Tag Archives: Russia Ukraine

Diary Blog, 5 June 2026

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[Hampshire]

Tweets seen

I have no idea who that ugly, stupid woman (who obviously thinks herself very clever for some unknown reason) is; I presume a Labour MP.

Said stupid woman tries to play to the BBC Question Time audience, as if to say about the Reform UK candidate in the Makerfield by-election, “Hey, look, people! This idiot actually thinks that, if we were to close the borders, and not continue to allow in a million migrant-invaders a year, there might be less of a housing crisis. What a knuckledragger!

Like so many pro-immigration types, and most Labour MPs, that woman is unable to use basic logic. Of course immigration has an effect on housing availability and pricing. It may not be the only factor, but it is a major factor and, overall, the major factor.

[Sajid Javid, a previous political idiot (a Pakistani ex-Muslim apostate, pro-Israel, and a devotee of the Jewish philosopher of selfishness, Ayn Rand) who also failed to see the connection between importing millions of unwanted migrants and having a housing crisis. The only difference is that the “4 million” mentioned is now nearer to 15 or even 20 million]

Unsurprisingly, many of the cretinous Question Time audience (selected by the BBC quite deliberately, of course), seem to be in agreement with said stupid ugly woman.

Ah, just saw a tweet to the effect that said stupid ugly woman is actually a loonie Green; probably one of their MPs.

[Update, same day: the stupid ugly woman has been identified as one Sarah Wakefield, local councillor and Green candidate at the Makerfield by-election. An idiot.]

The Greens are even worse than Labour. They want near-open borders, unlimited housing for all, even if tens of millions arrive here (which is starting to happen, btw), and generous social security for all the new arrivals (hardly any of whom are employable in ordinary jobs, or any jobs beyond delivering pizza).

Apart from that, we know that, without immigration and births to immigrants, the UK population would have been reducing steadily for about 20 years.

In other words, overall, the only really significant factor in the housing situation is the migration-invasion (both “legal” and “illegal”.

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More ludicrously-unbelievable examples of fake “history”.

More?

As far as I know, even the official Jew-Zionist orgs in Israel etc now accept that there never were any lampshades made of leather from Jews’ skins, or books bound with similar material, or Jewish-skin-leather armchairs. Or soap made from boiled-down Jews’ corpses, for that matter.

Of course, ludicrous, but when I was forced to attend a “voluntary” interview with Essex Police in 2017, after yet another false and lying complaint by Stephen Silverman of “Campaign Against Antisemitism” (he lived in Essex at the time), the detective-sergeant interviewing me, with another policeman, actually asked my opinion about Jews boiled down to make soap! He obviously still believed all that nonsense. Early brainwashing, I suppose.

See also:

Actually, many of those WW2 atrocity stories were recycled “black propaganda” that started life as British hate-propaganda of the First World War, but with the difference that, in those days, the victims were Belgian or French (babies bayoneted by German soldiers, and Belgian nuns killed by being used as bell-clappers in cathedrals etc).

The Germans, she says, took her from one camp to another (why?), then to a “gas chamber” where, however, she was given a “lethal injection” (why? was there a gas shortage?), and then….—as if by magic— here she is…er… testifying…

A pack of lies. Those individuals are either loonies or were paid to make those statements (and/or, like many proven “holocaust” “survivor” fakes, were trying to sell their fake memoirs).

Instead of seeing the problem as mass immigration/migration-invasion, Starmer-stein blames “the far right” and Elon Musk for the inevitable consequences of a multikulti society…

Why are people confronting the police in situations where the numbers of protesters (vis-a-vis those of the police) and the protesters’ lack of tactical discipline (and no leadership) mean that the police are always going to come out on top? That is stupid.

It would be different were the protesters equipped, disciplined, properly led, and large in number (like the SS and SA in the 1920s).

More small villages or hamlets. Russia needs a gamechanger.

As previously said on the blog, Burnham has nothing or nothing much in the tank. Only words. Britain has too many words, too little action.

Anyway, will Burnham stop or even slow the migration invasion? No.

For once, I favour an “Israeli” response. A wall, a squad, and an end for the murderer himself, the same or —at very least— deportation for the family (and any others involved), and a bulldozer to demolish their house, leaving only a hole in the ground and a large notice warning other untermenschen of the penalties for attacking (real) British people.

I hope that the voters of Makerfield vote either Reform or Restore. Make your point, at least.

