Showing posts with label Wiggiaatlarge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wiggiaatlarge. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 02, 2025

Wiggia's Week: The lost ‘art’ of lying

 

Politics has always contained statements and speeches riddled with untruths, adjusted facts, downright lies and hypocrisy, being economical with the truth has become an art form. That of course was in the days when we had political figures who could carry all that off to a degree lost in today’s ‘amateur’ world of the current incumbents of Westminster.

The belief among them that nobody will notice their deliberate distortions is in the case of the current Labour government off the scale, lies are trotted out at such a rate that the use of u-turns to reverse the obvious faux pas, has everyone in a spin as daily we get fed evermore untrue and manipulated ‘facts’; even those with popularity ratings in the minus section continue to trot out the same garbage.

None of this is helped as the “here today, gone tomorrow” minnows in the political spectrum attempt to make a mark during the short tenure in a post, a post in most cases that they have absolutely no connection with in any form. They are all mediocre non-entities promoted above their abilities.

“Out of touch” is a phrase frequently lobbed in the direction of these nonentities that have by some strange means ended up in Parliament and even Cabinet positions. Nearly all have never had a job outside of politics or charity positions so it is not unexpected when they lie to cover their inadequacies having never had to deal with everyday living on a personal basis.

This recent interview with a former Labour supporter says it all about being out of touch. Not only was she a Labour supporter but he had visited her before, so a safe meeting, or so he thought. He didn’t like what she said about the changes in her area and resorted to his standard fall back phrase and called her racist, quite extraordinary that this person is leading (?) the country or supposed to be.
Much is made of the advisors and civil servants who do the heavy (?) lifting in the background as without them these inadequates would be no different to those cardboard cut-out figures one used to see outside of the likes of butcher’s shops and petrol stations - at least they served a purpose, to show the way in.

Our current PM is possibly the worst example of this genre. Not having the wit charm or guile to make any speech or statement believable he flounders and the following day makes things worse by either lying again or u-turning; in his case it is the total lack of any feel for what the nation thinks or believes. Surely his advisors cannot be of the same ilk to a man, but that is how it appears, they are all cut from the same cloth.
Albert RN - would anyone notice the difference if he was installed as PM?

Ed Miliband runs the PM close in the ‘economical’ stakes, he would be top if given more air time. His ‘the public will save £300 on energy bills’ has morphed into an increase of £150 and rising. Strangely he believes our most expensive energy costs, the highest in the western world, are the result of outside factors. These outside factors have no effect on any other countries to the same degree but we are supposed to swallow a blatant lie: his end of the world scenario is borne out by the science. We have heard it all before but he still spouts the same drivel. Naturally these ‘end of days’ statements have been official folk lore for a long time.

The Health Secretary and the PM have joined forces in lying about the millions of extra (?) appointments the NHS has provided this year, when if you speak to anyone who is waiting for any of the aforementioned they will tell you they have had cancellations and re-appointments a-go-go this year. I personally know of two recently that have had up to five cancellations for procedures in a short space of time, others have said similar. The only way you can get a firm date for a procedure is to arrive in the country in a dinghy and get your teeth fixed while you wait.

These people are not lied to. Agreements drawn up without the public’s consent see illegal migrants looked after with every detail fully adhered to, no lying in that area, but by now we know all that.
At all levels people tell porkies, as I said it is now so common that they can be seen through at first utterance. When Yasmin Alibhai Brown says she goes into pubs to argue with white people about how they are failing to integrate - I don’t think I believe her; when the Home Secretary talks as she did the other day about her many Jewish friends after the synagogue murders I don’t believe her.

When a recent Labour advisor during the Birmingham bin strike said that she knew what was behind the strike as she knew many bin men! she fell into the things that never happened category and lied.

