Forum Topics

We reject the shedding of even a single drop of blood under the pretext of avenging our children

"Druze leaders in the annexed Golan Heights have distanced themselves from Israeli threats to retaliate against Lebanon’s Hezbollah group, who Israel blamed for a deadly rocket strike on a Druze Arab town in the territory, the AFP reports.Most of Majdal Shams’s around 11,000 mainly Druze residents still identify as Syrian more than half a century after Israel seized the Golan Heights from Syria and later annexed it in a move not recognised by the international community.On a visit to the town on Monday, prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed Israel would deliver a “severe response” to the strike, which killed 12 children aged between 10 and 16 as they played football in the town on Saturday.In a statement issued after his visit, Druze lay and religious leaders said the community rejects the “attempt to exploit the name of Majdal Shams as a political platform at the expense of the blood of our children”.Noting that the Druze faith “forbids killing and revenge in any form”, the community leaders said “we reject the shedding of even a single drop of blood under the pretext of avenging our children”." (Gdn today)-----------------------------Also today in the Guardian:-"Israeli strikes hit Syrian air defence basesTwo air defence bases in southern Syria have been struck by Israeli missiles overnight, a war monitor has said.The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported no casualties in the overnight strikes in Daraa province, which abuts the armistice line separating Syrian and Israeli forces on the Golan.Syria’s state-run media did not report any strikes.The move marks a further rise in tensions on Israel’s northern border after a deadly rocket strike on the annexed Golan Heights killed 12 over the weekend."Preparing?

David Ainsworth ● 329d3 Comments ● 328d

Why can’t Wandsworth Council count?

You may have seen news reports in the last few days about the General electionresult here in Putney.I thought I understood the result quite clearly. As a newly elected local Councillor Iwas at the count and saw the election result read out from the main stage in the earlyhours of Friday 5 th July.  Only that isn’t what happened at all. On Wednesday (17 th July) the council added anextra 6558 votes to what it announced as the result.It doesn’t change the outcome. Fleur Anderson clearly won, and I hope she does agreat job – regardless of who you vote for that’s in our collective interest.What has now emerged has left me shocked. For context the number of ‘extra votes’that have been added this week are more than the combined winning margin in 2019and 2017!Turnout has leapt up from 42,737 (59%) to a far more respectable 49,513 (68%).The number of votes each candidate received has now also changed even if therespective places of the parties has not.For almost 2 weeks 1 in 6 votes in Putney effectively didn’t count. They weren’tphysically lost. There was no hidden box or sack of voting slips.But Wandsworth Council have demonstrated they simply cannot count.The council’s highly paid Chief Executive Mike Jackson was the man in charge of theelections and within 24 hours has announced he’s going for what we are told aretotally unrelated ‘personal reasons’. I will take what he says at face value.But as a Putney resident and Councillor I think we need answers. What we have hadso far is a pretty muted apology and a vague promise it won’t happen again. MyCouncil colleagues have pressed for answers and tried to have the matter formallydiscussed. But rather than a full update and taking questions the Council sought toshut down debate.Openness and transparency are not the way this Labour run council operate. This isn’tFlorida and we ought to be able to quickly and accurately count paper ballots.A ‘spreadsheet error’ doesn’t explain why the system failed so spectacularly. After allthe votes cast should equate to the number of ballot papers issued. One sheet ofpaper, a pencil and a calculator should be enough.Having been so incompetent the Council needs to demonstrate it can do the basics.Next week we might learn a bit more. It will need to be impressive if voters can haveconfidence that when we get the result next time it wont then be overturned!

Nick Austin ● 340d51 Comments ● 336d

Politicians have always lied – it’s the quality that’s declined

Extracts of an article in the Telegraph.  Absolutely brilliant article!  Because it is behind a paywall, I am copy-pasting a small number of paragraphs.David Dimbleby: ‘Politicians have always lied – it’s the quality that’s declined’The 85-year-old presenter on royal spin doctors, election-night blunders and the reason we have so few good MPs"....And then there is the calibre of today’s politicians.  “For all sorts of reasons there has been a gradual decline in the quality of senior politicians. The upsets of the last five years – the effect of Covid, the 2008 crash, Liz Truss, the Tory party choosing its leaders with 85,000 members deciding who will be Prime Minister – they all have created a world where a lot of people just won’t touch politics, won’t go near it.” Do politicians today lie more than they did at earlier stages in his career? “No. I think they have always lied – though they do get more honest and let their guard down after 10pm on election night when the ballots have been cast and they can call a result a car crash. The word lie is rather too serious a word to use. They try to get you to see the world their way and for that they distort the truth.”Is that what Boris Johnson was doing? “Oh, he is completely separate. He is sui generis. We can’t do Boris. It was a nadir, all of that stuff.”.....https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/06/29/david-dimbleby-interview-bbc-question-time-general-election/

Ivonne Holliday ● 360d2 Comments ● 360d

Reform U.K. ~ Contract With You

I watched the live event held in Wales this morning when Nigel Farage and Richard Tice presented Reform UK's Contract With You, deliberately not called a manifesto. I am sure 99% of you aren't interested but for those who have an open mind I have copied some very important pledges below:Reform U.K. 'Our Contract With You' Launch ~ Wales Monday 17th June 2024 https://www.facebook.com/share/v/mmJnLyeDE7ViM2oL/? First 100 days: Critical reforms needed in the first 100 days:Free Over 1.2 Million Small and Medium Sized Businesses from Corporation Tax.
Lift the minimum profit threshold to £100k. Reduce the main Corporation Tax Rate from 25% to 20%, then to 15% from year 5.Abolish IR35 Rules to Support Sole Traders.
Britain's self-employed often work longer hours and take more risks. Many have no pension and receive no sick pay.Lift the VAT Threshold to £120,000. 
Free up small entrepreneurs from red tape.                                                                                            Thereafter:Support Small and Medium Sized Enterprises.
SMEs represent over 95% of UK business and two thirds of all employment. Abolish Business Rates for High Street Based Small & Medium Firms. Offset this with Online Delivery Tax at 4% for large, multinational enterprises to create a fairer playing field for high streets. Cut entrepreneur's tax relief to 5%. SME Enterprise Zones for left-behind Areas with a period of zero tax for new or existing businesses that are creating jobs.Reform the Planning System.
Fast track new housing on brownfield sites and infrastructure projects to boost businesses, especially in the North and in coastal regeneration areas.Slash Business Red Tape. The Brexit Bonus.
Scrap thousands of laws that hold back British business and damage productivity, including employment laws that make it riskier to hire people.Reform the Tax System.
Major simplification is needed. At over 21,000 pages, the UK's tax code is a burden. Hong Kong's tax code is under 500 pages.Economy - Business Pledges Costs = £18 billion pa Inheritance Tax Reform has pledged to abolish inheritance tax for estates worth under £2m. In addition, it wants to reduce the charge from 40pc to 20pc. Currently, people can pass on £325,000 without having to pay death duties. Homeowners get an extra £175,000 allowance – so couples can leave behind a maximum of £1m.If you want to hear how Reform U.K. plan to fund these changes and to hear their policies on other key issues you can listen to the complete launch by using the FB link above. It has probably been uploaded to YT by now too.

Sue Hammond ● 372d21 Comments ● 371d

Random pic 12 June 2024

"Baby Elephant", Ou Vanndy, 2006; SOAS cafeteria, Senate House, London University https://flic.kr/p/2pALMgPMade as part of the Peace Art Project Cambodia, 2006 in Phnom Penh from Small Arms and Light Weapons captured and destroyed by the EU ASAC (European Union Assistance on Curbing Small Arms and light weapons in Cambodia), the work is on long term loan from a private collection Peace Art Project Cambodia Turning weapons into art.The cessation of armed conflict in 1998 left Cambodia facing the huge task of tackling the widespread destabilising proliferation of small arms, mines and UXO. Between 1999 and 2004, the Royal Government of Cambodia and the European Union Assistance on Curbing Small Arms in Cambodia (EU-ASAC) publicly destroyed 125,000 weapons across 17 Cambodian provinces. PAPC has secured thousands of these weapons, along with destroyed ammunition tripods, large calibre weapons and mine/ordnance casings from MAG and the Halo Trust for the purposes of the project Established in July 2003 by Small Arms Specialist Neil Wilford and Artist Sasha Constable, PAPC brings together twenty three students recruited from the Royal University of Fine Art Phnom Penh utilizing decommissioned weapons to create works of art. The completed work is exhibited and sold to promote contemporary Cambodian art, young Cambodian artisans and a weapon free society in Cambodia and globally.The PAPC custom workshop space is rented from the Development Technology Workshop Incubator Park, a British based charity focusing on the transfer of sustainable engineering skills in underdeveloped countries.Three international artists have visited PAPC, providing new sculptural and metal working techniques as well as marketing and promotional skills which are vital to the students' creative development - Mark Solomon an American artist/blacksmith and the executive director of a regional American social justice NGO, Joe Rush an English metal sculptor, and Toby Poolman an English furniture design specialist have all imparted thelr speclalist skills and knowledge the the students.

