Sunday [12 till close of play]

(1718) Evening all.

 

17. Moo corner


16. There ya go


15. West living under a delusion of safety


14. Lord T and Calvin


13. When the enemy selectively cherrypicks verses for its purposes


12. TPA and some new holiday tax in Wales

“The TPA wonks have already shown how an overnight visitors levy, an extra charge applied to anyone staying at a hotel, B&B, or even in a tent or caravan, could deal a whopping £359 million hit to the Welsh economy.

Now, Anglesey and Conwy councils are actively consulting on introducing their own charges, despite the enormous damage they could do. In Anglesey, where one-in-five jobs are related to tourism, they could miss out on £14 million of spending from tourists. Meanwhile Conwy could lose 80,000 tourist visits, taking a hammer to the 10,000 jobs reliant on tourism.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the people we spoke to were up in arms about the measures. In Holyhead our team delivered almost 2,000 leaflets to residents urging them to submit to the consultation, while business owners in Llandudno were keen to give them out to customers. Every conversation we had told a personal tale of how they’d be affected, with many specifically worried about friends or family working in hospitality or the future of their own businesses and wider communities.”

Sunday [11]

 

The enemy within

This is not directly linked to our current enemies and yet may well be, upon further examination … Them, the invaders, the Woke left indoctrinated … the baddies here are very much indoctrinated or in someone’s pocket, or are in thrall in some way, maybe even in fear of consequences.

The story is about a Paris section set up by two abused women (remember this was written around 2006, revised up to 2016, so there’s nothing new in the subject). They received help, funding, and so were able to function for some years, exposing corrupt officials … but after some time, it was apparent that the really high-ups were protected, so it was only low fruit they were able to get at.

A man (Hugh), a guy with some military experience, who’d met the head of this French section (Geneviève) in a Russian town … well they’d liked one another and he’d decided to shift base to Paris.

Soon he was attacked (a lorry tried to run him off a motorway, across a grassy gap into oncoming traffic) … then rescued girls in the section started being bumped off. Clearly, someone inside knew they’d discovered something more sensitive than the usual.

The worst incident was when one of the supposed rescuees had tried to kill both Geneviève and Hugh, plus there were two other traitors as well … Alana and Elaine.

Geneviève (partly injured) was obviously highly upset, they needed a meeting, together with the section member Nadine who’d given the alarm on the three traitors. She was a much younger member (23).

The moral of the excerpt below was that one never really knows … while there are people, such as this Emmeline below, who have given way completely to evil, barely able to disguise it, yet there are others far more devious and clever, who can be hidden for years, even coming to them at the section’s inception.

Below is a set of things to look for when employing staff … some might seem spurious but experience says otherwise.

……

Just after lunch, Geneviève appeared. Her head was back together and she was more in control of herself. They got down to business.

‘Let’s look at the Emmeline and Alana question, all right?’ began Geneviève. ‘I’d thought our selection procedures were pretty good – we’d chosen Nicolette, Nadine, Melanie –’

‘But also Elaine, Emmeline and Alana, I have to remind you.’

‘Yes, yes, that’s what worries me. We need better procedures.’

Nadine put in her contribution. ‘We need to check records better and check the checkers as well. Expand our database.’

‘You weren’t selected solely on your record, Nadine,’ said Hugh. ‘It was Geneviève here who decided to take a chance with you. The ability to sniff out talent and danger is everything in the final analysis – data goes only so far.’

‘But that’s unreliable and it makes one person indispensable,’ protested Nadine.

‘That’s the eternal dilemma. But after a long period of time, even if you’re an unwise person, which describes me perfectly, sheer experience helps you pick up certain things but you can’t do it alone, this is the error many leaders make … they don’t listen to the middle ranks.’

‘Example?’ asked Geneviève.

‘If an enemy wants to infiltrate, he’ll use sleepers who’ll get past your guard at the recruitment stage, then act perfectly normally for a long period of time, allaying your fears – they’ve studied you, know your weaknesses, they know the general system – you really must have others in there as well who can give advice from the side so to speak.’

‘Mademoiselle is good at picking up anomalies.’ Nadine.

‘She is, it’s her strength but she picks up certain kinds of anomalies she’s sensitive to, I’m the same, so is anyone, there’s no shame in this. For example, you and Nikki saw that this Emmeline was insubordinate to Nikki, but there might be other anomalies.’