TTK (Two Tier Keir)’s obsession, along with Blair about digital ID to stop the boats, was always just a fig leaf for other uses. He lied as a week on we have before being released, mission creep! Last week it was to stop the boats, now its bills and benefits, next week it’ll be your movement licence in and out of your 15 minute ghetto, followed by your carbon tracker and digital ration book plus how many of your Tesco Club points you can use on non-eco items.
This is her ‘frighten the children’ look

When Darren Jones, Labour minister, states on Question Time that 80% of the people on the boats coming across the channel are women and children! has he spent too much time in the sun? No one of sound mind could come out with that and expect to be believed; such a blatant lie.
Misleading is the replacement word used most. One would have to be very kind of heart to use that word in the situations shown and many others. The amount of misleading statements put out by our Chancellor are really just one gigantic lie, but then she lied about her CV so shame is another word that has been discarded.

It is very noticeable that when interviewed our Chancellor or her predecessors never have a real life accountant from the public sector that actually works daily in the sector interviewing them. Understandable really when the quality of those in charge is of such a low standard and that has been a trend for some years. When a lie becomes the stock answer to a problem we are in serious trouble, and we are.

Sunday, September 28, 2025

WEEKENDER: The Assisted Dying Bill, by Wiggia

 

Why are they all smiling!

The title gives the impression this Bill is all about helping those in extreme medical circumstances out of their dilemma by killing them. For some it makes sense, for many it is a form of legalised murder.

Far too many influences are involved that are not in any way wanting to help the afflicted but hasten them on their way for their own advantage, whether they be individuals or organisations i.e. the State.

The fact this Bill is a private members’ one does not disguise an element that shows all the signs of relieving older people of the help they need as they approach their later days.

There was a time when older family members were automatically brought ‘home’ to see out their days in the bosom of the family. That of course was a long time ago, now they become a nuisance only. Contact often is because family members can see a pot of gold within reach, I doubt if many reading this will not have across the family members descending like vultures when a grandparent dies in the belief they are entitled to what is left; I have seen it in my own family, it is not something to be proud of and the usual suspects turn up every time like locusts.

I have heard many such cases from friends over the years so I am hardly surprised how widespread it is when it happens.

Now it appears that governments want to get in on the act. In the Lords Matthew Parish was mentioned for his recent piece in the Times…..

https://x.com/i/status/1968979274775277584:
“The elderly and infirm are a ‘drain on resources’”. Lord Curry of Kirkharle quotes Matthew Parris in The Times saying it would be good if they felt pressure to end their lives early. This is the chilling attitude that legalising assisted suicide would normalise.
An interesting issue is the MP who put forward this private members bill. Kim Leadbetter is a strange choice for Westminster. Being the sister of the murdered MP Jo Cox seems to be enough to have chosen her for the shoo-in, hardly a reason on its own for being selected but many both in the Commons and the Lords have got there by association of one sort or another over the years and it still goes on. Her main distinction since winning the seat is to be very coy about her sexuality as her Muslim supporters are not known for being tolerant to sexual deviation so she butters them up to the detriment of everything else. Still she has got this far with the Bill and it looks as though it will pass in one form or another. What her motivation was for presenting the bill in the first place is not known, was it actually her or is she a proxy for the government as a whole?

There is generally a support group for assisted dying that is purely financial. Many commentators have voiced concerns over the cost of social care and the NHS (in general unaffordable), coupled with the increase in the aged population. Yet this is not a problem that has crept up unforeseen. The figures since the start of the last century show a steady rise in longevity and as with so much else little has been done to meet the inevitable demands it would bring, yet strangely the government of the time while worried about the costs is introducing ever more items to increase life expectancy, such as medical advances, better (though that is increasingly abused) diet, and lifestyle changes.

As with most advances there is a downside, in this case the cost as the recipients are of the older retired age group.

So once again many who believe they are being in some way robbed of services and financial gain see assisted dying as a way to lessen the load so to speak by targeting the group that takes most of the resources.

We saw some of this during Covid as explained in my last piece on the NHS, and the care home murders, for that is what they were went unchallenged and no one has been brought to book for the decisions made, truly one of the most disgraceful decisions made in recent times. That was even repeated when and after the instances leaked out, no one cared, so there is a problem and we cannot trust governments to legislate on this matter; they are not to be trusted.