Michael Ixer ● 378d0 Comments ● 378d

Random pic 18 May 2024

The Antarctic 100 Memorial, Cardiff Bay https://flic.kr/p/2pCnRkuTHE ANTARCTIC 100 MEMORIAL
Commissioned by the Captain Scott Society and gifted to the City of Cardiff by the Society
Unveiled by Her Royal Highness The Princess Royal 6th June 2003
This memorial commemorates the Heroic Age of Antarctic exploration and in particular Captain Robert Falcon Scott's Scientific Expedition of 1910-13.
The memorial overlooks the point from which Scott's expedition ship, the SS Terra Nova, left Cardiff on the 15th June 1910.Designed and created by the sculptor Jonathan Williams, the memorial depicts Scott and the faces of his four companions, Wilson, Oates, Bowers and Evans, who died with him on the return journey from the South Pole.The Memorial was unveiled on the 6th J une 2003 by Her Royal Highness The Princess Royal.
On the 15h June 1910, the British Antarctic Expedition led by Captain Robert Falcon Scott, CVO RN made its final departure from United Kingdom shores. This memorial overlooks the old outer lock gates at Roath Basin, the point from which Scott's expedition ship the "Terra Nova" sailed from Cardiff to the cheers of vast crowds of well wishers. Prior to the departure, Scott had launched a national appeal for funds and the money donated by the City of Cardiff. and South Wales exceeded that contributed by any other city in the UK. It was in recognition of this generosity that Scott designated the city as the home port of the, "Terra Nova". She was to return to Cardiff three years later to a nation in mourning for one of its heroes. The expedition ended tragically and created one of the great legends of the twentieth century. Scott's supreme achievement was that he touched the imagination of his country as no other man had done and possibly has done since. With his dying message, eloquently told in his diaries and handwritten in desperate circumstances he challenged whatever was finest in the British temperament. "The causes of this disaster are not due to faulty organisation but misfortune in all risks that had to be undertaken.... Had we lived, I should have a tale to tell of the hardihood, endurance and courage of my companions which would have stirred the heart of every Englishman. These rough notes and our dead bodles must tell the tale".
Designed and sculpted by Jonathan Williams Those who perished: https://flic.kr/p/2pCAmry[Text from plaques by the Memorial.]

Michael Ixer ● 403d1 Comments ● 402d

Douglas Bader Reception

Went with my other half he had physio today, I waited in reception, before he went in, an elderly lady stood up and turned to me and said I've been waiting 4 hours for a Ambulance to take me home.  I said can I get you a drink of water, so as I walked past the reception I said that lady has been waiting 4 hrs to get home. So I walked across to get her the water, but didn't have a chance as this aggressive receptionist started hurling abuse at me, what's it got to do with you screaming and I mean screaming, waving her arms about.  I still hadn't got the water. So luckily i turned round and 3 men todo with the hospital were standing there, So I said the lady had been waiting ages, I've only come to get her some water.  In the end my other half told her perhaps your in the wrong job. Anyway this went on and on.  My other half was then called in for his appointment. I sat quietly, then the receptionist was having a tea break and made a point of walking past this elderly lady and started talking to her aggressive and pointing her finger at her saying don't start on the Ambulance when he comes, or telling them what to . So after she went out the door I went and sat with the elderly lady to keep her company and to stop the receptionist having another go at her.  The poor lady was sitting really quiet, she was still there when it was time for us to go, making that 5hrs.  The receptionist needs a right talking to.  She wasn't busy or loads of people waiting there was only about 3 people in the waiting room.  She really shouldn't be in the job. This was 2 this afternoon. Queen Mary's Roehampton.

Barbara Stevens ● 431d21 Comments ● 411d

Sadiq Khan's promises

Let's hope he delivers them.I am putting them in my 'Bring forward for review' folder !Note however some are rather vague and unmeasurable and further note the provisos, especially that of there being a Labour Government.I presume Starmer has also agreed to commit to them ? 1.Work to make universal free school meals permanent for all state primary school children2.Freeze TfL fares until at least 2025 and continue to freeze fares for as long as economic conditions allow3.Build 40,000 new council homes by the end of the decade4.Work with a Labour government to put an extra 1,300 neighbourhood police officers and PCSOs on the streets5.Invest more in youth clubs – creating 250,000 positive opportunities for young Londoners to help steer them away from gangs and crime6.Redouble efforts to reduce violence against women and girls, including investment to stop reoffending and free legal advice for victims of sexual abuse7.End rough sleeping for good by 2030 in partnership with a Labour government8.More support for renters – delivering new affordable ‘rent control homes’ and empowering Londoners to take on landlords through a New Deal for Renters9.Continue world-leading action to tackle air pollution and the climate crisis – from making all buses zero-emission to providing air pollution filters to primary schools10.Deliver a new London Growth Plan, with a target of creating more than 150,000 good jobs by 2028 and increasing living standards for Londoners

John Hawkes ● 414d12 Comments ● 413d

Double standards - one rule for them and another for us

The Campaign Against AntiSemitism has just released a statement. This is part of it:There was a planned Walk Together between midday and 2.00 pm in London tomorrow in which there has been enormous interest. There are Jewish communities whose rabbis have given dispensation to their congregants to walk for hours on Shabbat in order to come to central London. Such is the depth of feeling among British Jews about the weekly marches, the record-breaking levels of antisemitism, and the repeated police failures.Tomorrow’s march by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign meanders for two-and-a-half miles, from Parliament Square to Reformer’s Tree in Hyde Park. WHEN WE ORGANISED OUR PEACEFUL MARCH AGAINST ANTISEMITISM A FEW MONTHS AGO WE WERE TOLD THAT THERE WAS NO WAY THAT THE ROYAL PARKS COULD BE USED.  YET AGAIN, IT SEEMS THERE IS A DOUBLE STANDARD... Police have told us that they intend to handle the march no differently from the passive way that they have become accustomed to over the course of more than six months. During that time, WE HAVE BECOME ALL TOO USED TO SEEING ANTISEMITIC CHANTS AND PLACARDS at these marches, glorification of terrorism ... Yesterday we met with the Home Secretary and the Minister for Policing to propose concrete measures which can force the police to change their approach. This situation cannot endure much longer and firm action is needed urgently, which we made clear at the meeting.Our Director of Investigations and Enforcement,..., also met with the Metropolitan Police Service yesterday, which told him of its desire to protect Jews walking in the area, but we have a responsibility to be sure that they can. Due to the thousands of people now intending to join and then walk where they please – something that we used to take for granted in London as Jewish people without having to discuss with police ahead of time – we still do not have confidence that people would be safe.ADDITIONALLY WE HAVE RECEIVED NUMEROUS THREATS AND OUR MONITORING HAS IDENTIFIED HOSTILE(S) WHO SEEM TO HAVE INTENDED TO COME TO ANY MEETING LOCATIONS THAT WE ANNOUNCED. THE RISK TO THE SAFETY OF THOSE WHO WISHED TO WALK OPENLY AS JEWS IN LONDON TOMORROW AS PART OF THIS INITIATIVE HAS THEREFORE BECOME TOO GREAT.We are no less angry about these marches than our Jewish community and its allies. WE WANT TO WALK. We want to force the Met to police these marches, not merely manage them. BUT WE CANNOT ENCOURAGE THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE TO WALK WHEN THERE ARE SUCH RISKS TO THEIR SAFETY, AND THERE ARE. We have reluctantly decided not to go ahead tomorrow... Tomorrow, we will watch to see whether anything is different about the way that the Met handles the march, and in the coming week we will progress our discussions with the Government. WE CANNOT ALLOW THE CURRENT SITUATION TO BECOME THE NEW NORMAL.NEEDLESS TO SAY I FOR ONE AM FURIOUS THAT AS A JEWISH WOMAN IT IS DEEMED TOO UNSAFE FOR ME TO WALK AMONG MY FELLOW JEWS TO PROTEST AGAINST ANTISEMITISM IN THIS COUNTRY. My father, who marched with antifascists at Cable Street, is turning in his grave.

