing whatever one desires to believe in. That should – although rarely the case – be a given. That it remains the greatest challenge to be free from programming and conditioning with their respective consequences in the ‘real’ world, is utterly obvious. A life spent in search of the ultimate understanding what existence really means, arrived at the conclusion of an experience that cannot be vocalized, or expressed in any other significant way – but the clap of one’s hands. https://www.alanwatts.org/2-3-4-uncarved-block/ For the participating observer in the world out of balance (Koyanisqatsi), one aspect of grief will forever be the unwillingness of the conditioned mind to let go of all… Read more »

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Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  Nottheonly1

No, it was Boris Johnson.

3
0
Nottheonly1
Nottheonly1
5 years ago
Reply to  Rowan

Funny to imagine that “God’s in control” of everything – but not of Boris the Butcher.

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Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  awildgoose

Let everyone who can pray do likewise.
Adding to a long, long list of victims who need our prayers.

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Binra
Binra
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

I pray not to or for victims but with the power of the heart that is in everyone alive.
Inspiration, guidance and support are part of a resonance of being. Being a victim does not help. Confirming others as victims feeds a disimpowerment.
Compassion – yes.
I suggest we need to extend blessing to (know that we) have it!

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0
Stephanos
Stephanos
5 years ago
Reply to  awildgoose

I am about to send a private message to you. Please get in touch.

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0
John P
John P
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Not doing a lot for the old either.

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AfterAll
AfterAll
5 years ago
Reply to  John P

Lockdowns harm the elderly. The indiscriminate lockdowns make food deliveries unavailable, so somebody in the household has to venture out for food, increasing risk. And masks increase the risk of potentially catastrophic falls, by restricting the field of vision and fogging up spectacles.

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JHUNTZ
JHUNTZ
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

If they ever intend to hold elections again (which I presume they do) they’ve just killed there future voter base.

13
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BertieFox
BertieFox
5 years ago
Reply to  JHUNTZ

I really wonder about that . . . . .

7
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Binra
Binra
5 years ago
Reply to  JHUNTZ

‘They’ operate the leveraging of our presumptions.
When they say there’s no going back to ‘normal’ it isn’t just because they are part of a controlled demolition of a corrupt system of human management into a reset to a tighter social contract.
The State – as the technocratic representative of Stakeholders, grants any privilege or freedoms according the tier status or caste.
Eradicating not just the voter base but the idea of people having any real choice in their own life outside of rules and compliances.

We’ve been so predictively programmed to our outcome that when it is here, we do not believe it.

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Elisabeth
Elisabeth
5 years ago
Reply to  JHUNTZ

Why would anyone want to bother to vote when hundreds of thousands of fake ballots can be dumped at 3 am? Or a click of a button can install the desired globalist puppet?

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0
LMS2
LMS2
5 years ago
Reply to  JHUNTZ

Who do we vote for when they’re all the same?

7
0
Bunter
Bunter
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Totally agree- the young are pretty much unaffected by the virus, their education and job prospects are being destroyed and they are going to be the ones paying this ridiculous debt back. The they get told they are being selfish- unbelievable.

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Bella Donna
Bella Donna
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Frankly this government should be put in front of a brick wall and executed for what they have done to this country. Its unforgiveable.

52
-1
iansn
iansn
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Im reading Prof Jordan Petersons book right now, what his outlines is the impact on the younger kids (preschool age) will be even worse especially those from poor or disrupted families, single mothers and so on. They will NEVER recover based on his opinion,

29
0
Nottheonly1
Nottheonly1
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

That is the idea behind these ‘policies’.

12
0
Bella Donna
Bella Donna
5 years ago
Reply to  Nottheonly1

They are deliberately creating a two tier system of the haves and the have nots.

5
0
bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  Bella Donna

They are not creating it, they are extending it.

2
0
Hugh
Hugh
5 years ago
Reply to  bebophaircut

I suppose it is an ongoing process of creation…

What I want to know is what happened to one person one vote? Why does the agenda of (for example) big pharma count ahead of the interests of ordinary voters, even large numbers of ordinary voters?

It might not be explicit as it has been in the past but it is what is happening none the less.

1
0
J4mes
J4mes
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Further to my comment yesterday about the deliberate drive to ruin the future of British/European children, Covid19 is the perfect pretext to finish the job – and the worst part is that it has swept up a large swath of public support from those who have been terrified by propaganda but might previously have been either apathetic or even against damaging the prospects for the young.

Last edited 5 years ago by J4mes
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Hugh
Hugh
5 years ago
Reply to  J4mes

One of the major things about this shambles that needs to be clearly established is, why are so many people so easily terrified? Could people always be so easily scared – by a (not excessively dangerous) bug?

As I have mentioned previously, my north London ancestors slept in their own bed during the blitz rather than the official shelters. Do people still have this spirit of courageous defiance? If not, why not?

2
0
Nottheonly1
Nottheonly1
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Could people always be so easily scared – by a (not excessively dangerous) bug? What bugs me, is the fact that in 2019, 4.2 million humans succumbed to air pollution. That is more than twice as many fatalities than from ‘the bug’. What is it about the virus that freaks out people? Who incited the freaking out about something that is essential to keep one’s immune system properly primed against any bugs that will inevitably appear on the surface of the Earth? Is it the delusion of being separate from micro organisms, bacteria and viruses? Just like the artificial divide of B.C and A.D., before 9/11 and after 9/11, there will be “before covid” and “after covid” – but all this is nothing else than a division from the Now. The only ‘time’ that exists. Imho, it is so called civilization that has created this irrational fear of death and therefor of life. The point Lord Sumption tried to make unsuccessfully. Everybody thinks their life is worthier than that of thou. Britons have financed immeasurable horrors, suffering and pain in the Middle East alone. They never forced their war mongering and atrocious politicians to resign from office. While a more… Read more »

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JayBee
JayBee
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Most ‘kids’ in that age group are fully into it.
There is practically no resistance and no critical thinking done by them.
As such, most of them fully deserve their mask&lockdown-support
related miserable future.

8
-1
Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

Some may be into it, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t wrecking their lives of all of them.

13
0
Hugh
Hugh
5 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

No, they’ve been damaged by the culture and environment they’ve been brought up in, I suspect. They are victims too. With so many having mental health problems, and probably most of the rest probably having quite a lot to worry about, there’s only so much one can expect.

Either way, this shambles isn’t going to help them.

