New Plot Twists Mean Lockdown Could be Renewed for Another Season

Official figures continue to show falling numbers of Covid cases and deaths. There were 333 Covid deaths announced yesterday, the lowest 24-hour toll since December 27th and a drop of 18% on the 406 last Monday. Any optimism, however, is to be kept firmly in check by the vaccine resistant South African variant. The Telegraph has more.
The Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine may be only 10% effective against the new South African variant, it has emerged, as experts warn that 147 UK cases could be the “tip of the iceberg”.
The results of a new study in South Africa show that the jab offers virtually no protection against mild to moderate illness, meaning it is likely to allow the virus to spread.
However, scientists believe the Oxford-designed jab, currently shouldering the bulk of the rollout burden in the UK, should protect against hospitalisation and death from the variant…
The full details came to light as UK ministers sought to bolster public confidence in the vaccine programme.
Boris Johnson said the Oxford vaccine would remain a “massive benefit” to the national effort, adding that medicine “is slowly getting the upper hand over the disease”.
Matt Hancock hosted yet another Downing Street press conference, in which he was joined by Deputy Chief Medical Officer Professor Jonathan Van-Tam, and by NHS England’s Medical Director for Primary Care Dr Nikki Kanani. While he offered a positive update on the rollout of vaccines and said “we’re turning a corner”, Hancock made it clear that the new variants mean this won’t be over any time soon.
“We mustn’t let a new variant undo all of the good work that the vaccine rollout is doing to protect people.
“Now, the first line of defence is to spot and suppress new variants aggressively wherever they’re found.
“Hence the tougher measures at the border and the firm action we’re taking in those small number of areas where variants of concern have been found in the community Including door-to-door communications, and enhanced testing and sequencing.
“At the same time, since the emergence of variants of concern late last year, we’ve been working on how vaccines can be used to tackle them.”
The Spectator‘s Katy Balls sums up the overall message of the conference as “Don’t Panic”.
With 147 confirmed cases of the South African variant so far identified in the UK, Van-Tam said the Kent variant remains the dominant threat and all vaccines are believed to be effective against the UK strain. He said there was “no reason to think that the South African variant will catch up or overtake our current virus in the next few months”.
The conference did not offer much in the way of substantial comment on the pathway out of lockdown restrictions, merely a warning against ambitious Summer holiday plans.
As for the future, neither Hancock nor Van-Tam was in the mood to offer specifics on the roadmap for easing the lockdown. The Health Secretary said it was too early to discuss relaxing exercise rules to allow for more people to exercise together. Meanwhile, JVT’s advice on summer holidays was simply the more ambitious the plan, the higher the chance of it being cancelled.
Naturally it was the danger presented by the new variant which dominated the reporting. Prompted by a BBC news report, one of our readers had this question:
In case you thought there might be cautious grounds for optimism that we might be gradually heaving our way towards the end of this crisis, the BBC was on hand yesterday to dash any hopes. The 1800 News on Radio 4 began with Boris Johnson’s optimism about vaccines but that mood couldn’t last.
The Science Correspondent, David Shukman, banged out a piece about the dangerous prospect of mutated variants racing ahead of vaccines, helped by countries that won’t be vaccinating until well into next year and by difficulties in getting other countries up to speed with genome analysis.
That’s all theoretically true of course, but it’s been true of all viruses since forever so it wasn’t exactly a revelation. However, the real purpose seems to have to been to inject a mood of complete pessimism and despair.
In the unlikely event any listeners were still holding onto some modicum of sanity after that, Shukman finished with the priceless: “And all the time the risk is that new variants will emerge that can evade the vaccines and cause harm before the drugs can be updated.”
It’s not clear why Shukman didn’t just say, “It’s all over people, you might as well give up now; everything you’ve done for the last year was a complete and utter waste of time because we’re sunk.”
In one sentence he’d managed to undermine completely the vaccine message by suggesting that they’re never going to catch up. Of course, he could have pointed out either that the vaccines might work, or that the virus might mutate into a contagious but relatively harmless form, which are equally possible. But that would be to miss the chance to be an apocalyptic doom-monger, wouldn’t it?
Good old BBC.
The Risk of Eternal Lockdown

With ongoing nervousness about relaxing restrictions, exacerbated by concerns over the new variants, Adam Wagner, a barrister at Doughty Street Chambers and an authority on lockdown rules, has written an article for UnHerd warning against the danger of everlasting lockdown. He begins by reminding us just what a momentous thing lockdown is.
Twelve months ago, the first two cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in the UK. Fifty days later, on March 23rd, the Prime Minister announced that he would “give the British people a very simple instruction – you must stay at home”. Three days after that, the first set of emergency lockdown regulations arrived. These were undoubtedly the most severe restrictions on liberty imposed in peacetime, and Health Secretary Matt Hancock reportedly described them as “Napoleonic”. “In lockdown”, he told the Cabinet, in a reversal of the usual principle of English law that whatever is not explicitly prohibited is permitted: “people would be forbidden from doing anything unless the legislation said, in terms, that they could.”
It is extraordinary that restrictions which a judge described as “possibly the most restrictive regime on the public life of persons and businesses ever”, could be made without prior Parliamentary scrutiny. But it took just 11 pages of law and one signature for Matt Hancock to impose the March 24th lockdown, which came into effect the moment he put down the pen.
Those 11 pages closed all non-essential businesses, meaning that people could only leave their homes if they had a “reasonable excuse”, and largely banned gatherings between people not of the same household. Any breaches could be punished. The police were also given power to take “such action as is necessary” to break up gatherings or ensure business closed.
Wagner asks if lockdowns can be justified, and finds it hard to answer. Even if some of the restriction are proportionate, he says, they cannot become permanent, for three key reasons.
First, some lockdown measures work but they have serious knock-on effects including a shrinking economy (which itself causes higher mortality), delayed cancer treatment and surgery. The move to online education has most severely affected those from lower socio-economic groups. While this doesn’t negate the need for restrictions, it illustrates how damaging they can be and why they must only be used for as long as necessary and no longer.
Second, the method by which lockdown has been imposed in England borders on anti-democratic. There may have been justification in March for using emergency procedures to bypass Parliament but there has not been since. The most severe legal restrictions on liberty require the gold standard of democratic accountability, not a rushed procedure which side-lines Parliament. This has likely led to illiberal outcomes, for example the explicit allowance for protest being removed in early December, meaning that it is unclear whether socially-distanced outdoor protests are a criminal offence or not…
Third, the lockdown laws themselves have become overly-complex, poorly communicated and almost impossible for a non-lawyer (including the police) to digest. Guidance and law have become elided by both politicians and public, leading to wrongful enforcement and widespread confusion. Then there are the exceptions. On one level, it is positive that exceptions have been added to allow for the many vicissitudes of human life, but they have been at the expense of simplicity.
He concludes:
Hard questions will need to be asked as to what to do next, and it will require a rights-based approach to resolve. It is essential that we don’t enter a semi-permanent state of emergency laws and basic rights switched on and off by the Government at will and without democratic scrutiny. Lockdowns may have been necessary, but we cannot be locked down forever.
Worth reading in full.
Do the Papers Have a Vested Interest in Going Easy on the Government?

The Conservative Woman has a must-read piece by writer Frederick Edward on the dramatic change that has taken place within the advertising industry over the past year. First, it tells of the shrinking trade that newspaper advertising it is getting from the companies that were its biggest customers.
According to reports, the industry-wide ad-spend for 2020 was down 14.5%: a decline of £3.6 billion. Some areas of advertising have witnessed complete destruction as the Government has clamped down on businesses’ ability to operate and has restricted civic freedoms.
The UK’s top advertisers, led by McDonald’s and Procter and Gamble, have slashed their budgets: why put adverts on the telly when your outlets are closed? A report from August 2020 states McDonald’s year-on-year advertising had already fallen by 97%. Even Amazon’s fell by 77% and Sky’s by 60%. Entertainment and leisure (-£207million) and travel and transport (-£138million), hit hardest by restrictions, saw the largest cuts.
Such reductions had a dramatic impact on companies reliant on them for their advertising revenue, namely newspapers.
Daily Mail and General Trust reported an advertising revenue fall of around 25% between September 2019 and September 2020; given that half this date range is pre-pandemic, the impact is likely greater still.
Fortunately for the industry there is one customer that has stepped in and kept the industry afloat.
Until 2020 the Government was not a major advertiser in newspapers. According to Newsworks, the marketing body for national newspapers, between February 1st, 2019 and January 31st, 2020, the Government was 30th on the list of UK’s spenders on newspaper advertising, shelling out £6.23 million over that one-year period (approximately 13% of HM Government’s advertising budget), a figure dwarfed by Amazon and Sky, which spent five times as much.
All that changed during the pandemic, when the Government became the nation’s largest advertiser across all media. Between March 23rd and June 30th, 2020, Public Health England’s advertising spend increased by 5,000 per cent (year-on-year), reaching £44 million in that three-month period.
Though less than a quarter of the Government’s total outlay for COVID-19 information and communication, the spending has proved significant enough for the newspaper industry to hail this continued Covid advice blitz as vital for its revival in 2021.
This market shift is not without consequences.
The Fourth Estate is supposed to hold the Government to account. It should be the newspapers’ responsibility to scrutinise the unprecedented state actions taken in response to the pandemic under the emergency powers of the Coronavirus Act, now twice extended, and bringing about the greatest loss of liberty in our country’s history.
When newspapers find themselves increasingly reliant on the largesse of the UK’s now-largest advertiser, can they be trusted to question robustly and independently the approach the Government has taken?
As Laura Perrins pointed out last week, the media rarely ask any tough questions. Pretty much every question they put is, why didn’t you lock down earlier, and why didn’t you lock down harder? Why didn’t you enact more draconian measures sooner?
