Joined March 2022
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A seemingly intractable problem apparently exists with both sides playing Massacre or Genocide Bingo. Level heads need to prevail and they seem increasingly thin on the ground on both sides. Their "clients" need to give them a talking to. x.com/RnaudBertrand/status/1…

Absolutely masterful interview on Gaza of Dominique De Villepin, former Prime Minister of France, who famously led France's opposition to the Iraq war and who, IMHO is the best diplomat the West has produced in decades. This is so important, so incredibly well argued, that I decided to translate it in full: "Hamas has set a trap for us, and this trap is one of maximum horror, of maximum cruelty. And so there's a risk of an escalation in militarism, of more military interventions, as if we could with armies solve a problem as serious as the Palestinian question. There's also a second major trap, which is that of Occidentalism. We find ourselves trapped, with Israel, in this western bloc which today is being challenged by most of the international community. [Presenter: What is Occidentalism?] Occidentalism is the idea that the West, which for 5 centuries managed the world's affairs, will be able to quietly continue to do so. And we can clearly see, even in the debates of the French political class, that there is the idea that, faced with what is currently happening in the Middle East, we must continue the fight even more, towards what might resemble a religious or a civilizational war. That is to say, to isolate ourselves even more on the international stage. This is not the way, especially since there's a third trap, which is that of moralism. And here we have in a way the proof, through what is happening in Ukraine and what is happening in the Middle East, of this double standard that is denounced everywhere in the world, including in recent weeks when I travel to Africa, the Middle East, or Latin America. The criticism is always the same: look at how civilian populations are treated in Gaza, you denounce what happened in Ukraine, and you are very timid in the face of the tragedy unfolding in Gaza. Consider international law, the second criticism that is made by the global south. We sanction Russia when it aggresses Ukraine, we sanction Russia when it doesn't respect the resolutions of the United Nations, and it's been 70 years that the resolutions of the United Nations have been voted in vain and that Israel doesn't respect them. [Presenter: Do you believe that the Westerners are currently guilty of hubris?] Westerners must open their eyes to the extent of the historical drama unfolding before us to find the right answers. [Presenter: What is the historical drama? I mean, we're talking about the tragedy of October 7th first and foremost, right?] Of course, there are these horrors happening, but the way to respond to them is crucial. Are we going to kill the future by finding the wrong answers... [Presenter: Kill the future?] Kill the future, yes! Why? [Presenter: But who is killing whom?] You are in a game of causes and effects. Faced with the tragedy of history, one cannot take this 'chain of causality' analytical grid, simply because if you do you can't escape from it. Once we understand that there is a trap, once we realize that behind this trap there has also been a change in the Middle East regarding the Palestinian issue... The situation today is profoundly different [from what it was in the past]. The Palestinian cause was a political and secular cause. Today we are faced with an Islamist cause, led by Hamas. Obviously, this kind of cause is absolute and allows no form of negotiation. On the Israeli side, there has also been a development. Zionism was secular and political, championed by Theodor Herzl in the late 19th century. It has largely become messianic, biblical today. This means that they too do not want to compromise, and everything that the far-right Israeli government does, continuing to encourage colonization, obviously makes things worse, including since October 7th. So in this context, understand that we are already in this region facing a problem that seems profoundly insoluble. Added to this is the hardening of states. Diplomatically, look at the statements of the King of Jordan, they are not the same as six months ago. Look at the statements of Erdogan in Turkey. [Presenter: Precisely, these are extremely harsh statements...] Extremely worrying. Why? Because if the Palestinian cause, the Palestinian issue, hasn't been brought to the forefront, hasn't been put on stage [for a while], and if most of the youth today in Europe have often never even heard of it, it remains for the Arab peoples the mother of all battles. All the progress made towards an attempt to stabilize the Middle East, where one could believe... [Presenter: Yes, but whose fault is it? I have a hard time following you, is it Hamas's fault?] But Ms. Malherbe, I am trained as a diplomat. The question of fault will be addressed by historians and philosophers. [Presenter: But you can't remain neutral, it's difficult, it's complicated, isn't it?] I am not neutral, I am in action. I am simply telling you that every day that passes, we can ensure that this horrific cycle stops... that's why I speak of a trap and that's why it's