Lucille Grant ● 424d61 Comments ● 414d

Macron warning

Emmanuel Macron’s urgent message for EuropeThe French president issues a dark and prophetic warningEconomist 3 May 2024In 1940, after France had been defeated by the Nazi blitzkrieg, the historian Marc Bloch condemned his country’s inter-war elites for having failed to face up to the threat that lay ahead. Today Emmanuel Macron cites Bloch as a warning that Europe’s elites are gripped by the same fatal complacency.France’s president set out his apocalyptic vision in an interview with The Economist in the Elysée Palace. It came days after his delivery of a big speech about the future of Europe—an unruly, two-hour, Castro-scale marathon, ranging from nuclear annihilation to an alliance of European libraries. Mr Macron’s critics called it a mix of electioneering, the usual French self-interest and the intellectual vanity of a Jupiterian president thinking about his legacy. We wish they were right. In fact, Mr Macron’s message is as compelling as it is alarming. In our interview, he warned that Europe faces imminent danger, declaring that “things can fall apart very quickly”. He also spoke of the mountain of work ahead to make Europe safe. But he is bedevilled by unpopularity at home and poor relations with Germany. Like other gloomy visionaries, he faces the risk that his message is ignored.The driving force behind Mr Macron’s warning is the invasion of Ukraine. War has changed Russia. Flouting international law, issuing nuclear threats, investing heavily in arms and hybrid tactics, it has embraced “aggression in all known domains of conflict”. Now Russia knows no limits, he argues. Moldova, Lithuania, Poland, Romania or any neighbouring country could all be its targets. If it wins in Ukraine, European security will lie in ruins.Europe must wake up to this new danger. Mr Macron refuses to back down from his declaration in February that Europe should not rule out putting troops in Ukraine. This elicited horror and fury from some of his allies, but he insists their wariness will only encourage Russia to press on: “We have undoubtedly been too hesitant by defining the limits of our action to someone who no longer has any and who is the aggressor.”Mr Macron is adamant that, whoever is in the White House in 2025, Europe must shake off its decades-long military dependence on America and with it the head-in-the-sand reluctance to take hard power seriously. “My responsibility,” he says, “is never to put [America] in a strategic dilemma that would mean choosing between Europeans and [its] own interests in the face of China.” He calls for an “existential” debate to take place within months. Bringing in non-eu countries like Britain and Norway, this would create a new framework for European defence that puts less of a burden on America. He is willing to discuss extending the protection afforded by France’s nuclear weapons, which would dramatically break from Gaullist orthodoxy and transform France’s relations with the rest of Europe.Mr Macron’s second theme is that an alarming industrial gap has opened up as Europe has fallen behind America and China. For Mr Macron, this is part of a broader dependence in energy and technology, especially in renewables and artificial intelligence. Europe must respond now, or it may never catch up. He says the Americans “have stopped trying to get the Chinese to conform to the rules of international trade”. Calling the Inflation Reduction Act “a conceptual revolution”, he accuses America of being like China by subsidising its critical industries. “You can’t carry on as if this isn’t happening,” he says.Mr Macron’s solution is more radical than simply asking for Europe to match American and Chinese subsidies and protection. He also wants a profound change to the way Europe works. He would double research spending, deregulate industry, free up capital markets and sharpen Europeans’ appetite for risk. He is scathing about the dishing-out of subsidies and contracts so that each country gets back more or less what it puts in. Europe needs specialisation and scale, even if some countries lose out, he says.Voters sense that European security and competitiveness are vulnerable. And that leads to Mr Macron’s third theme, which is the frailty of Europe’s politics. France’s president reserves special contempt for populist nationalists. Though he did not name her, one of those is Marine Le Pen, who has ambitions to replace him in 2027. In a cut-throat world their empty promises to strengthen their own countries will instead result in division, decline, insecurity and, ultimately, conflict.Mr Macron’s ideas have real power, and he has proved prescient in the past. But his solutions pose problems. One danger is that they might in fact undermine Europe’s security. His plans could distance America, but fail to fill the gap with a credible European alternative. That would leave Europe more vulnerable to Russia’s predations. It would also suit China, which has long sought to deal with Europe and America separately, not as an alliance.His plans could also fall victim to the unwieldy structure of the eu itself. They require 27 power-hungry governments to cede sovereign control of taxation and foreign policy and to give more influence to the European Commission, which seems unlikely. If Mr Macron’s industrial policy ends up bringing more subsidy and protection, but not deregulation, liberalisation and competition, it would weigh on the very dynamism he is trying to enhance.And the last problem is that Mr Macron may well fail in his politics—partly because he is unpopular at home. He preaches the need to think Europe-wide and leave behind petty nationalism, but France has for years blocked the construction of power connections with Spain. He warns of the looming threat of Ms Le Pen, but has so far failed to nurture a successor who can see her off. He cannot tackle an agenda that would have taxed the two great post-war leaders, Charles de Gaulle and Konrad Adenauer, without the help of Germany’s chancellor, Olaf Scholz. Yet their relationship is dreadful.Mr Macron is clearer about the perils Europe is facing than the leader of any other large country. When leadership is in short supply, he has the courage to look history in the eye. The tragedy for Europe is that the words of France’s Cassandra may well fall on deaf ears. ■

Alexander MacLeod ● 417d0 Comments ● 417d

Costs of policing pro-Palestine marches and averting Tube strikes

How is this likely to affect what we pay in Mayor Khan's Precept to our Council Tax ? 'Police said last Saturday’s pro-Palestinian march was the 12th large-scale protest since the 7 October attacks by Hamas on Israel, which led to a bitter and bloody conflict in the Middle East.The Met assistant commissioner Matt Twist said the cost of policing those and other linked protests was £38.5m. He said it was not for his force to call for any change in the law to further restrict demonstrations.He said while the protests had been largely peaceful, with up to 300,000 attending one demonstration, there had been 415 arrests, including 193 for alleged antisemitic offences such as offensive placards and chants, and 15 for alleged breaches of counter-terrorism laws, largely on suspicion of supporting Hamas'.And further, Sadiq Khan on Monday hailed a £30 million Tube pay deal that averted a week of strikes and which will give the lowest paid staff an 11 per cent increase.The deal — which provides a basic five per cent increase plus a lump sum of up to £1,400 — was struck after the Mayor unexpectedly found additional millions to prevent a rolling walkout by 10,000 RMT members in the first week in January. All 16,500 London Underground staff will now have the pay boost backdated to last April after Unite and the TSSA followed the RMT and Aslef in accepting the offer.Mr Khan’s Tory critics have accused him of “giving in to union blackmail” and warned it will fuel more pay demands. The cost of the pay deal will be a recurring cost to Transport for London. The Mayor funded the lump sums by taking £30 million from business rates and council tax. Previously TfL commissioner Andy Lord had warned unions preparing to strike that a five per cent rise was his “full and final offer”.

John Hawkes ● 423d17 Comments ● 421d

Odd phenomena - antipathy to Jews; support for Arabs

Am I am misreading or misunderstanding the reaction to the Israel-Palestine conflict; worldwide, in the UK and even amongst some of the white middle class residents of Putney that read this Forum ?Because strange to my way of thinking, any action perpetrated by the Palestinians and other Arabs seems always to be excusable and is explained away by their 'suffering' and experience in the context of an historical and current Middle Eastern conflict.Some people even delve into history to justify the behaviour of Iran, one of the most backward, aggressive and dangerous states on the planet. This being the case even though so many innocent British adults and children have been killed by bomb and knife attacks by Islamist Arabs in the name of their religion, and Iranian infiltrators are thought to be attacking their country's political exiles on our streets.However anything carried out or said by the Jews and the state of Israel seems immediately damned and vilified.And even the word genocide, correctly used to describe the holocaust and the industrialised extermination of six million Jews is misappropriated to describe the unfortunate deaths of Gazan civilians caught up in the current conflict. This is not to excuse every action carried out by Israel and I will not resuscitate the accusations and justifications concerning them made on another thread.However I am unaware of any threat thought posed to British citizens by Israel and Jews and we and the rest of the world have benefited greatly by their enterprise and creativity.Not a claim easily made for Arab states and its citizens, though we do rely on their oil supplies.The current circumstances, issues and actions by the respective political opponents seem to be described bizarrely in ways Lewis Carroll and George Orwell would have recognised.How did the Palestinians and the Islamic world in general achieve such good PR ?  

John Hawkes ● 431d50 Comments ● 425d

"This happens in a war"

It was quite shocking to see Netanyahu's smirking non-apology apology for the IDF's killing of 7 aid workers in Gaza (see it on BBC News at 10 last night, about 3:50 in: https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m001xy2x/bbc-news-at-ten-02042024).  It's even more shocking when you read the details of what happened; this is from the Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2024/04/02/israeli-missiles-rain-down-british-aid-workers/ - paywall)."It was not a single rogue missile that killed seven aid workers on the coast road in central Gaza between 10 and 11pm on Monday night but three precisely targeted missiles. According to unnamed Israeli security sources who briefed the local media, they were dropped in succession from a Hermes 450 drone with sophisticated night sights and deliberately guided down on to the three clearly marked humanitarian vehicles travelling below.Even though the drone pilots would have had both the authority and technical means to swerve the bombs away until the very last moment, they chose not to. On the ground it was carnage. As the first vehicle was hit, several aid workers reportedly scrambled from it and into the other cars, before it was reduced to a burnt-out shell.An emergency call was put in to the Israeli authorities, who had cleared the mission ahead of time, but to no avail. As the two remaining vehicles continued their journey south on the Al Rashid Road, one was hit by a bomb that passed through the humanitarian badge on its roof. The third vehicle got another kilometre and a half before it, too, was picked off. All that remained of it at first light on Tuesday morning was a twisted, blackened hulk of metal."What's especially disturbing is that this is far from being an unusual incident: over 200 journalists have been killed in the conflict so far, and there are disturbing reports of children being shot by Israeli snipers despite the IDFs claim to be only targeting "terrorists and military targets."No doubt the usual suspects will claim justification on the grounds that Hamas is worse. So I'll save them the trouble, and say outright that Hamas has done many worse things. But that doesn't justify this and similar atrocities; even the White House has said of the WCK killings that it is "outraged" and Sunak has called it "appalling." But will they do anything other than mouth words? I doubt it...