Finally, the piece concludes:
It is nothing new that the media has a symbiotic relationship with Government. For journalists, it’s their need for access to information and promises of scoops; for the politicians, it’s their need for the platform to promote their policies or their personal profiles. But now the balance has changed. With the Government increasingly becoming the editors’ paymaster, paying to push their policies, where is the quid pro quo? What chance of these newspapers raising and ruthlessly pursuing the questions so urgently in need of asking, or indeed, of running a campaign against lockdown for example? A lot less likely is my guess.
Worth reading in full.
A Reminder From Sweden: There Is a Better Way

Cases are falling in the UK, which many will attribute to the beneficial effects of the Lockdown. It is timely then, that David Paton, a Professor of industrial economics at Nottingham University Business School and a member of HART, has written a piece in Spiked to remind us that the example of Sweden still shows that there might just have been a better way to respond to COVID-19. He opens with a crucial fact from the experience of Spring 2020.
The best way to trigger people on both sides of the lockdown debate is to mention Sweden. To some, it is a model of how to manage a pandemic without shutting down society for months on end. For others, refusing to implement lockdowns was a reckless strategy with deadly consequences.
When Sweden decided not to lockdown in March, we were told it would lead to nearly 100,000 deaths by July 1st. The actual total ended up being 5,490. Infections and deaths were falling from mid-April, pretty much at the same time as in most other European countries with strict lockdowns.
True, Sweden didn’t avoid a second wave, as many lockdown sceptics thought it would. But the restriction it imposed at the end of last year were far milder than those imposed in the UK and achieved similar results.
By December, death numbers were similar to those in April, leading to the Swedish Government finally deciding to impose more restrictions. These include limits on opening hours of bars and restaurants, closing upper-secondary schools (for pupils aged 16 and above), and recommending (but not mandating) masks on public transport.
The measures were still very modest in comparison with the restrictions and lockdowns imposed in most other European countries. Many were concerned that they would not be enough to stop the rise in infections. Indeed, governments across Europe assured their citizens that strict lockdowns were the only way to stop a surge in infections and to prevent health services being overwhelmed.
Yet from the end of December, Sweden has experienced the same steady decline in cases as elsewhere. Positive tests have decreased from a peak of 7,136 on 20 December (using the centred seven-day average) to the latest figure of 2,875. That’s a 60% decrease – almost exactly the same as we have seen in the UK.
Sweden did not get everything right. Much like the UK, the country failed to properly protect care home residents. But the fact that it is now in a similar situation is striking.
Sweden raises the possibility that had the UK relied more on guidelines and sensible safety measures, rather than enforced closures backed by criminal law, our hospitalisations and deaths would have peaked at a similar level, but without the terrible economic and social consequences of lockdowns. For some, that possibility is just too awful to contemplate.
Worth reading in full
Postcard From South Carolina

Today we’re publishing a postcard from Greenville, South Carolina USA from a Professor of Classics and long-time reader of Lockdown Sceptics. South Carolina is one of the good states, with the luck to have a robustly sensible Governor who hasn’t issued any stay-at-home orders since last Spring. Here is an extract:
Our city (with its own rules) has a ‘mask mandate’ of sorts. It is widely disregarded.
Since May, my wife and I do our daily 3.5-mile walk in our neighbourhood, without masks, meeting and passing many of our neighbours in the process. They are not wearing masks, either. When we decide to go out on the town, which we do several times a week, we walk downtown (eight blocks) passing some people wearing masks on the sidewalk and others not wearing masks. I guess the ratio of masks to not-masks is 30:70.
We dine out several times a week. In 2020 our self-indulgence came to seem to be a virtuous civic duty, keeping our favourite places open while many potential customers cower at home.
The drill: We walk to the door of the “Swordfight Cocktail Club” (excellent!) or “Jianna” (also, excellent… get the oysters). We don our masks. We approach the host and are walked eight feet to our table. We take our masks off and never put them on again until it is time to make the 30-second walk to the door.
We are known to the servers, managers, and bartenders. They are required to be masked by local civic ordinance, but they will come chat with us in our unmasked state.
We attended a New Year’s Eve party at our favorite bar. My wife and I, sitting at the bar, struck up a conversation with a lovely young couple next to us. At the end of the evening we all embraced upon saying goodnight. That brief moment of contact with friendly strangers was like the most heady wine.
So that was nice, but passing human contact should not be so remarkable. It should be the normal diet of a sane society.
In a recent press conference, our Governor (may he live forever) said, “Some states are forcing restaurants to close, and they are even telling people that they can’t go to church, if you can believe that! South Carolina is open for business.”
Worth reading in full.
Striking the Right Balance

We have a new piece today from historian and Lockdown Sceptics regular Guy de la Bédoyère. He looks at the growing polarisation in the lockdown debate, the dispiriting assumption that one side is all right, and the other all wrong, and, looking back at history, makes a plea for balance, and for the value of cooperating, communicating and pooling resources. Here are the opening paragraphs:
One of the most unedifying developments in the whole debate about lockdowns has been the descent into ever more polarised positions, especially the vilification of anyone deemed to be a dissenter about the efficacy of lockdowns. But it cuts both ways. Some who dispute lockdowns have been as intolerant of the other point of view.
Why is this? I think because as the crisis has deepened and lengthened, it has proved to be beyond any easy resolution. Lockdowns have worked in certain ways, but they certainly haven’t exterminated the virus and they aren’t sustainable. We have had three lockdowns, but they haven’t stopped a chronically high death rate. Non-lockdowns haven’t worked either. We can pick and choose our data, but almost every country has paid a price of sorts.
Now you can see the ever-mounting recriminations. The most ardent proponents of lockdowns, including those who were ambivalent at the start, blame the Government for not being quick enough, sustained enough, or committed enough, and anyone else for somehow being complicit in the deaths of Covid victims. Those most opposed to lockdowns are beside themselves with frustration at the mounting cost in other areas.
In short, this was and is a very complex problem that no single solution was ever going to tackle. As time has gone on, the complications have become ever more apparent.
Human beings spend their lives trying to solve problems, individually and collectively. We have achieved enormous successes. But a Stoic philosopher would tell you that the sum total of good and bad never changes. Every solution we devise creates new problems or reveals new problems. Heated homes keep us warm and comfortable and help us to live longer and healthier lives. The act of heating homes contributes to global warming which we are constantly told is a crisis so deep that it threatens our very existence.
Now we are told we must march towards the promised land of zero-carbon – a utopian vision of having our cake and eating it. Given the hundreds of thousands of years of human existence to date, you’d have thought we might have realised the choices we face are a little more complex than that. The truth is there are many ways to skin a cat, but it’s very easy to refuse to believe, having chosen one method, that there might be another solution.
Worth reading in full.
Back to Normal Campaign: 300,000 Postcards Delivered So Far…

Geoff Cox from Back to Normal has asked us to give the group another mention. He writes:
Back to Normal is a back to basics campaign which every lockdown sceptic can get involved with. Though we have a website and social media pages, our main target is to deliver one million postcards to households around the UK. We have already gone past 300,000 and now we need more postmen and women to boost deliveries. The postcards are free though we do appreciate a donation to our GoFundMe account. Door to door posting is a way to reach parts digital campaigns don’t. And we know the postcards are being read as we get a steady response from sympathisers (and critics). As a bonus, we are also able to put people in touch with other sceptics helping to keep our side sane! If you have contacted us before, please get in touch again and order another lot of postcards. If you are new, join in and make a difference.
You can follow us on Facebook here, on MeWe here, or get in touch through our website or by email. We now have a GoFundMe page to help with the cost of our campaign. We spend about 35p on each postcard and happily we have been overwhelmed with orders.
Round-up
- “Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics: Manufacturing the Crisis” – Very thorough deep dive into the Covid death stats by Simon Elmer at Architects for Social Housing
- “NHS spends £30 million on preparing staff for inquests” – A Telegraph investigation into the extraordinary sums of money that the NHS spends on legal advice
- “GCSE pupils have suffered the most during lockdown says report that warns of a ‘lost generation’” – The Daily Mail reports on the findings of the largest review to date of school children in the COVID-19 era. They reveal increased anxiety levels, lower wellbeing, and lower learning scores
- “Vaccine hesitancy among UK minorities forces COVID-19 inoculation centre to close early three days last week” – RT reports that that John Scott Vaccination Centre in Hackney, which caters for patients at 40 doctors’ surgeries, reduced its hours due to “really low patient uptake”
- “More PPE that can’t be used by the NHS” – The Good Law Project has details of another load of Government money spent on PPE for the NHS which in the end could not be used
- “Shot in the arm – Can leisure and hospitality require a vaccine to access services?” – An explainer from Lexology on the law regarding leisure establishments requiring customers or staff to be vaccinated
- “If we can’t afford lockdown, what chance have the world’s poor?” – The UK has been able to engage in costly measures to mitigate the economic fallout from the pandemic, but there is no such intervention for the worlds poorest, writes Sonia Elijah in the Conservative Woman
- “Have my friends been taken over by aliens?” – Keith Joyce, writing for the Conservative Woman, wonders how it is all that all his friends have been “suckered into fearing a virus which is dangerous only to a tiny minority, and into believing that they must have a novel type of vaccine in an early experimental stage”
- “America’s two largest states are fighting COVID-19 differently” – The Economist puzzles over the cases of Texas and California. America’s two most populous states have been quite different in their responses to COVID-19 but not so much in their ‘results’
- “How a virus was used to transform a free country” – Writing on the AIER blog, Sandy Szwarc examins how COVID-19, or rather the response to it, is leading the US down a dangerous path
- “I can’t stop wondering about COVID-19” – Donald J Boudreaux, on the AIER blog, wonders what is it about COVID-19 that causes sensible and rational people to lose their judgement
- “Letter from Victoria, capital of authoritarian Australia” – A letter to UnHerd from Melbourne-based writer Edward Cranswick, warning the UK against looking to Victoria for guidance in its response to COVID-19
- “Maximum Collaboration” – A deepl translation of the Welt report on the collusion between scientists and the federal Ministry of the Interior over dramatized ‘worst case scenario’. See also, this summary on twitter
- “The Myth of St Jacinda” – Excellent piece by Oliver Hartwich in the Spectator about the toothy tyrant’s feet of clay
- “Boris Johnson wants to free the long-suffering British public… SAGE won’t let him” – Trevor Kavanagh in the Sun with a flattering analysis of the Prime Minister’s hesitancy
- “Books to cheer you up: from P.G. Wodehouse to Kingsley Amis” – Some great recommendations from Alexander Larman in the Spectator if you’re looking for a bit of light lockdown reading
- A dog-walker in Canada sums up the absurdity of the ongoing restrictions in a two-minute clip
Theme Tunes Suggested by Readers
Nine today: “The Needle and the Damage Done” by Neil Young, “Madness” by Madness, “Running Out of Hope” by Simon Brown, “Tomorrow Never Knows” by the Beatles, “Liberty Song” by the Levellers, “If You Tolerate This Your Children Will be Next” by Manic Street Preachers, “Citizen Erased” by Muse, “Bullets” by Editors and “Oh To Be Young” (geddit?) by Logan Alexandra.
