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The UEFA Decision Shows the Government is Making Things up as it Goes Along

by Noah Carl
26 June 2021 8:53 AM

Following pressure from UEFA, the Government will allow several thousand football VIPs to attend the Euro 2020 finals in Britain without having to quarantine. Meanwhile, ordinary Britons and other NVIPs (Not Very Important Persons) will still have to quarantine for 10 days if they arrive in the U.K. from amber list countries.

This absolutely flagrant double standard – one rule for thee and another for VIPs – has united everyone from David Davis to Caroline Lucas in condemnation of the Government. Davis said the decision was “morally inconsistent”, while Lucas called it “deep hypocrisy”.

How has the Government attempted to justify the decision? Well, as one source told The Telegraph, “It’s important to be able to host international events such as the Euros, and there will be strict mitigations for those attending in order to protect public health, similar to those used at the G7.” 

To be fair and reasonable to the Government’s position, this makes absolutely no sense. On 14th June it was announced that the full re-opening would be delayed by four weeks due to a supposedly alarming rise in cases. Here the Government’s top priority was keeping cases down, even if that meant cancelling weddings, concerts and other live performances.

Now the Government is saying, “It’s important to be able to host international events.” But why isn’t it important to be able to host weddings and concerts? I suspect some of these events even have had international guests (you know, people travelling from abroad to see their friends get married).

The Government’s position seems to be: it’s of course very important we don’t do anything that could risk another epidemic, unless that thing happens to be an “international event such as the Euros” in which case it’s of course very important that we host it. You’re keeping up, aren’t you?

But it gets better. The VIP exemption was negotiated by Dan Rosenfield, the PM’s chief of staff, who happens to be “an avid football fan”. So now policy is decided based on the hobbies of political appointees? “Sorry your concert’s been cancelled but our chief of staff doesn’t really listen to music.” 

How can the Government get away with simply making things up as it goes along? I guess it’s down to the lack of any real opposition. In the vote to extend lockdown, almost every Labour and “Liberal” Democrat MP again voted with the Government. And it’s hard to hold a party to account when there aren’t any other options.

Stop Press: Ross Clark has made a similar argument in the Sunday Express.

Tags: GovernmentLockdownTravel quarantine
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107 Comments
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Cecil B
Cecil B
4 years ago

Noah have you only just worked out that they are cunts

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-3
beancounter
beancounter
4 years ago
Reply to  Cecil B

I am sure he has known this for months, but it might be tricky to use that wording as the title of his article, amusing as it would be.

29
0
Rogerborg
Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  beancounter

Why? It’s the absolute truth, and dissembling weakens you.

11
0
Jaguarpig
Jaguarpig
4 years ago
Reply to  beancounter

It’s a word that fits them all perfectly.

5
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
4 years ago
Reply to  beancounter

This is evil

We were in LONDON for the anti Lockdown demo

Join every anti Lockdown even you can
Stand in the park South Hill Park Bracknell every Sunday 10am meet fellow lockdown sceptics
Join our Telegram Group: t.me/astandintheparkbracknell

4
0
Julian
Julian
4 years ago

They do make stuff up but in this case it makes perfect sense as part of the bread and circuses strategy they have pursued from the start

The lack of opposition is a big part of it but fundamentally it is enabled by propaganda and psychological warfare funded by the taxpayer

50
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Occamsrazor
Occamsrazor
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

And funded and supported happily by the taxpayer too.

13
0
Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Occamsrazor

Manufactured consent. Which is why our constitution, ought to forbid governments from engaging in “nudging” of any kind.

24
0
Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  Occamsrazor

not in my case – why should they use my taxes to pay for that which I am VERY opposed to at the same time as telling me that those same taxes cannot be used to fund the medical treatment which I need and they won’t provide so I have to pay for it myself while watching ALL kinds of charlatans benefit and profit while lying to the country and ramping up the fear???

10
0
Occamsrazor
Occamsrazor
4 years ago
Reply to  Milo

Oh I’m with you. The only positive about losing income this year is that the fuckers won’t get their usual vast amounts of tax out of me.
Unfortunately the vast majority seem to want this crap to continue forever.

3
0
MartinR
MartinR
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

There’s no opposition because in reality it’s all one political party with the same aims and policies.

17
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Rogerborg
Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  MartinR

Bingo. Just different rosettes on the same Party of Davos.

