Logos Rising. Globalist or Nationalist, You can’t be both.

Joined January 2022
1,914 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
1.Was there a pandemic involving a lethal pathogen that spread globally? Prove it! 2.What is the false positive rate of PCR on a scale from 25 to 45? What cycle threshold did US testing facilities use? 3.Explain the mechanism of action by which an injectable product could cause immunity against a respiratory infection? 4. Why were the official Pfizer post marketing release data showing 1,223 deaths in first 90 days ignored? 5. How can a regulator safely recommend a new product be injected in children (or anyone) but not know what is in the vials? 6. Remdesivir failed its clinical trials killing 53% of recipients in the treatment arm. How did you make this drug the ‘standard of care’ for Covid? Of those hospital deaths attributed to Covid, how many died due to kidney/liver failure? 7. How is it that the furin cleavage site in SARS-CoV-2 matches a sequence Moderna patented years before? 8. Researchers have demonstrated that the COVID-19 vaccines were a military program disguised as a civilian one. The COVID-19 vaccines were obtained by the DOD under an OTA and are not legally pharmaceuticals but military prototype medical countermeasures, which are not regulated by the FDA and can contain literally anything. Is this true? 9. What qualifies you to make the claim that natural immunity, a capacity built up in humans over hundreds of thousands of years and a cornerstone of established medical orthodoxy, was *inferior* to being injected with an experimental technology that had failed animal trials? 10. Explain why you never quote from peer reviewed studies that don’t fit your narrative of which there are thousands. For example the Cleveland Clinic study which featured 70,000 subjects and which clearly shows the more injections people receive, the higher their susceptibility to illness?
14
86
230
23,610
MakingSense retweeted
21
323
1,848
14,261
The War Beyond the Battlefield: Why Aughinish Alumina Is in the Crosshairs In recent weeks, we have witnessed an avalanche of commentary directed against Aughinish Alumina, situated on the southern shore of the Shannon Estuary in County Limerick. It is one of Europe's largest alumina refineries, transforming bauxite ore into alumina, the essential raw material from which aluminium is produced. The refinery is not merely an industrial facility; it is a major employer and an important contributor to the economic life of the region and to Ireland's export trade. Its deep-water port, overlooking the broad waters of the Shannon, enables raw materials to arrive from across the globe and finished products to depart for markets far beyond Ireland's shores, including, it must be said, Russia. The campaign against the refinery has brought together Ukrainian officials, Irish and European parliamentarians, activists, commentators, and social media personalities, all seemingly united in their determination to place the refinery at the centre of a wider geopolitical storm. The question, however, is not simply why Aughinish Alumina has become a target, but who is driving the narrative and what interests may lie behind it. Let me begin with one of the most prominent voices in this debate: @CaolanReports. Mr. Caolan Robertson is frequently presented as an independent journalist reporting on events connected with Ukraine. Yet independence is a curious thing. It is not merely a matter of what one reports, but also of the relationships, associations, and honours one acquires along the way. Reports indicate that Mr. Robertson received an Honorary Ambassador Award for Digital Diplomacy from Ukraine's First Lady, @ZelenskaUA, in 2025. Readers may decide for themselves whether such recognition affects perceptions of impartiality, but it is certainly relevant context when evaluating commentary that is presented as independent analysis. It is also worth noting that Mr. Robertson resides in Ukraine, a circumstance that some readers may regard as relevant when considering his perspective on the conflict and his reporting on the policies and actions of President @ZelenskyyUa's government. As with any journalist, proximity to events can provide valuable insight, but it may also shape one's outlook in ways that readers are entitled to take into account. As Colonel George Williams of the @BritishArmy's @Int_Corps once observed, every story has a cast of characters, and every cast has its patrons. The difficulty, as ever, is not in seeing the performance, but in discovering who is directing it from behind the curtain and what part each player occupies in the drama. The broader issue concerns what may be one of the most sophisticated influence and strategic communications campaigns of modern warfare. Unlike soldiers on a battlefield, journalists, members of the