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 Lockdown Sceptics here.
Stop Press: Are you being ‘coronazoned’, or have you just been ‘lockblocked’? Language learning app Babbel has found that Covid and lockdown restrictions have given rise to a whole new vocabulary of dating, according to FoxNews.
Sharing Stories
Some of you have asked how to link to particular stories on Lockdown Sceptics so you can share it. To do that, click on the headline of a particular story and a link symbol will appear on the right-hand side of the headline. Click on the link and the URL of your page will switch to the URL of that particular story. You can then copy that URL and either email it to your friends or post it on social media. Please do share the stories.
Social Media Accounts
You can follow Lockdown Sceptics on our social media accounts which are updated throughout the day. To follow us on Facebook, click here; to follow us on Twitter, click here; to follow us on Instagram, click here; to follow us on Parler, click here; and to follow us on MeWe, click here.
Woke Gobbledegook

We’ve decided to create a permanent slot down here for woke gobbledegook. Today, we bring you the Teach for All Network Equity Book Discussion Group in the U.S. There are in fact two discussion groups.
How To Be An Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi
This group is open to everyone in the network. There are two groups, and each meets seven times. We ask that you join this club only if you can commit to at least six sessions in a group.
Joining the second group, however, appears to be for whites only – all in the name of anti-racism, you understand.
Me & White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad
This group is open to anyone in the network who holds white privilege, is visually identifiable as white, or who passes for white, in order to allow for white people to engage in a set of work specific to their identity. By Saad’s definition and recommendation, this can include “persons who are biracial, multiracial, or white-passing People of Colour who benefit under systems of white supremacy from having lighter skin color than visibly Brown, Black, or Indigenous people.
Register here if you fancy a crash course in woke gobbledegook.
Stop Press: Over on Spiked, Tim Black has written a review of David Baddiel’s new book Jews Don’t Count. It is, he says a “short sharp attack on ‘progressive’ attitudes towards anti-Semitism” and a “compelling polemic“.
Stop Press 2: There are some good stories in the latest Wokeyleaks column from Spectator U.S.A., but none more surprising than the leak from an aerospace and defence company.
Of all the Wokeyleaks we’ve received, perhaps the most jaw-dropping is from an employee at one of the largest arms companies in the world – Northrop Grumman. Northrop has made billions supplying much of the hardware for America’s invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan; it also supplies training to Saudi Arabian forces that, according to the UN, have been perpetrating war crimes in Yemen. But don’t worry about any of that because apparently Northrop Grumman has created an internal social justice portal for its employees, training them in how to avoid “microaggressions in the workplace” and “unconscious bias and microinequities”.
Stop Press 3: Our favourite American comedian, Ryan Long, has a new video out about the Church of Woke.
“Mask Exempt” Lanyards

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.
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.
Stop Press: A story in the Dunfermline Press about a Rosyth litter pick provides evidence of the continuing impact of disposable masks on the environment.
Environmental champions have raised fears over heath and safety after a face mask was found every 60 metres on a litter pick in Rosyth.
Volunteers from the Fife Street Champions group have revealed the scale of discarded face masks in our communities and in December alone have picked up more than 3,400 in total.
Nicola Donald, from Camdean, joined the group last year and highlighted there were particular problems around the Sainsbury’s at Unwin Avenue.
She told the Press: “I collected 51 masks just in a couple of hours on December 28th and counted one every 60 metres.”
Stop Press 2: Executive traveller reports some good news for airline passengers, provided they can pay premium prices.
Now there’s at least one more reason to fly in business class or first class, especially with Cathay Pacific: the airline will exempt passengers in those premium cabins from wearing a face mask when they recline their seat to a fully-flat position.
Cathay Pacific’s reasoning is that the high enclosures surrounding its business class seats and first class suites, along with the greater degree of personal space and thus the distance between travellers, helps combat the airborne spread of coronavirus between passengers…
Qatar Airways also permits its business class passengers to wear a mask “onboard at their own discretion, as they enjoy more space and privacy”, especially in the airline’s Qsuites, whereas economy passengers “are required to wear their face shield visor in addition to their face mask or covering throughout the flight, except when they are served their meals or drinks”.
The Great Barrington Declaration

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.
Scottish Church leaders from a range of Christian denominations have launched legal action, supported by the Christian Legal Centre against the Scottish Government’s attempt to close churches in Scotland for the first time since the the Stuart kings in the 17th century. The church leaders emphasised it is a disproportionate step, and one which has serious implications for freedom of religion.” Further information available here.
There’s the class action lawsuit being brought by Dr Reiner Fuellmich and his team in various countries against “the manufacturers and sellers of the defective product, PCR tests”. Dr Fuellmich explains the lawsuit in this video. Dr Fuellmich has also served cease and desist papers on Professor Christian Drosten, co-author of the Corman-Drosten paper which was the first and WHO-recommended PCR protocol for detection of SARS-CoV-2. That paper, which was pivotal to the roll out of mass PCR testing, was submitted to the journal Eurosurveillance on January 21st and accepted following peer review on January 22nd. The paper has been critically reviewed here by Pieter Borger and colleagues, who also submitted a retraction request, which was rejected in February. UPDATE: The retraction request has been rejected.
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…

In this week’s episode of London Calling, Toby compares James Delingpole to an angry drunk picking fights with all his mates in the pub after last orders have been called. Inevitably, he calls Toby a “cuck”. After the usual jousting, they discuss the new variants, the zero-Covid cult, the Dig, News of the World, Losing Alice and, of course, Bernard Cornwell’s Grail quartet.
You can listen to this week’s podcast here and subscribe to it on iTunes here.









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Woo Hoo!!
This seems to be turning into “Lockdown News Roundup“. org
Or to be more exact “Good News About The Vaccine Rollout ” dot org
Or “My Old Boss Boris isn’t that bad really ” dot org
How about Toby organising legal protests via this site.
No chance of that it would threaten his chance of a knighthood or a place in the house of lords. He makes no secret of his desire to obtain such things.
What will you do to celebrate the one year anniversary?
https://www.youtube.com/post/UgxXbodHvYJnrdPCBlB4AaABCQ
Celebrate??
The things I’d like to do to the instigators of mockdown would be highly illegal even without the Covid “regulations”
Nothing would be too gruesome for me.
Definitely not comply! Thankfully things aren’t too asinine around here. We avoid big box stores out of principle anyway, plus I have another reason to avoid them: the likelihood of a mask nazi appearing is higher. I’m afraid if I had one of those mask nazis get in my face things might get really ugly. And I really don’t want to go to jail for beating the living piss out of someone.
Stella
Sadly 3rd Judy
Scottish police arrest & charge man over ‘offensive’ tweet about late
Captain Sir Tom Mooreold man. That’s even before the Hate (free speech) crime bill, has passed.What about the statues, weren’t they offend to be pulled down?
The zombies, led by Archcovidian Dustbin Jellybaby, will call for statues of Saint Captain Dupe. The police will beat up some sceptics on the grounds that they were not calling for statues of Old St Dupe.
The BLMs, led by Archcovidian Dustbin Jellybaby, will then go out in their thousands and pull the statues down because Old Dupe was a white male supremacist.
The police will put on three layers of face knickers, kneel to the rioters, and go and beat up a café owner
Superb, Annie.
As some wag wrote in comments under the article: “time to defund the police!”
Nothing waggish about that, long overdue.
Man in his 70s collapses and dies just 25 minutes after receiving COVID-19 vaccine in NYC – as officials say he ‘didn’t have allergic reaction’ This will be a hard one to fudge.
They’ll find some way to hide it and discredit anyone who says otherwise it
I imagine he threw a clot.
Hopefully there’ll be a post mortem. The Americans are much more keen to get their compensation than we are.
There’s no compensation to be had. The manufacturers were granted blanket immunity from lawsuits, as they are with all vaccines in the US. You can try to get compensation through their vaccine court, but almost nobody wins these cases. Despite the extremely low win rate, they’ve paid out over $4 billion since 1986 which is the tip of the iceberg with respect to vaccine injuries.
go down the criminal path, not the civil one. however agree it is probably useless as the judiciary is bought and paid for along with the rest of the establishment
Why is having an allergic reaction ‘fudgeable’, it’s still the vaccine and it’s still death.