And if anyone believes the never ending lawyer fest that is the Covid enquiry will bring answers to this and people to book, I have a bridge to sell you.

Strangely during all the discussions on this Bill between the great and the good and the indifferent, at no point has the use of DNR (Do Not Resuscitate) notices in hospitals been raised. As I have previously written I am one of the few to have had a DNR notice put on them and lived! I do know what I am talking about. Finding other examples is easy: I have spoken to three people I know, one an old friend, who have had partners and family members suggested for DNRs at their time in hospita. These were thankfully resisted by family members and all those patients are leading normal lives, which begs the question about the criteria in place for issuing these notices in the first place - or is there a simpler explanation? I leave that thought with you.

In my case the protocols were not followed, to the extent that my wife was not aware of what had happened. When she visited me the day after being told ‘I was unlikely to make it’ she found I had been moved and put in a bare room and all the medical support had been withdrawn. The ‘doctor’ was summoned to explain what had happened but failed to appear and made an appointment for the following morning. He failed to show again and my wife rightly went ballistic.

Fortunately one of the nurses that had been looking after me got hold of the doctor’s superior who came down and came in to see me and reported back to my wife. He felt it was a wrong decision, had me fed, cleaned up , changed my medication put me back on a ward and here I am. The original doctor to all intents disappeared never to be seen again.

https://www.nhs.uk/tests-and-treatments/do-not-attempt-cardiopulmonary-resuscitation-dnacpr-decisions/

If you read the above it shows that little or nothing applied to my case and what was not revealed to my wife/family.

That story has all the hallmarks of the NHS not wanting to spend any more money on a patient. That one doctor who never went through the protocols thought it was an easy way out. Harsh you say? Not really, to not even have the decency to explain what he had put in motion was at best poor and at worst a dereliction of duty. How many in the same position would have accepted the original decision and let the patient die believing all they had been told (or not told)?

Despite my semi comatose state I was aware of my position and remember vowing to try and go home. I actually managed to get out of the bed and crawled because I could not walk at that stage, before (I presume) being found on the floor and put back in the bed. Surely my being able to do that would have triggered some sort of message that something was not right here. The memory of being in that windowless barren room very much alone is something that the comatose state I was in only partially blots out and will always haunt me. God knows what it must be like for someone who is fully functional.

But the Bill is for people who have full mental capacity and with a prognosis that they have only six months to live. Who decides the six months. The examples I have given presumed the patients were not going to survive but all are still here, one of them ten years later and living a near to normal life.

The safeguards are a problem. In my case we had Health Power of Attorney, but it was not asked about and my wife did not know that it applied to DNRs; it does of course and except in extreme cases a DNR can not be given to anyone with that power of attorney without going before a judge first to decide on the way forward. Where does this sit with the Assisted Dying Bill?

Yes I can see circumstances where excess pain and suffering that have become intolerable with no hope of a reverse in that status are grounds for a decision to end life. But what happens with mental problems? I had an aunt who suffered from dementia and suffered from mini strokes. She was in a private nursing home because she had the money to fund it and was not expected to last beyond a year or so. In fact she lasted fifteen years with no quality of life at all for most of that period; for her an end would have been merciful.

There are so many variables in this that a one size bill does not fit the case. It has never been an easy decision even when using DIGNITAS as the same problems exist there.

The great and the good in the Lords have to my surprise passed the Bill. Considering the age of many in that place I can only assume they voted that way in the belief that this bill will in no way ever affect them. The talk of saving money that came up with some of them was a case of this is for them not us. Beware: this is a very dangerous path to set out on.

Monday, September 15, 2025

START THE WEEK: More NHS, what is to be done? by Wiggia

In the current climate with so much wrong or going wrong in the UK, it seems almost churlish to further criticise that ailing monolithic entity the NHS.

Since my brush with the four horsemen, see earlier entries, I have had plenty of time to analyse my recent appointments with the organisation. Clearl, in its current form it is largely not fit for purpose. So much is glaringly wrong that it is a question of where to start.

