Tag Archives: Scunthorpe

Diary Blog, 14 April 2025

Afternoon music

[painting by Konstantin Razumov]

Tweets seen

The Jew-Zionist lobby seems to be immune, in this country, from any proper regulation or punishment. So far.

More music

More tweets seen

[“Soft coup in the army of the Israel: mass protest of the Air Force and Navy officers of the Israel army! Journalists and analysts from Israeli TV channels report: The letter from pilots and naval officers demanding an end to the war has caused a real storm. Refusal to serve becomes a strategic threat. The dismissal of thousands of military personnel would be a grave mistake! At the same time, none of the goals of the war have been achieved yet, and everything that is happening is turning into a huge snowball, capable of developing into an avalanche.”]

[“NEW POST. I’ve just returned to Britain from Hungary, where I spent a few days giving talks to students, politicians, and members of the public. Whenever you mention Hungary among a certain group in London —think SW1 Westminster, the BBC, Financial Times, Oxbridge—people tend to lose their minds. ‘Hungary!?’ they say, ‘you mean that rather odd country in Eastern Europe that’s very conservative and falling out with everybody in the European Union!?” I first experienced this reaction last summer when, amid the Southport atrocities, I dared to point out that the country I was visiting and which Western elites like to criticise —a very stable, a very secure, and a very peaceful Hungary—looked utterly different to the country I was returning to. Because unlike Hungary, Britain was on fire. Widespread rioting and protests after the Southport atrocity had become an unavoidable symbol of intense public concern about things that are only significant in Hungary because they are absent —mass uncontrolled immigration, broken borders, radical Islamism, Pakistani Muslim rape gangs, and the murder of children by the descendants of recent immigrants. Nonetheless, my mere suggestion that perhaps Hungary has got some things right that Britain has got badly wrong generated an incredibly hostile response from British elites, reflecting an arrogance and snobbishness that is rife among that class. Indeed, for much of the last fifteen years there’s been an assumption among elites in Britain that something has gone ‘badly wrong’ with Hungary. But based on what I witnessed and was asked at events last week, I’m here to tell you that the opposite is true. Because as far as many Hungarians are concerned, it is Britain, it is England, it is us, who got things badly wrong, who made a series of disastrous policy choices they are determined to avoid, and who are, in the words of one person I encountered, “losing our country”.”]

I certainly enjoyed my week or so in Hungary (about 24 years ago), when I stayed for about 3 days at Szeged (having driven from Turkey through Bulgaria and Romania) and then about 4 days by Lake Balaton.

“British Steel”…ha ha. 3,000 employees. In 1971, it had 200,000.

[“Out with it!” (rest of the caption regretfully redacted by reason of the repression on free speech now in force in England…)]

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[Tiger tanks in action on the Eastern Front, 1943]

More tweets

Talking about the USA, but it is at least as true here in the UK…

Accept none, certainly not more than a few defecting spies etc, and start to “remigrate” those already there. Deutschland erwache!

What is the Arabic for “keep calm and carry on“, or “we are still open for business“?

https://twitter.com/SprinterObserve/status/1911858471924093227

Late music

Diary Blog, 4 April 2025

Morning music

Talking point

Tweets seen

When will “they” finally decide that they have had enough revenge?

and that is only a tiny fraction of total immigration into the UK

If replicated at a general election, that might give Reform 325 MPs; on the cusp of an overall majority (Labour 154, Cons 58, LibDems 45/60).

https://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/userpoll.html

Whatever the exact figures (recent opinion polls have varied much), the direction of travel is clear. The main System parties are both out of favour with the public.

The Runcorn and Helsby by-election, set down for 1 May 2025, thus takes on an even greater significance.

Very true, but behind all that is something very different. Starmer-stein marches to yet another very different drummer…

[“If you don’t understand how the legal system really works, here’s something you need to know: Apart from giving your name and address, your only words to the police should be: “No comment.” Let your solicitor do the talking – that’s what they’re there for. The system pressures people to plead guilty for a lighter sentence, even when they’ve done nothing wrong. It’s designed that way – quick, easy, and cheaper for them. But it leads to countless miscarriages of justice. And once you plead guilty, even if it becomes clear later that you were treated unfairly, you’ve usually lost your right to appeal. Know your rights. Don’t be bullied by the system.“]

I was wondering whether (presuming that it was so) the person in that first tweet pleaded guilty, thinking to receive mercy, if not justice. Not in a “political” case…

Interesting that the police (obviously, or presumably, posing as “anti-terror” plods) got the man’s credit/debit cards barred, thus forcing him to return to the UK rather than extend his stay, move elsewhere etc. Thus we see the dangers inherent in the looming “cashless society”. If your only money is stored in electrical impulses on a screen, it is controlled, monitored, and can be cut off, centrally. Be warned.

Talking point

“Two-tier Keir”…aka “Starmer-stein”.

Runcorn and Helsby by-election

I would ask the voters at Runcorn and Helsby, for their own sake, to vote Reform, whatever its flaws. Hit out at fake Labour and fake “Conservatives”, hit out at the System (while you still can).

More tweets seen

Late tweets

The political system in Norway is basically a ZOG/NWO set-up.

Late music