Diary Blog, 25 January 2025, including the latest news about the legal case of Wilson v. Mendelsohn, Newbon (deceased), and Cantor

Morning music

[painting by Victor Ostrovsky]

Saturday quiz

Well, not a good week. I scored only 4/10, but still just beat political journalist John Rentoul, who got a mere 3/10. I knew only the answers to questions 4, 5, 8, and 9. I might also have guessed question 7 but, out of the two or three most likely battles, guessed the wrong one.

Talking point

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-14318861/declassified-cia-documents-agency-plot-kill-americans-cuba-war.html

Chilling Pentagon documents may reveal why the ‘Deep State’ has always feared the release of the John F. Kennedy assassination files.

A 12-page report, signed by the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) in 1962, details a secret plan to commit heinous acts against American citizens to justify war with Cuba in the 1960s.

Code-named Operation Northwoods, this top-secret plot proposed enacting terrorism on US cities in a what is known as a ‘false flag operation’, before blaming Cuba in order to fool the Americans into supporting war efforts to oust communist Fidel Castro.

JFK rejected Operation Northwoods when it came across his desk and was shot.

A conspiracy theory surrounding JFK’s assassination claims he was killed by Israel which allegedly controls the US ‘Deep State.’ 

Now, President Donald Trump has promised to release all classified documents relating to JFK’s assassination, which could potentially lead to more shocking revelations about the US government’s activities during the 1960s.

[Daily Mail]

Plus ca change…

cf. the attacks on New York City and Washington D.C. of 11 September 2001. Iraq was (wrongly, inaccurately) blamed, and that set the scene for the American invasion, thus greatly furthering the agenda of World Zionism and Israel.

“Rachel from Accounts and Customer Relations”— latest

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14323329/Labours-tax-rises-leave-struggling-firms-dire-situation-figures-reveal-unprecedented-50-cent-rise-businesses-critical-financial-distress.html

The number of firms on the brink of collapse has surged under Labour.

Rachel Reeves was last night warned that her tax-raising Budget threatens to push many over the edge following an unprecedented 50 per cent rise in businesses in ‘critical financial distress’.

Separate figures yesterday showed private-sector jobs falling in January at the fastest pace since 2009 – excluding the pandemic – in another blow for the beleaguered Chancellor.

[Daily Mail]

Tweets seen

On the face of it, they look well taken care of.

Wilson v. Mendelsohn, Newbon (deceased), and Cantor— latest

That refers to the case, and the aftermath of the case, of Wilson v. Mendelsohn, Newbon (deceased) and Cantor, in which it seems that self-promoting Jew-Zionist solicitor Mark Lewis gave advice, and committed acts, both negligent and dishonest (and not for the first time, by any means).

See also:

[“Retribution— Get down there where you wanted to send me, you unclean spirit!“]

Talking point

If—

By Rudyard Kipling

(‘Brother Square-Toes’—Rewards and Fairies)

“If you can keep your head when all about you   

    Are losing theirs and blaming it on you,   

If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,

    But make allowance for their doubting too;   

If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,

    Or being lied about, don’t deal in lies,

Or being hated, don’t give way to hating,

    And yet don’t look too good, nor talk too wise:

If you can dream—and not make dreams your master;   

    If you can think—and not make thoughts your aim;   

If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster

    And treat those two impostors just the same;   

If you can bear to hear the truth you’ve spoken

    Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,

Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken,

    And stoop and build ’em up with worn-out tools:

If you can make one heap of all your winnings

    And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss,

And lose, and start again at your beginnings

    And never breathe a word about your loss;

If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew

    To serve your turn long after they are gone,   

And so hold on when there is nothing in you

    Except the Will which says to them: ‘Hold on!’

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,   

    Or walk with Kings—nor lose the common touch,

If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you,

    If all men count with you, but none too much;

If you can fill the unforgiving minute

    With sixty seconds’ worth of distance run,   

Yours is the Earth and everything that’s in it,   

    And—which is more—you’ll be a Man, my son!”

[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudyard_Kipling]

More tweets seen

Wes Streeting, and his fellow Labour Friends of Israel members in Starmer’s hapless hopeless Government, are just empty vessels, making much noise. Even their noise, though, strikes me as being of the past, a tired rehash of Blair-Brown-ism mixed with rather a lot of Cameron-Levita/Osborne pseudo-“austerity” nonsense.

Starmer-Labour has nothing at all to offer the British people (as I predicted a year ago).

They are still, also, pushing the obviously false, untrue, mantra, “Diversity is our strength“, which only the very dim and/or totally deluded still believe.

Not quite the same as my solution…

Wall. Squad. End.

