Diary Blog, 17 April 2026

Afternoon music

[painting by Volegov]

Tweets seen

[“Since Argentina is being talked about more these days, here is something that will make your jaw drop if you’ve never heard about it.

One of the most powerful and notorious crime rings in the world in the late 19th and early 20th centuries was a Jewish Ashkenazi mafia organization called ‘Zvi Migdal’ (and sometimes ‘Ashkenazum’). Their expertise? Trafficking young girls into prostitution across the globe (from Poland to India and New York; they even trafficked some Jewish Moroccan girls).

The center of their operations was Buenos Aires, and for a while they were so powerful, and handed out so much bribe, they practically dominated Argentina’s political system.

Epstein was not a pioneer, you see. Zvi Migdal preceded him by more than a century. I was waiting a long time for someone to point out the similarity, but no one did, so there you go.”]

I wonder what happened to that Jewish crime syndicate. Did the “antisemites” get them, or did they just become part of the overall Zionist movement?

[“The ‘self-domestication’ of London foxes is a remarkable evolutionary feature. Though, it remains unclear to me to what extent this little dude, who lost his mum, might be wild, feral or tame. That said, while he’s adorable and incredibly gentle, he stinks, and he can be incredibly annoying.
There are likely good reasons why our ancestors domesticated cats and dogs, and not foxes …
“]

Our animal friends.

I used to say that it is only when you have lived in the United States that you understand how “occupied” by the Jew-Zionist element it is. Today, it is just obvious, in plain sight, and wherever you live in the world.

Why on Earth would a civil servant have wanted Mandelson appointed? The opposite is a more likely scenario.

The appointment was entirely the wish of Starmer-stein and his Labour Friends of Israel cabal. After all, or in the end, cui bono?

Britain started to go badly wrong, and wrong in a geographically widespread way, in the late 1970s and 1980s.

Then, with the advent of Blair and his Labour Friends of Israel cabal in 1997, the UK started its serious slide to perdition. Mass immigration on a huge scale, almost ubiquitous drug abuse, even the poor in credit card debt up to their eyeballs, and (with the spread of the Common Purpose cancer) increasing maladministration and a feeling that “nothing works properly any more” (police, central government, local councils, rubbish collection, prisons, schools and universities etc).

The society left by Blair and Brown was shoved much deeper into the mire by the “Conservative” misgovernment of 2010-2024.

After that came Starmer-stein…

We are now in a situation where the slide in standards is recognized by all but the wilfully blind. Take universities. As late as the 1980s, only a very small minority of students were awarded Firsts. Now almost everyone gets a First, or at least a 2:1 degree, merely for turning up and ticking the right boxes.

More significantly, Britain in 1989 was still at least 95% white (British). Now? About 80% and dropping rapidly.

We are told by msm propaganda that “we” must ready ourselves to fight Russia (for no good reason, at that). What will “we” be fighting for?

Overall, it appears that the UK is in the position of being on the brink, or quite near the brink, of at least a slow-burn social/racial/cultural/ideological/demographic war.

Society, perhaps especially in the West, needs to be thoroughly purged.

Talking point

More tweets seen

Whatever the exact truth of the matter, Starmer comes out looking as if he has —once again— shown poor judgment.

Starmer. Mandelson. Epstein. Labour Friends of Israel. Jewish lobby. Israel lobby…

Our animal friends.

7 thoughts on “Diary Blog, 17 April 2026”

      1. Yes, if I remember correctly, it was a huge Victorian house. God knows what it would cost to buy or lease it today.

        BTW, as I tend to look for nice properties that I would never be able to afford, unless I win the Lotto, I have noticed that, compared with those in France or Italy, property prices in the UK are ridiculously high. A nice house or flat in very good condition in Italy or France would cost you 1/4 of its value in the UK.

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      2. Claudius:
        Yes, property prices in the UK, since the early 1970s, have “always” been absurdly inflated, but the past 30 years have been simply stratospheric in terms of price inflation.

        When I had a lease of the house you mention, the farmer who owned it told me that, if I were in a position to buy, he might consider £2.5M. That was in 2002. The house and secondary accomodation (a large farmhouse and two small lodges), and the surrounding 100 acres, was put up for sale about 5 or 6 years ago at either £7M or £7.5M, but then swiftly withdrawn from sale.

        Incidentally, that same house had sold at auction to the farmer’s father in the mid-1960s for £25,000…

        As for leasing it or renting it today, I should imagine maybe £5,000 per month as a rental; something like that.

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    1. Hello, Claudius.

      I’ve been to the Lost Gardens of Heligan on a couple of occasions. The last was about ten years ago.

      It is a beautiful place, with the gardens having such majestic colour. The last time of visiting, I recall there was a rather curious atmosphere, or almost an expectation, to the place. If I were at all superstitious, I’d describe it as a place heavy with ghosts from the past.

      As it is that’s nonsense, of course. But it’s definitely worth a visit when / if you do visit Cornwall.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Thank you very much for the information. I hope to visit the UK next year, and I would love to visit Cornwall.

        Talking about ghosts, the Spaniards have a funny saying that can be translated as: “I do not believe in ghosts, but I am sure they do exist” (LOL)

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