If anyone had told me a year ago we’d be forced to wear face diapers and close many businesses and have personal freedoms restricted in many parts of the world, I would not have believed them. Until last year I thought the Agenda 21/30 was a conspiracy theory!
And that Magna Carta, The Bill of Rights, Parliament were guarantees of some sort of our inalienable rights the basis of a civilised life that we have believed essential since time immemorial. The most shocking thing of many to me.
Going outside a crime, your mouth and nose taped up, your children denied education, non-stop terror and hate propaganda and persecution of dissidents, human rights abolished, travel illegal, forbidden to see your family and friends, old people kept in perpetual solitary confinement, shops boarded up, all leisure facilities closed, libraries inaccessible, no society, no culture, churches boasting how they keep you safe by denying God, forced administration of useless snake oil, rabid worship of a failed medical shambles, human beings replaced by gibbering zombies… it’s still hard to believe it’s all real.
Thanks Annie. It’s always good to be reminded of reality.
And all this for a run of the mill respiratory disease.
Brilliant…and a good antidote to those who say ‘its not like its the Soviet Union’!
Even worse times are coming. The monsters running this shit show just can’t afford to leave a section of the public unvaccinated. This would give their evil game away, as the vaccinated carry on dropping like flies. Pressure to partake of the lethal injections will become intense.
The cabinet is divided on the issue of consent. That’s reassuring, isn’t it? Half the cabinet are OK with denial of fundamental rights.
Worrying indeed, but in retaliation I’m not OK with any of the cabinet.
Doesn’t surprise me in the least….thought it would be the whole cabinet of these shits.
I agree…as the song doesn’t go…..things can only get worse.
They will come for our children with the vaccines, just as they came at them with masks. Time to prepare for this, Us for Them?
Hundreds of thousands of us feel like this is the end of the world at the moment. We are desperate to be proved wrong.
It’s looking less and less likely that we’ll be proved wrong.
The depopulation theory has a lot going for it, though for some cognitive dissonance will make it difficult to grasp and they will continue to flounder around worrying over issues that only meant to distract.
Depopulation explains most thing, including the avalanche of lies, the apparent stupidity, the fake science and the inconsistency, all of which have shrouded the ludicrous Covid event since day one.
It is the worst scenario, but it has become far too obvious to ignore. If we don’t know or accept, what the government is really up to, then we will have absolutely no chance of putting end to its outrageous intentions.
Don’t worry about depopulation. When this rubbish ends there will be a colossal baby boom.
Which is the very last thing that this crazily overpopulated planet needs. But the idea that lockdowns can, or are intended to, solve the overpopulation problem is ludicrous.
Worth pointing out that there is something like a million times the resources that the current world population requires (air, water, land etc.)
If they were properly distributed, there would be plenty for everyone. And if we ever got to a stage where there was a genuine shortage centuries from now (we won’t on current trends, the annual per centage increase of world population – if anyone actually understands these things – has been decreasing since the 60’s), by then we would likely be able to utilise resources elsewhere in the solar system – and possibly beyond – quite effectively.
What really worries me is the wars and extreme government that is likely to follow from this shamble. Now there’s real problems.
No, I’m not a Malthusian…
A perfect summary of this sad new world.
It really is starting to get to me. Can one stay in such an environment?
Marry me, Annie! My kind of girl.
Alas, I am spoken for! But thanks.
You are not actually forced to wear the nappies. I never have and nobody has said a word.
Nor have I. My score so far is one squat, venomous little she-zombie, and our horrible rector who gibbered on at me in the face of the whole maskoid congregation.The she-zombie was mere vermin, but the rector is a traitor to God and I shall never enter that church again, living or dead.
when my mum tells the mostly aged congregation at her [catholic] church that she’s not having the vaccine [in response to their enquiries: it’s what passes for small talk nowadays] she is met with looks of blank incomprehension and utter confusion. they simply have no idea where she could be coming from.
It never goes past beyond some people that there are reasons for going against the grain.
That’s why they’re sheep or in this case zombies.
Your mother is far from being alone, similar levels of stupidity abound where ever you go. I expect the vaccines to fix this problem and it seems they are off to a flying start.
Looks like irony is a lost sense.
I’ve just had a similar discussion with a coworker. Educated and intelligent but swallowed the Covid scam hook line and sinker and will get the vaccine soon. Wears a mask by herself.
My questioning and suggesting there may something off with the official narrative was met with the blank stare of the indoctrinated
No hope for these people and perhaps the depopulators are right, these brain dead people really are just clogging up the planet. Of course, I don’t wish upon anyone the slow painful death, that Uncle Bill’s special brews will be bringing, Mostly though, they will have only themselves to blame.
Don’t worry the underground church is developing where face nappies are exempt, hugging and singing loudly are encouraged and freedom to worship and live in the way God created us expected.
Please tell me where?! I can’t face going to mine and sitting in a muzzle – it feels like kow-towing to the Prince of Darkness.
As this is being watched by the 77th brigade, online is probably not the place to share such info. What area are you in though?
North London
I echo your feelings on masks, that’s what led me to write this poem. WHAT WOULD JESUS DO? Would Jesus stay in lockdown? Would Jesus hide away? Would Jesus visit those alone If He were here today? Would Jesus wear a mask When He goes to get some bread? Would He stare with hollow eyes, Or would He smile instead? Would Jesus jump away When a person walks too near? Would He walk across the road, Or would He show no fear? But it’s easy to be Jesus, He’s safe, for He’s God’s Son, He’s protected by His Father But He’s not the only one. Not one of us can die Before the Father calls us home, For we are His precious children, We’re not left here all alone. Should we do what Jesus did? Should we visit those alone? Or should we stay away from them And leave them on their own? Should we cover up our face Because we’re told we must? Or should we smile and talk about The God who we can trust? Should we meet up as a church? Should we sing His praise? Should we hide behind a mask? Join in with this new… Read more »
Amen.
I’m so sad people can’t understand this.
Jesus was not a Christian and would never be in this situation as you beautifully put it in your first 3 stanzas.Unfortunately, you then mentioned God and religion which will have caused many to stop reading.
That’s exactly what it us.
To drive the message home, our bishop forbade the lighting of candles.
…because that’s what it is
I refuse to bow down to the god of health and safety, with Matt Hancock as their Archbishop. I have worshipped outside with friends, singing loudly and mask free, we’ve met in our barn with friends, in our garden with friends and we have more plans for the future. We see this situation as it unfolds, making following Christ, as the Bible tells us to, a criminal offence. God moved us to the country a year and a half ago. But God is gathering together people here and people in pockets all over the nation and the world, people want to worship in Spirit and in TRUTH. God’s people cannot be silenced. It says in His Word that “if these [people] keep silent, the stones will cry out [in praise]!”
I have heard that Chinese Christians are preparing information packs for Western Christians to help us prepare the underground church.
People must know that you exempt yourself if you are “severely distressed”. If anyone reading this wears a mask anywhere, you are a traitor or to the LS cause.
my total mask wearing time was 10 minutes, at a railway station, way back when I think it was that railway station, not the government, making it mandatory. it was weird AF. I have never worn one since.
When the mask regulations were first proposed, I asked about mask use at the local train station. The ticketman stated that train companies would not enforce use (correct legal position) and that a TfL/railway policeman may query the issue at the exit gate (in London for me).
A lot of the grief is caused by jobsworths who think they know the law and abuse their power. This ambiguity has been deliberately encouraged by the mix of law and guidance.
This!!!
Half the problems are precisely these sort of people. They’re happy to abuse whatever little power they have.
Don’t forget too those businesses especially small ones who have a death wish by saying “No mask, no entry.” It’s akin to the signs from the bad old days saying “No blacks, no dogs, no Irish.”. They deserve to go bust.
Strangely enough it is bakeries where we have had a bit of hassle, everywhere else fine..
I’ve gathered health food shops tend to be amongst the most problematic. Certainly Go Mango (in Cardigan) and the Glebelands Farm Shop (near Cardigan) are positively paranoid. Also problematic is the health food shop in Newport, Pembrokeshire.
Although there were never any signs saying “No blacks, no dogs, no Irish.” It’s one of these historical myths that won’t go away.
Wrong, such signs certainly existed.
Keep that comparison, it will come in useful at Nuremberg 2, along with ‘Juden unverwünscht’.
Tesco are a prime example and I assume they are looking to downsize their bloated outfit.
About 10 minutes for me too, on just one occasion, last October when I went to a jazz club in London. The door person didn’t regard my scarf as adequate and provided me with one of these blue things. She was quite pleasant and persuasive, and I wasn’t going to throw away the cost of my advance ticket and journey by walking away. So I wore the blue thing until I bought a drink, which I then spun out for the whole of the gig. At the end I briefly put on the blue thing again to go to the toilet and to leave the premises.
As for my scarf: on my occasional train journeys I wrap it round the lower part of my face when I get on, then find a quiet seat where I can let it slip a bit. Food and drink is helpful here too.
Traitor
The government, and the Labour opposition, are the real traitors for me. A lot of people are being put in very difficult situations, or facing impossible choices, and this should never have happened. I’ve no plans to wear a face coverings, but people may oppose this shambles in whatever way they can – or they may be victims of the biggest propaganda campaign of all time, after many years of an education system that has failed to teach many people to think critically. (Thinking about it now, one might wonder if this was deliberate).
That’s unfair. Sometimes you need access to a service and can’t get it without a mask. See my earlier post regarding A&E
Some people have genuine mental health conditions or other problems e.g. autism that means that they have to avoid confrontation, so wear a mask. This was me up until the end of last year. As I posted at the start of the year, my anger has now overtaken my severe anxiety and autism fears and I have not worn one all year. It is adding to my problems, but I will fight these bastards all the way.
Well done!
My concern is that if severe distress is our reason for not masking up, will it soon be a reason, if you use the same logic, to call us mentally unstable for refusing the vaccine and thus vaccinate us without our permission?
