287 Comments

Hopefully this will bring down Boris, since he took a historic 80 seat majority and p*ssed it up the wall, furiously implementing Agenda 2030 instead of his manifesto.

Having said that, Rishi and Jabbit are no loss to the nation — not a sliver of principle between them.

A pox on all their houses!

Expand full comment

Is this more rats swimming away from the sinking ship? What little I know of them, they hardly seem to the types to stand on principal.

Expand full comment

Yes. I didn't see an apology for the 2 year incarcerations of the innocent, masking or toxic jabs.

Expand full comment

Jabbit was one of the enthusiasts for mandated jabs. Utter scum!

Expand full comment
Comment deleted
Expand full comment

Covid has nothing to do with these resignations. PM embroiled in scandals due to his own incompetence and arrogance and continually gets caught lying whilst these people have been all over the media defending him. Absolutely rats jumping the sinking ship and now trying to disassociate themselves and appear principled when in fact they have none, they’re only thinking of their own careers

Expand full comment

There's more to life than COVID and this substack also sometimes talks about those things too.

Expand full comment

It's ironic that Sunak and Jabbit both get on their high horse about principles. They've been two of the primary enablers of the rotten agenda inflicted on the British public. Good riddance! We need some real conservatives, not posturing new world order fakes.

Expand full comment

Holding my breath waiting for the alleged great, principled, uber-educated, Catholic Jacob Rees-Mogg to step down in protest as well. Looks like I will implode as I just checked and he opines today he hopes Johnson will be PM for years to come. Kyrie eleison! Do they not have mirrors in their homes to greet their lyin' manipulative mugs in the morning?

Expand full comment

Like all undead, they do not cast an image.

Expand full comment
founding

Ooh. That was good

Expand full comment

Yep, JRM has been a huge (and surprising) disappointment these past 2.5 years.

Expand full comment

Very true. I used to be an enthusiastic supporter of JRM as the one true conserative.

Expand full comment

A monkey pox on all their houses.

Expand full comment

As much as I agree with you, the problem is all of his likely replacements are worse than he is. As weak and useless as he is, I don’t believe Boris is malevolent, unlike many who would replace him.

Expand full comment

Yes, I take your point. I voted for Boris, so obviously I didn't think him to be an evil man.

Having said that, he has proved himself too weak to be in post at this consequential time. He may not be a intentional villain, but he is allowing villainy to rule. He's not done a single thing we voted him in to do, in fact he's just doubling down on with the same woke globalism that was driving us toward the cliff before. I've run out of faith and hope in him. It's time to face the reality, which we always knew (if we're really being honest with ourselves) - that Boris is not a man of principle; the only thing he believes in himself.

We trusted him with the kind of once in 3 generations majority that would allow him to get literally anything passed/repealed/done. He had the chance that most leaders don't get, we opened up the highway for him and handed him the keys to a Ferrari with a full tank.

He had the chance to really turn things around and be a historic leader at a historic time. Instead, the moment his wife whinged in his ear he just threw it all away for his own comfort. He's let us down, and I feel that he's betrayed the nation in the worst possible way. Worse than prior leaders, because of the majority he had, and the opportunity for a real reboot as we left the EU. But he bottled it.

Both the parties are infested with globalist wets top to bottom, and you're right that many of them are genuinely malevolent schemers [looking at you GOVE], and the remaining rump are a sad collection of dullards, grifters and underachievers of various flavours. But if he won't stand up to any of them, or change the direction, or do anything conservative ...then what is the good of keeping him in post? It's just seems like panto at this point. He still isn't actually grasping the seriousness of the matter, he thinks he can brazen his way through it, again. I don't think so. The time for jokes about Peppa Pig is over. Personally I think it's time for Brady to visit him with the whisky and revolver.

Expand full comment

I pretty much agree wholeheartedly with everything you’ve said. It’s come to something when I find myself trying to defend such a person as Boris and the best I can do is say he’s the least bad option out there. Honestly, I won’t be sorry to see him go, I just fear that what comes next will be much worse as it’s likely to be someone who combines competence with very bad intentions. Not sure there’s any way to escape, no matter what happens. At least if Boris does go we also get shot of Carrie, not that it’ll make much difference in the end as they all seem to be on the same page with regard to wokeness/net zero green madness/globalism etc.

Expand full comment
Jul 6, 2022·edited Jul 6, 2022

True Mark, I agree with you.

It's a buffet of crappy options. It's like deciding if we would prefer to be shot or poisoned.

They're all useless, craven, and in thrall to an ideology the voters want nothing to do with.

The big picture answer (as I see it) isn't to elect my particular 'team', or find a new 'star' and 'saviour' to elevate. They will all disappoint us in the end. A big part of why we hate our leaders more with each decade is that they're becoming bigger and bigger figures in our lives — the entire apparatus of state is. And the larger the state grows, the more inept and corrupt it becomes, which is inevitable.