13
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Norman
Norman
4 years ago

“How can the government get away with it?”. Because they have been pretty successful so far.

35
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RickH
RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  Norman

Yep. Put simply.

9
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JayBee
JayBee
4 years ago
Reply to  Norman

Why should they stop or reverse course, when the plebs have rewarded them for it at the ballot box?!

14
0
Rogerborg
Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  Norman

To get Randian, the question is not who will allow them, it is who will stop them.

7
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago

Hey, there is another option, dear Sceptics:

Leave The Country.

An exodus of intelligent, free-minded, sceptical, imaginative people who can think critically and perform basic research and arithmetic to see this has NEVER been a health emergency…

Question is: where to go to start the new New World?

Last edited 4 years ago by Marcus Aurelius knew
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Mr Dee
Mr Dee
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

Iceland?

5
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  Mr Dee

Wife says it’s too cold. I do however tell her that it’s a volcanic island, with hot springs ever, and they really know how to build warm houses.

3
0
Jaguarpig
Jaguarpig
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

Plus they are ultra piss heads.

3
0
Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Mr Dee

I know they are lifting some restrictions now but have they had a “never again” moment? Unless they have, you’re a hostage to fortune.

12
0
Rowan
Rowan
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Restrictions will be back in September. I thought we all knew that.

6
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J4mes
J4mes
4 years ago
Reply to  Mr Dee

Weren’t they amongst the first to require 2 jabs for entry to the country?

2
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Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

As far as I can see the only places where the madness never took much hold or has now been rejected are mainly US States governed by Republicans (not puffing up Republicans here, just making an observation). E.g. Florida, South Dakota, Texas. And then you have poor countries who cannot afford lockdowns. Other places may have had fewer restrictions at one time or another, e.g. Sweden, but have still bought into the narrative. The fundamental truth that covid was not an emergency and that even if it had been, govt power should never extend to lockdowns etc. has not been recognised in many places in the mainstream/by the majority.

33
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Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Totally agree with everything you write, Julian. A simple summary of the last, horrible sixteen months.

Family in Morocco say it’s completely back to (Moroccan) normal. Not officially, but practically.

Family in Turkey are still suffering under thoroughly ridiculous restrictions which are enforced.

Family in Czech Rep say nobody wears masks outside, but that you are literally prevented from entering any buildings if you’re not wearing the muzzle.

Family in Poland say similar to those in Czech Rep but they have not restricted any activities, unlike Czech Rep.

Family in Virginia say mask mandates are heavy, but basically OK.

Family in Florida – are sitting pretty.

13
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Rowan
Rowan
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

Nothing remotely OK about mask mandates.

16
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huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

Bloody hell you lot get about.

0
0
RickH
RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

“US States governed by Republicans”

My guess is that, had the realpolitik been different, the result would likely have been the same.

0
-2
Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  RickH

I think there is more libertarian thinking in the US than most other places. Not that the Republicans are particularly libertarian, but possibly more of their voters are.

11
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mka1221
mka1221
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

I’m resigned to this. I hate what this country has become in 16 months or so. OK the writing has been on the wall for a number of years, but the naivety and ignorance of the general public, the greed of our political class, the inherent evil in our public health officials and civil service and the rottenness of our mainstream media has come to the fore in this period. This is a poxy, small-minded, grotty little rat-hole of a country. I’m off!

36
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Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  mka1221

We are off, too, mka. Just got a few big things to close out and then into our van with the kids, scouring Europe, Asia and Africa for a new home. USA seems too far off, as much as I think we’d love FL, SD and TX. Unless they open a COVID REFUGEE PROGRAM, that is!

14
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Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

USA very hard to get into, legally, unless you have skills in a shortage occupation or millions to invest in a business

6
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RickH
RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

… and no great example in a wider context, despite some advantages in terms of devolved power.

3
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Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  RickH

I would not have considered it, until covid. I mean there are many worse places to be, but I would have looked at Europe and other Anglosphere countries first had I needed to move.

2
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RickH
RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  RickH

I admit I’m stuck on this question (I’m limiting this to places I know to some extent) – all the places I’ve been attracted to, like Spain and Czechia have been compromised, and I’ve always said that two countries where I would never wish to live are the US and Israel.

At one time, I might have said ‘NZ’!

