Nadhim Zahawi, the UK Minister for Propaganda, errr sorry I mean Education seems to have forgetten how many fake Covidscam shots he has had. pic.twitter.com/oPAU8m8DKV
— Dai π΄σ §σ ’σ ·σ ¬σ ³σ Ώπ¬π§ (@daikhood) January 2, 2022
Elevation of the unworthy
Saw an old (I think) edition of The Chase, actually only the last 10 minutes or so. A “celebrity” edition. Former Conservative Party MP and whip, Gyles Brandreth (the only one I could name on sight); a TV bric a brac bod (Paul Martin) whom I looked up later on Wikipedia but recognized as someone whom I saw on TV a long time ago making completely ignorant remarks about Franco and the Spanish Civil War; some woman called Alex Jones, of whom I had never heard (turns out she is a Welsh TV presenter); and an unpleasantly exhibitionistic gay who, it now appears from Wikipedia, is an actor on Coronation Street called Anthony Cotton.
Suffice to say that, in the final part of the quiz, the bit that I saw, the four were all unbelievably ignorant. Slightly surprised at how poor Brandreth was. Still, that is often the way with “celebrity” quiz shows: most of the time, the said “celebs” (most of whom I do not even recognise), are rock-bottom in terms of knowledge. One exception, seen a while ago, was the foppish interior designer, Laurence Llewellyn-Bowen.
The same has been true of the recent Christmas University Challenge series, featuring famous or at least well-known alumni from various universities including Oxford, Cambridge etc. My wife and I scored better than both teams put together, usually. Again, surprising how poor people such as Sky correspondents and msm scribblers were, unable, for example, to identify fairly easy historical maps such as one showing the 1939-1940 Winter War between the Soviet Union and Finland.
Jo Maugham, the prolific Twitter user and barrister, was notable, when he was on the show, both for his over-confidence and his ignorance.
The point is that the said worthies are those who purport to speak or write authoritatively on politics, military affairs, the “panicdemic” etc. I think, though, that people generally are becoming less willing to accept their punditry without question; there is a well-justified suspicion around re. “experts”, and the “panicdemic” has deepened that.
More tweets
Just when I thought that I would never warm to Jo Maugham, the part-Jewish barrister perhaps best-known to the general public for having battered a fox to death…
There's a certain irony that a future Home Secretary could almost certainly use the legislation to remove without notice Priti Patel's UK citizenship if they thought it "conducive to the public good." https://t.co/gv5ShZTu8A
A confidential settlement between Jeffrey Epstein and Virginia Giuffre, which could be key to a legal case involving Prince Andrew, is set to be made public todayhttps://t.co/27WUV5qP2k
Now you know why American “democracy” is the way it is…and the UK is going the same way.
At the ultrasound for my 2nd pregnancy we were told our baby had Down Syndrome and her heart was incompatible with life. They encouraged us to end the pregnancy. She's completely healthy. pic.twitter.com/RgR8haX15s
There is, of course, more than a grain of truth in the said need to blow apart the Oxbridge old-boy and old-girl networks. The point though, is what replaces it…
This is the phenomenal unique never again moment the Starlings over the Jordan Valley swooped into the shape of a bending spoon with sugar Captured by nature photographer Albert Keshet. π₯ pic.twitter.com/YDZVRt2GdB
After nearly 50 years, I still have not come to a conclusion about Uri Geller, still do not quite know what to make of him. I have read one of his books of memoirs, and at least one book about him. I was at school in Sonning, Berkshire, early 1970s, when Geller had a UK television show special which was watched by many millions. Spoons were bent, clocks started after years of being broken. It was not long after that, that Geller bought a house in the village, where he lived until mysteriously decamping back to Israel several years ago.
My own inclination is to think him an amalgam of skilled conjurer, genuine psychic, and fraud, but that is only my guess. I know that several professional conjurers have gone on record as stating that they themselves knew how to do what Geller does in terms of bending spoons etc; some others have called him an outright fraud. However, I myself have heard tales which (for what they are worth) seem to support the view that he does have some genuine psychic powers.