commentariat, activists, and social-media personalities operate in the realm of public opinion, where narratives can be as valuable as tanks and artillery. To be clear, Mr. Robertson is not engaged in the manufacture of bombs or improvised explosive devices. His battlefield, if one may borrow the metaphor, is not the trench or the barricade, but the likes of X and YouTube. His supporters would contend that he is doing nothing more than practising his profession as a journalist—observing, reporting, and conveying events to the public. His critics, however, contend that his reporting frequently aligns with the interests and messaging objectives of the government in Kyiv. Whether that is deliberate, unconscious, or simply the result of genuine conviction is a matter for readers to determine. What cannot be denied is that criticism of President @ZelenskyyUa and his government is often met with accusations of being "pro-Russian." Those who question, challenge official narratives, raise concerns about human rights violations, and/or question the hundreds of billions of pounds, euros, and dollars which fuel @ZelenskyyUa's war machine from the United Kingdom, the United States, and the European Union frequently find themselves subjected to similar labels. Just ask @BowesChay, who, for simply reporting the facts as he sees them, has found himself on a Ukrainian kill list. This brings us to Ireland. Meanwhile, in Dublin, within a red-brick building on Elgin Road, in the heart of Ballsbridge, the Ukrainian Embassy has become an increasingly active participant in Ireland's political and media landscape. The headquarters of Ukraine's military intelligence service, the HUR, are located on Kyiv's Rybalskyi Peninsula, where I am told a desk officer has been tasked with matters relating to Aughinish Alumina. He is not alone. His former counterpart, according to sources, was a former @UKRinIRL employee, let’s call them “Z.” (identity known), who appeared to take a particular interest in Irish politicians and organisations that, for one reason or another, attracted the attention of @DI_Ukraine. Thanks to a very familiar source who has recently raised the alarm over financial payments connected to Irish political organisations, presented as gifts from the Ukrainian Embassy, these are matters that warrant scrutiny and transparency. Let us be clear: there is nothing normal about a foreign government seeking to influence Irish politicians and the Irish Government in the middle of a war. I am told that a payment of more than €11,000 was, allegedly, a politically motivated gift and, most controversially of all, was paid to an entity specifically to attract the attention and engagement of @sinnfeinireland, a party often perceived in Kyiv as being sympathetic to susceptible to Ukrainian interests. This naturally raises a wider question: if an Irish politically exposed person and party was the subject of an influence operation being conducted by “Z”, which included engagement with @MaryLouMcDonald, who, it must be added, was, and may still be, unaware that she was being groomed by a foreign intelligence service, then the question has to be asked: who else may have been targeted? Today, the Ukrainian Embassy is headed by Ambassador @GeraskoLarysa, who has been extremely active in seeking to influence the Irish Government and public opinion. Some would say that advocacy is, of course, part of a diplomat's role. Others would argue that what we are witnessing extends beyond traditional advocacy and into the realm of a well-funded influence campaign. That is, at the very least, a matter deserving public examination. As of this month, the diplomatic footprint of Ukraine in Dublin appears larger than it was at the beginning of the year. Whether that expansion reflects routine diplomatic requirements or a broader strategic effort is a question deserving examination. Equally intriguing are the activities surrounding the office of the "Ukrainian Parliament Commissioner for Human Rights in Ireland," where an advisor, having been challenged about their position, appears subsequently to have adopted the rather different title of "volunteer." A detailed interview on the subject will be published in due course. Such changes, while perhaps entirely innocent, inevitably invite questions about status, authority, accountability, and precisely who is acting in what capacity. Here is a question for @MichealMartinTD: why are there no safeguards, vetting procedures, or controls in place governing the activities of foreign non-diplomatic state entities in Ireland? And so we return to Aughinish Alumina. Why has an aluminium refinery on the Shannon Estuary suddenly become the subject of such intense public attention? Why has social media become saturated with discussion about a facility connected, through ownership, to Russian business interests? Why is it that