In the phrase of Katie Hopkins, “Bonkers Batshit Britain“…

According to Electoral Calculus, that would mean about 303 Labour seats, 138 Reform UK, 91 Con, 71 LibDem. So probably a Lab minority government with LibDem support, but possibly a Labour minority govt. with support from SNP and other minor parties. Labour would have to get a dozen or two dozen votes from somewhere.

Reform UK would be the official Opposition either way, on those figures.

https://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/userpoll.html

Half neither approve nor disapprove of the “diversity hire” “Conservative” leader, it seems. I suspect that many have never heard of her.

Late music

33 thoughts on “Diary Blog, 25 January 2025, including the latest news about the legal case of Wilson v. Mendelsohn, Newbon (deceased), and Cantor”

    1. WAS a good justice system and one of, if not, the finest example of a system in the world but sadly this is no longer the case. Now, it is insufficiently funded which means the wheels of justice turn far too slowly. This is a fatal error as every decent criminal justice system needs to solve cases and mete out justice to criminals and their victims QUICKLY if a decent level of deterrence to criminals is going to be provided for.

      Potential criminals need to fear being apprehended by the police and brought before the courts QUICKLY. Yes, sentences need to be pretty severe as well but before a criminal can be convicted and sentenced they need to be caught. Sentencing policy is mainly about retribution against the offender and saying something/ sending a signal to society about the morality of the offence that has been committed. Essentially, sentencing is about punishment and looks backwards towards the offence that has been committed rather than forwards into the future.

      An effective criminal justice system is normally one that is speedy at catching criminals, putting them before the courts and sentencing them.

      It should come as no surprise that Monaco has a low crime rate. Apparently, police officers there are the best paid in the world and there are MANY of them and the area they cover is very small. It supposedly has the biggest police presence in the world.

      Also, of course, having a population composed of 1 out of 3 people being millionaires or multi-millionaires helps to keep the crime rate low but having a large and efficient police force is still of immense value in keeping Monaco relatively safe from crime.

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

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    2. Yes, I have seen that barrister before on Youtube. I wonder how many Harry Potters there are in the UK? Or Elon Musks? It would be funny if a lottery winner went on tv to be interviewed and was called Elon Musk, Harry Enfield (of ‘loadsamoney’ fame) or Chris Tarrant!🤣🤣🤣

      Like

  1. What about revealing the US government’s actions during the late 1930’s when Roosevelt and the people around him were helping to stoke tension in Europe that eventually set it disastrously ablaze once again?

    Invading Iraq was stupid and completely misinformed. Al Queda came from Afghanistan NOT Iraq. Toppling Saddam and destroying Iraq was unjust revenge for 9/11, destabilised the Middle East and only aided the Zionist terror state whilst helping to set in train an asylum seeking flood towards Europe.

    Bliar should not have joined in with this like the globalist cretin and fool that he was and neither should the dopy, thick morons of Britain’s fake Conservative Party have voted for this utter stupidity in parliament like most of its MPs did with few honourable exceptions. Unsurprisingly, that thick, useless moron Iain Dumbo-Smith was ‘leader’ of the fake ‘Opposition’ at the time and showing his usual abject idiocy voted for it. Unjustly invading Iraq made me utterly ashamed to be British. It also damaged our relations with our then EU partners of France and Germany. So much for Bliar being a pro EU enthusiast/Europhile. Bliar joined in for idiotic reasons, to help Israel and because being the incredibly vain and egotistical bastard that he was and remains he wanted to pose as a ‘world leader’ alongside Bush.

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  2. Bliar was a right idiot for joining in with that silly Iraq War 2. Not only because it was unjust and was nothing to do with us but also because he damaged our relations with our then EU partners of France and Germany. Being a supposed Europhile/pro-EU person he should have placed a premium upon maintaining relations with them and spent the time he wasted posing as a ‘world leader’ with Bush changing our electoral system from FPTP to Proportional Representation as the Labour manifesto of 1997 indicated his party would. If he had done that and also allowed the temporary restrictions on Eastern European migration from the countries that joined the EU in 2004 that the EU allowed us to have (only Britain and the Republic of Ireland did not place these controls on) then the build-up of Euroscepticism in this country may have been less strong in society and within the Conservative Party thus Cameron may not have called that now infamous referendum.

    Bliar is, I think, Britain’s least suspected gravedigger of British EU membership.

    Like

  3. Trump wants to invade or buy Greenland. Apparently, he had a rather ill-tempered phone call with Denmark’s PM making various kinds of threats and not treating her with sufficient respect.

    Greenland is not for sale! Defend Europe and Denmark! Should we rejoin the EU now? We are closely related to the Danes. A large part of our ancestry comes from there along with the Netherlands and the very Northern part of Germany.

    I do not think a possible US invasion of Greenland would be very wise. If it happened it would unite the EU as never before and to be frank I do not think that would really be in American interests.