I believe the answer is to de-fang and de-centralise the system in such a way that the state has less power and influence in our lives. Way, way less. We need to beat back the state until it resides once again 'over there'. We should aim to return to time when nobody can name the Chancellor, because who cares who he is. Politics should be at the fringe of our lives, not in the centre of it, as it is currently. The state should get out of classrooms, bedrooms, parent/child relationships, and my pocket. A radical reduction in the remit of government would make the whole circus less glamorous and profitable, which would weed out some of the grifters and sociopaths organically. And some other upsides of them doing less: there's less for them to screw up; we get to keep more of our money (good for the economy); it would give us greater liberty [since liberty & government inhabit the same space - more of one necessarily means less of the other].

It will take time to get there and will be chaotic (understatement!), but I think that should be the goal. Give these clowns way less power over our lives. Over anything really.

Expand full comment

I couldn’t have said it better myself! I completely agree, I just don’t have a clue how we get from here to there…

Expand full comment

Sigh.

Expand full comment

Thank you for saying what I was struggling to say.

Expand full comment

Sajid Javid is a despicable person, totally unfit to be U.K. Health Secretary. He ruthlessly coerced NHS staff and others into accepting Covid vaccines that would not prevent them from catching or transmitting the virus and which were potentially unsafe.

If he really cared about improving public health he would have put more positive effort into encouraging healthy eating and exercise, and he would not have resigned in an transparent attempt to advance his career.

Expand full comment
author

success has many fathers.

failure is an orphan.

the canny rats have seen that they have lost and do not want to be around when the bill comes.

Expand full comment

Wishful thinking. They are opportunists. They see a chance to obtain the big seat. They want to be around, they just want more power and control. Taking a moral stance against dastardly Boris, they think, is the key to unlocking it.

Expand full comment

Partygate is almost certainly a cover for “there’s no fucking way I’m going to be around when the shit hits the fan”

It’s certainly not at all likely that they’ll blame policies they had a big hand in.

But at least instability can create more fertile ground for more realistic appraisal of what’s happened.

Expand full comment

No. Rishi and Jabby have not realised that their Covid tyranny was wrong and will backfire. They just think Boris in injured and Rishi might take over with Jabby in some senior role as a present for backing Rishi.

Expand full comment

Reasonable farmers drown rats before they endanger the harvest. And if you're unwilling to go this far, how about some tough love? "No Sajid, you shouldn't join politics, you're not good enough. I know these are your pals and you are an attention seeker, but you're just not good for your fellow citizens".

It seems to me, that these are all people who were only ever encouraged, no matter how wrong and stupid they acted. Politics is probably the only place where they can function. I wouldn't hire a plumber who cannot tell dry from wet - just saying.

Expand full comment
founding

Hahaha. Last sentence. Gonna use that one down the road!

Expand full comment

And week before last he got caught out live in the Commons, about the fact that they're actually still recruiting for senior staff for the expansion of the 'Covid Passport' program he told us was wound up & never to be seen again.

...That's after assuring us multiple times in 2020/21 that there would never be any such 'passport', because the very notion would be "discriminatory" and even "unBritish". Absolute lying toe rag.

Expand full comment

Similar to Former Senator Joe Biden who promised in 2020 that he wouldn't mandate the covid "vaccines".

Expand full comment
Jul 5, 2022·edited Jul 5, 2022

Exactly. Boris is bad but these 2 are worse! I work for the NHS and loathe this man. He pushed the covid hysteria and coerced staff to take big pharma’s solution like the toady he is. He is positioning himself in the leadership election - thinks he can be the next PM as does big spender Sunak who’s wife is non-domiciled for tax purposes and doesn’t pay uk taxes! When partygate was revealed I came to the conclusion that Boris was going to get the push because he refused to lock us down for Christmas holidays in Dec 2021. Wasn’t compliant enough for the Bilderburg/Davos/WEF elite faction.

Expand full comment

She does pay English tax now. I don't personally care about that, the money was earned from India, and she paid tax in India - but he went along with all the Covid lies.

Expand full comment

As did the Queen. Cnuts, all of them.

Gove, I fear. He’s like Heydrich. Man with an iron conscience.

Expand full comment

Yes, I was horrified that the Royal Family agreed to promote the jab.

Expand full comment

In a way I am grateful.

We had Prince Harry, Tony Blair, David Beckham all telling me to get jabbed. I was 50/50 before that, but with those 3 telling me to get jabbed before it was my turn, it completely put me off. I see now that it was the right decision, even though it cost me a fair bit of personal inconvenience.

Expand full comment

I applaud everyone who resisted the jabs. Well done! I'm grateful every day that I made the right decision.

Expand full comment

I do care. Sunak wants to be PM with little to no skin in the game as Nassim Taleb says.

Expand full comment

If either of those failures take over Britain is done for.

Expand full comment

Indeed. I'm not a British citizen but I watched him and listened to him. He is part of the deep state and he is hoping to get away with his complicity. I sure hope the Brits have long memories (although not so far back as the 1700s, lol!)

Expand full comment

Yeah we remember the 1700s mate.