The obvious place is the GP surgery There is no doubt that a postcode lottery is part of the GP set up. Some people I know have a decent GP practice allowing same day appointments, phone calls and decent services all round.

My one falls into the ‘not fit for purpose’ category. Whilst they bombard you with requests to visit them for jabs and annual health checks for all and sundry the primary purpose of GP surgeries getting to see a doctor remains frustrating, time-consuming and if you are working nigh on impossible. The Blair contract was the start of a slide in service: he or his government gave the BMA all it asked for with no questions asked over the removal of weekend and after hours work. It became a five day 9-5 service with (in our case and many others) an hour for lunch.

Why was it allowed to fester and end up like this? The fact it is a ‘private’ though publicly funded entity is a part of the reason. GP surgeries use the private and NHS parts according to their needs not those of the patients; again not all but far too many do. The fact they are paid for the amount of patients on their books rather than those that they treat makes them the sole arbiters as to treatment and when it is administered, often it seems at their leisure.

You have the ridiculous case of the NHS bombarding people with adverts to go and see their GP with various serious ailments and then the same people not being able to get an appointment to have the problem analysed. This is plainly wrong and costly for the obvious reasons of delay in treatment and costs in treating the delayed treatment when in many cases the need has reached serious levels or cannot be treated at all.

Plus how come our GP surgeries have the information screens telling migrants they do not have to have any paperwork to get treated as our recently did? We pay for all this and we are not asked how our money should be spent. There is a mindset within the NHS that they know best on all matters, not universally but by enough to make the hairs on the back of your head stand up as happened to me at a routine health check a while ago when the nurse after being asked a simple question about a long wait for treatment smiled and said ‘it is free, you know.’ I did not dare say what I wanted to.

This early diagnosis and treatment which would save lives and money has been promised for years and little has happened. If it did happen there would be nowhere to put the patients anyway, there often isn’t now, as we have the lowest ratio of beds available to patients in Europe - Germany for instance has four times as many and France twice the number.

https://www.pgweb.uk/health/3546-comparing-uk-hospital-beds-with-other-countries

Some years ago the Conservative government decided to introduce a system that it hoped would see patients treated quickly and free up beds to save money. It has backfired spectacularly, with old hospitals like our local one being turned into flats and replaced by new ones with fewer beds. The crisis has been exacerbated by the rapid increase in the migrant population - our indigenous population has remained at the same level for some years, so the migrant problem has affected the NHS twofold: not enough capacity and not enough staff to cope with the increase.

Staffing is another issue and is as stupid as the lack of beds. The NHS employs more people than any other organisation in Europe yet those who manage it (if you can call it that) constantly clamour for more staff. Despite their constant denials it is clear something is wrong. Those that work on the front line will now tell you so - which they would not have done a few years ago, denying the NHS was anything other than the best in the world and saying they would defend it to the hilt! But now during my prolonged stay in hospitals and subsequent visits for myself and more recently my wife, they are much more forthcoming about the organisation’s shortcomings. The district nurse who treated my wife recently was one of many who having spent many years in all areas of nursing spoke of the multiple managers they now have compared with just one a few years ago. Again compared with the European counterparts there is a massive imbalance in the staff employed, something is badly wrong and again the patient/ taxpayer suffers.

The figures show we do indeed have a shortage of doctors, yet the system is not employing front line staff that are available. This is simply a case of lack of funds to employ them or so we are told, despite bringing in staff from third world countries that can ill afford to lose them. Something is very wrong here.

The infrastructure has been neglected for decades, Boris, he of the promises, said we were to build forty new hospitals; not one was built and now we have no money to build one. A local hospital, the Queen Elizabeth in King’s Lynn, has been falling down for decades and was recently voted the worst performing hospital in England. We now have almost permanent scaffolding and supports to keep some hospitals upright as well as having people sitting on the floor in A&E waiting. Truly third world status.

With cottage hospitals and convalescent homes a thing of the past there is no spare capacity so the shortage of beds crisis is now a problem all year round not just in winter.