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    1. John:
      The “invasion” of Greenland might not be militarily opposed. The geography, imbalance of power USA-Denmark, and the fact that there is already a massive airbase there all point to American “victory”, as does the usually peaceful policy of the Danish government. They would not fight if it seemed hopeless; look at what happened in 1940.

      Trump’s idea seems pointless, but that does not mean that it will not happen. If it does, though, NATO will be living on borrowed time. Denmark might even withdraw.

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      1. Not just Denmark should withdraw but ALL non-US current Nato members should including us. An attack from a Nato member upon another should be an intolerable situation for the organisation’s members.

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  4. Wes Streeting is, like most Labour MPs, a silly little puppet of the pro-Israel Zionist Lobby a fact that nearly costed him his seat. An Islamist pro-Palestinian muslim independent came quite close to replacing him on the parliamentary gravy train.

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      1. I am unsure. I have not looked-up the result in his constituency on Wikipedia which is not far away from me. You may be correct about the name of the candidate who nearly toppled him. She might just be in favour of Palestinian liberation which is a perfectly reasonable position and should be accorded respect by the media like the loons at the Daily Tory Moron (Mail) and Telegraph but is not due to their being pro-Israeli Zionist rags. She might be an Islamist too but someone holding Pro Palestinian views is not necessarily one of them. To be in favour of Palestinian rights and/or liberation you only have to have some sense of humanitarian values.

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  5. Are you sure about that, Matt Goodwin? Under our archaic, Grade A CRAP of stand alone, ‘pure’ First Past The Post /single-member (one MP per seat) plurality electoral system it is NOT overall votes that count but WHERE they are cast.

    There is no reliable way of knowing what our stupid, severely out of date, unfit for purpose electoral system will do when significant vote shares for three parties are entered into it along with not absolutely tiny ones for the Greens and Liberal Democrats.

    Our system could well act as even more of a random, illogical lottery than it did in July last year.

    FPTP is meant for TWO parties that can gain a very significant vote share between them ie 80% plus not the sub 60% fake Conservative and Labour are now on or independent candidates only.

    I do not trust those supposedly very sophisticated new MRP style polls to get predictions right. After all, last year only one I think (Yougov) said the Conservative Party would still win over one hundred seats. Nearly all the rest were estimating only as high as 80 odd and a few even up to the day or so before the inherently rigged ‘election’ were suggesting 60 odd. When you have an electoral system where the winning candidate only needs ONE more vote than the nearest opponent and not a majority of the vote share within the seat either predictions on a national scale and with several parties having decent vote shares across the country are difficult to estimate successfully.

    https://www.makevotesmatter.org.uk

    https://www.electoral-reform.org.uk

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

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  6. Have you heard of the “spontaneous” demonstrations against Robert Fico, the President of Slovakia? The man has been elected three times and he is widely supported if not loved. What a surprise! The Western media is praising the protestors (sorry: Useful idiots on the payroll of the EU or the CIA) Let´s not forget that Fico refused to send any weapons to Ukraine and seems to be friendly towards the “evil” dictator who lives in the Kremlin. Fico also said (in 2016) “Islam does not have a place in Slovakia” Fancy that!

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    1. Claudius:
      No. I suppose they are akin to the “spontaneous” demonstrations seen previously in other countries: Georgia, Belarus etc, Ukraine and, in the past, Ukraine and Russia…

      The CIA must have to spend plenty to organize it all.

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      1. Yes, the CIA was behind the ‘Orange Revolution’ in Ukraine a few years back. Now, after the USA’s meddling then helped to lead to the situation whereby Putin invaded Ukraine they would prefer to cut and run out of the war ensuring we Europeans are left with the mess and dealing with Putin on our own. Thank you, America!

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      2. John:
        There is no need to “deal with Putin”. Putin and Russia only pose a threat to central and western parts of Europe because “NATO” (NWO/ZOG) is threatening Russia constantly now, pushing for war or conflict, supplying money, arms, ammunition, and even training staff to the Kiev regime. Leave Putin and Russia alone, and the “threat” disappears.

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      3. I agree. Britain should stay well out of this conflict. My point was that the USA and their always meddling military-industrial complex and security services helped to create the situation so instead of leaving the scene of the crime like Trump wants to do leaving Europe to pick-up the pieces THEY should deal with Putin. All the rest of us in Europe should stay out of it.

        You do not help to create a bad situation then scarper off and make a profit. That is profoundly unreasonable behaviour.

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      4. Are you sure that you didn’t mean to address your reply on the subject of the ‘spontaneous’ demonstrations to Claudius (our favourite hot headed Argentine friend)?

        Liked by 1 person

  7. Guardian reading, Starbucks Latte drinking morons and pro-EU rejoining Labour supporters are going to be shocked when Germany elects well over 100 and possibly as high as 150 plus AfD ‘fascists’ and ‘Nazis’ to its parliament the Bundestag before the end of next month!