Expand full comment

So do we! 😉🇺🇲

Expand full comment

Yes and Rishi Sunak printed half a trillion off for our relatively small economy that's a nightmare. He was in a mini-cabinet within the cabinet when the very worst decisions on lockdown were made. Boris, Michael Gove, Matt Handcock, Rishi Sunak. Those four. The slurry of the slurry.

Only 42 MPs out of over 600 rejected Lockdown2 in October 2020. Mainly tory rebels. Desmond Swayne, Chris Green, Charles Walker, Ether McVey, David Davis. And Jeremy Corbyn and a few Geordie Labour MPs who actually represented their constituents.

Expand full comment

I remember briefing Chris Green & Esther McVey personally, each 1:1.

I didn’t get the impression of great understanding or of will to change things.

Green in particular was weak.

Loads know exactly what’s happening and and trio of them could pop over to Mark Steyn or Neil Oliver & blow the globalists out of the water.

No courage.

Expand full comment

Thanks for your efforts, who then, if any, would you stand with?

Expand full comment
Comment deleted
Expand full comment
founding

I'll like anything with a quote from lord of the rings!...;)

Expand full comment

I love the smell of rats scurrying in the morning.

Expand full comment

I hold Sajid Jabbit personally responsible for health issues that my son and daughter-in-law have. They both work in the health service and care sector. My d-in-law was forced to have 4 jabs of the rotten stuff because she cares about her patients.

Expand full comment

I'm 31 years post heart and lungs transplant, immunosuppressed to the hilt, and unjabbed. I can assure you, sickeningly, that your d-in-law's jabs were in vain and on balance did more harm to patients than good. The rotten system from Ferguson, to Pharma, to Government is of the utmost distress.

Expand full comment

You're correct! Read this post from the outstanding The Naked Emperor's substack. It includes a video link.

https://nakedemperor.substack.com/p/uk-itu-doctor-confronts-health-secretary?r=z0bfk&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email

Expand full comment

I am not fan of Javid, but the entire medical establishment were pretty much the same, pushing the mRNA shots (lets face it they aren't a vaccine) and nothing else.

Expand full comment

Yes and 385 MPs voted for mandatory injections into NHS staff, two years after they'd all faced the epidemic several times, and got the natural antibodies (Not pre-screening for antibodies before offering anyone the jab was the most unscientific thing ever).

Only 100 MPs voted against injecting these frankly persecuted staff. I presume the rest abstained or no-showed.

There's only a bus-full of MPs worth keeping out of 650.

Expand full comment
Comment deleted
Expand full comment

All the politicians have done the opposite to promoting healthy lifestyles. Lockdowns, where people stress eat and drink alcohol. Closing gyms, closing churches, closing schools and withdrawing support. Disabling health services, promoting an experimental jab. It looks as if they deliberately set out to harm us.

Expand full comment

There is far more money to be made by keeping people unhealthy and on a steady stream of pills, treatments and doctor visits.

Expand full comment

The rats are fleeing. Don’t EVER forget what these bastards did. Don’t allow them to just switch jerseys.

Expand full comment

Exactly these two are some of the worst offenders. WEF and WHO footsoldiers.

Expand full comment

We have the receipts.

Expand full comment

Speaking as an American, there is no more important thing we can do than improve election security to the maximum extent possible, and I don’t mean “fortifying” it on behalf of the rich psycho bastards and their minions in the party of chaos.

Expand full comment

I wish liberal MP’s in Canada had backbones and weren’t such sniveling cowards

Expand full comment

Let’s hope Trudeau and the liberals aren’t too far behind. They can’t implode soon enough. What a sad state of affairs.

Expand full comment

They've been the leaders in the WEF experiment to see how far tyranny can be pushed. They should all be in prison for their crimes.

Expand full comment

They need to go independent tho, not quit or some other dipshit will just take their place

Expand full comment

"I wish MP’s in Canada had backbones and weren’t such sniveling cowards."

There! Fixed it for you.

Expand full comment

Ironically for us misogynists (kidding), the two most visible resignations from turdeau's cabinet were women. Apparently the ladies have the balls in lefty organizations!

Expand full comment

Don’t you go assuming their gender, you bigot! 😆

Expand full comment

oops, I meant to say: "peoplekind with the ability to bear children". LOL

Expand full comment

It will happen when they realize what side of their toast is buttered. If nothing else, every one of them will protect their own arse, when the time comes.

Expand full comment

#whatever. We almost had them with the convoy but alas it was not to be. The grift and WEF are strong here 😔

Besides Freeland is next in line.

Expand full comment

Wouldn’t be surprised in the least if Freeland could/would outdo that Arden thing as a WEF zealot…

Expand full comment
founding

didn't they bring in some private wef army to curb the truckers? that's a good sign, a signal for decentralized world-wide protests. i don't believe they have an army that big to curb everyone. even if they do, at even the slightest sign of extremely violent conflict would resonate highly and collapse the house of cards. they just can't force it. CJ wrote it up brilliantly: https://cjhopkins.substack.com/p/the-naked-face-of-new-normal-fascism

Expand full comment

I see this as a coup from the authoritarians.