politicians, activists, diplomats, and members of the commentariat all seem to be speaking from what appears to be a remarkably similar script? Perhaps the answer is straightforward. Perhaps it is simply a matter of sanctions policy and wartime economics. Or perhaps there is a larger story about influence, lobbying, strategic communications, and the shaping of public opinion in Ireland. Or perhaps it has more to do with two individuals, whom I have chosen to identify only as "E" and "H", and a slush fund used to grease the wheels of influence; for, as we all know in Ireland, money has a habit of doing the talking. As many an investigative journalist has observed, the most interesting stories are often not those that are shouted from the rooftops, but those that quietly unfold in committee rooms, diplomatic receptions, and private meetings, far from public view. All of this began with a midnight telephone call from a source who, it must be said, has proven reliable on previous occasions. On this occasion, the source provided me with a telephone number in Kyiv, said to be connected to a particular desk, together with the name of the individual whom I was told could be reached through it. Intrigued, I placed a call to the number. The call was answered by a man who identified himself as Alex (name changed). What began as a routine inquiry quickly deteriorated. The conversation became increasingly heated, and Alex responded to my questions with a stream of highly abusive language; the phone was picked up in the offices of @DI_Ukraine located on Rybalskyi Peninsula, after a torrent of racist abuse directed towards the Irish and the Russians, and being warned not to call back, the call was terminated. I did, however, call back, determined to ask further questions regarding Aughinish Alumina. During that second conversation, and between a stream of anti-Irish/Russian expletives, Alex screamed: "You Irish pigs can shut it (refinery), or we will shut it for good." I cannot independently verify whether this remark was merely the outburst of an angry individual, an attempt at intimidation, or something more serious; either way, this will be fully explored in the next segment. Whatever the truth may be, one thing remains certain: in a democratic society, foreign influence—whether it originates in Moscow, Washington, Brussels, London, or Kyiv—should be subject to scrutiny, transparency, and public debate. For, in the end, the public is entitled not merely to opinions, but to facts. And unfortunately, in Ireland, the truth is, as always, the first casualty. Note: References in this article to perceptions of Sinn Féin's position on Ukraine reflect views held by certain commentators, officials, and observers and are not presented as statements of fact. Sinn Féin is a party which, in some quarters, is perceived as being particularly sympathetic to Ukrainian interests, although the party itself would no doubt characterise its position differently. Equally, while Sinn Féin has publicly condemned Russia's invasion of Ukraine and supports Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity, some have questioned the party's support for Irish military neutrality and its cautious approach to aspects of European defence integration. These matters remain the subject of legitimate political debate, and readers should bear in mind that perceptions and political realities do not always coincide.
3
4
4
365
Has there ever being people from any country and/or territory throughout human history who just sat back and did absolutely nothing while they were becoming a minority in their own country and/or territory due to foreigners/invaders coming in?🤨 🇮🇪👇👇👇
10
32
122
2,436
MakingSense retweeted
Based on this dataset with simple extrapolation: cso.ie/en/releasesandpublica… The population of the Republic of Ireland is likely 70.8% Ethnic Irish in mid 2026. Total population at 5.56 million with just under 4 million being ethnic Irish. Remember that there is over half a million Irish living with their parents for whom the governments solution is allowing planning permission for livable sheds in small gardens. Meanwhile Sligo town just had accommodation built to house 25% of the towns population but will be filled with migrants. If you cant see the issue or you want to do battle with Unionists then you cannot be helped.

FYI in case you didnt know the CSO, wisely, estimate population from multiple datasets. The 2022 Census results gave us a population of ~5.15 million versus 5.33m from adminstrative sources: cso.ie/en/releasesandpublica… and cso.ie/en/releasesandpublica… A difference of ~150k. The latest (2023) puts the gap wider at
7
18
705
MakingSense retweeted
The number of Irish language playgroups outside the Gaeltacht is down -70% Yet we spend €6,000,000,000 on NGOs. Annually. The Irish State needs to have a serious word with itself.