[“Two men involved in a machete stabbing and a revenge petrol-bomb attack on a home containing a mother and her 13-year-old daughter have avoided jail.

Naveed Hussain and Bilal Ahmed were handed suspended sentences after violence in Stoke-on-Trent left one man wounded and two victims in hospital for weeks.

Both men escaped immediate prison and were instead ordered to carry out unpaid work and pay £500 in costs.”]

At least they did not make a speech applauding the historical expulsion of Jews from England, as Jez Turner did (imprisoned), or distributed completely lawful stickers against immigration, as Sam Melia did (imprisoned).

The so-called “justice system” in the UK has become, like the political system, anti- the British people.

Those untermenschen in Stoke-on-Trent deserve a squad, a wall, and an end. As it is, they have escaped with a rather more lenient penalty, in reality, than I myself received simply for having published the truth on this blog: see

Neither the ordinary political system nor the legal system as it now is will save us.

In once-peaceful Guildford, Surrey, of all places, not so far from where I lived (Reigate) from time to time in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

We know in our hearts what will have to happen in this country, eventually. It will probably be very unpleasant but we, or our descendants, will come out the other end into a bright future.

People of Makerfield, wake up. People of Britain, wake up.

The seas were rough this past week. Later in the summer, the invasion will get even worse.

Late tweets

[“Keir Starmer has accused JD Vance of trying to ‘interfere in our democracy’ and ‘stir up division on our streets’ after Vance blamed Henry Nowak’s murder on the ‘mass invasion of migrants’.

Starmer literally took the knee for an anti-western, revolutionary BLM movement that unleashed chaos on America’s streets.“]

Starmer-stein is an evil little bureaucrat given power he cannot handle.

As already pointed out a few times on the blog, Andy Burnham, though no worse than his Labour cronies and rivals, has (like them) nothing in the tank, really. His supposed popularity is a big inflated bubble of nothingness.

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Diary Blog, 5 October 2024, including a few thoughts about the reality of the 1970s (as distinct from the usual “fake history”)

Morning music

Saturday quiz

Well, this week my 6/10 trumped political journalist John Rentoul, who scored 4/10. I did not know the answers to questions 3, 5, 6, and 8.

Tweets seen

https://irvingbooks.com/product-category/books/

Accurate… I spent 9 months in East Africa. It’s very hard to pinpoint exactly why it’s such a mess.

They have an infantile mentality and absolutely no commercial sense.

I once went about 10 miles down the road, in the middle of nowhere on the way to Lusaka, the capital of Zambia, and every 50 meters there was someone selling watermelon. I said to the driver, “Everyone is selling exactly the same product. Why don’t they try making watermelon juice or something different to stand out?” He replied, “But why would we do that? We like melon!”

That attitude was everywhere. In fact, I would sometimes meet Westerners who would say, “Isn’t it amazing how they’ve kept this piece of junk car going for 30 years?” And I’d reply, “It’s more amazing that we have automated car factories with robots.” They literally only focus on the immediate need. “Car not go today, car fixed with string and tape.

The only two factors preventing Britain and other European countries from retaking direct control of Africa, of all of Africa, are 1. socio-political will and 2. the fact that the (((globalists))) find it more convenient to exploit Africa’s resources via corrupt tiny “elites” in each fake African “state” (and to hell with the environment, the forests, the wildlife, and the African people themselves).

The fact is that European rule would benefit all, not least the ordinary Africans.

Incidentally, it would be a great deal easier than many imagine for Europe to reconquer Africa militarily. Only the two factors already noted make it at all hard.

Illiterate travel

I have just read this, https://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyle/travel/sarajevo-guide-balkans-bosnia-and-herzegovina-b1176081.html, a travel piece in what I still call the Evening Standard, and written by well-known columnist Suzanne Moore. Not hugely interesting anyway, but then absurdly badly-written. An essay by a 10-year-old, at best. Or is the sub-editing to blame? Maybe someone pushed a few of the wrong buttons. Extraordinary. Read it and see.

I have read other pieces by Suzanne Moore which were written properly, so maybe it was the fault of the Standard.

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Pretty accurate summing-up of “Starmer-ism”, in my opinion, “Blairism without the good bits“, though I do not recall many good bits then either, speaking personally.

As far as assisted dying is concerned, I see it as a generally well-meaning attempt to be kind, which however, put into policy and law, is the start of a slide to, eventually, somewhere down the line, killing people for convenience or money.

HS2 was a vanity project that never should have been approved. As far as I know, though, the other rail projects are or were useful.