0
0
Nymeria
Nymeria
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Yes, Hugh. Three months, and one Paracetamol overdose later, my girl is home from university.

13
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Lisa (formerly) from Toronto
Lisa (formerly) from Toronto
5 years ago
Reply to  Nymeria

I am so sorry. I had two girls in university and my youngest has suffered from mental health challenges, but before all of this insanity. She dropped out of school recently, which Covid accelerated, but will be switching to a trade school in the fall. She was not doing well mentally before dropping out so I understand your pain. Oddly, she is now spending her time as a gaming streamer and actually making good money at it. I will never forgive those who have done this to our children and I worry every day that mine will get through this. My thoughts are with you and your daughter and I wish her the best.

10
0
Nymeria
Nymeria
5 years ago
Reply to  Lisa (formerly) from Toronto

Thank you, Lisa. Good wishes to you and your children too x

4
0
Cheezilla
Cheezilla
5 years ago
Reply to  Nymeria

Poor love. Better off out of there!
I hope she’s physically ok. At least she’s come home to someone who’s sane.

6
0
Nymeria
Nymeria
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheezilla

Thing is, Cheezilla, she thinks I am quite the opposite of sane, but glad to get home to mommie dearest, all the same 🙂

4
0
Hugh
Hugh
5 years ago
Reply to  Nymeria

University was stressful enough already, and probably not least because of the fees, which they were protesting about in my day. How much worse must it be in these circumstances. I’m sorry to hear about what happened to her, and pray that she comes out the other side ok.

0
0
happychappy
happychappy
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=GqAbeSggcnw

Neil Oliver sums it up perfectly.

7
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago

Do you know the Scientific History of Lockdowns? A Must Watch – CRUCIAL.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=978zLJJLo-I&list=WL&index=78

Ivor Cummins

THANKS to KATE WAND FOR THIS SUPERB MINI-DOCUMENTARY on LOCKDOWN SCIENCE!

This film is based on a letter by an international team of professionals, researchers and activists, calling for an expedited investigation into scientific fraud in public health policies.

Full letter here: https://ccpgloballockdownfraud.medium…

17
0
PastImperfect
PastImperfect
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

Hmmm… can’t reach this page

1
0
Coronabonus
Coronabonus
5 years ago
Reply to  PastImperfect

Here you go:
https://ccpgloballockdownfraud.medium.com/the-chinese-communist-partys-global-lockdown-fraud-88e1a7286c2b

1
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago

I Wonder Why The BBC & Sky News Didn’t Report This
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lfnHC_ySFjk

Anti Lockdown Protests in Austria – sings “Make Influenza Great Again”
WE GOT A PROBLEM

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0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago

News Roundup | NY Judge Orders Hospital To Use Ivermectin, Woman Recovers https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6pm5T_E4rw From: TrialSite News “New York Supreme Court Judge Order: Give The Patient Ivermectin As Court Battle Leads to Ivermectin for Successful Treatment Against COVID-19: A judge ordered the Millard Fillmore Suburban Hospital to allow an 80-year old woman to be treated with Ivermectin. According to the family their attorney, the treatment saved the life of Judith Smentkiewicz. Although not yet approved, according to court documents, the woman’s daughter referred to it as a “miracle drug,” as do her attorneys, Ralph C. Lorigo and Jon F. Minear. Apparently, a doctor ordered the drug off-label in the intensive care unit (ICU), and as she improved, she was moved to another unit, and the doctor there stepped in and disallowed the use of the drug. Family members immediately involved lawyers and legal action to resume treatment. And now, The New York Supreme Court Judge Henry J. Nowak has aligned with the family.  https://trialsitenews.com/new-york-su… Nigeria Government Making Moves to Fund Ivermectin Research Targeting COVID-19: IVERCOVID Program: The Nigerian federal government commissioned a team of researchers to investigate the efficacy of Ivermectin as a potential treatment for COVID-19. Known as “IVERCOVID,” this… Read more »

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0
awildgoose
awildgoose
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

Andrew “The Gawdfadduh” Cuomo is piiiissed!

7
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago

Build Back Better Video Goes VIRAL! / Hugo Talks #lockdown
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQgF-5hqaSE

10
0
Freddy Boy
Freddy Boy
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

Add this to the New Normal docu on bitchute & the dots join up! I have been onto The Great Reset for months when it appeared in booklet form on Amazon for anyone to purchase ! Surely all this needs disproving asap OR it is TRUE ! ( HELP)

4
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago

Asia’s Climate Ambitions
Tony Heller
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bMzgsxZxwzQ

1
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago

mRNA Vaccines vs. Oxford-AstraZeneca Vaccine (from Livestream #61)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OLcdnoagoxQ

2
0
bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

Put them in the center of a boxing ring and let ’em fight it out.

0
0
bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  bebophaircut

Stolen from Steven Wright’s dehumidifier vs humidifier joke.

0
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago

Lockdowns Cost Lives
We believe in getting back to normal – the old normal

https://backtonormal.org.uk/

11
0
Binra
Binra
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

While freedom of association, movement and speech may be possible if something shifts at a deeper level, how do you not know what has been and is being revealed by this psychosis? The official covering narrative offers a living death in a human lab rat system – but is a contraction of the old normal and not a true ‘natural’.
The underlying disease is being revealed and suppressing symptoms in and of itself will not do more than move the furniture while presenting as progressive change.

Most of what covid and other similarly destructive narratives are doing is the result of social engineering or ‘mind control’ that has run throughout our lives.

So while I am not attacking your desire I don’t share the framing of old and new normals as being aligned in our true being and therefore our true needs.

1
0
bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  Binra

We need a new and improved (like detergent TV ads) old normal.

0
0
Binra
Binra
5 years ago
Reply to  bebophaircut

Normal is a conditioned habit. You may want to truly live. Is that really a habit or are habits strategies of adaptation and defence in a world set to manage and dictate who you are and how you should be? Natural is a word that can be misused – all words can – but what comes naturally is not artifice or mask – but unselfconscious and true. Because we have lost our true nature to a ‘normal social masking’ set in old terrors never healed, we fear that nature is predation, rape and plunder. We already lived a ‘social distancing’ management system that we did not see as such if we were workably comfortable in it. Do you want the old cage back? I understand nostalgia for things past. The only way I see to bring forth a new and naturally aligned order that honours Life and Living is to align in and be who we are. Be the change you want to see or meet. Live the Golden Rule. Give as you would in truth receive. Neediness does ‘work’ in attracting its polar opposite of control. I think that what was hidden as the underbelly of our mind and… Read more »

0
0
Liewe
Liewe
5 years ago

“But to hit the Government’s target of 13.9million people by February 15th, which is the threshold at which officials will consider relaxing lockdown”.
Just lovely! Once again it will be my fault if there is perpetual lockdown, not only did I visit a friend (unmasked – the horror!), but I also refused a vaccine.