1
5
9
116
MakingSense retweeted
It is criminal that our government enabled a bat virus to infect and spread between humans. Indeed, it is hard to imagine a bigger betrayal of our species. It is equally troubling that the mad scientists who did this then gaslit all the people of the world about it, including those who CORRECTLY interpreted the evidence. Then, of course, the very same monsters amped up fear of the Covid frankenvirus and steered the panicked public away from safe medicines, and toward an obviously dangerous gene-therapy which they falsely called a vaccine in order to lure us into acceptance. These are among the greatest crimes EVER committed against humanity. We now have persuasive evidence of everything I have said above. If we don't correct the record and hold the perpetrators to account, this pattern will happen again, and again, and again--shortening our life expectancy, and degrading our quality of life each time that it does. This is our Nuremberg moment. We can not simply move on from this ghastly chapter of history. We must finish it. @brownstoneinst
Replying to @RandPaul
@RandPaul DOCS: hsgac.senate.gov/wp-content/… "SARS-CoV-2 is an American-created recombinant bat vaccine, or its precursor virus. It was created by an EcoHealth Alliance program at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV)."
856
8,721
25,637
728,421
Micheál Martin Simon Harris Helen McEntee All help finance this👇
When our political-media establishment chant "stand with Ukraine", it means boycotting diplomacy and finance the kidnapping of Ukrainian men to use them in a campaign to weaken Russia as a strategic rival. If the majority of Ukrainians had a say, there would not have been a regime change in 2014, the 2015 Minsk agreement would have been implemented, the 2019 peace platform would not have been reversed, the 2022 Istanbul agreement would have been signed, and there would now be negotiations about the pan-European security architecture. However, the US and EU run Ukraine, and men are hunted on the streets to fight to the last Ukrainian in NATO's proxy war.
2
4
135
MakingSense retweeted
Hey @BarackObama What were you doing at this Ukrainian biolab in 2005? Asking for a few billion friends.
439
12,304
34,834
192,840
MakingSense retweeted
Planned Collapse of the West. Mass Immigration = Civil War National Security Study Memorandum ⬇️ Unsealed documents from the 1974 “Implications of Worldwide Population Growth For U.S. Security and Overseas Interests” (THE KISSINGER REPORT) 1974 prove that governments know very well that immigration leads to high levels of crime, violence & civil war. Tribal groups with incompatible morals & values cannot coexist. All of history shows us this, our current reality, stats, evidence & data shows us this & this report proves this. This is a Depopulation Agenda for White Europeans in the West. Without Remigration our people will never know peace or safety again.
33
694
1,191
14,978
Why did Belfast Catholics largely not riot in the past week? Political movements can become so successful that they destroy the very social ecology that originally produced them. Interesting piece by Keith Woods.
Reflecting on Belfast, street politics, and the state of political nationalism in the North. What actually explains Sinn Féin's abandonment of nationalism for leftism? keithwoods.pub/p/belfast-str…
1
257
MakingSense retweeted
BELFAST | Digital ID All of this is shaping up in Hegelian fashion towards a Digital ID solution. You can see it coming. But the challenge in NI has been that unlike with passports, you can’t have two Digital ID systems in operation in the same jurisdiction. This is why Leo Varadkar is pushing for what HE calls a ‘United Ireland’. Nationalists should not get excited though. The unity Leo has in mind has nothing to do with nationhood and everything to do with the creation of an unrecognizable dystopian technocracy. Likewise, Micheál Martin’s “Shared Island” initiative is less concerned with reviving a common Irish culture and more focused on harmonising institutions, regulations and governance structures across the island. Now, with borders and security once again dominating the conversation, matters appear to be being swept along in a remarkably convenient direction. Was the Belfast attack orchestrated to this end? In this hyper low trust environment we have to say at least that everything is on the table.
