Tag Archives: Russian offensive

Diary Blog, 19 August 2023

Morning music

[Cloisters, Salisbury Cathedral]

Battles past

Saturday quiz

Well, this week an easy victory over political journalist John Rentoul. He scored 4/10, whereas I managed 7/10, and might have scored 9/10 had I been able to bring to mind the answers to questions 1 and 7 (which I basically knew). The only question on which I had no idea at all was no. 3.

Tweets seen

Humanity owes a massive karmic debt to the animal kingdom.

Slava! All the same, that central westward thrust from Dnipro (Dnepropetrovsk) to Vinnitsa looks to me unnecessary and possibly counterproductive.

Russia needs to secure all territory east of the Dnieper, and also the coastal littoral of the Black Sea (including Odessa) but, above all, Kiev itself. Confine the Zelensky regime to a rump inland “state” based on Lvov.

The map shows, supposedly, something akin to the original scheme, but it probably is still the overall strategy.

More music

[Ely Cathedral]

Historical note

The Bürgerbräukeller, Munich, in or about 1923, shown above presumably before rather than after the “Beer Hall Putsch” (8-9 November 1923 :https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer_Hall_Putsch).

The photo shows a meeting of the NSDAP. All those shown in the photo were members or supporters of the NSDAP.

What interests me is that, at that time, the NSDAP was a relatively minor party even in its hub, Bavaria (in early 1923, the national membership was about 6,000, and by the Autumn of 1923 about 20,000).

In May 1924, i.e. after the failure of the “Beer Hall Putsch” (aka “Munich Putsch” or “Hitler-Ludendorff Putsch), the NSDAP (banned, so using the name “National Socialist Freedom Movement”) scored only 6.5% in the federal (national) elections, and only 3% in December 1924.

In 1923-1924, the NSDAP had the sort of minor public support that, in the UK of the 21st Century, UKIP was enjoying about a decade ago, and that the BNP had about 15 years ago.

All the same, look at that photograph of the NSDAP meeting in 1923. Many hundreds of people, at the least. All looking decently-dressed.

One cannot but help compare that to the tiny so-called “far-right” (national and social-national) parties of today’s Britain.

The main difference politically between Germany in 1923 and Britain in 2023 is, that in 1923 Germany, there were large numbers of Germans of all social and income groups who supported the idea of national renewal. The NSDAP may only have had a few thousand or tens of thousands of members, but other volkisch parties and groups, such as, and primarily, the Stahlhelm, had the same or more, in some cases hundreds of thousands: see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Der_Stahlhelm,_Bund_der_Frontsoldaten.

Look now at Britain in 2023. The degenerate strata of higher-income and high-social-status groups do not, generally, support national renewal, but are (metaphorically) signed up to the trends which are destroying our society (and now destroying it quite rapidly).

What that means is that, should social-nationalism, by a political miracle (which I do not rule out) take power in this country, it will have to start its mission by removing surgically, and by drastic surgery, large sections of degenerate society, at all income and social-status levels.

[“At the end stands Victory”]

More music

[Shishkin, Before the Storm]

More tweets

Starmer is a complete fake, and a bureaucratic would-be desk-tyrant, totally in the pocket of the Jewish/Israel lobby, and very dishonest.

Ha ha! “Councillor Birgit Miller”. What a total mug. Typical “Jack Monroe” supporter (middle-aged, apparently fairly affluent, and unable to distinguish “grifting” deception and pointless tweeting from genuine campaigning).

As for the other mugs mentioned in the tweet, apart from Jewish TV cook Nigella Lawson, we have “Charron Pugsley-Hill, artist and hypnotherapist“, whose full Twitter profile says “Artist/Environmentalist Paintings of Nature/flower Paintings prints for sale. Solution Focused psychologist and hypnotherapist. Happier world together.” Another pretty typical “Jack Monroe” supporter-mug. Oh, and I have just seen that she is a facemask loonie as well. At least she is apparently an animal-lover.

I actually saw two facemask loonies today, one a supermarket cashier, the other a customer at the same place.

Late tweets

Maybe reality is seeping in. Anything even slightly looking like defeat for Russia in the Ukraine battlefield space might trigger a nuclear attack on the West. Don’t go there.

Exactly. That has been the case for at least a year now.

Late music

Diary Blog, 14 February 2023

Afternoon music

On this day a year ago

Tweets seen

That says more about the chances of the Kiev regime than all the Zelensky bs, and all the (((Western))) msm propaganda, ever could…

Before mass immigration, before migration-invasion, before they started breeding prolifically…

Of course, it is ironic in the extreme that Clark’s own son, Alan Clark, was one of the most intemperate, rude, egoistic, and egotistical people in the country (though he had a few better points): see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Clark; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Clark_Diaries.

This has become pervasive. I seem to recall that, during one of her times in police custody a few years ago, Alison Chabloz, the persecuted satirist and songwriter, was confronted by a young policewoman who told her, inconsequentially, that she, the policewoman herself, did not agree with her, Alison Chabloz’s, views!

Come to that, I recall also picking up, from Hatchards bookshop in Piccadilly, a pre-ordered copy of one of the books by the Soviet defector, Golitsyn. That must have been in the late 1980s, maybe 1988.

The youngish (22 y o, perhaps) blonde girl felt the need to inform me, as she gave it to me, that she disapproved of Golitsyn, and me for buying one of his books; “because I am very left-wing“, as she rather foolishly expressed it (I myself never use the pointless “left/right” terminology). I just nodded affably, while really thinking that she probably deserved a couple of rounds pumped into her.

Imagine that, though: the (entitled, possibly Oxford/Cambridge grad) shop assistant thought to intrude her ridiculous, half-baked —and unwanted, and unsought— personal political views into a mundane book-buying situation which did not call for her judgment, or judgmentalism.

[Note: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anatoliy_Golitsyn; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hatchards].

You see that kind of attitude everywhere now. It came out into the open during the “Covid” non-crisis or “panicdemic”, with silly shop-people loving their new roles as herders of shoppers, ordering them to “socially distance”, and making sure that the human “sheep” were wearing their useless facemasks “the right way” etc.

Funny how life moves on though; I was at a Waitrose supermarket earlier, and you could just about see the football-sized circles on the ground, almost worn away, which originally, in 2020, had messages such as “keep your distance” and “NHS priority” etc on them.

More tweets seen

UK satellite TV recently showed again the film Contagion, shown on TV in 2020, a day or so before the “Covid” “panicdemic” narrative started to be heavily pushed on TV news. The film is about a worldwide “pandemic” that starts in a Chinese laboratory, then spreads to a “wet market” also in China; after that, quickly spreading across the world and…well you can guess the rest.

Are such occurrences mere co-incidence, are they examples of “synchronicity”, as explored in books such as The Morning of the Magicians, or are they actually part of a mass propaganda conditioning process?

[Note: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Morning_of_the_Magicians; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synchronicity].

Late tweets

The arithmetic seems to suggest that it will not be long before the forces of the Kiev regime run out of ammunition of various kinds. At that point, a gigantic offensive, if the Russian forces can mount —and continue to supply— one, might be able to take the major cities and towns east of the Dnieper, including Kharkov; maybe even the main prize, Kiev (which lies on both sides of the Dnieper).

Late music