I did try to post what I think about #TonyBlair here, but despite my saying he should get a fair trial, it's one of the increasing number of tweets the nice people protecting you from having to think for yourself decided to block. Join me on Telegram! https://t.co/2PdQboL6nX
Twitter has only limited utility now, but is still useful to me (expelled from Twitter in 2018 via the machinations of a pack of Jews) as a shorthand way of filling my blog with a variety of views and information, mainly the latter.
The Prime Minister: Tony Blair to have his "Knight Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter" rescinded – Sign the Petition! https://t.co/aOudiImHLL via @UKChange
I do not bother to sign petitions. This one is no different. MPs and others do not change their minds because of petitions; neither do petitions get rid of them.
I fully expect Ghislaine Maxwell to follow the Jew Epstein up the chimney, unless she either succeeds on appeal or gets a sentence that is very lenient. She knows too much and may be willing to disgorge.
Unusual glass, for port. As for me, I do not think that there has been a Christmas/New Year time when I have drunk so little. The bottle of Beluga vodka I bought before Christmas still has a little left, and a bottle of Remy Martin VSOP cognac I was given is intact, save for a glass or so. I have drunk no wine, no beer even, and Waitrose ran out of my favourite 40% Kirsch well before Christmas. I was given a little gift pack of three quite decent ports, but the whole pack only added up to about a fifth of a full bottle.
“They” declared war on us secretly, long ago, while usually pretending to be benign, well-intentioned, “liberal”, and/or “victims” (until they had economic and/or political power).
The Coudenhove-Kalergi Plan in action. Who is behind most of it? The (((“you-know-who”))) element… The blacks themselves are just the puppets, being played.
That part-Jew clown [Johnson] is, however, a sinister clown, and pulling his strings are (((others))) far more sinister.
So how does this work then? No qualifications but will be flown in to live here and look after our sick? Save the NHS they say? No chance! https://t.co/uf3yPnxHOv
— Chris #Caulbearer #QuestionEverything (@Christi75367510) January 1, 2022
What will make British people take action? Anything?
Plod should mind their own business about free speech
That is particularly so when the police are so often willing to act as the flunkey militia for the Jew-Zionist element, meaning such as the “Campaign Against Antisemitism” [CAA] and the “Community Security Trust” [CST]. Here below is an experience I had several years ago. There have been others, but “what goes around comes around” when I am attacked: https://ianrobertmillard.org/2017/07/13/when-i-was-a-victim-of-a-malicious-zionist-complaint/.
“And just before Christmas, in a landmark judgment that has attracted surprisingly little commentary from human rights lawyers given its profound implications, the court of appeal went further in ruling that the College of Policingβs guidance that the police should record all non-crime hate incidents, as perceived by those taking offence at them, is an unlawful incursion on citizensβ freedom of expression.” [The Guardian]
“Little commentary…“? Not so surprising when you consider that most “human rights” lawyers of any prominence in the UK are Jews…
“...the College of Policing tells police officers to record as hate incidents all those perceived by the person reporting them as motivated by hostility, including unfriendliness or dislike.
This has become open to manipulation, with sinister consequences for freedom of expression. Anyone can complain to the police if they donβt like something someone says. It will get recorded as a hate incident, in a way that could significantly damage careers and reputations but with none of the due process of a criminal charge. And it is impossible to understate the chilling impact of getting a call from a police officer warning you off exercising your democratic rights.” [The Guardian]
Educated guess: Jews make a great proportion of such complaints, and are likely to have contacts which themselves have contacts with compliant police “officers”.
“There is no democracy without freedom of expression. That the police have unlawfully acted to shut down legitimate political debate in 21st-century Britain should remind us that, even in mature democracies, the most basic human rights should never be taken for granted.” [The Guardian].
What distinguishes the Covid police state from previous tyrannies, even the Soviet one, is the level of direct intrusion into personal and family life.
Wilfully dangerous moral stupidity at this point. The really offensive part is how prosecco Thatcherism claps evil on the back, justifies it as mere harmless civics, and projects itself as just fun-loving truth 'n lolz so-why-don't-you-just-lighten-up. pic.twitter.com/hLTgzLVAXB
Do you expect anything better from radio loudmouth Julia Hartley-Brewer? I had to put her right on a couple of legal points years ago, when I had a Twitter account, and after actually trying —vainly— to argue with me, she blocked me. Typical. Just an airhead, really.