4
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Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  RickH

I would have considered anywhere in the Alps, probably more the Teutonic side, Austria, Switzerland, Germany, Trentino Alto Adige. And winters in the Canary Islands. I think they are all probably off the list now.

1
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Rowan
Rowan
4 years ago
Reply to  RickH

At one time, I might have said ‘NZ’!

Try going there now, or even applying for residence, unless you have millions to burn. The other thing to worry about is the lovely Jacinda, an armpit with teeth. Yuk.

Last edited 4 years ago by Rowan
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Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Agreed, Julian, that’s what I mean when I say it’s “too far off”. I think I could potentially swing the “skills” scale in my favour, but the chances of bureaucratic ridiculousness makes me think it ain’t worth the hassle.

1
0
Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

I envy you – good luck!

0
0
RickH
RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  mka1221

In some ways this has always been the case. The image of historical Great Britain has always been a con in great part – the recent TV play about Mountbatten in India brought to mind one massive ineptitude that blows apart the notion of competence and benevolence – as does the present state of Palestine.

The notion of a ‘parliamentary democracy’ that is actually a monarchy (German) was always full of holes. Corruption and hypocrisy (admittedly no different from other places – but that’s the point) is endemic and salted with the privileges of class, with the resultant breathtaking general managerial (in all senses) incompetence.

But there were always balancing factors, and a feeling of ‘despite all that shit …’., and the physical aspects of these islands are manifest (that stays).

But the balance has now been fundamentally twisted out of shape.

2
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Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  RickH

Exactly. As my wife (Polish) puts it – I am now ready to be disappointed by another country – one where at least the weather is good.

9
0
JayBee
JayBee
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

The Truly Free American States of Florida&Texas&SDco would be my first choice, if they ever can make that construct happen.
But I’d even chose Florida now whilst it was still part of that collapsing construct USA, banking on DeSantis or Noem as next POTUS for at least 8 years, if they only let me in.
Alternatively, I’d be joining any group of libertarians in any place of the world if they were given a territory. We c/would even turn the West Sahara into a paradise within a decade.

6
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Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

Libertarians in the US – when they didn’t vote to be led by John McAfee (who now sadly sits in a Spanish prison, in Barcelona, I think) I gave up on that party!

EDIT – John McAfee died three days ago…

Last edited 4 years ago by Marcus Aurelius knew
2
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Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

McAfee killed himself in prison a few days ago, when his extradition to US was authorised

2
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Jaguarpig
Jaguarpig
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Just after he twattered if I do an Epstein it wasn’t me I was suicided.

8
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

Western Sahara – gets my vote. Big van life community already winters there…

Last edited 4 years ago by Marcus Aurelius knew
1
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Rogerborg
Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

Kekistan.

0
0
jsampson45
jsampson45
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

Perhaps they have gone already.

0
0
stewart
stewart
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

Well, headlines like this one don’t help as it makes it look as if this is the first sign that they are making it up as they go. EVERYTHING they have done shows they’re making it up as they go.

3
0
Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

I think that the next remote island which “comes up for sale” – from time to time they do – we should club together and buy it. Frame our own constitution – agree our own rules – that will be the only way to A) get out of this madness and B) make sure it never happens again and C) get to do some living.

2
0
JayBee
JayBee
4 years ago
Reply to  Milo

I am in. The first crowdfunding ever that would make sense.

1
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  Milo

Yep, in! 😀

1
0
imp66
imp66
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

Mars?

0
0
Occamsrazor
Occamsrazor
4 years ago

Yes Labour and the ‘LibDems’ have been a total disgrace throughout this shit show. When you go so far down a rabbit hole in your desperation to support the government narrative, it’s very difficult to get yourself out of it. Credit in some ways to Caroline Lucas for calling it out but the Greens have been a total disgrace too, faffing about worrying about trans people and claiming anyone who feels like it is a woman, cock or not, whilst supporting the rise of global corporations and billionaires at the expense of the poor they are meant to care about. The whole political class are frankly a bunch of absolute cunts.

44
0
beancounter
beancounter
4 years ago
Reply to  Occamsrazor

Compare this lot to the politicians of the 50s and 60s who had some morals and resigned when their behaviour slipped from societal norms.