Richard Carter ● 447d140 Comments ● 431d

Royal Mail is a beacon of British failure

Royal Mail is a beacon of British failure, where the inept are rewarded and the innocent pay.https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/04/12/royal-mail-privatisation-fake-stamps-british-failure/This article in The Telegraph is behind a paywall.  Therefore I will copy-paste some paragraphs.  "...In February, a BBC Panorama programme titled Royal Mail: Where’s My Post, laid bare the scale of the organisation’s failings, featuring people who had missed operations because NHS letters never arrived, and showing others queuing at sorting offices in a bid to find lost post.This week, we learnt that Chinese forgers are now flooding the UK market with fake stamps – leaving unwitting victims having to pay £5 penalties to collect their letters. ....The company’s director of external affairs and policy, David Gold, admitted this week that the counterfeits, coming from abroad, were so good even he couldn’t tell the difference, before blaming the Border Force for failing to stop them coming into the country. .....No, Mr Gold. A more obvious question is why Royal Mail, a once august British institution, whose origins date back to the reign of Henry VIII, is being run by such a bunch of complete and utter numpties. These people have one job: to deliver the post on time, and they can’t even manage it. Royal Mail has lost £319 million in the first half of this financial year alone and bosses continue to blame labour disputes – despite there having been no strikes since December 2022.The truth of the matter is that cuts to “right-size” Royal Mail have resulted in it becoming the wrong size, having haemorrhaged more than 10,000 employees in the past two years. ....Like its former sister company, the Post Office, Royal Mail has become a beacon of British failure. Much like the stages of grief this sort of abject bungling usually involves five steps. First comes the initial “failure”, be it performance or error. This is normally swiftly followed by the “denial” phase, when senior management repeatedly insists nothing is wrong while continuing to receive generous bonuses. Phase 3 is the “blame” stage, when “the global pandemic”, “industrial action”, even “the customer”, are listed as excuses. Then comes the “lack of accountability” phase, when bosses flail around at select committees and public inquiries passing the buck while exposing their own ineptitude. Such company crises usually culminate in a final “reward” phase, with the CEO inevitably given a golden handshake only to land another plum job – often in the public sector. ..... "This saddens me and angers me in equal measure.  Taking Royal Mail, the Post Office, Thames Water and other companies pumping sewage into rivers and surrounding seas with the blessing of Parliament, the living crisis, the COVID-related procurement fiasco, the incompetence of governing classes and the greed of executives, has the UK lost its moral compass?

Ivonne Holliday ● 438d8 Comments ● 433d

Blundering Susan Hall Mk. II

In the hope that consideration of Hall won't again get drowned in the endless, interminable, circular arguments about Gaza, I want to draw attention to her misleading statements about crime in London."Crime has spiralled out of control after he shut police stations and failed to recruit police," Hall claimed at her campaign launch (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-68639277.amp).Wrong: when he took over in 2016/17 the crime rate (the Met + City of London Police) was 89.3 per 1,000 population; in 2022/23 (the latest available figures) it was 100.9 (https://www.statista.com/statistics/380963/london-crime-rate/). so the increase was 13.2% over 7 years; hardly spiralling out of control.And the Conservative campaign has been forced to delete an ugly attack video that made another false claim about crime in London: “London under Labour has become a crime capital of the world.” Further, it showed scenes of panic at a railway station, overlaid with an ominous US-accented (why a US-accented narrator??) narrator saying: “A 54% increase in knife crime since the Labour mayor seized power [seized power? He was ELECTED, you dummies!] has the metropolis teetering on the brink of chaos. And in the chaos, people seek a desperate reprieve.”Not only was the station shown not in London or even in the UK, but it was Penn Station in New York! And the claim that there has been “a 54% increase  in knife crime was also completely false: in 2016/17 the total number of police recorded knife or sharp instrument offences in London was 12,077 and by 2022/23 it was 12,786, an increase of, er, 5.9%.It seems the hopeless Hall is so desperate she can only run using distasteful and dishonest tactics.

Richard Carter ● 455d16 Comments ● 445d

"Evenin' all"

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13256743/Moment-Met-Police-confronted-Jewish-woman-officer-told-swastikas-arent-necessarily-anti-Semitic-banners-spotted-pro-Palestine-march-London.htmlOh for the days when our police were like PC Dixon and perhaps would have had no doubt that brandishing a swastika was a contravention of our hate speech laws found in several statutes. 'Expressions of hatred toward someone on account of that person's colour, race, sex, disability, nationality (including citizenship), ethnic or national origin, religion, gender reassignment, or sexual orientation is forbidden. Any communication which is threatening or abusive, and is intended to harass, alarm, or distress someone is forbidden. The penalties for hate speech include fines, imprisonment, or both.The Police and CPS have formulated a definition of hate crimes and hate incidents, with hate speech forming a subset of these. Something is a hate incident if the victim or anyone else think it was motivated by hostility or prejudice based on: disability, race, religion, gender identity or sexual orientation. A hate incident becomes a hate crime if it crosses the boundary of criminality.'Doubtless the woman questioning PC 'Thicko' Plod thought comments and actions taking place were 'motivated by hostility or prejudice...based on race' as would any one with a modicum of intelligence or common sense.Or better still had the Sweeney been on the spot Detective Inspector Jack Regan and  his partner, Detective Sergeant George Carter could, with a few clips around the ear, have sorted out the racists.How the Palestinian issue, in which we have no interest, is bringing this country down when we allow it to act as a venue for the activities of those that do have.

John Hawkes ● 450d0 Comments ● 450d

Long Read in today's Guardian Israel/Gaza

Now that the Susan Hall thread has been 'hijacked' I thought I would begin a new thread specifically about Israel and Hamas/Gaza. Firstly my cousin, a British journalist, has just left Israel after a fact finding visit and told me the following with regard to humanitarian aid reaching the people of Gaza:'We had a long discussion on the food situation with the lawyer who represented Israel at the ICJ. Basically Hamas controls how food is distributed. He said a UN inspector who had been there said Hamas took 90 per cent of the food from a truck that he saw going in but the UN cannot criticise Hamas because otherwise Hamas will kill their people.''It’s so complicated. These are the things that complicate it:1) israel needs to check all the vans for smuggled weapons, that takes time2) Gaza has become a lawless place3) Hamas and other militias steal the aid and sell it for a profit to fund their activities4) there is enough food in southern Gaza5) Israel was trying to force non combatants out of northern Gaza - people that didnt leave may be suffering from a famine as the aid is going via the south6) Israel is still on Oct 8 - there are some people who don’t want to feed the enemy still holding onto hostages7) there are more food aid trucks going into Gaza than ever.'From the Guardian:In late October 2023, the veteran Israeli peace activist Gershon Baskin published an open letter denouncing a man he had long called a friend – Ghazi Hamad, a senior Hamas official. Baskin, an architect of the deal that freed the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit from Hamas captivity in 2011, is one of the only Israeli citizens who has maintained consistent contact with leaders of the Palestinian Islamist movement. Hamad, a former journalist with a degree in veterinary medicine, was also involved in the Shalit negotiations and served as deputy foreign minister in the 2012 Hamas government. Prior to the 7 October attacks, for more than a decade and a half, Hamad and Baskin had exchanged frequent phone calls and text messages. These mainly concerned negotiations around prisoner swap deals, and sometimes the possibility of a long-term truce between Israel and Hamas. The pair developed a warm working relationship based on mutual trust.After 7 October and the start of Israel’s ground invasion of the Gaza Strip, that relationship started to unravel. Hamad insisted that the attacks were entirely justified, and denied that Hamas fighters had carried out atrocities during their incursion into Israel. On 24 October, in an interview for a Lebanese TV channel, Hamad vowed that Hamas would commit the same acts “again and again”. He said that “Al-Aqsa Flood”, Hamas’s name for its armed offensive, “is just the first time, and there will be a second, a third, a fourth”. Once considered a thoughtful observer of Palestinian politics, Hamad now declared that “nobody should blame us for what we do – on 7 October, on 10 October, on October 1,000,000. Everything we do is justified.”To Baskin, this did not sound like the man he had come to know. The proclamations by Hamad, “thought to be one of the most moderate people in Hamas”, Baskin noted, landed like a betrayal. Baskin had long argued that it was possible to broker an agreement with Hamas for a “hudna”, or a fixed-term armistice, in exchange for opening the land, air, and sea blockade of the Gaza Strip, which Israel has enforced, with Egypt’s support, since Hamas came to power in 2007. Baskin had believed that Hamad could help move Hamas toward acceding to a two-state solution. In the months before 7 October, Baskin had been trying to organise a meeting with him in Europe to discuss the prospect of a long-term truce.But after 7 October, Baskin, too, shifted his position. “Hamas has forfeited its right to exist as a government of any territory and especially the territory next to Israel,” he wrote in an article for the Times of Israel on 28 October. “Hamas now fully deserves the determination of Israel to eliminate them as the political and military body that controls Gaza.” More recently, Baskin has proposed exiling Hamas leaders such as Yahya Sinwar from Gaza as part of a potential ceasefire deal. He has also proposed that Hamas be barred from contesting future Palestinian elections unless they renounce violence. It is not that Baskin has given up on peace – he remains a fixture in international media coverage as a lonely, even desperate Israeli voice calling for an end to the war. It is that he no longer believes Hamas can be part of the equation. Since October, many Israelis, even or perhaps especially on the centre left, have gone on a similar journey.In late December, I sat with Baskin in the basement of his home, in a quiet, leafy neighbourhood of Jerusalem. Born in New York, Baskin is a stocky, energetic man in his late 60s. He answered the door wearing the silver dog tag engraved with the words “Bring them Home”, which has become an emblem of the movement calling for the return of the more than 100 Israeli hostages still held by Hamas.One question looms over the story of Baskin’s exchange with Hamad: did Hamas change, or did Baskin simply misunderstand the group all along? Baskin believes it was the former. “Most of the years previous to 7 October, there was a willingness to explore pragmatic, long-term ceasefires,” he told me. “In retrospect it became clear – there were signs, but none of us read them – that from two years before 7 October, Hamas had made a decision that there was a no-go on a long-term modus vivendi [with Israel] and that they were beginning to make their plans for an eventual attack.”Baskin recalled his final exchange with Hamad in late October. “During the early days of the war, when I heard that his house was bombed, and I didn’t know he wasn’t in Gaza, I said to him: ‘Ghazi, if they’re going after you, there is no one in Hamas who is safe.’” (Ahead of the war, Hamad had departed for Beirut.) “He responded to me: ‘We have lots of surprises, and we will kill lots of Israelis.’”That was when Baskin posted his open letter to Hamad on social media. “I’m sorry to say that you were someone who I actually trusted and thought that we could help bring a better future to our peoples. But you and your friends have brought the Palestinian cause back 75 years,” he wrote. “I think you have lost your mind and you have lost your moral code.” And with that, Baskin severed their ties.*******The disintegration of Baskin and Hamad’s relationship thus reflects a larger and older debate about Hamas, one that has only become more urgent. At its core is a question about the essence of the organisation: whether it is primarily a nationalist group with an Islamist character, which could be a constructive player in a meaningful peace process, or whether it is a more radical, fundamentalist group, whose hostility to Israel is so unwavering that it can only play the role of violent opposition.