so important to know what response we are going to give. We stand alone before history today. And we do not treat this new world the way we currently do, knowing that today we are no longer in a position of strength, we are not able to manage on our own, as the world's policemen. [Presenter: So what do we do?] Exactly, what should we do? This is where it is essential not to cut off anyone on the international stage. [Presenter: Including the Russians?] Everyone. [Presenter: Everyone? Should we ask the Russians for help?] I'm not saying we should ask the Russians for help. I'm saying: if the Russians can contribute by calming some factions in this region, then it will be a step in the right direction. [Presenter: How can we proportionally respond to barbarism? It's no longer army against army.] But listen, Appolline de Malherbe, the civilian populations that are dying in Gaza, don't they exist? So because horror was committed on one side, horror must be committed on the other? [Presenter: Do we indeed need to equate the two?] No, it's you who are doing that. I'm not saying I equate the faults. I try to take into account what a large part of humanity thinks. There is certainly a realistic objective to pursue, which is to eradicate the Hamas leaders who committed this horror. And not to confuse the Palestinians with Hamas, that's a realistic goal. The second thing is a targeted response. Let's define realistic political objectives. And the third thing is a combined response. Because there is no effective use of force without a political strategy. We are not in 1973 or in 1967. There are things no army in the world knows how to do, which is to win in an asymmetrical battle against terrorists. The war on terror has never been won anywhere. And it instead triggers extremely dramatic misdeeds, cycles, and escalations. If America lost in Afghanistan, if America lost in Iraq, if we lost in the Sahel, it's because it's a battle that can't be won simply, it's not like you have a hammer that strikes a nail and the problem is solved. So we need to mobilize the international community, get out of this Western entrapment in which we are. [Presenter: But when Emmanuel Macron talks about an international coalition…] Yes, and what was the response? [Presenter: None.] Exactly. We need a political perspective, and this is challenging because the two-state solution has been removed from the Israeli political and diplomatic program. Israel needs to understand that for a country with a territory of 20,000 square kilometers, a population of 9 million inhabitants, facing 1.5 billion people... Peoples have never forgotten that the Palestinian cause and the injustice done to the Palestinians was a significant source of mobilization. We must consider this situation, and I believe it is essential to help Israel, to guide... some say impose, but I think it's better to convince, to move in this direction. The challenge is that there is no interlocutor today, neither on the Israeli side nor the Palestinian side. We need to bring out interlocutors. [Presenter: It's not for us to choose who will be the leaders of Palestine.] The Israeli policy over recent years did not necessarily want to cultivate a Palestinian leadership... Many are in prison, and Israel's interest - because I repeat: it was not in their program or in Israel's interest at the time, or so they thought - was instead to divide the Palestinians and ensure that the Palestinian question fades. This Palestinian question will not fade. And so we must address it and find an answer. This is where we need courage. The use of force is a dead end. The moral condemnation of what Hamas did - and there's no "but" in my words regarding the moral condemnation of this horror - must not prevent us from moving forward politically and diplomatically in an enlightened manner. The law of retaliation is a never-ending cycle. [Presenter: The "eye for an eye, tooth for tooth".] Yes. That's why the political response must be defended by us. Israel has a right to self-defense, but this right cannot be indiscriminate vengeance. And there cannot be collective responsibility of the Palestinian people for the actions of a terrorist minority from Hamas. When you get into this cycle of finding faults, one side's memories clash with the other's. Some will juxtapose Israel's memories with the memories of the Nakba, the 1948 catastrophe, which is a disaster that the Palestinians still experience every day. So you can't break these cycles. We must have the strength, of course, to understand and denounce what happened, and from this standpoint, there's no doubt about our position. But we must also have the courage, and that's what diplomacy is... diplomacy is about being able to believe that there is light at the end of the tunnel. And that's the cunning of history; when you're at the bottom, something can happen that gives hope. After the 1973 war, who would have thought that before the end of the decade, Egypt would sign a peace treaty with Israel? The debate shouldn't be about rhetoric or word choice. The debate today is about action; we must act. And when you think about action, there are two options. Either it's war, war, war. Or it's about trying to move towards peace, and I'll say it again, it's in Israel's interest. It's in Israel's interest!"