The hard border between the south and north or NI and the Republic, is not coming back. Anyone who thinks this is a solution to the immigration madness needs to get a hold of themselves. Therefore there is nothing stopping the latest diversity import Hadi Alodid, from Sudan, from leaving Sudan (Red Country) travelling to Paris then to Dublin and then making his way to Belfast either by train or road. He will still arrive on the streets of Belfast ready to behead someone. It has nothing to do the with the CTA but everything to do with the ridiculous immigration policy both Dublin and London run. lauraperrins.substack.com/p/…
1
5
17
595
MakingSense retweeted
In a major development for financial sovereignty, Swiss voters have dealt a massive blow to the push for digital currencies and the central banking agenda championed by European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde.
34
159
522
7,904
MakingSense retweeted
Under the EU. Migration Pact which is coming in, Ireland will have to accept between 25k to 30,000 Asylum Seekers per year, full episode 9 of @irish_question_ out tomorrow.
171
489
1,118
74,088
MakingSense retweeted
This is the report that has shaped the new Belongto program that is now targeting every single primary school in Ireland. It has been overseen by Aoife Neary. You need to read this tread and understand what is coming into to primary schools belongto.org/app/uploads/202…
13
98
228
9,178
MakingSense retweeted
The name Dr Aoife Neary (she/her) University of Limerick @UL needs to be known in every home in the country. Her radical gender ideology regarding children needs to be widely discussed by families. Her influential pedagogical role needs to be interrogated by citizens & the state.
This is the report that has shaped the new Belongto program that is now targeting every single primary school in Ireland. It has been overseen by Aoife Neary. You need to read this tread and understand what is coming into to primary schools belongto.org/app/uploads/202…
19
78
183
6,436
MakingSense retweeted
🇺🇸🇺🇦 US Intel Declassifies Files on American Biolabs in Ukraine Researching Dangerous Pathogens Outgoing Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard — set to leave her post at the end of the month — has published a tranche of declassified documents detailing the activities of US-funded biological laboratories in Ukraine. "Many of these US government-funded biolabs were conducting research on dangerous and highly contagious pathogens, in some cases including gain-of-function research, with virtually no oversight or supervision," the Office of the DNI stated. Gabbard added: "Despite the obvious potential for catastrophic global consequences that research on dangerous pathogens can have, policymakers and so-called medical officials — such as Dr. Fauci — along with figures in the Biden administration's national security team lied to the American people about the existence of US-funded and supported biological laboratories, and threatened those who tried to expose the truth. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence will continue to work closely with partners across government to determine where these labs are located, what pathogens they contain, and to put an end to dangerous gain-of-function research that threatens the health and wellbeing of the American people and people around the world." The declassified documents reference several such facilities — including centers in Kharkov, Dnepropetrovsk, Lvov, Vinnitsa, and Chernigov — where research was conducted on anthrax, tularemia, swine flu, Marburg fever, Ebola, plague, and other pathogens.
33
446
892
33,283
MakingSense retweeted
SÉAMUS CLARKE: An Irish academic writes about Athena SWAN and how DEI became a weapon against free speech. “Staff and students who raise concerns about aspects of DEI policy often discover that disagreement carries professional and social costs”. gript.ie/how-dei-became-a-we…
5
35
145
3,900
MakingSense retweeted
The Child Safeguarding Coalition Ireland has raised concerns about inappropriate children's books to TDs and Senators at an Oireachtas event in Dublin, calling for an "audit" of all educational materials recommended for minors by the State: gript.ie/child-safeguarding-…
26
173
741
12,656
MakingSense retweeted
"Shaming & gaslighting the public for having concerns about immigration will not make those concerns go away. Neither will setting fire to innocent immigrants’ homes .. But people persistently denied a voice will eventually find a way to make themselves heard" -Brenda Power👏👏👏
5
110
541
5,255
MakingSense retweeted
Independent Ireland TD Ken O'Flynn challenged the Government in the Dáil over conflicting claims about Children's Minister Norma Foley's knowledge of the controversial book 'What's the T?', prompting questions about transparency: gript.ie/dail-clash-over-fol…
17
133
675
12,039