‘Such as?’ Geneviève.

‘This Emmeline’s manner was closed, too intense, too internalised. Plus she had a stud in her nose.’

Nadine huffed. ‘What does that have to do with it?’

‘Nadine, do you have a stud in your nose or a nail through your eyebrow?’

‘No.’

‘Why not?’

‘That’s my business.’

‘Why don’t you just say ‘because I don’t want to’?’

‘All right – I don’t want to.’

‘You’re a certain type, brought up in a certain way – this Emmeline was far more cavalier, less careful in her ways, I’ve watched you make the coffee and I’ve watched her too.’

‘I don’t accept it.’

‘I do,’ Geneviève chipped in. ‘I’ve had my eye on her for quite some time and that coffee was one example.’

‘Why, Mademoiselle?’

‘The boys Emmeline hung around with were rough. Stupid, yes?’

‘No,’ said Hugh. ‘Exactly the opposite. You know the saying, ‘You’ll know them by their fruits?’ Each little anomaly, on its own, may mean nothing, might be inconclusive. But when certain anomalies of a kind are combined, then that’s possible danger. In normal life, we can ignore it but in a Section like this – it can’t be ignored.’

‘So, why didn’t you pick her?’ persisted Nadine.

‘Because I observed but then dismissed what I’d seen.’

‘What did you observe?’

‘Emmeline was about 167cm, hair tied back severely, hands large but arms skinny like the rest of her – almost 20 years old, dressed to appear more childlike than she was, made up darkly, steady gaze from the eyes betrayed something other than innocence.’

‘And?’

‘While I didn’t fall for her little girl beauty, I missed seeing the viper lurking behind the eyes. She was pretty – that’s how they got me in Russia.’ Hugh sat back in the chair and sipped his now cold coffee.

Geneviève had been listening carefully. ‘So are you saying we should be more vigilant?’

‘Not only. Yes, we should always be vigilant but we should always do things in conference – someone might have seen something we didn’t. And don’t forget they are trying to make you ineffective, they lay troubles on you, plus you lay troubles on yourself, such as me and so it does need those extra eyes and ears.’

‘Emmeline and Alana?’

‘Emmeline and Alana were designed to get past your guard, Genie, that’s why they were placed. Secondly, your own antennae weren’t picking up clear signals due to your own troubles and that was factored in – to make you less effective. Thirdly, those girls were only bit players, on the peripherique. And there is a fourth point.’

‘Go on.’

‘Sometimes we’re blinded by close association with people. On the grounds that we’ve been working with them for a long time and that they appear to be our kind of people, we make the logical jump that they are, therefore, good people. We don’t really know that – we don’t know who has what hold over them. Are they more likely to betray that or to conceal it?’

‘Example?’

‘Philby, Burgess and Maclean, especially Philby. There’s a less high profile example from London. My immediate boss and I interviewed a young woman for a teaching post and he asked what I thought of her. I said I really liked her – I have a bit of a problem with pretty girls, yes I know you can’t understand that – her methodology was sound, she was personable and the children responded to her.’

‘So you gave her the job?’ asked Nadine.

‘My boss refused, he said she was wearing denim at the interview.’

‘Excuse?’ Nadine snapped.

‘Denim – she was wearing a denim jacket.’

‘Yes? And what?’

‘To an interview.’

‘So?’

‘That was my reaction too at the time. Turned out though he was 100% correct – the girl had been trouble. Tiny point but he’d picked up on it.’

‘But how could he have known?’

‘Firstly, he was a naturally suspicious character. Secondly, it was only the faintest of suspicions. The rest was easy – checking the database.’

‘Did this boss of yours ever get it wrong?’

‘We both did. Another absolute little dream came for a job interview, exactly my type of girl, and we gave her the job. She was the front girl for a gang of thieves – that’s a true story by the way.’

‘All right – wearing denim and excessive prettiness, you claim,’ said Geneviève. ‘What other things would warn you?’

‘They’ll sound crazy and Nadine will go beserk when she hears them but I swear they’re indicative, they’ve been borne out by long experience, I myself ignored most of these or dismissed them in the early days.’

‘Go on.’