    Do they still wish to rejoin the EU in those circumstances or have they now gone off the idea? There are an awful lot of ‘fascists’ and ‘Nazis’ amongst our Continental cousins!🙄🙄

    Increasingly, more and more people in Europe are realising that continual mass immigration, ‘asylum seeking’, multiculturalism ect just does not work in practice. A few days ago two people got stabbed to death in Ashschaffenburg, Bavaria – a city I visited whilst on a school exchange with my German penfriend along with Frankfurt, Wurzburg and the very charming town of Rothenburg ob der Tauber.

    The utterly deluded and patently dim idiots who still believe in the ‘diversity is our strength’ nonsense make-up a large percentage of Labour’s ‘core vote’.

    Liked by 1 person

  8. The AfD’s new electoral slogan ‘Zeit fur Deutschland’ or ‘Time for Germany’ is quite a good one but not as catchy or humourous as the previous one entitled ‘Deutschland. Aber Normal’ which translates as ‘Germany. But Normal’.🤣😀👍

    https://www.afd.de

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  9. I think the national-conservative/nationalist AfD party will do well in the election but I doubt whether they will get more than 25% of the vote. So far, their highest opinion poll rating has been one of 24.5% but that was at the beginning of last year. I believe they might be reaching the limits of their support. At present, they are much stronger in the former East Germany rather than the Western part of Germany where more than 70% of Germans live. Also, they have become increasingly Eurosceptical which, by and large, is not a popular political position amongst many so that will put a dampner on their support.

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    1. There have been some large protests against the AfD today in Germany as shown on the Deutsche Welle website. Some people carried placards reading ‘Nie Wieder Ist Jetzt’ which translates as ‘Never Again is Now’.

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  10. “Parents in Northamptonshire claim asylum seekers are loitering around the school gates and filming their children on phones. Police say they have talked to asylum seekers about “different cultural expectations””

    Savages whose barbaric “culture” involves preying upon women and children, do not belong in Europe.

    Every single member of the diversity who has committed any crime against a White person, should be punished most severely.

    When a Pro-White government wins power, all of the diversity will be deported to their ancestral homelands or any other third world country that will take them.

    Also, the (((evil tribe))) who imported the diversity will be collectively and individually held responsible for (((their))) depraved attempt to genocide the White race.

    Furthermore, the race traitors who colluded with the (((evil tribe))) will be arrested for treason and genocide.

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    1. “Different cultural expectations” is a good one from the PC Stazi/Poundland Gestapo. Yes, Mr PC Plod, British people do indeed expect that people living here shouldn’t film children on mobile phones in a lewd manner.

      No doubt these 99% chance of being fraudulent ‘asylum seekers’ were muslims. What is it with Islamics and sexual crimes? I have a feeling their Koran encourages the commission of these type of offences.

      Liked by 1 person

  11. Trump is getting more clumsy and stupid as the days go by. Yesterday he said that the Americans invented hypersonic missiles but the wicked Russians stole the plans during Obama´s presidency. 😂​😂​

    If you invented the hypersonic missiles why did you not make any? Supposedly you had the know-how… 😂​😂​

    How stupid and childish can he be?

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    1. Claudius:
      Americans like to believe that they invented almost everything but, of course, that is not so. Britain has a far more prolific record, both in past history, in the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries, and even today. France and Germany, among others, as well. Russia’s history of scientific invention and discovery is also strong. The Periodic Table, orbiting satellites etc, not to mention its lesser engineering innovations of the Soviet period, such as the Ekranoplan. The post-Soviet period has also come up with some smaller achievements, such as the SHERP vehicle invented in Russia but now made in Ukraine:
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherp

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I wonder how many inventions the Japanese have made? It should be many in theory since their average IQ level is said to be about 105-106 whereas that of Britons and some other Europeans is around 100. They have a knack though for putting ideas into production.

        They have taken our invention of the Maglev and are constructing a very expensive new train line using it which will be the world’s fastest.

        Japan’s Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) done a study a few years ago which estimated that around 50% of all commercially viable inventions since WW2 were from British inventors.

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      2. Hello: Yes, it is funny (in a pathetic way) how many Americans believe they have invented almost everything. There are people like that in all countries though. I remember meeting a middle-aged Australian woman who believed her countrymen were geniuses who invented lots of things, when I asked her to name some she could only come up with three silly inventions, or improvements to something already invented. 😂​😂​😂​

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      3. Claudius:
        I am probably ignorant of some Australian innovations etc, but I was at school there for nearly 3 years, and do not recall anything I learned about that. Of course, there are items in Australia not usually found elsewhere: Vegemite comes to mind!

        (when I was there, the population was only 12 million, though).

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