Boris Johnson was against most covid measures, reluctantly went along with it and abolished them earlier then any other country. He went against the narrative and has been hated ever since. They tried to get rid of him on bullshit charges before and now they pull this stunt.

Once he is gone these so called conscientious objectors will return and so will the masks and lockdowns.

Expand full comment
Jul 5, 2022·edited Jul 5, 2022

Not quite.

There is a group of rabid establishment Remoaners who still harbour hatred for Boris for implementing Brexit, and will never let it go. They will pounce like lions on any scandal, to try to reverse that, and generally regain the London-lefty-media establishment's control over affairs.

But Boris is not a crusader of the people, not at all. In fact he's really a creature of the same dinner party circuit as that crowd, he just switched sides when he saw that Brexit was potentially a winning ticket, and he rode it all the way to Number 10.

But all the policy positions he won a landslide for in 2019 were actually the brainchild of Dom Cummings. And when Boris' woke young mistress manoeuvred Cummings out of the way to place her own besties into posts instead, the wheels started falling off the wagon. Boris' government is now an administration known for failure, chaos and sleaze. Whilst he had the backing of the people (and particularly of Tory voters and party members) before to bolster him against his opponents, he no longer has that support because he's delivering woke, green, big state globalist BS ...and Tory voters are having none of it.

He's out of lies... and allies. Time's up for the greased piglet I'm afraid.

Expand full comment

Interesting. So is there a better option with a serious chance? Usually these kind of situations will cost a party a lot of votes, so the alternative to Johnson will then be labour.

I was in the UK last week and was shocked by all the displays of wokeness. You really can't afford four years of labour rule.

Expand full comment

Yes, I agree with you on that, Labour will hold us under water until we are really finished. It would be a disaster. But if you look at the by-election results recently, there isn't actually a swing to Labour, not at all. There's just conservatives staying at home, and then those seats falling to either Lib Dems or Labour by default.

3 times in a row the long-suffering British public have voted for conservatism, and 3 times in a row we cannot bl**dy get it.

But we remain a small 'c' conservative country, the raw vote numbers continue to bear that out. Labour only ever win when they move to the centre and steal the right's clothes — speaking the language of aspiration, like Blair did (very successfully). If you spend some time looking back that's actually been the clear pattern since the WW1 period.

There is no sudden appetite for socialism. On the contrary, the public keep telling the politicians "no thank you to socialism!" ....and then the politicians say "well now that we have been elected we are going to try some socialism, you'll love it!". We do not love it. And how many times must we tell you fools that we want conservatism!?

The giant, gaping, drive-a-truck-thru-it hole in British politics is on the right. It's for an unabashed, anti-woke, small state conservative. Anyone who stepped up boldly with this platform would clean up. This is begging for the return of Nigel Farage. If Nige stepped back into the mix as leader of the Reform party, the others would be in serious trouble. Vote-share wise it may be enough to see both corpses fall, such is the nature of the voting system we have. Nigel is not for everyone, but he has a canny instinct for reading the winds and appearing when they favour him. Let's see...

Expand full comment

It seemd Nigel stood aside for the 'greater good' and smash labour in 2019 and get brexit done with a stonking majority.

Now it's clear our leap for sovereignty out of the frying pan of the EU was into the fire of the globalists NWO/WEF/WHO ...will he step up? Or is he happy with his media rant channel salary?

This country is fluxing between just about there and totally effed. I've actually lost most faith in the Brits about me in the last two years, including the majority of my outer family who barred us from the family get together for not agreeing to a 'voluntary' self-imposed test, and even my sister who said two-tier society was right for the unjabbed.

Nevermind the politicians, how can I feel comfortable walking around a town in these Isles knowing one day people seem fine, the next they'll wear masks and sell you out to the police if asked?

Expand full comment

Yes, I know what you mean. It's been demoralising to see so many people fall to the group think and hysteria. I try to remind myself though, that there is a big silent-majority phenomena that we see in Britain and Brexit was a great example of that.

We were repeatedly told from every media outlet and high office in the land, that Remain had it in the bag. Well... in the privacy of the voting booth clearly a lot more people said "no thanks" to the EU, despite the most expensive and intense state-sponsored pressure campaign probably since WW2?

And that vote only even happened because of Farage. Who never even held a seat in Parliament. Even for those who hate him, he's almost certainly the most consequential political figure since Thatcher, and possibly since Churchill (given the nature of what Brexit was about; sovereignty). He did all that without even a voice in the Commons. It's a good reminder that it doesn't take 51% of the vote to topple the existing players. As we've seen, it looks like it takes about 15% to move a major to one end of the field, and 30% to bring them to their knees.

I do wonder if he regrets stepping aside though. But if he didn't, and then we got no Brexit whatsoever, I can't imagine he'd ever forgive himself, don't you reckon?

Expand full comment

I did allow myself to consider that scenario once, and given we're in the global situation, I felt if his party had got 15 or 30 seats, it'd have been such an important voting bloc. The tory rebels could have lashed themselves onto it too.