20
0
Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  beancounter

Profumo looks like a boy scout in comparison

4
0
RickH
RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  Occamsrazor

“desperation to support the government narrative”

I don’t think that’s the motivation. It’s the fear of standing up against it. Midget politics. So Starmer has gone the other way – more and harder.

9
-1
Occamsrazor
Occamsrazor
4 years ago
Reply to  RickH

Yes that may be a better way of putting it.

0
0
Victorious Sponge
Victorious Sponge
4 years ago
Reply to  Occamsrazor

It makes perfect sense when you understand that there are no ‘real’ politicians anymore. The political class are now just managers. They ‘manage’ democracy and politics on behalf of the same globalist puppet masters. And they’re all the same all over the Western developed nations – plastic Macrons, Trudeaus, Ardens, Blairs – grinning charmless mannequins employed to give speeches littered with woke management speak and globalist nonsense, there to maintain the illusion of democratic choice in the rotting remnants of Western civilization.

20
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Victorious Sponge

Except NONE of them have ANY management skills or abilities.

1
0
sjonesy1999
sjonesy1999
4 years ago

Ffs they have been making it up as they go along for some time now. What is that quote? ‘Men lose their minds in herds but regain their senses one by one’. It is slow going for the herd I must admit.

30
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  sjonesy1999

Yes – Charles Mackay in “Extraordinary Public Delusions and The Madness of Crowds”. One of my favourite quotes.

2
0
SueJM
SueJM
4 years ago

They can get away with making things up as they go along because it’s currently blamed on a third party, aka the ‘variants’; the latest being the Lambda variant from I can’t remember where. Keep ’em coming cos the kids are waking up and the more ridiculous the more even adults wake up.

Last edited 4 years ago by SueJM
16
0
Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  SueJM

I think they should call it eh Lambada variant [ as its from S America]

0
0
beancounter
beancounter
4 years ago

The propaganda continues from the NHS. Yesterday my wife and I both received letters telling us that we were at high risk of serious illness if we caught COVID-19. I have cancer, my wife has no underlying illnesses; she is also 10 years younger than me. Both letters had exactly the same wording, in a font size that you could read from the other side of the room.
If we were so disposed we would be rushing off to get our missed vaccination – as it is I have no intention of taking a drug that is not a vaccine and has not yet completed its trial phase.

35
-1
TheBluePill
TheBluePill
4 years ago
Reply to  beancounter

I had the same yesterday. Also the harassment texts have started up again, having stopped when I told them I was declining to be part of the experiment. At least we know how desperate they are.

15
0
J4mes
J4mes
4 years ago
Reply to  TheBluePill

It reminds me of the scare-tactics and harassment used by the BBC when they bombard you with TV licence junk mail. I’d already told my GP to stop the phone calls, so instead they started sending regular text messages. I then ‘opted out’ of the messages but they started coming from a different source of NHS instead, so I blocked that number.

Now they’ve started sending letters.

This must be expensive. This is surely costing the tax payer a hell of lot of money because even the envelope was printed in colour. Then I learn the NHS will be giving out £400 vouchers to deter pregnant women from smoking – they’re deliberately trying to crash the economy.

11
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ellie-em
ellie-em
4 years ago
Reply to  J4mes

The £400 vouchers are probably as a result of WHO latest outburst – pregnant women or women of childbearing age should abstain from alcohol. Teetotal till menopause, then?

2
0
RickH
RickH
4 years ago
Reply to  beancounter

I’m in roughly the same position – but haven’t had such egregious postal assaults. Yet.

7
0
J4mes
J4mes
4 years ago
Reply to  beancounter

Me and my fiancée also got the letters, loaded with sensational claims that I could get seriously ill without the jab.

I’m wording a complaint to them and I’ll be sending one to my GP as well.

Last edited 4 years ago by J4mes
7
0
The Filthy Engineer
The Filthy Engineer
4 years ago

“ In the vote to extend lockdown, almost every Labour and “Liberal” Democrat MP voted again with the Government. And it’s hard to hold a party to account when there aren’t any other options.”

Fuck ‘em, fuck ‘em all.

25
0
RickH
RickH
4 years ago

” … it’s hard to hold a party to account when there aren’t any other options”

This is fundamental. By definition, democracy depends upon different forces having a voice. Without that, there is no democracy,and the best you get is majoritarianism – easily manipulated populist diktat.

Of course, looked at rationally, the policies have always been in tatters, but this moves it all to another level of egregiousness, and another notch on the thermostat of frog boiling.