Your lack of logic is astounding.
Unfortunately the government lacks logic as well.
My total of masking to date has consisted of a dash from the dentists reception door to the room itself and back again. The second time I visited the dentist during this I told them I was exempt and that was accepted. I have been prevented from entering in a few shops – duly going to be boycotted by me for rest of my life – but, by and large, no problem and I’ve been fine with the chain shops (so Tesco and W H Smith and Boots and I can manage). Been “asked” by assistants in a few shops – and said I was exempt and they left me to get on with my shopping there okay. So literally about 3 minutes of mask-wearing during the endless “3 weeks” of Lockdown that have now gone on about 11 months to date.
Once for me. Before the lockdown but while hysteria was building, visiting an old man in hospital.
Fair enough I thought. But the staff forgot to tell me to take the stuff off before I left the room and deposit it in the bin. So I wandered out to the nurses station fully garbed.
Are they still doing that today or are they wearing the same mask from bed to bed?
People must know the law of harassment, 1997 – if anyone asks you twice, they are committing a criminal offence.
I’ve worn a mask exactly once, at the doctors office. Where it almost made sense. ALMOST. If I had been there for cold symptoms. Which I wasn’t. I needed a tetanus shot cause I stepped on a rusty nail and hadn’t had a shot in 15 years…
I’ve not had any remarks for months now but it was horrible at the beginning. Hence why I’ve boycotted my local M&S despite the apology and compensation from the manager and Head Office, I couldn’t bring myself to relieve the bullying and I fear that I would not be able to resist being violent towards the woman who bullied me.
I had the unfortunate experience of needing A&E yesterday. NO entry without a mask exemptions included. I’m exempt but managed to wear one for 2 hours before it got too much. On ripping it off and stating I was on the verve of a panic attack I had a visor literally rammed on to my head. I won’t be going into an NHS hospital again. I’d rather self diagnose or go private. The distress was worse than the pain of a broken thumb.
I’d sue them, it’s the only language they understand. Forcible intervention like that sounds like assault. The evidence from 20, 30, 40 … yrs ago is that masks make little difference.
I had wondered if what she did constituted assault. I will look onto that today. I am certainly making a formal complaint at the very least. She had a student in the room too, so I have a witness.
I’m sure it qualifies as assault.
Masks don’t work, rather like the NHS itself.
I wonder if one solution would be for people to go ahead and have the panic attacks? Not a lot of fun for the sufferer, granted, but would make the point very clearly.
Bedlam Revisited.
Like you, I have never partaken of the dubious pleasure of inhaling dangerous mask particles and recycling my own exhaust and have never been reproached for my bare faced cheeks. My wife is of similar mind, though she has been asked by members of the public on two occasions why she was maskless. She told both of these people to mind their own effing business and they left it at that.
My workplace has mandated them. I work from Home as much as possible and wear them nowhere else. While at work I hide in a conference room as much as I can…
If you like thrillers & of strong enough constitution not to be offended by historical woke crimes. Look up Myron Fagan. & or Dr Richard Day – New Order of Barbarians Is this a case of reality copying fiction, or conspiracy theory becoming fact. Were they being truthful or did someone hijack their script?
Myron Fagan is a must listen, he is literally describing 2020 back in 1967, he uses outdated terms that are considered taboo now eg. “negros” but it was 1967! Not even he knew that he was describing woke culture.
Just ignore the illuminati references. Myron Fagan exposes the Illuminati/CFR [1967]
I’ve not worn a mask yet: they make me feel as though I’m being suffocated and panicky so I class myself as exempt. However I’m pregnant again and have to see the midwife …genuinely torn about what to do. The judgement you get for claiming exemption is not something I want while trying to build rapport with my midwife. Contemplating one of those utterly ridiculous face shields. Argh. Should I just brazen it out??
I would just go in bare faced with a lanyard. Last year I went for a mammogram without a mask. The nurse got me a ridiculous visor but I later took that off as well. I have been to several other medical appointments bare faced. Just do it! You don’t want to be stressed with a horrible mask on when pregnant. I tried a mask last March and felt panicky so that was that. Good luck
Your baby needs oxygen. See that s/ he gets it. Don’t let anybody stop you.
I’m obviously not the only one with insomnia!
The posters from different time zones abroad overlap with the British early birds. We provide a 24-hour non-stop service, if you can guess the correct moment to jump from the previous day’s bulletin to the new one.
Haha yes typically that’s somewhere between 10:30 and 11 pm central time for North America and sometimes I manage to look at the perfect time
I must admit to cheating a bit sometimes. 🙂
It seems to me the silver linings about the abject failure of the misnamed AZ vaccine (and perhaps others, who knows, too early to tell) is that surely the idea of a vaccine passport is rendered ludicrous. That said the stupider the idea the more likely implentation seems to be a guiding principle of this government.
The idea of a vaccine is rendered ludicrous.
99.95% recovery rate; 99.9% for under 70s. How can a vaccine affect that?
The passports are only using vaccination as a pretext. It’s about surveillance.
Identity cards by another name
The last item in Round-up is ‘Viva Frei’ David Freiheit much more at https://vivabarneslaw.locals.com highly recommended. Lawyer, ice fisher, vlogger, all round good egg and carer to rescue dogs. He and Robert Barnes help to make sense of what on earth is happening in USA and Canada.
Barnes is a funny and very clever guy.
They both are, their regular Sunday/Monday night 2 hour chats are a treat, comfort and consolation to the bewildered gentle folk of Olde England (one at least).
Bums away!
How is the airport prison scheme going?
The most popular president in history
Joe and Jill Bidenget BOOED by Super Bowl fans during pre-game video message to honor the 463,000 killed by COVIDHow dumbed-down have people become?!
Some claimed the crowd was booing at the Bidens and not the moment of silence.
Surely not!!
That front picture almost forced my breakfast back up. Those two lying vermin love this and don’t try to conceal it. I am not a violent person but those two above anybody install violent desires. Horrible, horrible individuals.
Yesyesyes. Let’s have some pictures of human beings. Yeadon, for starters.Or anything that doesn’t fill us with murderous nausea.
The pair of them look like they are trying to suppress a smirk all the time.
Odious overpromoted individuals.
How can Hancock order us about,he looks like a kid who would get bullied at school.
HandsonCock wasn’t bullied enough methinks. Over promoted milk monitor who was denied being a prefect because no one liked him, not even the teachers
He probably was bullied. Now he’s seeking revenge.
I could do serious damage to them, given the opportunity.
I’ve been perusing the SAEs from the US system VAERS. It’s much better than the UK one, unsurprisingly, as it is needed by proper lawyers, (rather than the rank losers we seem to have in the UK), to win some proper money.
Firstly, rather touchingly I notice a couple of extremely old folks are clearly using vaccination to euthanise themselves and I’m rather in awe of the HCWs who are helping them to a quick end. One old chap starved his 99 (!) year old self for a full week before the vaccine, and conked pretty much the same day. So clever and dignified in a system pitched against you.
SAE? Self addressed envelope?
That’s right. To BBC at W1A 1AA.
Severe Adverse Event. I’ll make sure I’m using the correct term.
Thanks.
It’s a habit of mine from sitting on committees.
Well as long as you understand that we get a lot of entries and we might not be able to return your drawing at the end of the competition, but we do look at every one.
Good memories.
😂
Stamped addressed envelope. You pay.
Of course. Too early.
But also is anyone else noticing that for 2 different technologies, the AZ and the mRNA both seem to be having rather similar adverse reactions? Which makes me wonder if we are be witnessing the effect of the spike protein, because that’s quite probably the only thing they have in common. (I’ll check the ingredients if I have time).
I don’t tend to watch much Judy Mikovitz because she’s scarily in the ball, but on something I saw in the good old days of YouTube, before censorship become even more rife, she referenced the ease with which vaccines become contaminated with debris from the lab. So I’m wondering.. are some of the mRNA vaccines contaminated with a Coronavirus and so stimulating an instant immunopathy (as per the pulmonary immunopathy outline in that medical report whose damning conclusion was that a SARS vaccine would likely prime its recipient to suffer an immune cascade)?
I could see how the AZ one would as it has an analogue of Covid-19, and there’s never any shortage of “wild” coronaviruses to set off a reaction. But how is the mRNA one doing it?
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22536382/
Don’t quite know what you’re on about.That’s why I’ve liked the comment – you have forced me to learn more!
I like the comment about not watching Judy Mikovits because she’s scarily on the ball. Just like I can’t watch Bhakdi, Sukared, Wodarg, Cahill, Buttar and even Vernon Coleman any more. Support them here: https://worlddoctorsalliance.com/contact/
Dr Vernon Coleman broke down the other night. Sobbing uncontrollably.
That poor guy! Nothing wrong with his mind – in fact it was clearly working very well, but handicapped by occupying a 99 year old body. RIP.
By Jonathan Barr Who is, Jonathan Barr, is he really a lockdown sceptic?
I suspect he is a double agent
Not sure about that, but he spends to much time being even handed & neutral. It’s as if he doesn’t really have any investment in anti-lockdown scepticism at all.
No passion at the massive injustice that is taking place.No analysis either.Uk column pointed out that the government were the biggest spender in advertising last year.Its very old news.
Also,according to the governments own figures only 150 people are known to be infected with the SA variant.
And he talks waves and spikes. Jonathan, please speak English, not Newspeak.
Ungood!
I am sure that some people here are infiltrators. Change agents. Trying to steer the narrative in another direction. Covid19 is a hoax. End of story. Everything connected to it is fraudulent and has been demonically manipulated. It’s disgusting. Next stop Nuremberg. Every damn one of them.