However, Nigel got double vaccinated and only smelt a rat prior to the booster campaign! Then he started inviting guests on for a debate over the booster. But he was onboard with the freedom movement and pretty sure he'd have voiced against lockdown 2 and 3.

Thanks for the positive reminder, the silent majority is however, silent. We're still raising our kids here, but showed them all Mexico, which they loved. The cartels meant they never shut down nor are abandoning cash. Better to live under a robber baron that a pretend do-gooder, the former is easily satiated, the latter with prove the relentless tyrant.

Expand full comment

Would love for Farage to come back. I kind of saw Johnson as his pupil, but since he is in power he has indeed swung to the left.

Actually what you say about the UK sounds strangely similar to what we have in Holland with immigration. We vote for parties that claim they want less immigration and once they are in control they push for more immigration.

Hurray for democracy I guess ...

Expand full comment

Yes, that's it, the sneaky bait & switch! ...I take it as a sign of complete 'capture' of our political establishments by outside interests, because all the parties do it to us, and across so many countries. It certainly tells us who they believe their *real* bosses to be... hint: not us.

They say what they need to get elected, and then once elected they proceed with risible nonsense like "Building Back Better" ...

...aka "After we have destroyed civil society, prosperity and social mobility then we will BUILD systems to concentrate all power and wealth BACK into our hands like feudal times, which will be much BETTER for us elites. You're welcome peasants!"

Not really what this democracy business is supposed to be about! :/

Expand full comment

Gladstone (prior to WWI)

"“From the time I took office as Chancellor of the Exchequer, I began to learn that the State held, in the face of the Bank and the City, an essentially false position as to finance. The Government itself was not to be a substantive power, but was to leave the Money Power supreme and unquestioned.”"

and so it continues.

Expand full comment

Since he married Carrie, he's in the NWO clutches and all we get is leftist policies of the worst globalist kind. I think having covid affected his brain.

Expand full comment
Jul 6, 2022·edited Jul 6, 2022

I have made this point before — but if you accept that Boris is a charismatic frontman who enjoys dress-ups, then his life and career make a *lot* more sense...

He is a showman. He lives for the applause, and the glow of the stage lights. But he has no interest in writing the scripts, or building the sets. He will swan in at the final moment, ascend the stage (30 minutes late) and deliver the lines written for him with cheeky gusto. And the crowd will love it. But all that requires an entire team doing the rest, and being ready to hand him the script, direct him to the stage they have built, and manage the lights and sound while he performs. A star without the rest of the crew cannot deliver the show.

Also, notice how the various personalities/ideas he has assumed change throughout his life like costumes, according to what suits his comfort in the moment:

— Libertarian, cogent, 'writer Boris' was when he was playing dress up in the ideas of his exceptionally intelligent (long-suffering) wife, Marina Wheeler.

— Then he saw an opportunity to dress up as a Brexiteer, and threw on the cloak of Leave and played in that for a while. When that wound down he saw a new cloak to try on — the extremely popular (populist?) ideas and positions of one Mr Dom Cummings.

— Then Carrie happened. She didn't like this scene of the play, so he threw off that costume and slipped into one more suited to his current circumstances. Currently he is living for the applause of the woke metropolitan globalist set that he is embedded with.

This is just Boris. Either they need to get a stronger person in to beat back that influence and enthrall Boris to dress up once again, or we are b*ggered. As far as I can tell, that's about the size of things right now.

Expand full comment

The only difference between the Tories and Labour is that Labour will implement the UN Agenda objectives faster (they are the same as the WEF agenda but the WEF is there as a distraction to keep you from understanding that the UN is in charge).

Look at this BS:

https://www.conservatives.com/

"Making Britain better for everyone"?

Nope, Build Back Better.

We are doomed, unless people wake up and over throw this rotten system.

A year and a half ago I was advocating for a permanent "Occupy Westminster". It only takes a very small percentage of the population to overthrow a government and a system in general. Getting 1.5-3% of the population to occupy Westminster and not leave until the bastards have gone is achievable and I stand by what I said.

Expand full comment

You're right that Labour and the Tories (and the Lib Dems) are all offering to take us to the same destination, merely at different speeds of travel. This is the result of decades of centralisation of power, removing meaningful democratic control from the hands of citizens and funnelling it upwards to bureaucrats to insulate the 'direction of travel' from public feedback/intervention.

It's a major issue all across the west. And voters do see that no matter how they vote they will be served the Davos agenda. The power structures have grown to be massive, opaque, even oppressive. Most of all they are unresponsive. So voters become depressed and demoralised; why vote, when it makes no difference? ...when no meaningful change will take place based on the vote?

The UK now has three left wing parties of various degrees, and no centre right or right parties, despite the voters still being largely small 'c' conservative in outlook. The coalescence of all main parties around the soft-left, green, woke, globalist position is causing a huge distortion in the ability for our democracy to function.

Voting should keep a lid on public anger by offering a release valve, but when all parties are effectively the same party once they get into office, then the steam builds up in the pot, and that's what's happening now.