13
0
JayBee
JayBee
4 years ago

As I said in the other thread, the G7 BBQ, Hancock and now UEFA, above all uber-draconian Merkel flying in for a day trip on Tuesday, demonstrates that they are now at the stage where they are just openly taking the p*ss out of us plebs.
And we let them do so and as such continue to deserve it and what’s still upcoming.

17
0
Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

yes – hasn’t she hear of Zoom??? I mean the rest of us have had no choice but to use it – why can’t she???

0
0
John
John
4 years ago

The Germans have finally found a means by which they can claim all of the sun beds without having to get up at the crack of dawn.

11
0
Lucan Grey
Lucan Grey
4 years ago

“How can the Government can get away with simply making things up as they go along? ”

That’s how populist government’s roll. They know this is now silly, but they have to maintain the pretense – because opinion polls. Politicians are followers, not leaders.

However the news is good and the politicians might finally be trying to get out of ‘typecast’ roles they have been given.

Prof Stephen Reicher, a government behavioural science adviser on the Spi-B committee, a Sage offshoot, said the Prime Minister sticking by aides and ministers who may have breached the rules made the repercussions for restriction compliance “toxic”.

He added that by defending Mr Hancock, “Johnson has trashed all the advice we have given on how to build trust and secure adherence”.

By keeping Hancock it means that what Hancock says in cabinet can be ignored

Last edited 4 years ago by Lucan Grey
9
0
Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Lucan Grey

They knew it was silly to begin with, and they formed public opinion rather than following it, or certainly pushed it VERY hard in a specific direction (increase fear, the opposite of what you are meant to do in an emergency). Why?

5
0
Marcus Aurelius knew
Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I think it possible that the behavioural psychologists in SAGE never imagined how “successful” their policies would be.

Last edited 4 years ago by Marcus Aurelius knew
11
0
Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Marcus Aurelius knew

Ferguson said they didn’t think they could get away with what the CCP did in Wuhan until they saw Italy and realised they could.

The govt had no business approving the fear campaign. IMO it is their biggest sin, bigger than the lockdowns.

19
0
X - In Search of Space
X - In Search of Space
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

“The govt had no business approving the fear campaign. IMO it is their biggest sin, bigger than the lockdowns.”

Yes. Unforgivable.

9
0
RGMugabe
RGMugabe
4 years ago

Civil disobedience is the way forward. Say no to masks. Say no to testing. Crack on and ignore social distancing. The Matt Handcock moment clinched (no pun intended) it for me. Time to give this “Do as l say and not what l do” government notice.

21
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Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  RGMugabe

We’re trying that but it’s hard. People are pushed into corners in their personal situations by employers and other bodies. Ideally we need some big businesses to open up regardless, and rich backers who are happy to fund legal expenses and support for those whose livelihoods are affected if they get fined/shut down.

15
0
charleyfarley
charleyfarley
4 years ago
Reply to  RGMugabe

In future when challenged for not wearing a mask instead of “I’m exempt” I will be saying “I have the Hancock exemption”.

6
0
ellie-em
ellie-em
4 years ago
Reply to  charleyfarley

Or ‘I identify as Hancock’.
On second thoughts, no, that’s grotesque!

2
0
MartinR
MartinR
4 years ago

Making it up as they go along. BS galore.

3
0
DanClarke
DanClarke
4 years ago

Rid the country of Blairites that would be a start

10
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  DanClarke

Starting with the lead Bliar.

2
0
Smelly Melly
Smelly Melly
4 years ago

To disprove a hypothesis it only takes 1 negative result. How many negative results have there been surrounding this hysteria that the sheeple believe because of “the science”.

There are many cases demonstrating that lockdowns, masks, antisocial distancing and so called vaccines don’t work, but the sheep still believe “the science”.