Tim Spector getting a lot of grief for his comments over the weekend
https://twitter.com/timspector/status/1358853553683578883
he claims he was taken out of context – but I think his comments that ‘masks and social distancing will carry on for years because they are no cost’ mark him out as just another oddball public health fanatic who neither knows nor cares about human rights – he just sees us as numbers on his spreadsheet. His mum should throw him out
See this is exactly what pisses me right off about Spector and his ilk. This is why I will not take part in passive monitoring and balked at sending him an email to point out that in Lincolnshire (at least) COVID-19 had been circulating well ahead of December 2019.
What the fuck makes people like him think they get to choose? Is he some kind of Svengali getting to choose how/when we get to live our lives? No he fucking isn’t! He’s a foot solider from academia. He should bloody know his place.
Which really gives credence to the Bill Gates theorists because if he doesn’t have delusions of grandeur, then he actually must be part of a cabal of people pulling the strings from Imperial , who really actually do have the power to distaste how/when we go back. And then Johnson really is a puppet ruler, and we really are all screwed unless we passively or actively resist.
But what frustrates me most of all is just how many LOSERS are cluttering up academia devaluing real research by faking it, at a time when for the safety of the country, we need real, impartial and gold-standard analysis.
… in Lincolnshire (at least) COVID-19 had been circulating well ahead of December 2019
Do you have any evidence for this? I strongly suspect it went through here (SW Devon) in December-January 2019/20, but can’t point to any direct evidence in support.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8715661/Pictured-British-grandfather-84-died-Covid-19-having-caught-December.html
Other articles have also appeared in Kent newspapers of families who were ill around Nov/Dec 19 and have since tested positive for antibodies. It’s certainly been in Kent since Dec 19.
Thanks – in my view, the balance of evidence for it being around early has gone from tentative to compelling. But no one wants to talk about it.
Put me down for Merseyside end of Jan 20, went right through a local hospital staff.
Did subsequent covid waves appear there? They haven’t done much down here – another reason why I think it went through here early.
In the summer of 2019 the military games took place in China and many athletes returned home with flu like symptoms in September. I also believe many countries in Europe discovered covid in the sewage from about this time.I believe the epi-centre for covid in Europe was northern Italy where a large Chinese community live and work.I believe covid is endemic in China and as been for some years which explains why they rates of covid is some thirty times lower than ours.
Yes, the cumulative circumstantial evidence looks compelling.
See above. Just because you don’t agree with someone doesn’t make them a loser. If he’d been running this rather than Imperial ( he’s from Kings College Hospital) the last year would have been massively more proportionate.
It’s the same with Boris. Whenever he gives a speech he talks about lockdown essentially being “inconvenient”. These people have no conception at all about cost, to businesses and of course cancelled and missed medical care yes, but also mentally.
Neil Oliver made a great comment the other day. Something like “nobody who is warm, will ever understand those who are cold”.
Solzhenitsyn. Oliver is a good advocate for sanity and wisdom
“Everyone is equally free to sleep under a bridge. Some chose to and some do not” is the mentality.
“No cost” is a concept that falls at the first hurdle anyway – ie re masks. What about all the health and looks problems they create? – or is treating them something that no-one anywhere (either the person concerned or our NHS) has to bear?
He says on Twitter that all he meant was that large events can’t take place ‘without regulations’ as we need to learn to live with endemic Covid. Firstly, Covid will only be minimally harmful and so should not be used as an excuse for any kind of restrictive regulation; and second he clearly has no idea at all of the economic cost of regulating large gatherings, which essentially means fewer people in the same space or the same people in more space. Concerts, shows, exhibitions etc will therefore be far more costly to attend and as a result many will not survive, so it will NOT be merely a matter of applying a few regulations. On the other hand it will be a more comfortable experience for those wealthy enough to go. The elite wins again.
his backtrack was a bit pathetic. My issue with him is
1 – ‘masks and social distancing will carry on for years because they are no cost’
a ludicrous statement that can only have been made by a psycopath
2 – ‘restrictions’ – who do they think they are? where is the debate about risk and freedom. It is now assumed that in order to ‘save’ some people, my rights don’t exist
When his party loses support in polls he’ll change his mind. Teresa May has more principles.
Yup, he has form on this – got quite a backlash on twitter a couple of weeks ago when he agreed with someone suggesting outdoor masking. He was not quoted out of context, he’s either trying not to rock the boat or is stupid. He’s already missed out on funding so why he is trying to appease the establishment is anyone’s guess.
This is completely unfair. I know Tim Spector from medical school. He is not a public health person he is a practicing doctor. He is called professor because he is paid by the university rather than the NHS to further improve medical education. He is at Kings College Hospital. Oh and he doesn’t live with his mum.
You may not agree with him but he’s a hell of a lot more knowledgeable than everybody on here.
Not casting aspersions on his medical qualifications. Just his apparent inability to recognise the effects of the measures he is applauding. If you present yourself as an expert and stand on a media platform, you should expect comment.
You’re confusing qualifications with intelligence and ethics.
Whatever his credentials and his provenance, what he said about NPIs being essentially ‘zero cost’ was unforgivable.
A total lack of insight into the impact this is having on people, society and the economy. Only someone with a mental malfunction would even suggest such a thing.
He may be more knowledgeable than me but he is amoral. It’s not what he knows I have an issue with – its what he thinks is reasonable to do to me, my children and society. Saying social distancing and masks are no cost shows him for the monster he is
If he’s not a public health person, he shouldn’t make public health policy pronouncements. This is where the reliance on the science falls down; science doesn’t help in defining an acceptable level of risk – that is a political judgement which needs to be made in the full context of social, economic, psychological as well as health consequences. The phrase that they all use that irritates me is ‘stay safe.’ What the hell does that mean? ‘Safe’ is an undefined and imprecise concept that cannot be used as a policy objective without some definition and metrics around it. Used on an individual level, it is a cop-out – nothing more than virtue signalling.
Knowledge doe’s not mean wisdom or empathy,
No, for example, Ferguson knows how to create very dodgy models.
If he was knowledgeable about masks he wouldn’t be recommending them when there is an overwhelming weight of evidence against their effectiveness.
UKMFA: Urgent warning re Covid-19 vaccine-related deaths in the elderly and Care Homes
Letter to Nadhim Zahawi, Matt Hancock, MHRA, JCVI cc. Boris Johnson
UK Medical Freedom Alliance: Urgent warning re Covid-19 vaccine-related deaths in the elderly and Care Homes (attached)
The document can be downloaded from the web here
I am in favour of the right of individuals to choose the right to live or die and have been disappointed at the sanctimonious and timorous reluctance of MPs to work towards this when it has come up in Parliament. And so to me it has been amazing to see the way the lives of the elderly, especially those in care homes have been cut short by state actions. We cannot decide for ourselves, that would be terrible, but the the government can do it for you, that is apparently OK!
You can suely see now, Steve, how euthanasia laws could be misused and even used coercively (which we on the other side of the debate have been saying all along). The disabled have been opposed to euthanasia laws for that reason.
For example a man in Canada was told that the state wouldn’t fund sufficient care for him to be at home, but they would fund his euthanasia.
We must resist.
Probably a rather complex subject for a prolonged debate on this forum but I do not agree that we should ban something because some people might abuse it. Too many people are already making arrangements, people I know with the wherewithal have prearranged things with Switzerland, my 91 year old aunt has her bottles of pills and booze ready in case anyone tries to drag her to a care home, I have my own plans. It is not an easy subject but i feel it needs an open realistic debate.
I don’t know why anyone would trust the government again: they target the frail and sick and then when they die it is just a coincidence. No one knows and it muddies the water. In the past doctors would not have vaccinated the frail and sick.
More evidence here:
https://hpv-vaccine-side-effects.com/covid-19-vaccine-side-effects-world-map/
UK PFIZER VAX – 49,472 ADVERSE DRUG REACTIONS INCLUDING 107 DEATHS IN 7 WEEKS
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/958616/COVID-19_mRNA_Pfizer-_BioNTech_Vaccine_Analysis_Print.pdf
I thought they believed in Zero for everything? Obviously not.
Yes, an important point about how cynical health officials breakdown the data so the effects are invisible. In this correspondence two and a half years ago lawyer Clifford Miller trawling the MHRA data for the Pandemrix vaccine in 2009 found 178 cases possibly related to narcolepsy (which had become recognised as side-effect) when the MHRA and June Raine denied finding any and were particularly hard nosed about it:
https://www.bmj.com/content/363/bmj.k4152/rapid-responses
They are of course mightily conflicted since if they find anything it shows they were wrong to license in the first place, not to mention being entirely funded by the manufacturers. What could possibly go wrong?
It’s my birthday today and I am so disappointed as I was supposed to be celebrating it with a week in London but unfortunately it had to be cancelled!
Happy birthday Janette.
Happy Birthday, it increasingly seems like we are having to live like long term prisoners and learn to be free in our minds;
In my mind I’m goin’ to Carolina
Can’t you see the sunshine?
Can’t you just feel the moonshine?
I love that song. You put a smile on my face Steve
Happy birthday! Bring out the booze and dance on you own.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J294A-R1Cjk
Wishing you many, many much happier returns and a chance to set London ablaze with celebration.
Janette, here’s a birthday limerick for you.
Jannette, happy birthday today,
These rules we don’t want to obey,
They’re not made for our fun,
They are really quite dumb,
So ignore them and have some fun anyway.
My daughter is 12 today and we intend to make the most of it, even in this stupid situation. Hoping you have a good day despite the restrictions.
Thanks Liberty and Happy Birthday to your daughter too.
Happy Birthday!!!!
Happy Birthday.
Mine (50th) was mid January, It managed to be just as sad as my 40th which I spent sat alone in a coffee shop. When we get our freedom back I suggest we have a huge joint birthday party for all the missed ones.
I hope your day is as good as it can be.