‘Any form of body piercing beyond earrings, a ring worn on the thumb, tattoos, dressing a la mode, excessive attention to make-up, arriving late for meetings, not apologising for things, speaking of ‘doing’ a country you’ve visited, excessive travel, beach worship, nightclubbing more than once a week, loudness in general demeanour or the opposite – excessive shyness, uncompromising attitude on certain issues, primaeval tendencies such as heavily rhythmic musical preferences, very personal questions early in conversations – I could go on and on. Remember – no one item is indicative, they’re only indicative in combinations’

‘What’s wrong with wearing a ring on the thumb?’ Nadine protested.

‘Nothing in itself as I just mentioned. But if you also club, wear clothes a bit on the immodest side and your speech is coarse, then that’s very much a sign. And certain combinations do often go together. We had to know these things professionally in one of my jobs.’

‘I still can’t see it.’

‘I can,’ said Geneviève. ‘I see it very clearly. Any other factors?’

‘Any number of them, Genie – taking yourself too seriously, unreasonable habits like being in a car and realising you forgot your compact and expecting the driver to turn around and go back for it, a man who uses come-on lines to a woman instead of natural conversation, excessive internet usage at night, general secretiveness, feeling things are unfair or that you’re not getting your fair share, coming up with new plans the whole time while not finishing the others and so on and so on.’

‘I’d appreciate it, Hugh, if you’d write those down and discuss them with me at a later stage. Any others?’

‘Hedonistic lifestyle, suntan in winter, beach worship, excessive muscular development in a guy, narrowed eyes, glazed eyes, feeling your business will break down without your presence, being a natural rebel rather than a natural loyalist, having no time for simple pleasures, doing only leisure activities which require money, inability to control personal finances, excessive shopping.’

‘Shopping?’

‘Shop-a-holics are sad people – not much inside them as people and compensating with external things.’

‘Like Louise?’

‘Yes, we keep coming back to her, don’t we? Incidentally, she wore a ring on her thumb.’

‘Yes, she did.’

Nadine had been listening to all this and was near-apoplectic. ‘But almost everyone I know does those things,’ she exploded. ‘Suntanning on the beach, for example – are all those people dangerous?’

‘It’s the combinations which count, Nadine, not single items. And not necessarily dangerous but sometimes just unreliable – it might not matter in everyday life but in our work – it does. Also, if they continue that tan into the winter – yes, they’re possibly unreliable. Not because of that itself but because of the mindset and the other things which go with that mindset.

You think this is outrageously wrong, don’t you, Nadine, because it attacks things in your age range which you accept as normal? I’m sorry, we can’t afford to worry about who’s upset about what – we need to be sure and so niceties don’t come into it. It’s not a foolproof method by any means but experience often bears it out and if that’s combined with things like your opinion on things, it gets pretty close.’

‘You’re sad. May I ask you something – are you happy in your life?’

‘Right now I am.’

‘You do have a penchant for provoking people, Hugh. All right, so where do we start?’ asked Geneviève.

‘With the fruits, of course – always the fruits. Take the specific of Emmeline – go into her flat at her invitation and observe. Go round with her for 24 hours, on some pretext, listen to the language coming from her lips, look at and listen to her friends.’

‘We do that already but I think we need to be better organised.’

She sent Nadine out for supplies and used the time to speak further.

Sunday [6 to 10]

(1115) Right, chaps and chapesses, short break now. Plenty of serious politics in the queue, very little of fun memes. No matter as there is a film, plus jazz, this afternoon. Have a good one. (1127)

 

10. Moo corner


9. The big move to control soc-med


8. Even in 2002, they were at it


7. More Katie Lam


6. The essential issue within Restore


As someone pointed out, this podcast with Joe Rogan is going to make or break Rupert. Meanwhile, the civil war within Restore continues:


It’s the same old same old … Rupert is quoted as saying he cannot abide “ethnats”. Yet Restore policy, already laid down, is very much concerned with all aspects of the other-cultural invasion, on top of the sheer numbers and the Uniparty destroying of Britain by every measure.

Somewhere in there is enough common ground to work with. This talk of binned vanguards helps no one. In short … there is a biew that zero foreign influence be allowed but then those who say just get rid of the illegals. It’s when getting into the legals who are misbehaving that the issue blows up.