Lucille Grant ● 459d16 Comments ● 457d

The death of a cyclist

There's a powerful piece in tonight's Evening Standard about the awful death of Gao Gao, a young woman who was knocked down whilst cycling home and killed by a speeding driver. It's not a long piece, so I make no apologies for including it all here.Oh, and I hope the anti-cyclists here will have the grace not to post their usual diatribes against cyclists and cycling.I cannot escape the horror of seeing cyclist Gao Gao’s terrible hit-and-run death on CCTVRoss Lydall"The images enter my sleep, and trouble me awake. A speeding car cannonballs across a wet road, flips and smashes head-on into a female cyclist riding home. This is no Netflix horror show. This was a residential street in Hackney on September 21 last year.Gathered from council CCTV footage, this deeply distressing film was shown in evidence to Court 12 at Snaresbrook Crown Court last Friday. The packed, overheated room was silent but for horrified gasps and sobs from about a dozen of the cyclist’s family and close friends.This was how the life of Gao Gao, by all accounts a quite remarkable young Londoner and devoted mother to two terribly young children, ended.Gao Gao’s family and friends had gathered expecting to see the ill-educated 29-year-old man who had pleaded guilty to causing her death by dangerous driving sent to prison.In 30 years as a journalist, the victim impact statements are as distressing as anything I’ve heardInstead, they had to wait as he claimed in court that when he fled the overturned car with his father, he was unaware that a woman was dying less than 20ft away.Somehow her widower, Luke Walker, and her sister Ella found the courage to read out their victim impact statements. They told how many lives had been torn apart, not least those of her four-year-old boy and his one-year-old sister, who will grow up motherless.The little girl, who was still being breastfed, now goes to her front door daily to plead for her 'mama' to return. In 30 years as a journalist, it’s as distressing as anything I’ve heard.This is the reality of what happens daily on London’s roads. As a cyclist, it’s terrifying. As a parent, doubly so. The selfish lack of regard for other road users runs directly from those who rush red lights or ignore pedestrians on zebra crossings to those who, like Gao Gao’s killer, drive at nearly 50mph in a 20mph zone. Hit-and-runs are soaring. Speeding is at epidemic levels: a million tickets may be issued this year. The so-called 'war on the motorist' — LTNs, Ulez and speed cameras — is anything but.But it has inspired the deadliest of vengeance against vulnerable road users. Protected by airbags in ridiculously fast, often unregistered and uninsured cars, many drivers think nothing of the consequences as they turn London into a lawless racetrack."https://www.standard.co.uk/comment/cyclist-hit-and-run-death-london-mother-gao-gao-b1134162.html

Richard Carter ● 518d10 Comments ● 491d

Sunak and integrity: how has that gone?

When he took up the job of prime minister, Sunak promised “integrity, professionalism and accountability,” welcome words after the previous holders’ lack of compassion (May), lack of integrity (Johnson) and lack of any competency (Lettuce Liz): how has that worked out? We’ve found out this week.Setting aside his welshing on the £1,000 bet with Piers Moron (“I’m not a betting man,” he said “it took me by surprise” – let’s hope the Russians don’t see this) and the tasteless attack on Starmer on trans issues as if they weren’t bad enough, I think even worse was his smearing of Starmer in an interview with Moron, in which he said that Starmer was “on the side” of a major Islamist group and suggested he was a “terrorist sympathiser”.What’s the background to this? Before he was Leader of the Labour Party, before he was Director Public Prosecutions and even before he was an MP, Starmer, working as a lawyer, represented the Islamist group Hisb ut-Tahir in a court case (and I hold no brief for them, before someone accuses me of being an Islamist supporter). Discussing this, there came this exchange (quoted from the Telegraph)Mr Morgan then asked: “Do you think he is a terrorist sympathiser?”Mr Sunak responded: “Well I would say let the facts speak for themselves, right?”Sunak doesn’t (or won’t) understand certain basic principles of the law, in particular, that you’re innocent until proved guilty and that you are entitled to legal representation if a case is brought., so he went ahead and accused Starmer of being a terrorist sympathiser. What an utter disgrace the man is!

Richard Carter ● 501d43 Comments ● 495d

Musical Museum survival appeal.

I'm a volunteer tour guide at the Musical Museum in Brentford, London. https://www.musicalmuseum.co.uk/It is a very satisfying role because I watch the delight and wonder on the visitors' faces when they see and hear the instruments used for music reproduction through the ages. We have musical boxes, polyphons (the precursors of juke boxes) self-playing organs and pianos including player pianos and reproducing pianos that play the actual performances of famous pianists of the past including Gershwin, Rachmaninoff and many others. There are phonographs, gramophones, juke boxes that play 78s and a mighty Wurlitzer Cinema organ in our concert hall. The collection is of national and international importance because it restores and preserves working examples of extremely rare instruments.Loss of income during the Covid shutdown followed by huge inflation in the museum's costs mean that the museum can no longer pay its way so this year, our 60th, might be the last. We have trimmed our costs to the bone but must find money urgently to keep the doors open as we change the way we operate.If you value a historic musical resource, you may wish to support the museum's survival crowdfunder but if it doesn't seem that important to you, I understand that and I apologise for the intrusion. Here's the crowdfunder link.https://gofund.me/5632515eIf you feel able to, it would be great if you can also pass on the appeal to anyone you think might be interested.