There is no outside the box thinking with the NHS. On the Continent clinics built to provide short stay facilities and minor ops are very successful and take pressure off GPs and main hospitals. Many of our old cottage hospitals did provide those services but were subsumed into the big hospitals; we had a very well-used and successful one in Sudbury Suffolk when we lived nearby, but that was closed.

They are not the answer but would help, especially as main hospitals are suffering from bed blocking with elderly patients not being able to move as no suitable facilities are now available. With an elderly population this is a problem not going away anytime soon.

There is much made of the fact that the NHS are recruiting staff from the third world. Why this should be is a mystery, many qualified British nurses cannot get jobs yet are available and the folly of these decisions is the almost routine employment of expensive agency staff, all of whom left the NHS for better pay and conditions in the private sector in the first place.

One of the observations I made when in for my long stay was the difference in quality among nursing staff. Many of the supposedly qualified nurses from abroad are very much “one item at a time” people. They seem incapable of multi-tasking: a simple request made when passing is met with ‘I will see to that when I have finished this’ and the nurse is never to be seen again - quite a normal occurrence.

And the ward where I was sent before being discharged was full of them and also the same third worlders who took a literal age to do standard tasks. As an example we had the drugs nurse come round and he/she spent three and a half hours, yes really, to dispense to ten patients, starting at eight and finishing at half eleven. So importing staff creates problems as well as solving a few.

A common problem that many can relate to is the time taken to sort out what the problem is in the first place. Again here is a personal example: my wife started to suffer pain in her knee, it got worse and a doctor’s appointment was successfully obtained and the doctor sent her to a specialist at the hospital for diagnosis and X-rays. The result was not conclusive so another appointment with another specialist was made for two months later. All the time the pain was getting worse. The second diagnosis was also inconclusive and a few weeks later it was suggested another expert would have a look at it. This one actually knew what she was doing and thought the X-rays showed little and the problem was her knee. Fine but of course this required another X-ray appointment. That happened a couple of weeks later and lo and behold it was her hip, so back to the hospital for an assessment and the news that it needed a hip replacement. How long to wait? About a year, came the reply.

By now she could not walk but dragged herself around in increasing pain. No way could she go a year like that so with reluctance we went private.

As so many people are having to make the same decision the private hospitals also have a waiting list. On the day of the op it was discovered she had developed an infection in the leg and the op was cancelled. Six weeks later it finally happened, but the endless delays caused problems with further infections and it took an age to get her back on her feet such was the state of her legs after all the inactivity.

If the initial diagnosis and op had taken place quickly it would have been very beneficial to my wife and our bank balance as we are the most expensive in Europe if you go private. Even taking that route the delay was eight months which considering her condition was inexcusable, but we are are part of an army of patients in the same position. I could not imagine how she would have ended up if we could not have afforded to go private.

But the bottom line is what is to become of the NHS? For years any criticism was met with disdain, even up to Covid where the few were still banging pots and pans in appreciation of the few still working. In my area live many doctors of all types as we are near the main hospital. Most spent the whole period at home and the GPs in many cases never went back to a full week ever again.

In the mind of someone who has seen just a smidgen of the whole problem it is obvious that the long term strategy of the NHS needs to be laid out and big changes made. Advances in medical science means many more conditions can be treated and even eliminated, but at a cost. Can we afford it? In an ideal world we would say yes but we are not in an ideal world and we frankly cannot go on this route for ever.

So priorities have to assessed and approved. Many will like the outcome but it has to be done. The service has to be streamlined. Some services e.g. IVF cannot be seen as a God given right; those who want it must start to pay towards that and many similar elective procedures such as many forms of cosmetic surgery. I am sure readers can think of many other items to add.

The NHS is just that, a ‘national’ health service funded by British tax payers for use by British nationals. Where those CEOs of trusts get the authority to decide to treat the world’s illnesses I have no idea, but it is wrong. Nowhere else that I know treats outsiders for free, all have to pay - and if you are abroad you also have to pay for your own translators if you need one, they are not supplied for free.