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Janette
Janette
5 years ago
Reply to  Liewe

Good for you. If only everyone did that

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0
Elisabeth
Elisabeth
5 years ago

Lockdowns until Easter? I’m not even in the UK and reading this sort of idiocy makes me so angry pretty soon I’m going to start biting people. I’ll start with the mask nazis.

55
-1
Hugh
Hugh
5 years ago
Reply to  Elisabeth

And how are they paying for this again?

(They’ll have to put you in a muzzle! 🙂 )

9
0
Elisabeth
Elisabeth
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

That’ll be a cold day in hell 😛😛😛😛😛

5
0
Puddleglum
Puddleglum
5 years ago
Reply to  Elisabeth

It’ll be a different kind of mask for you then 😉

1
0
Nottheonly1
Nottheonly1
5 years ago
Reply to  Elisabeth

Better than biting might be a T-Shirt with an appropriate notion printed on it. “What is worse? A disease that healthy people have no problems with – or the lunacy of the fearful mask wearers?”

On second thought, biting might give You an edge…

7
0
number 6
number 6
5 years ago
Reply to  Elisabeth

Hope its not Rabies, err unless you plan to visit our parliament,

3
0
bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  Elisabeth

Don’t forget the salt and pepper.

1
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
5 years ago

Hello

0
0
Hugh
Hugh
5 years ago
Reply to  Lockdown Sceptic

G’day

(And don’t forget, you didn’t come here to die, you came here yesterdie!)

4
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

And on Sadlidie….

6
0
Nigel Sherratt
Nigel Sherratt
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Twice on Sundridie …

1
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Nigel Sherratt

A million died on Mondie…

1
0
bluemoon
bluemoon
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Wonderful! No need to apologise!

2
0
Ewan Duffy
Ewan Duffy
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

As I was born on a Thursday, sorry, Thursdie, I agree with the sentiments.

1
0
Spikedee1
Spikedee1
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

See that smile, a beautiful thing,
But don’t take me to task
you can’t see, my beautiful smile
Behind this fucking mask!!

3
0
Steve Hayes
Steve Hayes
5 years ago

There is mass resistance, everyday. Just because it is not sensational does not mean it does not exist nor does it mean it is not significant. Remember Rosa Parks merely declined to follow a rule on a bus journey.

73
-1
Fingerache Philip
Fingerache Philip
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Well said, Steve; a very significant point.
The MSM keep “bangin” on about how “we must not lower our guard”, well from this part of the woods (South Shropshire), I would say that only about 30 % of people ever put up a guard in the first place.

38
0
ElizaP
ElizaP
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Or one could think of it another way perhaps – “the weakest link in the chain” and get busy identifying those weak links.

10
0
gina
gina
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Good point. Thanks.

2
0
bebophaircut
bebophaircut
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

And a traditional journalist made sure that the event became news..

0
0
Hugh
Hugh
5 years ago

Any news on excess deaths for the first week of the year?

Reckon I can guarantee it’s not 6,298 (or however many they’re claiming have died within 28 days of a positive test result).

7
0
jb12
jb12
5 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

17,000 odd overall, which is ~5000 more than last year.

Last edited 5 years ago by jb12
0
-1
Spikedee1
Spikedee1
5 years ago
Reply to  jb12

Where did you get the number, I thought they were not releasing death all cause? Also don’t forget 2020 was a very mild death year in January and February. Check the deaths against a bad year of the flu. I bet the numbers are very similar.

2
0
djaustin
djaustin
5 years ago
Reply to  jb12

There is a rollover of excess deaths from Week 53. Data shows 12254 for week1, in line with 12175 for the past five years.

0
0
karenovirus
karenovirus
5 years ago

I’m out and about maskless every day and usually have a dozen or more close up encounters with others, mostly masked, sometimes not.
I have experienced no hostility in recent months and certainly do not feel the victim of a witch hunt. If the conversation goes that way most agree to a certain amount if scepticism sometimes to a surprising degree.

Perhaps whitch hunt frenzy is a London thing.

38
0
Hugh
Hugh
5 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

I wouldn’t be surprised

5
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

Like all our other current ills, it’s largely a media thing.

30
0
Nigel Sherratt
Nigel Sherratt
5 years ago
Reply to  Annie

How small, of all that human hearts endure,
That part which laws or kings can cause or cure!

Oliver Goldsmith, The Traveller, lines supplied by Dr. Johnson

12
0
karenovirus
karenovirus
5 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

Maybe because my NHS Region didn’t have much of a first wave and not much of a second.
Despite lurid headlines about rising ‘cases’ and speculation about what might happen in two weeks time Local Live online (mirror group news) has been unable to report any new deaths for some days now.

7
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

I live in London and have not encountered hostility for months now. In fact I have people who deliberately approach me for a chat possibly because I’m the only face they see.

This witch hunt frenzy I suspect takes place in the la-la land of academia. Strange things always happen there.

42
-1
Tom in Scotland
Tom in Scotland
5 years ago
Reply to  Bart Simpson

Yes, academia is definitely la-la land! Another reason why I’m glad I haven’t been at my university for months. I avoid most of my academic colleagues online whenever possible. It would be great if academic people would eat themselves, and I think this might happen.

Stirling is fine, though more seem to be wearing masks outdoors than before. Still, most people are not and most people will smile if you smile.

6
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  Tom in Scotland

I didn’t finish my PhD due to financial reasons and everyday I thank God that I’m not in academia.

Maybe they will eat themselves especially if they find themselves out of a job as the universities become even more short of cash due to falling enrollment figures and having to fight off court cases from irate students and their parents.

4
0
Nick Rose
Nick Rose
5 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

Or a political/MSM thing.

14
0
Nottheonly1
Nottheonly1
5 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

The crucial part is to not stop conversing with those who are intimidated and fearful. Fear has been the preferred tool to make people obey idiotic and self harming policies. Bernays told the corporations and Fascists how its done. It is essential to not give up on those who succumbed to the disease called propaganda.