She seems to have difficulty identifying the “J” problem…

Again, look at the “usual suspects”…

The “fake history” of the 1970s

That’s because you, “Steve Zodiac”, are apparently telling your grandchildren a load of old hooey…

I have blogged in the past about how very many people (including, weirdly, many who were at least in their teens then, and so actually of an age to remember) say, and even perhaps believe, that the 1970s in the UK were some kind of dark age in which the electricity was off most of the time, in which bodies were left unburied by reason of industrial action, in which trains and buses rarely ran, in which rubbish piled up in the towns and cities, in which there was a “three day week” when offices and factories were closed for four days each week, and in which life was generally miserable (for example, food was terrible, they say).

The above-noted fabled dystopia was, we are told, the result of overreaching trade union power and Labour misgovernment.

Where to start?

First of all, the party in power for the first 4 years of the 1970s was the Conservative Party: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1970_United_Kingdom_general_election, and of course Mrs Thatcher won again for the Conservatives in 1979: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1979_United_Kingdom_general_election.

In other words, out of the 10 years, Labour was in power for about 6 years. Labour government was in place from the early 1960s until mid-1970, then from early 1974 until mid-1979.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/February_1974_United_Kingdom_general_election; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/October_1974_United_Kingdom_general_election.

One interesting fact is that, in the 1966 General Election, the “two main parties” (Lab/Con) got exactly 98% of Commons seats on just under 90% of the popular vote: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1966_United_Kingdom_general_election#Results.

Compare to 2024: 81.8% of seats based on 57.4% of the popular vote.

In 1966, the winning party (Labour) got 48% of the popular vote, the losing Conservatives 41.9%.

In 2024, Labour got 33.7%, and the losing Conservatives only 23.7%.

The electoral system has become not just unfair but also illogical and ridiculous. It no longer reflects reality.

Reverting to the general situation in the 1970s, the much-talked-about “Three Day Week” only affected, directly, commercial operations (which were banned from using electricity on the other four days). The Three Day Week only lasted for two months. Out of 10 years (120 months).

I saw the Three Day Week firsthand. I was working, aged just 18, as supposed assistant manager in a very small commercial intelligence outfit based in the Strand (London). The office only had 5 people including me, though we did have a network of mostly ad-hoc agents all over the southern and eastern parts of England (anywhere south or southwest of The Wash). Much of the work was in Surrey, Sussex, Kent, Hampshire, Berkshire, Hertfordshire, Essex. The agents were often retired Army officers who, on being contacted, would —eagerly— say something such as “right-oh, old boy. I’ll fire up the Rover and get onto it.”

I must do a blog post sometime about it.

There were, in the early 1970s, strikes by coal miners etc, resulting in a few brief power cuts (“outages”, as the Americans say), but they lasted for a few hours a day, for a few days. Out of 10 years, again.

In the “Winter of Discontent” (1978-79), there were, for a few weeks, situations in some towns and cities whereby rubbish piled up, yes; that much of the “fable” is true, but only for a brief time. As for the “bodies left unburied“, that only applied in Liverpool and Manchester and only for 14 days: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_of_Discontent#Gravediggers’_strike.

In fact, though the 1970s had its problems political, social, economic, Britain still had possibilities. The population was still almost entirely white Northern European, new ideas and projects were around or developing (the Milton Keynes conurbation, the Open University, new express trains, cross-Channel hovercraft etc), and the absurd and damaging house-price madness, though it had started, was still in its early stages.

Britain still had a functioning Army, Navy, Air Force (etc), and a police force that mainly did its expected job and was not usually the sort of poundshop Stasi we now see, snooping on or “monitoring” the expression of views and opinions.

Incidentally, the food was OK back then on the whole. Slightly less cosmopolitan, yes, but in the South of England at least, foreign foods such as hummus, taramasalata, olives, Indian, Chinese, etc were ubiquitous. In fact, some food was better and more available back then.

What I find worrying is not only that people who were not there, or were small children, are convinced that England in 1970-1979 was a dark and gloomy place; more that people who were there seem to have substituted, for what actually happened, a kind of folk-tale.

As for Jewish-lobby puppet Robert Largan, who was parachuted into the constituency of High Peak (Derbyshire) and served as MP from GE 2019 to GE 2024, he was only born in 1987.

If people cannot recall accurately the 1970s, how much less accurate must be the “memories”, often publicized, of the 1930s and 1940s.

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