I’m thinkibg they should concentrate on two things … firstly all illegals … secondly, identified misbehaving legals. …bemohasis on the misbehaving. An example is demonstrating sgainst the British as an ethnic or religioys group. That’s simply not on imho.

Sunday [2 to 5]

(0923) Morning all, got that extra sleep in. Right, state of play … a film and jazz ready for later, low on short docs, low on screenshot politics (same old, same old) … enough to get us up to 10 items for now. Might look for some baroque too. (1031)

 

5. This is art?


4. Steve at 1431

  • July 1776 Copy of Declaration of Independence Discovered Outside US in Foreign Navy Captain’s Papers
  • Conservative Scholar Victor Davis Hanson Analyzes Hard Left Turn of Democrats – Lays Most of Blame on Higher Education
  • Florida State Board of Education Votes to Ban Illegal Immigrants From Admission to Public Colleges and Universities
  • DeSantis Confirms Florida Will Execute Child Rapists and Take the Fight All the Way to the Supreme Court
  • Group of African Thugs in England Attacks Young White Man – UK Police Rush in to Arrest and Charge White Victim, Ask People Not to Share Footage of Incident!
  • Iran Received Boeing Jets From Saudi Arabia
  • What No One Is Saying About The New Air Force One
  • Russian Army Captures Konstantinovka In Blow To [The] Ukraine
  • General Washington And The Other Declaration of 1776
  • Much, much more.

3. The NIMBY upper-middle woke left


2. DAD at 1431

a) Salmonella Noodles with Goat Kebab?—Welcome to European Food Safety. Ukrainian-made noodles have caused a salmonella epidemic in EU countries as a UK chain was revealed to have been selling ‘lamb’ kebabs made mainly of skin, fat, and goat. (JH: Charming … dead soldiers too?)

b) The Establishment has just suffered two severe setbacks to its climate change Net Zero narrative in the form of official publications which show unequivocally that Net Zero is a dangerous fraud….

c) France. Trial of the RN and Marine Le Pen: a look back at an eleven-year legal saga. It is an eleven-year-long legal saga with significant repercussions that began with a simple, everyday act: leafing through a newspaper.

d) New NGO Database hit by Cyberattacks hours after exposing taxpayer funding. NGO-Files aims to map how public money flows to civil society groups, prompting debate over transparency, political influence, and state funding.

e) UK Is Talk of a Coming Civil War Justified?

Sunday [1]

(0457) My main opening post is on Katie Lam, both at OoL and Jstack, in conjunction with last night’s embedded clip, plus Julia’s post from Friday. This below is on energy, then I need to catch up on sleep … broken night … maybe an 0800 start with DAD.

 

Saturday [11 till close of play]

(1657) Almost evening all.

 

16. She’s been consistent

… it’s not been jumping on a bandwagon.

15. Moo corner


14. Eyes wide shut


13. Govt to control youtube for our benefit


12. Free school milk


11. Running scared, hiding away

Road trip

 

Wanted something more than official gun salutes and formal celebrations … wanted some real Americana as a 70s boy might have experienced it … the feeling of total freedom … so hard to get across to people today.

But also wanted it reacted to by a younger person who nonetheless got all the jokes. There were two very good black reactors I often watch … they got the groove the band laid down, start to finish, they got the synth, they could not understand the singer … whereas this reactor could … coz he’s a different demographic.

It’s a bit like some mates trying to play some garage music … yep, the groove’s great, the singer speaks his set of available lyrics, then has to think what to say after that … quite humorous, quite amateurish … garage … I love it … a bit like solos in the Sunday jazz, not knowing what’s coming next … so they invent something.

It’s carried by the band and the singer’s obsession with night trips on the highway … I remember them well. In SoCal on t’other coast, I did just this in my Sunbird convertible, down by Oceanside, wind through the balding pate under the cap … it was so FREE, so full of possibilities, meet some girl, met six.

The reactor, already being part of the demographic, different generation, just smiles at the different things pulled by the band. I’m thinking this video is a tribute to what America once was. But more than that, it’s so me, Jimbo tearing down the highway to the groove, gal or mate minding the cassette player … always the core groove, the pulse of life.

Great music in a classical sense? Hell no … but as a slice of 70s Americana … perfect I’d say. Anyway, it’s my tribute to America on this day.