Last edited 5 years ago by Nottheonly1
15
0
BertieFox
BertieFox
5 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

From my experience it seems to depend a lot on personality. You can almost pick out the personality types who will be absolute slaves to the narrative and those who will tend to question and also those who are receptive once they hear a different view.

9
0
MiriamW-sometimes-AlanG
MiriamW-sometimes-AlanG
5 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

Witch-hunt frenzy – evil rich & powerful conjured, behavioural ‘scientists’ midwived , rich people’s governments ordained, media promoted, twats & 77th. implemented.

London just happens to be HQ.
AG

5
0
Cheezilla
Cheezilla
5 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

Meeja schmeeja.

2
0
Ed Phillips
Ed Phillips
5 years ago

Brendan O’Neil in spiked talks about lockdown sceptics’ failed predictions.

What, exactly, have we got wrong?
It seems to be something about the second wave but we are not wrong. We have always said that there was going to be a seasonal rise exacerbated by the withdrawal of health services and wrongly attributed deaths because of pcr. I’m increasingly thinking we are seeing vaccine impacts but we will never be given the data for that.

No, the ones who have been continuously wrong are those putting restrictions upon us.

In fact it has been worse than wrong. They have lied, lied and lied again. Do not budge an inch. We are right and they are terribly, fatally wrong.

81
0
PastImperfect
PastImperfect
5 years ago
Reply to  Ed Phillips

The CDC in the US found that over 2% of those vaccinated had serious adverse reactions.

7
0
djaustin
djaustin
5 years ago
Reply to  Ed Phillips

The virus infection has passed through the bulk of the population as a result of wholly natural processes and evidence indicates that in the UK and other heavily infected European countries the spread of the virus has been all but halted by a substantial reduction in the susceptible population. …. The evidence presented in this paper indicates that there should be no expectation of a large scale ‘second wave’ with smaller localised outbreaks when the virus contacts pockets of previously uninfected populations.

Is not exactly looking like a sound prediction, is it?

https://dailysceptic.org/addressing-the-cv19-second-wave/

Vaccine impact will be on deaths in the next month or so, then admissions after about 3-6 months.

Last edited 5 years ago by djaustin
0
0
Cheezilla
Cheezilla
5 years ago
Reply to  djaustin

There wasn’t a second wave!
It was a casedemic. The virus peaked last April.

2
0
djaustin
djaustin
5 years ago
Reply to  Cheezilla

I don’t recall reports of Oxygen running out in hospitals in April. Nor half of all beds being filled with COVID patients.

0
0
Cheezilla
Cheezilla
5 years ago
Reply to  Ed Phillips

I wondered if it was a dig at Toby.

0
0
Boris Bullshit
Boris Bullshit
5 years ago
Reply to  Ed Phillips

O’Neill is a pillock obsessed by Brexit. If he really thinks Brexit matters compared with this tyranny he is out of his mind.

1
0
Steve Hayes
Steve Hayes
5 years ago

I cannot help but notice that there is much pessimism expressed in the comments. This pessimism is in my opinion unfounded and, if left unchecked, counter-productive, as it would inevitably undermine our morale and our power to resist.

I suspect this pessimism stems from the lack of substantial victories and sensational, large scale acts of protest. Whilst these would be wonderful for morale and for the fight against the madness, to expect them, given the strength of the forces promoting the lockdowns, is simply unrealistic. And, unrealistic expectations inevitably result in a sense of failure and futility, which is why we should recognise and accept that at the moment we are only capable of small acts of resistance.

But we should not undervalue those small acts of resistance. Every act of non-compliance is a victory. In yesterday’s edition, JohnDanny in a comment related an experience. He refused to wear a face mask.https://dailysceptic.org/2021/01/19/latest-news-259/#comment-366425 It was an act of heroism. It was a step forward for all of us. It was no less heroic, and no less significant, than Rosa Parks’ act of defiance.

Ignore the rules.

89
0
jonathan Palmer
jonathan Palmer
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

On off lockdown is the new normal until enough people say no.This has been the situation since the start.
I really think Easter is the key.Once the weather breaks and the vulnerable have been vaccinated then even the most docile sheep will understand there is no rationale for continued restrictions.

59
0
Alci
Alci
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Agree. Easter is the flex point. I’m afraid from what I see round me, that I think most people will sigh, but continue to comply, in thrall to government propaganda.
I feel like a drama queen saying this, but sometimes the only way out seems runaway inflation & currency collapse, which could take years.

25
0
Steve Hayes
Steve Hayes
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Mass non-compliance would certainly bring about an end to the madness. What would trigger that level of non-compliance is unknowable, unpredictable, but it could happen at any moment. Even those who are promoting the lockdowns say they do not want the restrictions, that they want life to be normal. If something were to happen that suddenly and clearly revealed the futility, the counter-productive, harmful nature of restrictions, it would completely change the situation, and, many hitherto staunch supporters of lockdowns would be demanding an end to the restrictions. There are moments in history when what was a tiny minority position suddenly becomes the dominant position and the world changes.

43
0
Alci
Alci
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

I hope you’re right! Of course I do.
Everyone who’s scared that I know is just getting more scared. Even doubters are being captured by the fear. It’s so mad and sad and wicked.

9
0
Steve Hayes
Steve Hayes
5 years ago
Reply to  Alci

Look to behaviour, rather than words. Lots of people repeat what they think is the correct opinion. But when their own behaviour is out of kilter with the correct opinion, they stop regurgitating the received narrative and provide justifications for what they are doing. Such justifications inevitably lead to further changes in behaviour.

20
0
Jinks
Jinks
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

In my many discussions with LD fanatics, when I point out to them, their own body language belies the words coming out of there mouths, when they get eyeball to eyeball with me. The blank expressions are priceless!

10
0
Spikedee1
Spikedee1
5 years ago
Reply to  Alci

Yesterday on the bbc they really did do a spot from a morgue, with crying nurses. Yep great reporting, no fear mongering there. I saw this reported by Alex belfield. I can’t go near the bbc as iI would end up with a very expensive foot through the TV. Don’t you find it amazing we are all calmly talking about opening at Easter as if that is fucking acceptable! We have been in a lockdown of one sort or another since October. in places like Manchester they have been shut down since September. So how is this fucking working? Just using your bullshit death numbers its failing on every level. Then we add your bullshit cases and these are still high. And all this is being caused by me not wearing a mask? Do the fat pig dictator and handjob listen to themselves speaking? Just do a review, we did this the numbers went up, mmmm! Shall we try something else? NO SCIENTIST WOULD ACCEPT THIS FAILURE WITHOUT TRYING A DIFFERENT METHOD!