Governments should never be allowed to get too large (in sprawl, or in our lives) ...or they will use that power to begin existing for their own sake. Selling their own self-serving lies. I think that's what we have now? — a system that lives for itself, primarily. The 'state' is now so big it touches everything. It's so bloated that it reaches into the most intimate corners of citizens' lives. The state is everywhere. It's in classrooms, bedrooms, parent/child relationships, etc.

Having achieved this immense and inappropriate power, now it's been targeted and colonised by the kind of people who are exactly the sort that should not be anywhere near power.

The answer (as I see it) isn't to elect my particular 'team', who I personally agree with... but on the contrary, it's to de-fang and de-centralise the system in such a way that the state has less power and influence in our lives. And hence less corruption is invited to be centralised; attracted to one central location - the limitless font of money and power that is the 'big state'.

Expand full comment

" So is there a better option with a serious chance?"

Nope. Not unless one of the 1922 Committee leaders decide to stop being back benchers and actually commit to being actual politicians.

Expand full comment

I agree with all you say, save for your admiration for Dom.

Expand full comment
Jul 5, 2022·edited Jul 5, 2022

I admire Dom's almost autistic ability to move forward with his plans, and genuinely not give a fig if everyone around him is squealing and gnashing their teeth.

Boris is the exact opposite, he lives to be adored, he seeks first & foremost his own personal comfort and the adoration of those around him. Such a person is not cut out for the challenges that must be met, like taking on the civil service (the 'blob'), though Boris could act as an excellent cheerleader for that agenda... which was popular with the public. Dom was an outsider to politics, and willing to get stuck in and upset people, in order to deliver on the manifesto. Sadly, with his departure, I don't see anyone else left who would even try, let alone succeed in that necessary struggle.

Having said that, I violently disagreed with Dom re lockdown policy, and in some other areas besides. I view Cummings like I view Trump: an imperfect instrument. A flawed man, certainly, but also the necessary [and effective] tool for the task at hand. Frankly, so dire is the state of the State, that I'm willing to accept an uncouth, intemperate Mr Cummings, if he is willing to act as the battering ram for reform, and really dig in for the fight. A compromise borne of necessity, sure. But rather a moot point now anyway.

Expand full comment

I think Dom is actually autistic, not that that means he can't be a good politician. He has good qualities in some areas, sure, curate's egg as we all are. His campaigning slogan on the bus was a lie, and he lost my support there. And he's Gove's man. And Gove is BigPharma central. And so I think is Dom. An imperfect instrument, yes, but he is not the guy who will reform for us. I would as you say accept him if he would, but he's the opposite, he's a Neil Ferguson follower.

Expand full comment

Simply do not comply. Enough is enough folks. Stope complying.

Expand full comment

If this fiasco has taught me anything it's that I find it utterly impossible to comply with stupid rules. I haven't ever worn a mask and I took almost no notice of lockdown or their rules.

Expand full comment

Cary, I am with you💕

Expand full comment

Your comment feels right to me.

Expand full comment

No, no. I worked with Boris once. Surface charm, addicted liar. He was PM. He is responsible.

Expand full comment

No, masks and lockdowns won't return. I've always refused to comply with any of it and so should everyone else.

Expand full comment

If true (and I'm not British so I can't speak to the truthfulness of the excuses given on those resignations, he needs to come out front with it and FAST!!!!!

Expand full comment

The Great Unravelling can't come soon enough for Canada where our health minister announced Monday that a Covid Booster will be required every 9 months to be considered fully vaccinated. LUDICROUS!! I didn't get shots 1, 2, 3, or 4 and I will proudly remain fully unvaccinated!

And, I'm still chucking over this line: "that’s for pscertain". Comic genius!

Expand full comment

What's most odd about that announcement is even THEY know 9 months is too far between doses based on booster data...It doesn't even make sense.

Expand full comment

Because in 6 months that 9 months will be 5 months.

Expand full comment

Of course!!!

Expand full comment

Why start making sense now? They haven't for one moment made any sense during this entire ordeal!

Expand full comment

Maybe it’s a birthing thing: every 9 months you give birth to new variants! Finally, men can give birth!

Expand full comment

THAT'S IT! Everyone is stupid except me and you...

Expand full comment

Lots of injured and dead coming to Canada if people are stupid enough to keep getting the shots!!!

Expand full comment

Anyone with half a brain can see that jabs don't work. They make it worse. That fake health minister must be deliberately setting out to harm people, there's no other explanation.

Expand full comment

I see zero principled people in any govt. And not many anywhere else.

Hope you're correct about the unraveling.

Expand full comment

I have hope for Ron Johnson-that is about it.😕

Expand full comment

If you lie about your company's financials or prospects, you can go to jail under the securities laws. (Hello, Jeff Skilling!)

Fauci said you won't get covid if you get the jab - we have this on tape.

They all said it was safe and effective.

Birx just admitted they "hoped" it would work.