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Taxpayers spend £18bn a year subsidising housing in the capital Find out how social housing tenants are benefiting from government schemes ⬇️ telegraph.co.uk/business/202…
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What a slogan.
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"Our fostering recruitment team. There’s no such thing as a typical foster carer."
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The truth is not hate. Facts are not "far right." If we don't stand up for the defenceless, who will? #PrestonDavey 🕯
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"Woman raped and tortured after being driven away from UK airport by masked men." @ClaireCoutinho @LBCNews @Wommando #BirminghamAirport #GagandeepSingh #Wandsworth #Rapist express.co.uk/news/uk/221711…
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An Iraqi Too Westernised to Deport. A Nigerian Too Possessed. An Albanian Not Extreme Enough. This Is the System Philp Wants to Dismantle. Chris Philp announced something this week that deserves more attention than it has received. Leave the ECHR. Repeal the Human Rights Act. Abolish the immigration tribunal system entirely. Replace it with Home Office decisions subject to a quick internal appeal. The only remaining route to court would be judicial review on a single ground, that the government had acted outside its legal powers. Philp estimates this would remove 98 percent of immigration cases from the courts. Judge the policy on its own terms, because the cases Philp cites are real and devastating. An Iraqi drug dealer avoided deportation because a judge ruled he had become too Westernised to safely return. A Nigerian armed robber assessed as presenting a high risk of serious harm to the public won his appeal because mental healthcare in Nigeria was deemed inadequate and he might be considered possessed there. An Albanian burglar with 50 convictions was allowed to stay because a judge decided his offending was not very extreme. These are not edge cases. 93 percent of small boat arrivals whose claims are decided are permitted to stay. Only 12,000 failed asylum seekers were removed last year against 80,000 rejected applications. Twenty thousand foreign criminals who should be deported by law remain in Britain. Philp's diagnosis is correct. The problem is not that Parliament has failed to legislate. It is that whatever Parliament legislates, ECHR jurisprudence and a tribunal system staffed in part by judges with documented backgrounds in open-borders advocacy will find a way to reach the same outcome. Shabana Mahmood's reforms, restricting Article 8 to immediate family, a 28 week appeal limit, a single appeals body, operate entirely within that framework. Philp's point, that Labour is tinkering, is hard to dispute when the tinkering leaves intact the legal architecture that produced the Iraqi, the Nigerian and the Albanian rulings in the first place. Reform's own proposals go further in one respect, an outright bar on asylum claims for anyone arriving illegally. On the core mechanism, removing the courts from the centre of immigration policy and returning the decision to elected ministers, the two parties are not describing different destinations. They are describing the same destination by routes that converge. Which is why the silence around this announcement is worth examining. A policy this radical, more radical in its institutional implications than anything Labour has proposed, has been almost entirely absorbed into the noise of Belfast, Makerfield and the social media ban. The government's response, that this is far too late and that Labour has already announced a system addressing this, is not really a rebuttal of the policy. It is a rebuttal of the messenger, and it works because it's not wrong about the messenger. The Conservatives had 14 years and the Boriswave happened on their watch, with Philp himself serving as a minister inside that government. That history is real and it matters. But it doesn't make the policy wrong, and the people most likely to privately agree with it, Reform voters who have spent years insisting the Conservatives are part of the problem, are the least able to say so without seeming to concede the argument that got them to Reform in the first place. That's not a comment on the policy. It's a comment on how thoroughly trust has collapsed, to the point where the right answer and the credible messenger for it currently belong to different parties, and voters are left choosing between the two rather than getting both. Philp is right about the courts. Whether anyone believes him is now a separate question from whether he's correct.
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These were the six children to whom #C4News gave a platform this evening to share their views on the social media ban for under-16s. They were diverse, informed, and eloquent. But which group doesn't see themselves represented? Was the omission accidental or purposeful?