15
0
HoMojo
HoMojo
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

I don’t see anyone complying around where I live. The trouble is nowhere is open, except supermarkets and I don’t go to them, so it’s very difficult to demonstrate that non-compliance. Have had plenty of people round for tea (or beer) but that ain’t gonna get on the front pages!

9
0
sophie123
sophie123
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Easter is too long for the children though. A whole term. That’s an eternity when you’re young.

25
0
Cotton Wool
Cotton Wool
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

You mean once “the vulnerable” have been sacrificed to the great god vaccine?

7
0
crimsonpirate
crimsonpirate
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Easter is the key. Ash Wednesday and the start of Lent should also be a marker point towards the end of lockdown.

5
0
Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  crimsonpirate

The government will not ever end any of its ludicrous Covid restrictions, unless and until enough people force it to do so. I doubt that will happen by Easter.

Last edited 5 years ago by Rowan
2
0
PastImperfect
PastImperfect
5 years ago
Reply to  jonathan Palmer

Stop kicking the resolution down the road.
Emphasise the massive personal and economic damage that is being racked by LDs and the fact that human rights laws are being broken.

Last edited 5 years ago by PastImperfect
7
0
Nick Rose
Nick Rose
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Well said

2
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Exactly. People forget that everything starts from small steps and for us who have been doing small acts of resistance, we should carry on and let others see us. The rest should hopefully follow.

I agree with the others who have commented, Easter will be the tipping point. Thee weather will be better then and we’ll get a better picture of the bad state of the economy during the first quarter of this year.

Once the dam breaks, I predict that more and more people will wake up.

It ain’t over until WE say it’s over.

18
0
Hugh
Hugh
5 years ago
Reply to  Bart Simpson

Ah. Is that why there’s talk of cancelling the May local elections?

0
0
PastImperfect
PastImperfect
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Excellent. JohnDanny’s actions were ‘textbook’. Always respond from a standpoint of authority.

3
0
The Filthy Engineer
The Filthy Engineer
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Interestingly I caught and advert on commercial radio late last night from Sainsubry’s about wearing masks in store and I thought oh no here we go again. My mood was immediately brightened when as part of the main advert they actually referenced the fact that you didn’t have to wear a mask or provide proof if you were exempt.

I found myself wondering if the letter referenced in yesterdays comments to all supermarket CEOs about the legal requirement not to discriminate was starting to filter through.

7
0
Steve Hayes
Steve Hayes
5 years ago
Reply to  The Filthy Engineer

And that was the result of some small acts of resistance, much like JohnDanny’s.

7
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  The Filthy Engineer

Not to mention that Disability Rights UK and the EHRC are fast snapping at their heels.

10
0
Nottheonly1
Nottheonly1
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

In my opinion, this pessimism stems from the fact that people no longer know what to do with themselves in a situation like this. Imagine the differences between a gardener, or a model railroader (or similar) and those who are already entirely depending on bad news/interwebs. It is well known that consumerism and lack of worldly activities leaves people empty. “Be here – now” seems also to help a lot to break the constraints.

3
0
number 6
number 6
5 years ago
Reply to  Nottheonly1

HERE _ HERE – BRAVO

0
0
EllGee
EllGee
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Interesting your thoughts on pessimism. A friend finally found their way here to read what was written. The conclusion was that the main blog was very interesting as it had things on that nobody would normally see but the comments were the biggest put off ever. If you aren’t happen with things you could end up totally depressed after reading what folk wrote.

As I didn’t know what they’d read, day or comments, just told them to try another day or two. Are we, in some ways, possibly our own worst enemy though? As Steve says, every act of non-compliance is a victory, so maybe the little things should be celebrated more.

4
0
Tom in Scotland
Tom in Scotland
5 years ago
Reply to  EllGee

I think that many of us spend too much time here and dwell on the negative. It’s easy to have a bad day and fear that this will never end. We can look at historical precedents and worry that they are being repeated. On the other hand, we should look at Rosa Parks and others who resisted, on an individual basis, and remember where that went. Let’s try to be more positive. I agree that Easter is likely to be the turning point as long as many of us are willing to fight back.

6
0
Dorian_Hawkmoon
Dorian_Hawkmoon
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve Hayes

Remember that the third Monday in January has in recent years (until they made every day blue) been called Blue Monday as the most unhappy day of the year. We are at the very nadir in mood at at the very height of the Govt propaganda storm. Hold the line.

7
0
Cheezilla
Cheezilla
5 years ago
Reply to  Dorian_Hawkmoon

Good point!

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

yesterday i talked to strangers who werent masked and we all say we re not getting that poison vaccine

2
0
wendyk
wendyk
5 years ago

https://www.spiked-online.com/2021/01/20/it-is-a-journalists-duty-to-question-lockdown/

A good one in Spiked.

Here in the joyous land of Sturgeonia, we’ll have to endure at least 4-6 weeks of solitary confinement.

My small town is now a virtual dead zone; even the local Gregg’s has now closed, while children stay at home, apart from the lucky few.

https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/uk/retailers-fear-losses-as-sturgeon-extends-lockdown-for-scots-till-mid-february-39986897.html

14
0
TheBigman
TheBigman
5 years ago
Reply to  wendyk

I live in a city here and its very dead. Everyone still thinks it will be alright, once they realise it won’t be that’s when we have to get them to our side before the Sturgenator throws out some BS like UBI to hook them in.

She is a communist and must be removed.

10
0
wendyk
wendyk
5 years ago
Reply to  TheBigman

Let’s hope, that if May’s elections do go ahead, that sufficient numbers will rebel against the Sturgeonator and the cult.

I’m still baffled by the strength of her hold over hitherto bolshy and tough minded Scots.

15
0
PastImperfect
PastImperfect
5 years ago
Reply to  wendyk

I hope people revolt before then.

3
0
vargas99
vargas99
5 years ago
Reply to  wendyk

Recently discovered a good word that describes her well – Termagant. “A harsh-tempered, or overbearing woman”

8
0
sophie123
sophie123
5 years ago
Reply to  vargas99

Ooh I didn’t know only women could be termagants.
it suits her well

3
0
jb12
jb12
5 years ago
Reply to  wendyk

Unfortunately, she mirrors the inner state of many Scottish people, hence her appeal.