These are material misrepresentations of fact. Fauci & co. are not used car salesmen that can puff as much as they want. They are public health officials. They should be held to a fiduciary standard and prosecuted for their lies.

Expand full comment

Big pharma and regulatory agencies are so cross populated with people, it doesn't matter.

All need to be liquidated with extreme prejudice.

Expand full comment
Jul 5, 2022·edited Jul 6, 2022

dont expect fauci to resign ...

Expand full comment

Hopefully a dungeon filled with him and all his murdering psychopath buddies, will happen soon.

Expand full comment

I was thinking that if we have a “moment” such as 246 years ago, in which defenders of the republic use every peaceful means necessary to put down the tyrants, restore rule of law in accordance with the Constitution, that the traitors AND THEIR FAMILIES - each and every member - should be exiled forever from this country, assets to be taken by the republic as retribution. That was often the punishment used by Romans in both the Republic and Empire eras. I stress peaceful because really, we don’t want to live in bloody chaos. (Just read up on history if inclined towards that path.)

BTW, has anybody figured out how normies will be able to look up actual history and science when online avenues are thoroughly corrupted or destroyed? I just started thinking about this when someone reported that nitrogen comprises 78% of the air we breathe. What if I wanted to look that up? Can I still trust online sources? Today, mostly yes if I choose wisely. But what about a few months from now?

And finally, at Naomi Wolf’s site I was looking for the latest from her + Warroom team on their Pfizer doc release work, (dailyclout.io), there was a link to an piece that in the end leads me to share another ‘stacker with a fascinating POV & analysis:

https://malwords.substack.com/p/sharks-attack?r=altwb&s=r&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&utm_source=direct

Expand full comment

In to your concern about “how normies will be able to look up actual history and science...” several months ago I realized I had the same concern. While not a perfect solution, I went “old school” and bought a beautiful, nearly untouched set of leather bound Encyclopedia Brittanica from an estate sale for the lofty price of $35. They’re from the 90’s so no worries about woke corruption. Until Fahrenheit 451 comes true, and my stash is reported to the authorities, my household will have a decent base of knowledge from which to refer.🤷‍♀️🤔😂

Expand full comment

Should the Republicans take Congress, I would expect the hearings to begin and our kindly Saint will find his retirement haven. A few royalty checks will be missed but he will be fine.

Expand full comment

I always hope this to be the case, but the majority of those Republicans all went along with the jabs. They will not be willing to take the blame.

Expand full comment

Repub "Hearings", (excuse me I have to throw up). Ah now I can continue.....

Do you mean like the Howdy Gowdy Hearings on Benghazi? That really nailed Hilarity Clintoon. Sheesh. With Mitchy McCuckold in the Senate and McCarthy in the House, it's the same old, same old shiat. Vote Harder!!!! That's the ticket. The Feral Gov is Bankrupt, let it collapse. Those are Bankster dollars anyway that we've been chasing like squirrels in a circular cage.

Expand full comment

The HRC hearings revealed her secret e-mail efforts. Other parts of the hearings were squashed by Ryan who refused to allow subpoena testimony. Ron Johnson's hearings were useful to many and he was not able to force via subpoena anybody. Perhaps the next Congress won't be so 'kind' to their fellows after the J6 committee tarring.

Expand full comment

the 'next" Repub congress will never have the necessary vengeance to save this country or even themselves. Polite committee interchange is Over. We are in the midst of a democRat Bolshevik Coup. They will never give up their Power at this point. 2022 sElections will be stolen again or cancelled by war.

About 12 weeks to "show time", and I do hope I'm wrong, utterly wrong.

Expand full comment

Me too. I do hope and pray that the J6 efforts will motivate them to extract some pain. We can see from polling that few trust the MSM news and are following others sources.

Expand full comment
founding

I hope they have hearings. The problem is; most of the Republicans went along with this nonsense except DeSantis and Noem.

I'm not holding my breath.

All of just pisses me off!

Expand full comment

Put him on a vent and pump him full of remdesivir…

Expand full comment

Fauci should be hanged in the public square. He's caused death and harm to millions.

Expand full comment

Sadly sociopaths like Fauci are rarely brought to justice. But Malone says the entire place needs a scrubbing after Fauci is revealed.

Expand full comment

That’s far too painless… 😁

Expand full comment

He will die first, he is old.

Expand full comment

but at least his age puts something of a limit on him :-)

Expand full comment

Meanwhile, I’m BC, Canada: “Horgan's [the current PM] comments simply confirmed what many have believed for some time: he's not sure whether he wants to stay in office, and is seriously considering an exit strategy.” Then: “After five years in the role, John Horgan announced on Tuesday afternoon he plans to step down as premier of British Columbia and has asked his governing party, the NDP, to hold a leadership convention later this year.”

No scandal, no infighting... just... stepping down... “They Know®️”

Expand full comment

One is reminded of a very old phrase - something about rats and sinking ships.

