Afternoon music
Tweets seen
As frequently noted, for me Reform is only useful as a means of destroying the old Lab/Con “two main parties” scam, and those 2 parties themselves. In itself, it is pathetic, and quite obviously tied-in with the Jewish/Zionist/Israel lobby. Tice is even worse than Farage.
Reform will soon have more “ethnic minority” candidates and officials even than Lab and Con. A joke.
It has even occurred to me that Farage, Tice etc, and (((those))) behind them are perhaps deliberately making Reform less English/British, so that not too many people vote Reform, just enough to make it “controlled opposition”, and so that the hits taken by Lab and Con will not be enough to kill them off.
A safety-valve, with the aim of releasing the pressure of popular discontent.
It may all backfire on them, though.
Talk TV is yet another pro-Israel/Zionist platform, of course.
I was unsure as to whether I had heard of Dr. David Bull previously. Peripherally, I think. This is him: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Bull_(politician). “A waste of space“, is my provisional view.
…and of course the (((usual suspects))) are behind it all…
About the same, methinks…
Reform still has “default” or “negative” support, because so many people want to stamp on fake Labour and fake Conservative parties, but of itself it has really nothing of worth. Jewish and Israeli links, non-white candidates and officers, and now a plethora of washed-up ex-Con politicos joining, the latest being fraudulent tax and expenses cheat, Nadhim Zahawi, a Kurd. Hardly surprising that the voters are already starting to turn off.
Incidentally, that latest opinion poll would result in no party having a Commons overall majority: Reform 282 MPs (about 44 short of overall majority, and about 38 short of a working majority); Labour 112, Cons 78, LibDems 75, SNP 44, Greens 20.
Result— A Reform minority government, or a Reform coalition or agreement with the rump of the Conservative Party. Uninspiring, to say the least. Still, that may play into our (social-national) hands, one way or another.
Interesting short video (22 minutes)
Incidentally, 1,000 Russian roubles is equivalent in rough terms to about £10 in pounds sterling, so 100 roubles is about £1 (actually a few pence under £1 at time of writing).
The video only shows roubles, and US dollar equivalents, such as the market pay-parking at 50c US per hour, which at time of writing is about 37p in British money, a bit cheaper than in the UK, needless to say.