Thanks Treehugger thanks and yes I like the idea of a huge birthday party for all those we missed.
Happy Birthday Janette – the sun is out and it’s a lovely crisp morning to go out and have a nice walk – the bastards can’t take the pleasure of nature away from us! Then a nice meal and glass or two of vino dancing round the kitchen to your favourite tunes played loudly!
Enjoy!
The factory owners allowed you 5 celebratory days per year so you worked the other 360 for them. Celebrate every day by meeting and embracing like-minded folk. x
Happy birthday Janette.
It’s my birthday too! Happy birthday to both of us. My son is staying with my wife and me – I went and collected him by car a few days ago, which was a round trip of 280 miles. It was all completely legal, because he lives alone and can be in our linked household, although I was in a rage at having to worry whether it was legal or not, and nervous about being stopped by the rozzers on the way. But in a journey across much of central England, about half motorways, I was pleased to see that traffic was quite heavy; about half of the pre-tyranny normal I think.
Happy birthday both of you. I hope you can make it special.
Happy birthday to you too Edmund. Wow I don’t think I know anyone else with the same birthday! Yes I know what you mean we start to questions ourselves all the time now on whether we are allowed to do certain things. It’s absolute madness! Anyway enjoy your day what’s left of it.
Better luck next year. I haven’t been to London since 1978.
Look me in the eyes and tell me behavioural psychology doesn’t work, Sheeple.
Look her in the eyes and tell her that she must die alone without family at her bedside.
Police informed of young people congregating in groups in Kinver, South Staffordshire: Not North Korea.
I see your ’75 year old man on a bench’ and raise you ’15 bench seats removed from cathedral grounds to prevent people sitting in dangerously large groups’ (ie groups of 2). Some of the benches were donated in memory of people who loved sitting there. They are now turning in their graves.
On the radio comedy show ‘Dead Ringers’ they used to portray Johnson as Gollum from Lord of the Rings,’ good Boris and Bad Boris’. That seems to be about right, I can never quite make out how much is planned, how much is total incompetence, how much is evil intent, how much it is dominance by the health tyrants, how much is that his personal political ambitions trumps everything else? Possibly he does not know and it depends how he feels each day? Whatever, Peter Hitchens was his usual acerbic self yesterday talking about how hard politicians find it to ever remove any restrictions lest things should later go wrong and they get the blame. At the moment the weakness of our politicians (whether planned or by default?) is leading to the disgraceful spectacle of the deputy Chief Medical tyrant lecturing the British people about their holiday plans. Having let these health tyrants into this position it is going to be as hard to put them back in the box as it is to have the confidence to back down on restrictions, I do not think Johnson in any of his manifestations is capable of doing this. Will nobody rid… Read more »
Who did they portray that likeable Handick as?
Sam Gamgee was right about Gollum. There was no good Gollum and bad Gollum, only Slinker and Stinker.
Johnson, in all of his guises, is working to the Bill Gates agenda. He is a traitor and needs to be dealt with accordingly.
He believes in Build Back Better.
It feels like a year long episode of Monty Python
“I want to complain about this dead virus”
“It’s not dead it’s resting, It’s a South African Blue they like resting ”
“It is not resting, it is dead you nailed it to the perch”
“No, no, look did you see that it’s mutating”
Policing by Douglas and Dinsdale Piranha
“But there is film of you actually punching him”
“Yeah, but no he butted my clenched fist”
Matt Hancock and the Ministry of Silly Smirks
Luc the punched Cafe owners GoFund me page is now in excess of £11,000
The Stasi punched him and then charged him with assaulting them
Corrupt and Despotic
If you can afford to donate please do so, if only as a protest
Lets show him and his family that the people of this country are better than these Gestapo thugs
https://gofund.me/96c73d50
(Yes I have)
Well done him and shame on Manchester Police for this.
Having lived in Manchester, I’ve always thought the police over there were useless. Couldn’t be bothered going after those who commit FGM, forced marriage and grooming gangs because they didn’t want to be seen as “racist”
Pathetic.
They actively covered up those things, to maintain their muslim block vote. The police and crime commissioner involved in the cover up is now my mp.
Exactly. Funny that I used to live not far from where the MEN Arena bomber lived.
The university was no better as well – did nothing with regards to anti-Semitic literature coming from left wing and Muslim student groups.
Done
I didn’t know about this. Has it been reported/video posted anywhere? Jobsworth’s salary paid by the very people they attack.
It’s posted in several places but this is quite a good summary with the footage:
https://youtu.be/rN-bjUuwAEg
As I suggested yesterday
1) he doesn’t need £££ for a counterclaim against the police for assault, harassment, etc that can be done in a county court using the small claims track for up to £10k damages (the litigant can claim costs at £19 per hour if the other party has behaved unreasonably which GMP have by punching him and then lying
2) a person charged with a criminal offence is normally provided with a solicitor – £11k is only useful if one of the plots set out by the Secret Barrister come to pass in which case an individual needs some backup.
It’s not just legal costs. He has debts incurred by the lockdown. I gave him the money in order to show that we are all not mindless thugs
Are you from the 77th?
If you don’t want to give don’t. If your not giving why comment?
Donated.
And the next time 80 patrons show up carrying pitchforks and shovels
Yesterday’s Telegraph headlines in rhyme. Some more of my lockdown limericks.
‘Teenagers are suckers for online conspiracy theories – parents should be increasingly worried’
The BBC lies on the news,
Filling our heads with their views,
These teens they can see,
What’s a conspiracy,
It’s the BBC you should accuse.
‘Keep the faith in Oxford Covid jab, urges minister’
Covidians now are a cult,
It’s entirely the media’s fault,
They have found a new faith
Which they think keeps them safe
Fear and chaos is now the result.
‘Living with the ‘lost’ generation: how to parent a GCSE student during the pandemic’
Our teens barely can cope,
The lockdowns have stolen their hope,
Locked up in their homes,
They are glued to their phones,
Or they go out with mates and smoke dope.
Great, and it all scans!
I’ve just skimned through the first part of this update and come straight here to the comments box. Seriously struggling to defend this site these days. Copy and pasting from the Telegraph is NOT lockdown scepticism. One of my customers told me yesterday she had unsubscribed from the LS mailing list and doesn’t bother reading the content anymore.
Get it together lads – there can be no fence-sitting here. Either live up to your name, or call it quits.
I enjoy this site for the comments alone. This is a great space where we can share and chat, that’s good enough for me. I suppose the content above the line bridges the gap between us deeper sceptics and the mainstream view. That’s probably quite good, because people will go on there to get a start on the alternative views and then come down here for the real content. I think it is a win win. As an aside, I decided to share my poetry down here from now on, instead of sending them to Toby, because some my newer work is a bit too critical of the government’s agenda, but you guys are more on my wavelength, so I decided below the line was a more appropriate place to share.
So true I said as much earlier, theres just no passion in opposition to lockdown, it’s as if the author is a non-believer, if it weren’t for the comments section i’d probably delete this site from my bookmarks.
Yes.only come here not ATL
UKC is all I have left.
Yes, the site has serious editorial flaws – I am doing a full academic analysis of reasons we come to this site. First findings are obvious: cheer each other up; find evidence to back our case; support the heroes like Yeadon & Craig; spotlight the irrational,people and ideas. Freedom is indeed a key element but ‘wokeness’??? I don’t know what it is but, as a Socialist, suspect I might be one. When you attack your own supporters, you are finished.
Bungle, if you are a socialist, then may I suggest you read this very long essay by Denis Rancourt:. Link below.
He shows how the ideologies of ‘wokeness’ have been designed and marketed in order to solidify the current system of dollar-centred monopoly capitalism.
‘wokeness’ has been explicity designed to supplant traditional class-based socialist thinking and canalize protest into areas much more acceptable – and indeed beneficial — to the powerful.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/332182416_GEO-ECONOMICS_AND_GEO-POLITICS_DRIVE_SUCCESSIVE_ERAS_OF_PREDATORY_GLOBALIZATION_AND_SOCIAL_ENGINEERING_Historical_emergence_of_climate_change_gender_equity_and_anti-racism_as_State_doctrines
Thanks, I guess I do know what ‘wokeness’ is to those who denounce it.I just don’t think it should be brought up on this site.
I started coming here in the late summer because when the news was in full panic-mode, there would be an excellent counter-argument here. Now either I’m past caring about panic mode or it’s not as bad, but there don’t really seem to be counter-arguments to a lot of what’s been in the news for the past few weeks. The government says something, it’s clearly unworkable, meh. So the LS headlines are copy and pastes from MSM; they don’t need debunking because they’re so light on material there’s nothing to debunk. I’d like to support the heroes more; in fact I’d like to hear from them more. I understand Mike Yeadon deleted his Twitter account because of the backlash and loss of work he was suffering due to his position. I’d like to know about this from the LS front page. We’d all like to know what’s happened to Carl Henegan lately. Why are so many of the trailblazers going quiet? I’m not on social media but I’d rather the personal work that these people may be doing somewhere like Twitter gets amplified by being pasted here, rather than the MSM. I don’t think the wokeness has a place here; it… Read more »
I put a few days ago what Carl told me – he and Tom are finishing several reviews for WHO and he has appeared with J H-B and updated the Florence Nightingale data on the CEBM site.
I think Jonathan is a bit weak (sorry, mate). Will still writes decently sceptical headlines rather than cut and paste.