4
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  jb12

During my 10 years living in Scotland I’ve always sensed there was something authoritarian about many Scottish people. Ditto their puritan streak.

Probably why the SNP gets a free pass – they appeal to the inner authoritarian of the Scots.

6
0
jb12
jb12
5 years ago
Reply to  Bart Simpson

Yes, exactly. And a large number of Scots are just a miserable bunch.

6
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  jb12

Mr Bart who is Scottish has said that’s one thing he dislikes about the Scots.

2
0
wendyk
wendyk
5 years ago
Reply to  Bart Simpson

The grievance mentality, which the Sturgeonator has raised to an art form.

2
0
jb12
jb12
5 years ago
Reply to  Bart Simpson

If you don’t mind saying and since we are talking about country of birth, I have seen you say you come from a place much more authoritarian than here. Where were you born? (and you don’t have to answer!)

1
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  jb12

I’m from the Philippines. Lived through a dictatorship (Marcos) and its “democracy” in name only but more of an oligarchy.

Last edited 5 years ago by Bart Simpson
3
0
PastImperfect
PastImperfect
5 years ago
Reply to  wendyk

C-19 is being leveraged to destroy small and medium-sized businesses and make people dependent on the state in line with the Agenda.

11
0
Just about sane
Just about sane
5 years ago
Reply to  wendyk

Another day I shed more tears. I’m working up writing my next email to my useless brainwashed MP and I have this question. I am under house arrest for committing no crimes and I am not allowed visitors and yet I find that if I had committed a crime pre 2020 and was held prisoner at HM pleasure I would be entitled to visitors and more importantly my visitors would be able to travel to see me. Why can’t I?

https://www.sps.gov.uk/Corporate/Information/covid19/covid-19-information-hub.aspx

19
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago

A great poem about the loss of religious faith. Now it serves well as an elegy for lost sanity.
But not everyone at that time had lost his faith. And not everybody now has lost his or her sanity.
Some of us have kept both and will do so for ever.

Et s’il n’en reste qu’un, je serai celui-là.

27
0
Anti_socialist
Anti_socialist
5 years ago

There is no conceivable reason for lockdowns(to last) they should end tomorrow!

If the vaccine works, then you only need vaccinate the vulnerable, no not nurses, doctors, police, NHS admin, teachers etc etc, just those people likely to have severe covid! That’s enough to stop the NHS being overwhelmed & saving politicians careers.

If the vaccines don’t/aren’t working, then its evident there’s no magical cure & we have to live with covid19 the same way we have with every other respiratory disease before. There is no logical excuse to carry on with this.

REMEMBER we were told, vaccines were the only way to end LOCKDOWN !!! Now vaccines seem to be keeping us in lockdown.

STOP pissing away lives & money, increase hospital capacity you’ve had nearly a year to work it out.

This is not a public health crisis, they aren’t controlling a virus they are controlling us.

Stop living, Save the virus, Control lives?

Last edited 5 years ago by Anti_socialist
133
0
Janette
Janette
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

Well said and my sentiments exactly. We need businesses to open up like in Italy

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

Go, kh, go!!!!

4
0
bluemoon
bluemoon
5 years ago
Reply to  Janette

I doubt she’ll get the reference! Great movie though.

3
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

Hear, hear!!! Like I’ve said before, if my workplace wants to break ranks and reopen, I will be the first to volunteer to work and welcome visitors with my smiling face.

13
0
PastImperfect
PastImperfect
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

To hell with the bloody vaccines with their limited efficacy and side effects.

Fortify immune systems (C,D3,Zinc + ionophore)

Treatments (Ivermectin, Early stage HCQ)

16
0
Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  PastImperfect

That won’t do, we need the genocidal vaccines.

1
0
Cotton Wool
Cotton Wool
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

Not all the so called “vulnerable” wish to be vaccinated.

9
0
Rowan
Rowan
5 years ago
Reply to  Cotton Wool

And I’m one of them. Come near me with their genocidal needle and I’ll take one of them with me.

6
0
JASA
JASA
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

Exactly. Very well said. This is the only message now that sceptics should be saying. People with access to the MSM, should be saying this continually. Come on Toby et al. hammer this point home.

4
0
JayBee
JayBee
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

It’s now primarily an international pi**ing contest about who has the least Covid deaths/million inhabitants.
And those nations that are at the bottom of that table are now focussing on being the fastest vaccinating ones instead- which could well increase their death toll over the others further in due course.

5
0
Nottheonly1
Nottheonly1
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

‘Lockdown’ (oddly it keeps coming up as ‘Lickdown’ on the ipatt) is simple gaslighting of the population. Very much like ‘Operation Iraqi Liberation’ or OIL.
It really is a Lock-up of people that did nothing else but comply with everything that was demanded from them for hundreds of years. Thousands, probably.

The rich always called the shots and as long as that is not remedied, they will continue to keep the upper fist. Trillions for war corporations – but nothing for the ruined lives of the many. As I mentioned before: compost the rich and things won’t be as bleak any longer.

2
0
karenovirus
karenovirus
5 years ago

At tomorrows Daily Briefing the Director of Communications is expected to announce . . .

20210120_033817.jpg
19
0
PatrickF
PatrickF
5 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

Act like you’re all aerosols.

Last edited 5 years ago by PatrickF
11
0
Thomas_E
Thomas_E
5 years ago
Reply to  karenovirus

They wont have these sharp suit made by Hugo Boss. They will look like fucking used cars salesman from the 90s. They cant even get their outfits rights, fucking disgrace.

2
0
TC
TC
5 years ago

If people put up with lockdown after it’s first anniversary or,in particular,the Easter holiday then we have a real structural problem in UK society.
I personally,for what it’s worth, do not think any change in attitude will suddenly erupt; more likely is a gradual shuffling off of restrictions by people rather than the spontaneous throwing off of chains. It just seems more like the British self conscious way of wait and see what others will do first.
More positively, like others, I see more people on the roads in the morning going to work than at the beginning of the year.I live in a small city with a large public sector workforce so many may well be working from home but traffic outside the city in particular has increased markedly. People want to save their jobs and businesses despite the government, msm and police.
It would be nice if the public could respond by going out to support those people and use what busineese are open aand encourage others to open.
If this goes beyond Easter I do not know how we will cope with our perceptions of this country and it’s people let alone it’s politicians,journalists and scientists.