David Lusty ● 508d3 Comments ● 507d

The real Covid enquiry

So the data is now out on the "rollout" of the "safe and effective" (novel, experimental, mRNA gene modification technologies) "vaccines rolled out at warp-speed* for a "pandemic" with a 99.97% recovery rate."There is only conclusion you can make - these "vaccines" are killing people. No doubt about it. They are causing irreparable harm.. . This cannot be a natural event.  It is man-made. Every single country in the world, every U.S. state, is hiding this data. Collectively, governments around the world are killing people. 13 million worldwide.150,000 in the U.K. [so far, since the trajectory is 5 to 10 years] killed by their governments. Release the data now. Any government that refuses to release it is corrupt."https://odysee.com/@may132:5/Steve-Kirsch-to-Parliament:6Testimony of Steve Kirsch, echoing New Zealand data aggregator who analysed the Cv19 data batches, expert witnesses at the House of Commons Committee meeting of 4 December 2023 as a guest of by MP Andrew Bridgen. One hour interview with  the New Zealand whistle-blower referring to MP Andrew Bridgen's efforts:https://x.com/ABridgen/status/1730156098936574204?s=20 "This data analysis which will be replicable in every highly-vaccinated i.e. westernised country"Steve Kirsch is the U.S. multi-millionaire businessman who, despite also being "jabbed" along with his family (many of whom have now died), has analysed all the data and was at the Committee hearing to reveal the analysis that was revealed earlier this month by New Zealand whistle-blower. That whistle-blower was a government official responsible for collecting – and has since analyse – the national government's own data on vaccine batches (of which there were 20,000 different ones globally, 30-50% of which were saline /  water i.e. completely ineffective but at least entirely safe). Data that shows a death rate of 20%. (And up to 30% in some NZ towns demonstrating, as we knew, that the batches were deliberately targeted).Andrew Bridgen is the MP who is exposing the government's own data (ONS) showing the month-on-month excess death numbers, the following expert witnesses provided their data (not "opinion" or "account"). The other expert witnesses at the 4 Dec Committee meeting were:Dr Pierre Kory – U.S. ICE / A&E doctor who appealed for the use of cheap and effective Ivermectin to avoid hospitalisation of those suffering from "covid";Dr David Martin – U.S. patent attorney who exposed all the pre-agreed contracts for the Covid tests and "vaccines" years before the "surprise" 2020 "pandemic";Dr Mike Yeadon (by video recording) – U.K. former VP of respiratory medicine at Pfizer who wrote "The Covid Lies" (Appendix 2 of our Covid Response Accountability Demand) who has exposed the lies around variants and purported virulence of "the virus";Professor Norman Fenton – U.K. mathematician who is a world leading expert on risk assessment and statistics;Dr Robert Malone – U.S. doctor who patented the mRNA technology used to deliver the Covid-19 vaccines, as use for which it was never intended. And who now wants that mRNA technology banned for vaccine delivery, even though he is himself "jabbed"; and*Those having died "with covid".. "within 28 days of a PCR test i.e. deemed dead with covid on the basis of having been tested with a99.94% false positive test no matter what the underlying cause of death. That is, if they weren't ventilated/intubated which had a near 100% death rate; or put on Matt Hancock's "end of life" pathway i.e. Midazolam and Morphine in order "to ensure a good death".

Lydia Tapping ● 556d20 Comments ● 549d

63 Putney High Street at risk

It’s rather depressing to note that No 63 Putney High Street (the building where the now defunct Paperchase was housed) has had protection from demolition denied.It’s depressing because the building is one of the few of any distinction in the street: just travel up and down PHS on the upper floor of a bus and you can see how little of value there is. The upper floors in particular on No.63 are distictly Arts and Crafts – and Putney Society featured the building in May 2019, explaining that it was built in 1906 for Lilley & Skinner to designs by Arthur Sykes. Sykes was a “versatile architect responding to the booming economy, Sykes could design huge classical retail premises for example in Kensington and Holborn. He designed King’s Parade in the centre of Acton in 1903 in an Art Nouveau style and later experimented with even more fanciful styles in Palmers Green. We’re proud to have our own Arthur Sykes building!”But now, Historic England have recommended against the DCMS adding it to the List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest and saying that a Certificate of Immunity from Listing (COI) should be issued for it. What this would mean is that if the owners choose, there’s nothing anyone can do to stop them. The last resort is to appeal to Michael Gove, SofS for Levelling Up,  Housing and Communities, and I urge that anyone who would like to see No.63 survive, should write to him at michael.gove.mp@parliament.uk

Richard Carter ● 605d12 Comments ● 587d

Global Population Takeover Plot by WHO & The Gang

Unbeknown to most people, I’m sure, because it’s all being kept very quiet, amendments to the World Health Organization Pandemic Treaty and International Health Regulations have been proposed by the WHO, to give them absolute power over the global population whenever they want and for as long as they want, with the various democratically elected governments around the world having no say at all; that’s right – sovereignties surrendered. The unelected, non-tax paying, diplomatically immune criminal gang who call themselves The World Health Organization, led by Ethiopian, Tedros, who already has a questionable Human Rights record, will be able to impose lockdowns, mask wearing, vaccine mandates etc. anywhere in the world at the drop of a hat, and there’s nobody anywhere that will be able to do anything about it. Their decisions will be legally binding, and even dissent will be outlawed. Only WHO approved medicines and vaccines will be allowed to be administered, and they plan to have vaccines ready for administration within 100 days upon discovery of any new pathogen.Governments around the world already have the draft documents and, as they relate to ‘amendments’ of an existing treaty, as opposed to a new treaty, they will come into force by default if governments do nothing, and nothing is what they are doing. Of course, government leaders around the world would not surrender their nation’s sovereignty to an elitist criminal gang unless they were part of the same elitist criminal gang; so we lose everything but our corrupt leaders and their pals get to control us via a democracy-free dictatorship under the guise of a health organization.As with the Covid scam, which has done so much damage to the UK and its population, Andrew Bridgen MP is one of the few MPs standing up for the people of this country, and has proposed a Bill in Parliament to help prevent any UK government from surrendering sovereignty to any organization without the permission of the general public by referendum. If you support Andrew Bridgen’s Bill and don’t want to live under a global dictatorship, please get in touch with your MP and express your outrage and disgust that a totalitarian State is even being considered by our government. The Bill comes to the House on Friday 24th November. A video of Andrew Bridgen MP presenting the case to Parliament follows:

Michael Brown ● 605d13 Comments ● 592d

Information about scams and frauds

I was recently at the International Cyber Expo and - along with some other government agencies - the Met police were there displaying their information about cyber fraud and scams.This isn't just a Putney issue but from some previous forum posts I know some of you might be interested in this. Even for those aware of these dangers I thought this information could be useful to pass on to friends, family members or colleagues who might find it helpful - the PDFs can alway be printed for those without or unsure about using online access.This website has links to a number of audio/visual online guides detailing scams and frauds to be aware of, how to spot them and tips to avoid them.It also has a link to all the PDFs of the "Little Booklet" series about scams and frauds (which personally I prefer to the A/V format).https://www.met.police.uk/littlemediaThe Little Book of Big Scams is one definitely worth reading:https://www.met.police.uk/SysSiteAssets/media/downloads/central/advice/fraud/met/the-little-book-of-big-scams.pdfAnd there's also this anti-fraud campaign led by UK finance with information and download:https://www.takefive-stopfraud.org.uk/On the business front, for SMEs the Met also have their cyber protect initiatives that might be useful for some - from staff awareness presentations to cyber escape room exercises - and for free …https://www.met.police.uk/cyberprotectAnd for those at the more nerdy end of the spectrum who like playing with Internet of Things toys, the DSIT has it's new Secure by Design secure connected device accreditation scheme to enable checking whether devices comply with the latest government code of practice and legislation for these deviceshttps://www.securedbydesign.com/internet-of-thingsAnd you can check here whether that item you're considering purchasing has been accredited - although one should still take one's own security precautions (strong passwords, etc) as no accreditation guarantees 100% security …https://www.securedbydesign.com/member-companies/accredited-product-search(I'm sure you'll all be pleased to see Ring.com is listed in the IoT Smart Homes Security category! :-) )Finally, I know a number of people in Putney work in the City so they may wish to know about the City of London police's Cyber Griffin programme for businesses:https://cybergriffin.police.uk/#hero