17
0
I am Spartacas
I am Spartacas
4 years ago

I look at it this way – if this was really a deadly and highly contagious pandemic would there be any exemptions at all? I mean seriously – if people of all ages – both young and old, healthy and unhealthy – were all actually dropping dead in the streets everywhere you go do you really think that the government would be allowing exemptions of any kind. In the event of a serious deadly pandemic – something on par with say the Black Death – I don’t think there would be any exemptions – none at all – in fact last year at the height of the pandemic and without the vaccines international travel was still happening in and out of the UK from all corners of the globe flying into all our airports which were as busy as usual with tourists coming in and out of the country 24/7 – we have vaccines this year and now the government has imposed rules and restrictions on flights and destinations? None of this adds up and neither does the exemptions for UEFA officials when the rest of us have to submit to all kinds of quarantines and tests if we want… Read more »

Last edited 4 years ago by Ember von Drake-Dale 22
31
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Rogerborg
Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  I am Spartacas

Make Zil Lanes Great Again.

7
0
Catee
Catee
4 years ago
Reply to  I am Spartacas

If it were that deadly a pandemic nobody would need to be ‘nudged’ to act in their own best interests.

13
0
chris c
chris c
4 years ago
Reply to  Catee

Precisely!

1
0
Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  I am Spartacas

“Reminds me of the old Soviert Union – a life of luxury and privileges for the ruling communsist elite – misery and bread queues for eveyone else.”

What with G7, UEFA VIPs and Hancock keeping his job I think we are already in that territory.

2
0
186NO
186NO
4 years ago
Reply to  I am Spartacas

https://www.gov.uk/guidance/high-consequence-infectious-diseases-hcid

Downgrading the “High Consequences” was accompanied by massive ramping up of restrictions with the catastrophic consequences that are all to obvious; Hancock drove this with SAGE/NERVTAG working Whitty, Vallance, Harries, van Tam, and supported by Lib unDems, Greens and Labour. Trust in politicians wins the Oxymoron of the Year. Very few MP’s have had their reputations enhanced so the UK Great Political Reset has to happen; political parties are anachronistic imho – what now..?

1
0
ArtC
ArtC
4 years ago

This, the Hancock affair and G7 serve the purpose of beating down the plebs – the one rule for us thing is there to show us that no matter how much we whinge about it, nothing will be done. It’s all part of the plan to usher in the reset – so when it happens we know that it’ll be no use complaining because nothing ever happens. Violent revolution might make them think twice. Anybody fancy joining me?

8
0
Catee
Catee
4 years ago
Reply to  ArtC

I believe that violent responses are what they’re trying to goad us to do, then they’ll have the excuse to control us by force.
The freedom marches have all been carried out peacefully (not that you’d know from the msm minimal reporting of them). They are the way forward, together with completely ignoring their diktats on social distancing, hugging, wearing muzzles, rules of six and all the rest of the shite.
Yesterday I met two friends separately that I haven’t seen for a while because they both bought in fully to the nonsense of the past 16 months. Both of them, without hesitation stepped forward to hug me with a wry smile.
The tide is turning, albeit slowly. I hope the Hancock affair (pun intended) will not only help to rid us of this psychopath but may bring the government down.
The way forward is peaceful noncompliance which includes not getting tested.

Last edited 4 years ago by Catee
18
0
ArtC
ArtC
4 years ago

Just been on the news that all over 50’s will be offered a Covid booster jab as well as a flu jab in the autumn. They’ll have arms that will have seen more pricks than Katie Price.

13
0
Rogerborg
Rogerborg
4 years ago
Reply to  ArtC

“Offered”.

5
0
Julian
Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  ArtC

Do any of the pretend journalists ask what the “booster” is for? What trials have there been to assess whether a booster might be required, what it should consist of, how effective it is, what the risks are, and how often it might be needed?

8
0
Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

needed “as often as they say it is”

2
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

The “booster” is intended to boost the kill rate.

Obv.

3
0
stewart
stewart
4 years ago

Everything they have done since March 2020 shows they are making it up as they go along.

10
0
charleyfarley
charleyfarley
4 years ago

I’d be interested to know who among those involved in the decision had tickets for matches at Wembley, or were intending to obtain/had been promised tickets.

1
0
Brett_McS
Brett_McS
4 years ago

Lockdowns were the first example of “making it up as they go along”.

5
0
Hypatia
Hypatia
4 years ago

Stone me. Surely people haven’t only just realised that the Government is making it up as they go along? I thought that a year ago!

And yes, they are. They ricochet from one stupid policy to another, driven by fear of not being liked coupled with not wanting the papers / press to say nasty things about them.

1
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Hypatia

Nonsense. Government knows exactly what it is doing.

1
0
imp66
imp66
4 years ago

Welcome to the party, Noah!

0
0

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