I’d much rather this site existed than not and am very grateful to Toby for starting it. It’s an excellent repository of links to relevant articles and papers and also gives us all space to vent which is much needed
Yes so true. My wife asked me why I was swearing at my phone this morning and could I shut up as the people on her zoom call could hear me. How can LS post utter bollocks from handjob and that fucking awful shitbag van twat? We are not the telegraph we are LOCKDOWN SCEPTICS, why is the person ATL not tearing into this absolute bullshit. Just one line, one single line from that piece should have made you so angry you should have been reaching for your pitchfork. Don’t make holiday plans!!! Who the fuck do you think you are? What right has a civil servant got to tell me I cannot leave my country. Fuck off. You are NOT the ruler if this country and have no right to tell me what I can do. When there was a war in Sarajevo, it was pretty bad right? People were being murdered every day. Every night in the news reporters would tell you stories of snipers dressed in flak jackets. But here’s the thing. NOBODY STOPPED ME GOING THERE! Nobody took my passport away if I was stupid enough to take the risk that was up to me. My… Read more »
We need more like you M8, not the wishy-washy Christians sorry to say.
The telegraph makes me vomit
You are not alone.
Send The Telegraph audio files of people vomiting. Hundreds of them. There were plenty of them on Little Britain.
I get sick of the sight of ugly fuckers like Johnson and Whitty on the photos in masks all the time. We see these bastards every day on the computer however much we try to avoid them. And stop using the vile creep’s first names.
“True, Sweden didn’t avoid a second wave, as many lockdown sceptics thought it would. But the restriction it imposed at the end of last year were far milder than those imposed in the UK and achieved similar results.”
… so why didn’t they do as in the spring to get similar result to that?
Depends entirely if you see the virus as following a seasonal trend rather than a continuous infection. Remember all the ‘covid deaths’ so far recorded would normally cover 2 cold/flu seasons. Is that second spike or just the next years season kicking of…here or in Sweden
I think it’s next years “harvest”.
Or ‘cull’.
The big mistake is to think of ‘the virus’. It isn’t a uniform or static entity. There are many virus assemblages, each adapting to its host. And the host adapts to the virus assemblage it is exposed to.
This outbreak is the most closely examined disease outbreak ever known, and we still do not know the fundamentals of how things work out. And that is because the process is essentially purely political, exploited by people with various agendas (including most commonly ‘get rich quick’)
Read that ATL thinking: Sweden’s mortality is unchanged so you can go look for your ‘second wave” in the tea leaves.
And also Guy, yes there is a RIGHT way and it’s not to lockdown at all. If science is to be used you need a control otherwise you’ve got dictatorship.
Yes another piss poor opinion piece from Guy. If lockdowns work there should be irrefutable proof. Non science people like us should look at the figures and it should be blindingly obvious. Sorry I can’t see any evidence, and i am looking really hard. So how did your variants spread? We are locked down, they cannot be transmitted, we are wearing masks and social distancing, we are WFH. but what happened? Had no impact, the virus still got spread. Could this be happening because of lockdown? Oh lets not ask that question. At what point do you HAVE to admit its had no impact and try something else? You know like Florida or Sweden?
I had an argument on YT with someone about this and he couldn’t accept that Sweden had no significant increase in deaths year on year. His line was “are you telling me that these people would have died anyway?” – well maybe not those exact people but over all Yes.
I tried reversing the situation and suggesting that if Sweden had 20k deaths overall, of which 12k were COVID deaths, absent COVID, was he saying that Sweden would have only 8k deaths in 2020 compared to close to 20k every previous year. He couldn’t provide an answer to this.
So who wants to give me odds.
If the school year is extended into the summer months, just at the time when families are finally about to reunite after more than a year in isolation, councils will start threatening parents with fines if their kids are not in school.
After all, every day missed by a child is detrimental to their education, they will say, ignoring the entire year missed of their education while they all hid and trembled in fear..
Teachers unions won’t allow that. Summer is teachers holiday time, they need it after the stresses of working on the front line…
I mentioned to my wife that they are preparing the way for schools to go on through the summer.
Her response: Yeah, they can get lost. (and a little bit more besides. All without colourful language, too.)
She is quite mild mannered about a lot of this but when she gets riled up about it she is glorious.
I gotta be honest Richy I really can’t see them getting back before summer. There is no positive news its all doom and gloom. The vaccine was meant to be their way out and all its doing is increasing the old death toll. If they don’t drop the fear narrative, how do they get the mumsnet mob to send their kids to school? What a shitshow.
It would appear we now have a ‘Education Catch Up Tsar’
Oh dear, if only we had a ‘Don’t Fuck It Up In The First Place Tsar’ back in March
Anyway, why do they keep using the ‘T’ word.
They took out and shot the original Mr T (no not him, he was American with a huge gold chain)
Brilliant analysis.
More evidence that a growing number of people are sick and tired of this shitshow
‘The ‘more elaborate’ your summer holiday plans, the more likely that you will have to CANCEL them, Prof Van Tam warns Britons,
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9237963/The-elaborate-summer-holiday-plans-likely-cancel-says-Van-Tam.html
Best rated comment (5058 upticks)
He might as well have said, dont plan to go anywhere again because well just keep coming up with excuses to keep you all locked up
Worst rated comment (367 downticks)
People, who book a holiday, deserve to lose every single penny. Get a grip of yourself. It’s like the only conversation in some homes – let’s book a holiday…
Can understand how you feel, but bit by bit I get the impression that resistance is mounting and restrictions on holidays are symptomatic of this, not just the only reason.
Well, people notice the loss of liberty in different ways, I guess.
Most of them have not earned a living; they have been gifted taxpayers’ money for doing bugger all which is not quite the same as earning it. You and I earn our money, or are prevented from doing so to anybody real extent.
All those not on furlough who have been needed to keep the show on the road are earning a living.
I suspect those who care most about a holiday abroad have suffered little so far but if it makes them notice then I suppose it’s a good thing .
I’d love to go to Italy this summer but it’s way down my priority list. Number one is visiting my son in Northern Ireland which may as well be the moon at the moment.
It’s like they enjoy their domestication, we are being managed like cattle & their only gripe is their fortnight in the sun & a pint down the pub.
My opinion of humanity has sunk to a new low & I was always critical of their complicity to serfdom.
For most of the country I think their life boundaries and ambition are a pint in the pub and a fortnight getting bladdered on Ibiza. The remaining are the “mustn’t grumble” and it’s for the best etc types who want the state to nanny them.
Then there is us, the sceptics, who value self determination and making our own choices given the facts and not want the state ruling every aspect of our lives.
Me too – I was so wrong!
True but start picking on certain sections of the community for being vaccine refusers and then we may see some discontent to put it mildly.
Yes you really can fool all the people…. because the ones you didn’t fool don’t have a voice and if they do speak up are shouted down and silenced. FSU – Mike Yeadon, yes thank for your support lads!!
That Abe Lincoln quote was clearly from a time before mass media.
These days you can DEFINITELY fool all the people all the time.
Some people haven’t got family to miss, don’t go out to eat often, do office work and therefore have had an easy time through lockdown. If lack of holidays is what it takes to wake them up, I welcome them to the daylight with open arms. I’ve been in the light since April last year, some of my family are just waking up.
I agree, but if it makes the zombies rebel, that’s fine by me.
Yes, I believe that we have been living through a false dawn when it seemed that people were now mature enough and had attained a level of individual thought at which they understood the vital importance of freedom, democracy and individual responsibility. It seems that I, at least, was wrong and that most people want to be led and told what to think.
Maybe come the next Millenium!?
my best hope at the moment is that after the fucking elites have finished genociding the rest of us, some meteorite or REAL pandemic will wipe their smug faces off the face of the earth forever, and then some other species can have a chance. The human race has blown it, I think
The people that sit at home because they can’t afford to, can’t be bothered, or are unsociable and never wanted holidays are always going to enjoy everyone else’s misery.
The ones that are getting upset about not getting a holiday have probably always been on the fence re lockdown but if my families neighbours are anything to go by, the vast majority have been ignoring a lot of the laws regarding visiting family etc but unfortunately cannot ignore the law that we are forbidden to leave the country. If this is what it takes to awaken the rest fully then so be it.
I will take whatever it takes to get a mass uprising.
Van Tam, Witty, Vallance, where on earth do they find these miserable depotic health tyrants? I’d rather have Arthur Daley or Del Boy Trotter running our health than this trio. There was once a lady who seemed more reasonable Jenny Harries? she made some comment about children being more likely to be injured in a car accident than being adversely affected by Covid, since then she seems to have become one of the disappeared.
She committed the cardinal sin of questioning the evidence as to the utility of masks.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8676535/Jenny-Harries-says-face-coverings-evidence-not-strong.html
Agree. I’ve long been angry about the lack of perspective and empathy, its nothing but crocodile tears.
and yet they will bend over and get their anal swabs when ordered
No sympathy at all
it’s a bit sad that they think this is the worst thing that’s going to happen to them. In fact they are going to see everyone they know and love die a horrible painful death, and then succumb to a horrible painful death themselves. when are they going to wake the fuck up and realise it?
Yes I am really hating the people I have to share the country with….I have never been a great fan of ‘the public’ but I now actively despise most of them. I just wish there was another planet I could live on that is not inhabited by cowardly herd sheep who place no value on freedom and independence. The blitz spirit my arse.
The Daily Expose has this analysis of ONS and NHS data.
https://dailyexpose.co.uk/2021/02/06/protect-nhs-100k-deaths/
‘But what would you do if you found out you had given up a year of your life due to a big fat lie? What would you do if you found out you’ve been staying at home to protect an NHS that has been at an all time low capacity compared to the last five years? What would you do if you found out there haven’t actually been 100,000 deaths due to Covid-19 but instead a campaign of fear that has manipulated data to trick you into thinking there have been thousands of Covid deaths per day?’
Did they actually write that?
Apologies, misread it as The Express
ha ha
ha .ha
I’d crawl under the bed and whimper ‘We’re all going to DIE!’
that pretty much sums up my position. so far I’ve done nothing but alternate between inchoate rage, terror and sadness. What else can I do – apart from flee the country?