Or maybe just, "gettin' out while the getting's good"

Expand full comment

“They Know”….🎯

Expand full comment
Jul 5, 2022·edited Jul 5, 2022

Sorry. I am not believing for even a second that those two scumbags resigned because they have integrity issues, care about the british public being deceived or because they are leaving ship for good. It's just the bank cartel insiders signaling Boris it's time to leave and be replaced by another puppet. They can still play this game with a vast majority of the angry public and this is what they will do. Just play along as if there are real parties, opposition, real elections etc. Even awaken people are still willing to buy this. As they buy the Putin or Trump are saviours stories.

Expand full comment

The bank cartel ain't needed. The way the Commons works is, the minute the ruling party's MPs see the leader is so unpopular he won't be re elected they look to ditch him. But they ain't ditching the guy because he got Covid wrong. They're ditching the guy because he didn't apply the rules on Covid to himself and his civil servants with the stringency he demanded on the little people. The little people still think they were good rules. They haven't yet realised they were conned. They hate Boris because he didn't bow down enough personally to the great god Covid, not because they have realised the great god Covid is the devil incarnate in action.

Expand full comment

Agree. Their resignation letters sound like they are just a tad pissed Boris may not clamp down on the public in the scheduled world-wide fall covid me-too freakout.

Expand full comment

Ok, Gato, lets put this in some context, here. Perhaps you're lacking the insight. You seem to be championing these two as some heroes of great virtue. Lets be clear: Sunak is the same guy who has openly admired and supported the idea of a centralised digital banking currency. That's even ignoring his wifes questionable financial dealings. Javid, meanwhile, was the same guy who was caught on tv telling health workers that opposed mandatory vaccines that they are spreading disinformation and if they didn't like it they should resign.

Expand full comment
author

i think you need to re-read the piece.

i have done nothing of the sort.

"and he too will have no more of the farce, a rebuke all the more stinging for coming from one who has championed such awful policy himself. (or, if one is of a cynical bent, perhaps a smokescreen to run away before the consequences of having pushed such pabulum land.)"

Expand full comment

Then I was wrong. But are you aware that Sunak, after this apparent display of found conscience, is the overwhelming favorite to be the next PM.

So a rebuke? I think not.

Expand full comment
author

how not?

it may also be a prime bit of political opportunism, but it's still quite the rebuke.

these are the canny rats jumping ship to distance themselves from the implosive failure that's clearly coming.

Expand full comment

I just don't agree. They see an opporunity to execute the final blow to a dastardly corrupt and inept leader and in doing so parlay the credited virtue into promotion.

Expand full comment

Love you gato malo, bow down continuously to your IQ and courage, but Richard is right on this funny English political rat behaviour thing.

You are right in that if the Tory MPs ever spot that Covid was got wrong and people are dying and kids are sick as a result they will kick Boris's head in. But we are a long way away from that day.

Expand full comment

I think The Telegraph comments are a good indicator of Tory party feelings and people have become very aware of covid failures recently. They have 70,000 subscribers.

Expand full comment

I can't see Tory party members voting for either of them as PM. They are too mired in the recent policy failures and chaos. There is a lot of anger in the ranks about recent failure to have conservative policies. I really hope that's the case. I think we'll get an outsider if Boris goes.

Expand full comment

It'll be Liz Truss (Baroness Von Thatcher 2)

oh, apparently Penny Mordaunt! Never heard of her.

https://www.oddschecker.com/politics/british-politics/next-prime-minister

Expand full comment

I think Gato is saying the rats are jumping ship. This is evidence that the vaxx narrative is calapsing. He is not applauding them.

Expand full comment

I can't get my popcorn yet. I'm too nervous (like a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs) with all of these food shortage/energy shortage/mass shootings/mandates still not gone psy-ops going on.

Expand full comment

Meanwhile here in Canada this government is getting worse. Justin has done far - FAR - more damage and engaged in more scandals than Johnson yet somehow remains standing. It's driving me nuts. The ENTIRE CANADIAN CABINET needs to resign. Especially since it came out the majority of the caucus is against the mandates but the cabinet is ignoring their own party and the actual will of the people - outside 25% of their retard base who need to be governed harder by losers like Justin and his band of incompetent buffoons. "Dr." Tam also needs to kick her own sorry ass out too.

Expand full comment
founding

by resignation you mean like the resignations in france between 1793 and 1794?

Expand full comment

Maybe something like a thermidorian reaction will finally end the covidian reign of terror.

Expand full comment

Sunak & Javid are absolutely not resigning from integrity or out of disgust for Johnson’s lies. They’re resigning because Johnson’s ship is sinking- not as a result of his lockdown policies, but due to a constant stream of low level petty political scandals. S & J are both double dyed lockdowners, fanatically committed to vaccines, medical coercion, censorship & corona panic.

There are no intelligent, decent, principled politicians waiting in the wings in UK politics, only predatory charlatans and grinning Great Resetters. If anything what comes after Johnson might actually be worse, hard though that is to believe.

Expand full comment

Yup. Absolutely. You are hearing it here from those in England and Wales who are reduced to hoping that Arthur and his men and the white horses sleeping under the hill might hear us and awake.

Expand full comment