The waste in the NHS from prescriptions to procurement is legion. As an example on a previous stay in the local hospital they had just been issued with new bleepers which worked rarely or not at all. It transpired that whoever purchased these never did in-house trials to see if they worked and the cost was £800,000. Again I am sure there are many who can give similar stories, a scandalous waste of other people’s money and it always is.

There is also the annual increase in compensation claims that have reached record levels. There will always be mistakes but is there an effort to reduce these often fatal errors? I recently had an acquaintance whose wife had a heart attack in hospital because no ultra sound was used before the procedure and the qualified doctor was absent when a camera was inserted which caught on a tear in the heart lining and caused an instant cardiac arrest. They have admitted liability for negligence but what of the young woman’s future?

Many of the NHS trust chiefs treat their charges as a personal fiefdom. In the wake of the Supreme Court’s recent trans decision ours recently announced she would not be complying with the ruling and the hospital would continue with trans women using women’s spaces. Just leave such stuff alone and get on with running a hospital! The rainbow flags on the roof and the PRIDE notices everywhere do not help anyone get better. Just stop it! There is no place for wokeism in hospitals or, as we have discovered, anywhere else.

There have been suggestions the current agreement with GP surgeries should be scrapped. They should be paid for the patients they see not those on their books, and maybe the whole ‘private’ make up of the GP set up should be scrapped and all of it should come under the umbrella of the NHS as an integral part. Anyone old enough to remember when doctors did home visits often at night knows what we are talking about. If the paperwork is weighing them down as claimed then change the set up along with the current failure in many sections of the NHS to inform other parts - they were still using fax machines until recently in some areas.

The NHS cannot fix everything. There is no health service anywhere that can fulfil the needs of all, and no amount of money can solve all the problems unless one wants a health service and no other public services. There simply isn’t enough money.

There was a glimmer of hope in some quarters when the current health secretary Wes Streeting made his first public announcements on the state of the NHS. He said no more money until reforms have been made. That lasted about two weeks when a delighted Wes was seen applauding in Parliament the giving of an extra £29 billion to the health service. As the leader of NHS England said most has already been taken up with wage demands. NHS England is to be disbanded over two years, long enough to find those sacked?

Another announcement, again from the health secretary is the listing of league tables as mentioned earlier. Why? We all know which local hospitals or medical services are good or bad, league tables will do nothing to change that and the poor patients have no choice in what they are given. The Brexit failure PM David Cameron promised, as they all do, that we would have choice in doctors hospitals and surgeries; as with everything else he promised nothing ever materialised.

There has been little to change the minds of those that believe the Conservatives were indeed heading towards a private health service. Only in the Tory Government’s dying moments was money put in to help slow down the decline, the classic “too little, too late,” and again there were no plans for any changes or reform. Perhaps they really did not want the NHS to survive.

And if this is an example of the ten year plan to fix the NHS we are in serious doo-doo:

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2025/06/29/supermarkets-told-to-cut-100-calories-from-shoppers-baskets/

So either Wes Streeting steps up to the plate and actually makes some meaningful changes or we are screwed for even more tax payer funds to throw at a service that currently is not fit for purpose in many areas.

I’m not holding my breath.

Saturday, August 16, 2025

WEEKENDER: Spiral 2, by Wiggia

The spiral of decline is fast becoming an everyday reality, no longer can obfuscation, divergent tactics and outright lies from our elites? Alter that fact.

On every level we see malfeasance, corruption and groups of ideologues pretending all is well and if we all pull together things will improve, never mind the simple fact they put nothing in motion to achieve that illusory aim.

The state gets ever bigger: 70 new quangos since this Labour government took charge; the demand for further layers of state-backed positions, such as regional mayors and the accompanying offices to add to the already burgeoning civil service that has been added according to a recent report, The report includes sobering figures about the degrees of churn among both ministers and civil service, but also the scale of civil service expansion. The SCS is nearly 70% larger than in 2012, and the policy profession larger by 94% since 2016.