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This is the video Andy Burnham doesn’t want you to see 👇
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There's only so many times you can say "no comment"
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A man who groomed and sexually assaulted a Kirklees schoolgirl after targeting her through social media has had his sentence increased. Masoud Abdi, 32, of Bute Street, Luton, was given a six-year prison term at Leeds Crown Court in September last year after being found guilty of five offences against the victim that occurred over February and March of that year. These were engaging in sexual activity with a girl aged 13 to 15, attempting to incite a girl aged 13 to 15 to engage in sexual activity and two offences of causing a girl aged 13 to 15 to engage in penetrative sexual activity. He was also found guilty of making indecent photographs/pseudo-photographs of a child. He was made the subject of a lifetime restraining order preventing any contact with the victim. The court had heard how Abdi told the victim he was around 20 years old when he was 31 at the time. He exploited the victim’s vulnerabilities and arranged to meet her, grooming her with alcohol and gifts, before escalating to committing sexual offences against her, and recorded them on his phone. Following the sentencing, an application was made by the Crown Prosecution Service to have the sentence reviewed under the Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme. The sentence was considered at a hearing at the Court of Appeal on Friday and found to have been unduly lenient. His previous sentence was substituted for an 11-year extended sentence comprising of eight years imprisonment with a three-year extended licence period. ------------------------------------------------------------ Article & Pic Copyright Owned/Licensed By & Credited To👇 westyorkshire.police.uk/news…
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Flavius Festerbragne retweeted
NHS SCIENTIST RAISED HUMAN TISSUE ALARM Dr Rajai Al-Jehani was a biomedical scientist at Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust (@RoyalFreeNHS), also holding an honorary post at University College London (@ucl). She worked inside UCL's Institute for Liver and Digestive Health. From that position she noticed something that made her deeply uncomfortable. She believed human tissue was being quietly redirected into for-profit commercial activities. The people she pointed the finger at were not strangers. They were colleagues. Massimo Pinzani was Director of the Institute and also Chair and second largest shareholder of a company called Engitix. Giuseppe Mazza was a PhD student in the same building and simultaneously CEO and largest shareholder of that same Engitix. Nothing to see there, obviously. Dr Al-Jehani did what every NHS speak-up poster tells you to do. She raised concerns. She contacted her union. She spoke to the Freedom To Speak Up Guardian. The Trust's Freedom To Speak Up Guardian was informed of her disclosures back in November 2017. The investigations were completed. Nobody told her. She was dismissed. On 15 August 2022 an Employment Tribunal ruled she had been unfairly dismissed and subjected to a series of detriments by Royal Free NHS Foundation Trust because she had made protected disclosures in the public interest. @thetimes ran the story under a headline about claims of a human tissue trade. UCL's linked investigations were suppressed. NHS has posters in every corridor telling staff to speak up. What those posters leave out is the small print: speaking up is fine, keeping your job afterwards is a different matter entirely. SOURCES @thetimes @alexander_minh @guardian @HSJnews @BylineTimes
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Will be starting a thread for those involved in the Young Bob situation. Please feel free to pass on this information to the police. First up: Daniel (Jasmine) Rushby - transgender thing. SUTR Manchester, alleged to live in the Levenshulme area.
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RT @Jonnywsbell: This is dangerous TQ disinformation... "One out of four teenagers who are trans try to kill themselves"... London has a…
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The Supreme Court was clear. Women and girls are entitled to single-sex spaces. Now John Swinney is talking about taking a 'domestic approach' – whatever that means 🤷‍♀️ @MeghanSCUP has written to the First Minister to ensure women and girls' rights will be protected.
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Dc Dan Livesley from West Yorkshire Police and based in Bradford charged with rape while off duty West Yorkshire Police officer to appear in court charged with rape - YorkshireLive examinerlive.co.uk/news/west…
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Pride in Surrey 2026 has been cancelled, citing rising costs and a loss of corporate sponsorship. With Surrey County Council’s review still unpublished, it’s no surprise sponsors are wary of an organisation whose founder is in prison for child s*x offences.
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Man upset because he can't enter women's spaces.
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THIS IS PC NICOLAS PEEL He has now been jailed for NINE YEARS after r*ping a woman multiple times. He was found guilty of raping his victim four times and attempting to rape her a further time. He was struck off from the force last year after he was found guilty of gross misconduct for abusing access to police systems. SHARE THIS EVERYWHERE!! Predator awareness
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Universities are receiving millions in taxpayers' money for research about asylum seekers stuffed with jargon like "postcolonial sexual identity" and "diasporic queers". Charlotte Gill has found 10 hair-raising examples. dailysceptic.org/2026/06/15/…
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