Michael Ixer ● 616d6 Comments ● 606d

Demanding accountability for the Covid scam

...by Marcel de Graaff - Member of the European Parliament for FVD.09 March 2023Back in 2021, we had the revelation of emails from the German Interior Ministry which showed that it enlisted scientists to scare the population.Last year it, was revealed that the Covid statistics had been falsified by Dutch Health Minister Hugo de Jonge by inflating the numbers.And now we have the revelation of over 100,000 Whatsapp messages from former British Health Minister, Matt Hancock. The British “Daily Telegraph” has put them online as "The  Lockdown Files.From all these revelations, it has been shown time and again that the coronavirus was no more deadly than other cold and flu viruses. As we know from flu and colds, these can be fatal to vulnerable, very old people. For anyone under 80, these viruses are almost never fatal. So it was with Covid-19. It was a common cold virus.Minister Matt Hancock had a discussion with then Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Boris Johnson, via Whatsapp about this low mortality rate. He wrote that this was a problem because it meant that vaccination targets would not be met.The Lockdown Files also show that in addition to the vaccines, other Covid measures were mainly intended to instil fear of the virus into the population.The revelations in Germany, the Netherlands and now especially in the United Kingdom show that the same Covid policy was deliberately followed in all these countries – policy which had nothing to do with the nature of the coronavirus. The Lockdown Files show that no special measures were needed, given the low mortality of the virus. The British government switched from publishing mortality rates to publishing the number of infections. The entire EU then switched and reported on Covid in the same way.Pushing through the vaccines and introducing the corresponding digital Covid pass was the real goal. For this, no means were shunned.Unvaccinated people were not simply portrayed as irresponsible but as anti-social, dangerous enemies of the state. There were threats of incarceration and forced vaccination. Unvaccinated people were fired. People were locked in their homes via curfews. Hospitals and nursing homes prohibited partners and children from visiting their sick spouses or parents, even when they were dying.From the beginning, there were medical experts who scientifically argued that the imposed measures were futile and warned against the vaccinations.Doctors who protested were silenced on social media. Doctors who prescribed effective drugs were punished with heavy fines and the revocation of their licence.The Lockdown Files show that the unvaccinated and Covid-critical doctors were right – and that there was absolutely nothing right about government policy.What also emerges from the Lockdown Files is the involvement of Bill Gates.  Matt Hancock literally messages about Bill Gates, "He owes me one." In other words, Bill Gates owes me one because Hancock had millions of his vaccines injected.This so-called philanthropist bought shares in Big Pharma for $50 million and after the Covid hype was over sold those same shares for $500 million.The contracts with huge sums of money signed by governments with the pharmaceutical multinationals are still not public. The correspondence between Pfizer and EU President Ursula von der Leyen is still secret. The messages between Dutch minister Hugo de Jonge and Prime Minister Mark Rutte about Covid have supposedly been erased.It looks like the European Commission and the governments of EU member states were as aware of Covid’s low mortality as the British government. Their policies were almost identical, the flawed PCR test was accepted EU-wide, the Digital Covid pass became an international travel document, even the wording was almost identical. Several countries started using the same phrases at the same time: “from neighbourhood to neighbourhood, from house to house, from arm to arm.”The measures lacked any reasonable ground yet they violated basic human rights and fundamental freedoms. Physical and mental integrity were violated without justification.There must be government accountability for this in every state. As a Member of the European Parliament, I demand that the European Commission come to Parliament to account for this.Therefore, I ask the President of the European Parliament urgently to put on the agenda for the next Strasbourg session a debate on the Lockdown Files with Ursula von der Leyen.We will see whether the European Parliament wants to take up its controlling task or whether it is complicit in the biggest scandal of the century.Marcel de Graaff

Michael Brown ● 610d2 Comments ● 607d

https://www.gov.uk/government/news/consultation-launched-to-ban-wet-wipes-containing-plastic

So the Govt is now consulting on wet wipes.  We've discussed them before and Fleur Anderson MP has spoken about them in Parliament calling for these wipes containing plastic to be banned.  There have been petitions because they cause sewer blockages and overflows. These often happen causing blockages and overflows all the way down a street.For years these wipes containing plastic have been heavily marketed with little acknowledgement of their effect on the environment.  I remember Thames Water taking a well known company to court and winning.  There have also been huge campaigns for years to Bin it don't Flush it.Yet when these are flushed and mixed with all the fats and oils which should not be poured down the drains they cool and congeal into fatbergs.  Some of these fatbergs in the sewers are the size of double decker buses and they have to be drilled out.  There is part of one in the Natural History Museum and in the Museum of London.Volunteers with the charity Thames 21 have spent year after year cleaning the Thames and have been counting the number of wet wipes collected from the foreshore.It is definitely not at all pleasant when toilets back up and overflow into your home or office.  Yet this will continue while unflushables are flushed - so don't believe the packaging - and don't do it!https://www.thames21.org.uk/event/big-wet-wipe-count-april-2023/https://www.gov.uk/government/news/consultation-launched-to-ban-wet-wipes-containing-plastic

Philippa Bond ● 619d5 Comments ● 612d

Calling All Cat Lovers!🐈🐈‍⬛

No apologies for this long post.  If you are not interested in cats' welfare don't bother to read it or post negative comments; jog on.  The video is eye opening and explains the desperate plight of rescues that are trying but sadly failing to rehabilitate 1000's of abandoned and feral  cats.  They are overwhelmed by the sheer numbers and unable to cope and the situation is now reached crisis point.  Nobody is asking for donations, just a few minutes of your time to sign the petition. Thankyou.** PLEASE SIGN AND SHARE **There has never been a more important petition regarding cats. Owners are not educating themselves before getting cats or simply just don't neuter them. Under age kittens are given to children to play with like toys. At 4 mths when no longer small & cute they are abandoned & start breeding by 5 mths.  Kittens are dumped in dustbins, cats thrown out of cars. This has to stop! Every minute rescues all over the UK get a call about strays, no one can help anymore, not even mums and kittens can be saved. Please share this with EVERY single person you know. 10,000 signatures we get a response,  100,000 it's debated at Parliament.  This winter millions of strays will freeze to death, how as a nation of supposed animal lovers do we let this happen.In answer to the concern we will run out of kittens these are the facts.We have no choice but to do this due to the out of control cat population and no one neutering. There are large colonies all over the UK females have litter after litter.Owners call rescues daily demanding rescues take their cats or kittens and threatening to dump them. Rescues cannot help as no space.I strongly suggest if opposed to this petition you try taking phone calls for your local rescue. Hundreds of cats on a waiting list more and more phoned in all day every day.  Breeding must be regulated going forward it is totally unacceptable to allow so many cats to keep suffering.  **************Calling all animal lovers please sign and share to stop cats and kittens suffering https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid0Wgi3vYUgJpWn5VVF3urPk3LB61MCYAsZ9oZgwv1uodFJufZwyjfXn4zDjkmr8z9Tl&id=100000343393592https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/643251

Sue Hammond ● 632d14 Comments ● 618d

PM speech on Net Zero: 20 September 2023

There’s been surprisingly little comment here on last night’s speech by Sunak, and what there is, is buried in other threads. Whatever you think of it, it was significant and it deserves to be discussed properly (the text can be found here: https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/pm-speech-on-net-zero-20-september-2023)So, to initiate this, my view is that it was one of the most disgraceful, dishonest exercises in political rhetoric that I can remember. Sunak starts off by claiming that he has spent his first year as Prime Minister “bringing back stability to our economy, your government, and our country,” a dubious enough claim already, given the chaos of the school RAAC fiasco, to give only one example. But he goes on to say he wants to change the way our politics works: “Can we be brave in the decisions we make, even if there is a political cost? Can we be honest when the facts change, even if it’s awkward? And can we put the long-term interests of our country before the short-term political needs of the moment, even if it means being controversial?” He then said that “I have made my decision: we are going to change. And over the coming months, I will set out a series of long-term decisions to deliver that change.”I’ve no idea what these decisions might involve, but his announcement last night of the U-turn on reaching net zero is not a promising beginning. He claims to accept that the climate emergency is serious, yet he puts off (to the dismay and fury of manufacturers) the changes to vehicle engines and home heating under a confected concern for the cost to families; it’s an absolutely blatant, cynical move to scrabble for some votes for his failing party. In other words, he has put his and the Conservative party’s interests above the country’s, the very short-term approach that he claims to be against. If his concern were genuine, why would he be scrapping the requirement for homeowners and landlords to meet energy efficiency targets? Why will he not take forward policies to encourage more sustainable behaviour, such as taxing airlines properly and informing the public of the carbon footprint of meat? Why does he boast about scrapping the proposal for government to interfere in how many passengers you can have in your car – when there was no such proposal in the first place? The speech was riddled with such inconsistencies, all with the aim of propagating the straight lie that he was thinking of the country in the long term instead of dishonestly trying to rescue his miserable government from the fate it so clearly deserves.Anyway, this post has gone on long enough: it’s your turn.

Richard Carter ● 642d36 Comments ● 630d

Random pic 30 September 2023

French art at the Courtauld: Édouard Manet (1832-1883), A Bar at the Folies-Bergère, 1882                   https://flic.kr/p/2oZS33p I hadn't registered the bottle of British Bass beer in the bar at the Folies-Bergère. Bottled Bass seems to get everywhere, some UK friends and I had to explain to a barman in San Francisco that it wasn't pronounced by spelling it's letters as "B-A-S-S" but as one word "Bass" to rhyme with "ass". Édouard Manet (1832-1883)
A Bar at the Folies-Bergère, 1882
Oil paint on canvas This celebrated work is Édouard Manet's last major painting, completed a year before he died. At one of the bars in the Folies-Bergère- a popular Parisian music hall - wine, champagne and British Bass beer with its red triangle logo await customers. A fashionable crowd mingles on the balcony. The legs and green boots of a trapeze artist in the upper left hint at the exciting musical and circus acts entertaining the audience. This animated background is in fact a reflection in the large gold-framed mirror, which projects it into the viewer's own space.
Manet made sketches on-site but painted this work entirely in his studio, where a barmaid named Suzon came to pose. She is the painting's still centre. Her enigmatic expression is unsettling, especially as she appears to be interacting with a male customer. lgnoring normal perspective, Manet shifted their reflection to the right. The bottles on the left are similarly misaligned in the mirror. This play of reflections emphasises the disorientating atmosphere of the Folies-Bergère. In this work,
Manet created a complex and absorbing
composition that is considered one of the
iconic paintings of modern life. Samuel Courtauld gift, 1934
E 47

