Diary Blog, 20 March 2025

Tweets seen

Liz Kendall, a thick, hypocritically-bleating member of Labour Friends of Israel. One of the worst of the Starmer-stein Cabinet of utter cretins.

I have not yet discovered whether Liz Kendall and/or Rachel Reeves are part-Jew. Possibly; not necessarily. I await further information.

Ignorant scribbler Allison Pearson, another puppet of Israel and the Jewish lobby. Quelle surprise

More music

More tweets

More music

[Borovsk, Kaluzhkaya Oblast, Russia]

More tweets seen

God, just look at them…

Like a line-up from a horror film.

When “they” try to smile, it looks even worse. It rings false. A kind of automatic (or deliberate) rictus. A phenomenon often noticed in the past.

I assessed the character and background of Macron (very odd indeed) in 2019. Still very relevant today, 6 years later:

If the NWO/ZOG cabals foment a real war (again), they must personally suffer the consequences.

Note the token English/white man in the white shirt (and a couple at the back). The “Conservatives” are a political dead duck; they have just not realized it yet.

The only language most of the untermenschen understand.

Starmer-stein cannot even play the role of a “world statesman”, let alone be one.

Reality is finally breaking through.

Only a small number of NATO states really want Kiev-regime Ukraine to join the alliance. Maybe France, maybe the UK, the Baltic states, Poland, maybe a few of the Scandinavians. Out of 32 states, maybe 10-15. It will never happen. It was never going to happen, once the war started.

In any case, every NATO state has a veto. So, even leaving aside the USA (the most important of all, and the only NATO state with both nuclear and serious non-nuclear forces), Hungary would veto, Italy too, Slovakia too. Others as well, if push came to shove.

What makes the cruelty and brutality of the Israeli Jews worse is the fact that those they victimize have little or no way in which to defend themselves, at least not really significantly.

We see it time and again— the Jew-Zionists always think that they are the “victims”, even when attacking defenceless civilian populations from the air.

If Israel as a state were to disappear, the rest of the worldwide web would be far more easy to eliminate.

The Kiev regime “Ukraine” is not a real state at all, more like a shambolic and brutal criminal conspiracy.

If you go looking for trouble, you often find it.

Late music

[Russian Imperial Family]

11 thoughts on “Diary Blog, 20 March 2025”

  1. MUST Watch – This Affects ALL Of Us

    Black Belt Barrister talks us through the suspension by Waitrose of Ben Wood, due to his posts on X.
    Waitrose has an employment contract with Ben, which contains certain restrictions on his social media use.

    Ben, aka Benonwine tweeted some cartoons and opinions that Waitrose found offensive and have suspended his employment.

    It is a free speech matter, but not between UK laws and Ben, rather between Ben and the terms of the employment contract he signed.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oZL4I7soorc

    Like

      1. Hello again! I managed to download William Wilkins´ book “The Alien Invasion” (1892) The title could not be more appropriate and it could have been written last month. By the way; it was not a coincidence that between 1880 and 1900, Great Britain and the USA received millions of Jews who were “escaping from the cruel persecution” of Tsar Alexander III. They were received thanks to the pressure of the already extremely powerful Jewish lobbies.

        I have been translating a French book written by a Jewess who admits that the “refugees” were so filthy and disgusting that some Jewish organisations in the USA began a campaign against them! (LOL)

        Like

      2. Claudius:
        The people, esp. the poorer people, wanted to bar or deport them, but the money fix was in at higher levels of the System. Another parallel to today’s Britain (and France etc).

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Hello: Yes, you are right. There is a wonderful Spanish proverb, coined by the great poet Francisco de Quevedo, that reads: “Poderoso señor es Don Dinero” = “Mr. Money is a powerful Lord”

        There is also a German expression who reads: “He who pays/hires the orchestra decides what pieces will be played”

        Like

      4. Thank you for reminding me of that one!

        Do you think that the radicalisation of many disgruntled Reform followers could lead to the creation of a new, more radical and perhaps racial-minded party? I have seen many comments from followers and ex-followers of Reform and they all sound fed-up with Farage´s cowardly, almost conservative rhetoric.

        Perhaps it is about time Reform and its phoney leader crash and burn, assuming that a new, much better patriotic movement comes out of the wreckage.

        Like

      5. Claudius:
        I find myself uncharacteristically uncertain about that. In principle, I am an ideologue to a large extent, unwilling to compromise on principle, unhappy about compromise or weakness on policy, *but* at the same time, since my 1970s teenage and young adult years, I have seen so many broadly nationalist parties either fail to get off the ground at all or take to the air only to be shot down.

        The National Front, British Movement etc in the 1970s, the BNP in the late 1980s through to 2010, numerous smaller parties in the past 50 years, and then of course (on the semi-nationalist side) UKIP and Brexit Party.

        Obviously, I oppose Reform’s pro-Israel, pro-Jewish lobby stances, and its relative weakness on deportation/remigration etc, as well as its finance-capitalist and anti-welfare-statism.

        Having said all that, only Reform stands a chance, in the upcoming 5 years, of destabilizing the rigged LibLabCon cartel. No new party would be able to do that, in my view, not within that timescale.

        I do not think that now is the time for Reform members to cause an implosion. Reform has a real chance of becoming the largest party in the Commons in the next few years, but disunity, amplified in the msm, could just destroy that chance. Disunity = weakness, and voters do not vote for weak-looking parties, usually.

        I should have thought that disgruntled Reform ppl should better hang in there, while openly supporting more radical policies. The public might respect that. By 2030, anything could happen. Farage may step down, for example.

        I am, of course, an outsider, but I think that Reform has a better chance by far than any offshoot might have.

        Something unexpected may lead to a real social-national upsurge, though.

        Liked by 1 person

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