42
0
danny
danny
5 years ago

Working on the premise that the government tends to float ideas as rumours in places like the Daily Mail to
gauge the public mood before deciding a course of action, every day this week has seen the goalposts move again. Now it is Easter, with drift into May/June. But I notice there is now talk of “the possible exception for schools”, which I can only assume is because longer closure for schools didn’t go down well.
This is why it is so very important never to acquiesce. Never to give a resigned shrug. Every day these zealots are testing the boundaries of our collective patience. There is no police force in the world that could enforce any of this against our will, let alone the 3 PCOs and a dog that most cities in the UK have. There is no politician in this spineless and petrified government and opposition that would not fold in a heartbeat if they felt the public was not with them.

43
0
Nigel Sherratt
Nigel Sherratt
5 years ago
Reply to  danny

No police here at all (except when there’s a stabbing). The fine 1906 police station is now a (real) police museum complete with broken windows.

Last edited 5 years ago by Nigel Sherratt
8
0
Waldorf
Waldorf
5 years ago
Reply to  danny

I do think they float stuff in the media to gauge reaction. Which is why pushing back is important.

16
0
The Filthy Engineer
The Filthy Engineer
5 years ago
Reply to  Waldorf

If you haven’t come across it before see the “Overton WIndow” theory:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overton_window

Last edited 5 years ago by The Filthy Engineer
2
0
Anti_socialist
Anti_socialist
5 years ago
Reply to  danny

Been happening for years, notice how they get a solitary MP to always poke their head above & test the marksmans aim(public opinion) same as with covid non i mean non of these politicians are genuine i dont trust a single one of them. Not even Swaine.

8
0
Anti_socialist
Anti_socialist
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

None* i hate auto correct.

1
0
Carmen B
Carmen B
5 years ago
Reply to  danny

That happens here in Australia, too. The idea most floated is “let’s open the borders some and let more people in from overseas”. Sadly, it keeps getting shot down. Here on Prison Island, so many are glad the borders are still shut – either because they’re ridiculously afraid of importing more Kung Flu, or because they’re glad to see an indefinite halt to temporary migration. Vaccine scepticism is on the rise, though, so that’s one positive. Me and my husband are already wondering what’s on the horizon for the southern hemisphere winter. Most likely the stupid will continue, but I can dream.

I really do so much appreciate reading all your stories and your encouragement of each other. It makes me feel less alone in my views, which I just don’t feel able to express at work.

11
0
Nigel Sherratt
Nigel Sherratt
5 years ago

Saw Bob Geldof yesterday face covered (literally) up to the eye balls walking into town. We live on opposite sides of Stonebridge Pond. He seemed surprised by my cheery call of “The disguise isn’t fooling anyone!”. Would have been better a day earlier but cheered me up anyway.

Last edited 5 years ago by Nigel Sherratt
25
0
PatrickF
PatrickF
5 years ago
Reply to  Nigel Sherratt

Feed the Paranoia, Bob.

4
0
Ewan Duffy
Ewan Duffy
5 years ago
Reply to  Nigel Sherratt

Like Bono, another, woke, hectoring Irish asshole. On behalf of Ireland, I would like to thank the UK for taking Geldof – can you pick up Bono as well?

11
0
Bart Simpson
Bart Simpson
5 years ago
Reply to  Ewan Duffy

Noooo…..can we send him back?

If you don’t want him, we can send him to Alpha Centauri.

3
0
Woden
Woden
5 years ago
Reply to  Ewan Duffy

Yes but Van the Man is doing his bit for freedom

6
0
Two-Six
Two-Six
5 years ago
Reply to  Nigel Sherratt

Gob Beldorf

3
0
TheBigman
TheBigman
5 years ago

Glad to see the communist goals being realised by more people.

THIS MUST BE RESISTED!

Think the great reset is a ‘conspiracy’ please tell me why so many countries in the west have followed the same creation of rules and laws. Why so many ghosts of the political past i.e Brown, Blair etc are calling for World government.

It’s all a stepping stone. Do not think we are on the same level as the political class, they won’t get vaccinated much in the same way Blair would continue to fly in private jets as “science will find the answer” to climate change which he quite obviously doesn’t believe in apart from to push further control, the same control that the covid emergency powers are granting by decree.

This is fast becoming a war of ideals, yet only one side realise it and its not us.

20
-1
The Filthy Engineer
The Filthy Engineer
5 years ago
Reply to  TheBigman

I really don’t understand this push towards World Government. Given how sclerotic the EU has shown itself to be in these and past times why do they think that WG would be any better?

It’s ironic that as nations seek to take back their own sovereignty and self determination the useful idiots push for more bureaucracy

4
0
Anti_socialist
Anti_socialist
5 years ago

Response topics raised How can masks work? If you don’t eat your meat, if you don’t eat your meat, how can your mask work! (Masks become saturated within in minutes of use, you’d have to change them every 10 minutes, continuously touching your face, but what about your eyes? Should we blindfold ourselves too?) Modelling isn’t fucking science, its arrogant speculative assumption. We’ve entered a new medieval period for sure. Yes each life has equal value, just not all lives are equal, I sincerely believe my life is more important than yours (nature made me & you this way) I fully understand if you feel the opposite way. No one has a right to chose who gets to live or die, NO ONE not government, not the NHS, not lockdown communists, not sage, not nervtag, not science technocrats, NO ONE, nature intended it to be this way, I wont be socially shamed, blackmailed or manipulated into abandoning natural process & believing otherwise, the social contract has limitations. No the NHS doesn’t have heroes it has employees, people paid by public taxes to serve the interests of their patients. PC Gobbledegook: Fuck Off (freedom of speech, its my right to offend,… Read more »

Last edited 5 years ago by Anti_socialist
24
0
Hattie
Hattie
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

On point 5 I have taken Alison in the DT to task on her sugary, heroes NHS in today’s rather weak article, including her assertion that we should be proud of our trust in the UK in politicians and scientists. Is she edging to the dark side?

5
0
Anti_socialist
Anti_socialist
5 years ago
Reply to  Hattie

She’s a communist!

2
0
Adamb
Adamb
5 years ago
Reply to  Hattie

Yes, she’s gone noticeably weak since things started getting a bit ‘hot’ this winter. Ross Clark too. Didn’t even bother reading that article when I saw the title.

3
0
PatrickF
PatrickF
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

Point 7. In my case, mask wearing induces panic attacks.