Michael Ixer ● 634d0 Comments ● 634d

Angertainment is a handy word for it

"Former Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull says Rupert Murdoch’s ‘anger-tainment’ damaged the democratic world""On Friday Turnbull said that Murdoch left a “hell of a legacy”, arguing that without Fox and News Corp, Britain probably would not have exited the European Union and Donald Trump would not have been president.“He’s built a vast global media empire, and no doubt the business pages will give him credit for that,” Turnbull told ABC News Breakfast.But Turnbull argued the media empire “sought to enrage Americans, divide Americans, and divide them against each other, and it has knowingly – and Murdoch had a personal hand in this … it has knowingly spread lies, most consequentially the one … where Donald Trump claimed to have won the 2020 election.“And, of course, that created the environment which made the January 6 insurrection possible.”In April, Fox and the voting equipment company Dominion reached a US$787.5m settlement in a defamation lawsuit, ending a dispute over whether the network and its parent company knowingly broadcast false and outlandish allegations that Dominion was involved in a plot to steal the 2020 election.Turnbull said Murdoch’s companies “will continue in much the same vein” without him as chair. “They have become more propaganda than news.”Sky News, like Fox, has been commercially successful because it “kept people engaged – in other words, watching their platform, their channel – by riling them up, by creating division and anger and resentment, and, you know, stoking that”, he said.“But the problem there is, while it might be good for Fox’s ratings or Sky News’ ratings, is it leaves you with a society that is incredibly divided, that’s increasingly polarised, that struggles to work together to meet common challenges, and so is therefore weaker.”"https://www.theguardian.com/media/2023/sep/22/former-australian-pm-malcolm-turnbull-comments-rupert-murdoch"Pouring oil on troubled fires" seems to produce profit, at least in the short term.

David Ainsworth ● 642d0 Comments ● 642d

25 Sept, 7.30pm, Port of London Authority talk on the Thames in Putney and beyond

If you walk by the river, drink by the river, row or sail on the river, travel on a river boat, are keen for more freight to go on the river rather than by road, are worried about pollution, then here's your chance to find out more. Do you know that all these issues come under the responsibilities of the Port of London Authority (PLA) who operate between Teddington Lock and the North Sea?If you care about any of these things then come along to the Putney Society meeting and hear from Jim Trimmer, Director of Planning and Development at the Port of London Authority. Monday 25 September at 7.30pm at the Community Church, Werter Road, Putney [opposite Sainsbury’s].Topics he is likely to cover include: progress on Thames Tideway; the proposed new Putney pier and ways to increase passenger and leisure use of the Thames; river pollution – do you realise it’s the PLA and not the Environment Agency who have responsibility for monitoring this issue in the Thames? He will also discuss their plans to encourage more freight to be carried by river and off our roads. And he is also happy to cover items pertinent to us such as the towpath and the maintenance of trees along the river banks and how the PLA prepare for major events such as the boat race. You can attend virtually by registering at registration@putneysociety.org.ukA £3 donation from non members of the Putney Society is welcome.Refreshments availableDisabled access

Victoria Diamond ● 651d1 Comments ● 644d

20 mph speed limits

Personally I’m pleased that many London councils (but not, as yet, Wandsworth) have adopted 20 mph as the default speed limit on their roads, as is the whole of Wales, on the basis that it improves safety for all concerned and reduces fuel use.This, of course, has drawn criticism from all the usual suspects, but the most extreme I've seen is from Penny Mordaunt, quoted in The Times today as saying (about the Welsh policy) that it is not just "insane" – that would have been bad enough – but "absolutely insane." She goes on to say “More disturbingly, it is going to increase individuals’ fuel bills considerably and actually be harmful to the environment.” She also claims that it will cost the Welsh economy £4.5 billion.All of this is nonsense, especially the extraordinarily extreme language about the policy’s supposed insanity, but the claims that it will increase fuel bills and harm the environment are quite simply wrong: "Reducing peak road speeds in areas where people live, work or play saves energy and cash. Research into typical stop/start urban traffic by Future Transport reveals fuel efficiency peaks with speed capped at 20mph. Drivers benefit from up to 10p per mile in fuel savings without trips taking longer. That’s a 30 per cent saving in urban fuel costs." (https://shorturl.at/lryW8). And the £4.5 million claim is, unsurprisingly, made without the benefit of anything as trifling as evidence.What's disappointing about this stuff is that until now, Mordaunt had seemed one of the more reasonable members of our benighted government. What on earth has got into her?

Richard Carter ● 648d38 Comments ● 645d

Here we go again

"Susan Hall is not fit to represent London.On Wednesday 19 July, the Conservative Party announced that London Assembly Member and Harrow councillor Susan Hall would be their candidate for London Mayor in 2024. Having faced some criticism for controversial social media posts in the past, Hall has made an effort to tidy up her social media in recent years, including deleting every tweet sent prior to December 2017.However, a review of Cllr Hall’s social media output – and in particular the posts she has “liked” on X (previously Twitter) – reveals alarming views and behaviour from someone seeking high office. Hall has repeatedly endorsed Enoch Powell, abusive posts aimed at politicians and journalists, including some directed at Sadiq Khan that have clear Islamophobic undertones.Hall has twice appeared to endorse the legacy of Enoch Powell, the Conservative MP best known for his racist Rivers of Blood speech.""It is worth noting that Powell bitterly opposed allowing Uganda’s Asian population to come to the UK after their cruel expulsion by Idi Amin in 1972, and a significant proportion of Hall’s home borough of Harrow are descended from those who were thankfully permitted to make their home here.On 5 November 2020, as votes were still being counted for the US Presidential Election, Hall quote-tweeted an article alleging a conspiracy to steal the election from the notorious right-wing misinformation site Gateway Pundit. The post remains live on Hall’s account."https://hopenothate.org.uk/2023/09/15/susan-hall-conservative-candidate-for-london-mayors-social-media-exposed/It will be a close-run thing, apparently. I could despair, so I have decided not to care. Much, anyway.

David Ainsworth ● 647d8 Comments ● 646d

Last Day to Comment on Closure of Ticket Offices

https://www.disabilitynewsservice.com/ticket-office-closures-could-lead-to-huge-price-hikes-for-disabled-londoners/We had many more and much more accessibility for everyone on the nation's rail services when we had the Olympics here.  There were ramps - which were available - and someone to put them in place for use - but now train travel has become a lot harder for everybody to access.You wouldn't think that we had laws about it being accessible, would you?If we want to get more people out of their cars then we have to provide alternatives and good public transport is one of them.Many young people buy their first car when they have a family.  It should be made easier for us to all travel by train.  It is very difficult to get on and off a train with a buggy and a toddler and all those difficult to climb steps and gaps and doors that you have to reach over to open and then swing open or shut.  (I once swung right out onto the platform while opening one and had to jump - I think/hope the design has now changed!  There are more sliding doors, I know.)I know that I don't like driving for hours any more the way that we once used to and would much prefer to get the train for long journeys - but our stations and trains need to be encourage that.  Stations need to be step-free so that they are easy to access and easy to take a suitcase so we can still visit family and friends further away.Ticket machines can be difficult to read and difficult to use and often do not have the ticket options available on the internet. You also don't need to do your own printing and can have the assurance of that your ticket is valid and when the next train is from someone who deals with tickets every day in a ticket office which is a great boon for the occasional train traveller.

Philippa Bond ● 662d7 Comments ● 660d

There's always someone worse off

I meant to post this article earlier. It is a reminder that, although things are bad here, the USA is in a worse condition:-"Why do Republicans even bother with this whole farce?Trump wasn't there, but we saw why he's leading: GOP voters don't care about substance, just unjustified grievances""The GOP exists mainly as a vehicle for the endless parade of unwarranted, incoherent grievances of the Republican base.When whining and playing the victim are all that the voters want from their leaders, of course Trump rises to the top. Even Florida's Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is so egotistical he put out an ad declaring he was handpicked by God, cannot compete with Trump's off-the-charts level of narcissism. For a base that just wants to hear how they're the real victims here, Trump's "woe is me" messaging and retribution-oriented rhetoric is political heroin straight into their MAGA veins. Wednesday night's debate was a painful illustration of this.The more candidates, like former Vice President Mike Pence and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, actually tried to talk about policy — albeit from a traditional "gut social spending" Republican point of view — the more you could feel the audience fall asleep. But when businessman-turned-professional troll Vivek Ramaswamy hollered the slogan, "Drill, frack, burn coal and embrace nuclear," the audience went nuts. Not because this is a serious policy proposal, mind you. Because, as his impish grin suggested, the joy was in knowing how much liberals would be triggered by this answer."https://www.salon.com/2023/08/24/why-do-even-bother-with-this-whole-farce/

David Ainsworth ● 667d0 Comments ● 667d