One has to ask why is there this push to devolve power and add layers of government, such as the regional mayors and Police and Crime Commissioners. Our local PCC has an office of thirty people, the original PCC had eight? Is there any justification for the increase? None at all: she is invisible and pointless and never had a proper job before becoming the Labour party sticking plaster. There was a rumour that the local unitary authorities will do away with PCCs and the newly elected mayor will do the job; why and how is this necessary, to get rid of one layer of government and then create another? This as now will be a political appointment yet if needed at all it should be be an independent position.

Yes, we need an accountable diligent and successful CS but like the NHS it has an awful lot of people who contribute little and the tax take from the private sector to maintain all this just keeps rising. Value for money? I think not, a DOGE is desperately needed.

Along with the costs of our open borders policy we are sinking in debt and this government has hardly got off to a good start on the economic front. Rachel From Complaints was hardly a star in the banking world, though compared with the rest of her front bench team she did at least have some experience outside of politics; not that it seems to have stood her in good stead as the bond market goes even lower than when the-short lived Liz Truss government was blamed for ‘trashing the economy.’ There are times when being tight lipped until you have a favourable result is the route to take.

We now have various political parties all blaming one another for the country’s woes. Nothing new in that except the scale of such which is futile and endless. None of them have listened to the electorate, all are playing board games with the country going to the dogs at an ever increasing rate, still they put personal political survival and party before the country, hence the back door moves to rejoin the EU, a failing entity on all fronts.

Have we ever heard so many foreign voices spelling out our demise? It is no good saying they should all be quiet as it is nothing to do with them. Not that long ago we had influence in the world; now we are kidding ourselves. Our press, or what is left of it, is generally compliant with all that goes on, little of value is printed these days and they are generally behind the curve when they do write something of note.

They did as told during Covid and continue to toe the line to a large degree. When was the last time a member of the press called out a politician at one of their asinine press conferences? It is not as though there has been a lack of opportunity.

Two recent voices partly explain much that is obvious.

Perhaps some of this would be useful:
And on a more peaceful but succinct note (re the r*pe gangs):

https://x.com/i/status/1876952358455824697

And to think there was a time when the map of the world was mainly coloured pink and despite mistakes was enhanced by our presence.

A *forthright* summation of what our country has come to:

https://x.com/i/status/1883800332691710299

and more from David Starkey who has been sidelined because he exposes the obvious and they the elites don’t like it. “Brexit… was simply the beginning of the process of reclaiming this country”:

https://x.com/i/status/1929143136372097221

For the general public and taxpayer it has become a bore and is draining the life from what is left of Britain. Rachel Reeves’ speech in Rochdale said it all with the dragooned masses behind her showing no sign of approval of the monosyllabic monologue she delivered, Andrew Laurence does a good skit of the same here.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1930589458467799135

The quality of leadership is truly dreadful. Two-tier policing and judiciary are evident despite denials we can all see what is going on. Lucy Connolly is just an unfortunate demonstration.

There is even denial among politicians that there is a groundswell of rising disquiet, most is total BS - https://media1.tenor.com/m/j5YcO9slE7YAAAAd/leslie-nielsen-nothing-to-see-here.gif:
The CEO of our local NHS hospital trust emerged in public to say that the trust will be ignoring the Supreme Court ruling on trans men in women’s spaces. Not unexpected, from a trust that in the past has festooned the main building with rainbow flags and has all noticeboards with PRIDE slogans at every turn. Just get on with your job trying to provide health care for those who pay your inflated salary and dispense with virtue signalling about something that is irrelevant and outside your remit. Perhaps you should make a trip to A&E and see as I did a couple of weeks ago thirty plus people sitting on the floor as they had run out of space and chairs! A third world service with all the trappings is now normalised for the indigenous population; as many have realised, arriving by dinghy by-passes all this hassle; priorities, priorities.

The scale of the discontent in this country is not being exaggerated. The historic ruling class has been rumbled yet the lies keep coming.

Something eventually will have to give. Time is running out for meaningful change. The mealy-mouthed “change” utterances of this government don’t even scratch the surface.