6
0
PastImperfect
PastImperfect
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

In this context

thelightpaper.co.uk for November 2020 front page highlights the “Government’s ‘Disastrous Policies’ Breaking Human Rights Laws

5
0
Silke David
Silke David
5 years ago
Reply to  Anti_socialist

Inside Health on R4 reported yday about the increased use of home oxygen monitors. Another ludicrous measure by the NHS.

One person who was told by the doctor to use one admitted he did not get the proper instructions from his doctor how to use it and what the readings mean until 2 days after!
One health official said they dished out 1600 and they need monitoring. Anyone with a saturation of between 92-94% for a period of at least 1h is deemed at risk and advice to go to hospital to receive oxygen.
The above mentioned patient was positive, had low oxygen for several days which mad him physical unwell and was put on increasing oxygen for a week. No mention if any other drugs given. C leads to inflammation of the cells, and you can pump as much oxygen into a person until they blow up, if the blood is unable to convert it, due to the inflammation, there is no point!

3
0
Nigel Sherratt
Nigel Sherratt
5 years ago

The article on masks by Roger Koops is essential reading (link just above The Great Barrington Declaration headline). An organic chemistry PhD who knows about PPE when it really is a matter of life or death. Can be saved as a pdf too.

7
0
Hattie
Hattie
5 years ago

So Brendan states we recognise Covid is real and dangerous. But how dangerous considering we know the demographics of those affected – is it really more dangerous than a bad influenza year? Surely his argument for lockdowns should also be on the disproportionate response to this respiratory virus. I also note he had to mention, we have always acknowledged the seriousness….this is like making your excuses for what you are about to state, similar to stating you are not a racist before putting forward a balanced argument on uncontrolled migration. Lastly, it is disappointing to see him use the term anti vaxxer in such a derogatory manner, which we know includes anyone who question the safety of the current vaccine regime – and all this endorsed by this site hmmm. Not impressed.

12
0
Ed Phillips
Ed Phillips
5 years ago
Reply to  Hattie

Yep, me too.
I refused to sign something which was arguing for a lifting of restrictions in my industry because it included lines about recognising the seriousness of the disease and the need for some restrictions.
I will not play the game.

9
0
steve_w
steve_w
5 years ago
Reply to  Hattie

just because something exists and is dangerous doesn’t mean everyone should be stripped of their rights

cars are dangerous

20
0
Achilles
Achilles
5 years ago
Reply to  Hattie

Life is dangerous. If you don’t want danger then you have to stop living.

15
0
Annie
Annie
5 years ago
Reply to  Achilles

That’s exactly what the sheeples have done.

5
0
Steve-Devon
Steve-Devon
5 years ago

The death statistics are hard to follow, I made a fool of myself yesterday by not realising the ONS had added an extra line to the weekly death report and then trying to reed the spreadsheet on an old mini-computer and getting the figure wrong! Sometimes it seems that the powers that be may be getting themselves into much the same sort of mess. To my mind part of the problem arises because of the push at the start of this hoo-haa for daily death figures. So that we now have the the daily PHE/NHS/Gov scary daily death figures and these are very much subject to fluctuations due to weekends and holiday periods. Only later do we get the more definitive ONS report of registered deaths. Clearly in April/May 2020 death rates went through the roof and alarmed everybody and drove the demand for rapid death figures. But in my view after April/May 2020 death rates have been much closer to the normal and not such as to warrant drastic public health actions. But having started this daily death data idea they are now hooked and we are bombarded with daily scary death figure in order to fuel the madness.… Read more »

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

easy mistake to make! we’ve all done it

what we need is what Sweden has

https://scb.se/hitta-statistik/statistik-efter-amne/befolkning/befolkningens-sammansattning/befolkningsstatistik/pong/tabell-och-diagram/preliminar-statistik-over-doda/

our weekly all cause mortality is screwed up for about 4 weeks due to Xmas

6
0
jos
jos
5 years ago
Reply to  Steve-Devon

Alarm is the whole point – at no point have they ever gone for reassurance because they know the truth is no more alarming than previous years ‘Elderly people dying of flu! An underfunded NHS getting overwhelmed!’ The true panic is being left out of the papers – see
off-guardian comments for a brilliant analysis of the US dollar being on the brink of collapse (middle of comments on the ‘I’m a covid denier’ article) – it’s the best explanation for what’s happening now with the fabricated pandemic in the world of interconnected currencies and economies and makes so much more sense than many of the other theories I’ve seen.

2
0
steve_w
steve_w
5 years ago

” In fact, the infection rate began to slowdown in the week after Christmas, as the graph from the ZOE Covid Symptom Study App shows.”

true – but the driver of the infection rate, the R value had actually peaked on the 17th December

the below is calculated directly from the Zoe data – Xmas has nothing to do with the R rate and neither do the restrictions (which we saw clearly in the March spike and decline)

R.png
Last edited 5 years ago by steve_w
7
0
popo says
popo says
5 years ago
Reply to  steve_w

So, another ‘self-limiting’ phenomenon – just like the March/April one. But they won’t have it.

2
0
steve_w
steve_w
5 years ago
Reply to  popo says

yes, a seasonal cycle – endemic now – nothing to do but get on with our lives

7
0
PatrickF
PatrickF
5 years ago

Britain maintains the worst Covid death rate in the world.
A sane person might conclude that Lockdowns, masks and vaccines don’t work.

64
0
JayBee
JayBee
5 years ago
Reply to  PatrickF

The UK (and the USA) was never and still isn’t suited and able to pull off a mitigation strategy.
Unlike Germany, it didn’t have tens of thousands of tracers already in place and its economy and society is just not made for that.
Like any other island or remote border (FIN, N) country, it could have pulled off a suppression strategy, but only in the beginning and with continued strict border closures and hotel qurantines, for good.
Now, it’s far too late and impossible to switch to that.
It and the USA would have done far, far better on every metric including Covid deaths, if it had stuck to keeping schools, the NHS and all businesses open, people unmasked and focussed on helping the
vulnerable and care homes instead.
Now, it (and the USA) is on the road to disaster, bankrupcy and Liberal Fascism.

15
0
Simon
Simon
5 years ago
Reply to  PatrickF

I pointed out to my Dad, whose not been sceptical or zealot (one of the masses I guess) at new year by phone, that nothing the government had done has worked if we’re in this mess now.

He paused and said, that’s right.

There are always more people thinking like this that don’t venture onto the internet like us. I know many more that think none of this works, they just don’t use forums or even the internet.

13
0

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