Friday [5 and 6]

(0834) Light out there. Only one ladies pic, so no ladies at lunchtime today … currently no quiz questions but I’ll try to get some posted mid-afternoon. (0941)

6. For Juan and reader/droppers in general

a. First off, there’s no hard and fast rule about where to leave comment now. Ideally on the topic in a post but if new material, e.g. Juan … then wherever the comment “takes”, where it works. It’s temperamental, WP, plus it decides it does not like certain words and phrases … so best avoid those, use euphemisms. Also, please keep trying because we need your input very much.

b. I’m going to repeat two photos which is sort of the backstory to nourishing and now unherdables … regulars, longtimers already know all this. I thought or one of you did, can’t remember, maybe Chuckles, that it’s a bit like in this pic:

The lighthouse keeps pumping out the signals within its range of operation, it does not attempt to become a chain of lighthouses or a celebrity lighthouse, it prefers not. If some passing ship stops in at the safe harbour just beyond the point, then the crew will find a tavern with several rooms, sustenace, bars, then across the carpark are chapel, stables, outhouses for this and that … obviously accommodation.

There are also various roads on the land leading towards the tavern, it’s a meeting place … the landlord is Higham and the people drinking and chatting are patrons, regular or passing through. Rules are minimal, laid out on the policies page. Having said that though … Wokery gets short shrift, ditto with globopsychoism … that bint Sen. Ernst would not be welcome.

Here’s a (fanciful) view from another angle, part of our invented backstory:


5. Lavrov interview

I’m late because I just listened to the entire Tucker-Lavrov discussion, all the fine detail too. Tucker is in a strategically vital place for world non-kaboom because it bypasses the psycho warhawks, funded by ill-gotten billions in currency and connects directly to Americans and Brits, also to some Europeans. How many intend to even listen to the interview?

Because the only way to stop or at least hamper the psychos is for the ordinary American etc. to become aware and to primary the end-worlders, starting with reversing the cheating we’ve seen. To my mind, any political pundit not addressing the issues raised in the interview is falling down on the job and failing to serve his/her readership.

The sense I get is that Russia will avoid nuclear warheads afap but Biden/Obama, plus those controlling them, are literally insane. As always, it comes down to strategic resources, plus money, plus real stick when a tyrant is defied (just look at Starmer, the meat-headed maniac.

In the West though, overall, it is more oligarchical, more defused … Fink, WEF honchos, the CFR, Chatham House, Tavistock, BIS, the black nobility, the Bavarian bruderheist, various others, e.g. the banksters who come out of the fallen Templars of yore … and so on. Thule comes into it. Starmer is a useful idiot because he’s so completely under the spell of the rhetoric that he spells it out …

… it’s always new society, new order, break it all to smithereens and build back better, the great work of ages, moriah conquering wind and all that utter bullsh. Wipe out whole populations, both the vulnerable and the glower of youth … always, never changes. Ever since I started the blog in 2006, it’s been completely about these … not so much the Pigboy Daves themselves. In 2006, you can well imsgine how my “out there” ideas on such things went down. I’ve never changed this stance. Now it’s coming into the mainstream, just as the covid thing has … though far more people were onto that one from its inception.

I’ve always said that, while Brexit was a good way to start the dismantling, my eyes have always been far more on destroying the EU than on Brexit per se. Dismantling, brick by brick. As for Bush/Blair and other mass-murderers … there it is.

The USSR was just as bad in the mid 80s and earlier, Russia is still no angel … it’s not an “either or” situation, as Lavrov said. Putin, for example, was under the influence of the siloviki … how much now … no idea.

WW3? Completely down to the ones running Biden. Retaliation with nukes? Most certainly.

Friday [1 to 3]

(0433) Morning again, in the dark here. (0604)

 

3. Steve summary at 899

Four: MilIC, French govt falls, Notre Dame biblical discoveries, Georgescu, more.

Three: Jack Smith, O’Keefe on FEMA, Johnson no more aid.

Two: Putin Blinken, bitcoin, overall sitrep.

One: Calls for Gates arrest, beef, milk, climate bollox, more.

2. DAD drops on this happy Monday at 900

Friday. It must be Friday as the Dustbin men came yesterday. [Why are there no dustbinwomen? The DEI wallahs have missed that job.] 

a) The general opinion [left and right] is that Macron must go. And, as the founder of the Fifth Republic also says, when elections take place after a dissolution, unlike those that take place on their normal date, it is a question of confidence that the President poses to the country.

b) A problem in NZ over NZ. Green Investment Fund questioned over SolarZero collapse.

c) DJT shares some fun.

d) Tucker Carlson interviews Sergey Viktorovich Lavrov. Russia’s longtime foreign minister describes the war with the United States and how to end it. One hour +

1. From today’s TDS

HERE

Whilst some epidemiological modelling studies give credence to the effectiveness of lockdowns, most studies based on empirical data concluded that lockdowns had little or no effect on COVID-19 transmission, cases or deaths. The collateral damage caused by lockdowns impacted health, economic, social, political, legal, policing and transport issues. Health issues included delayed and missedhealthcare, immunity debtaccidentsdeathsmental healthreduced fertility, an increase in obesity, an increase in smoking and alcohol and drug abusehigher taxeshigher inflation, more people on benefits, waste (test and tracepersonal protective equipment and hotel quarantine) and fraud (Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme payments). Children missed school, which compromised their developmentcommunication skillseducation and physical and mental health. Lockdowns also generated a workshy workforce and normalised truancy. Lockdowns exacerbated inequalities, too, with the poor being the worst affected.

Thursday [17 till close of play]

(1550) Evening all.

 

24. Let’s give this a try

23. From bobbies on the beat back then

… to two tier thugs and wimps today … oh how the mighty police have fallen … Dixon, where are you? Fancy?


22. Ta, Lee … so we don’t have to


21. How much damage will he do before then?


20. Steve at 899 and war room

a. California seats stolen

b. Key Uke port city plan

c. Syria balance of power

d. New sheriff in town needed

19. A post which might interest those

… liking a good read:

https://akhaart.blogspot.com/2024/12/for-anyone-who-misses-wireless.html

18. Posts up at UHC

… plus at Jstack.

17. DAD at 899:4

“Dr. Paul Thomas: “We looked at every single patient born into my practice… We stratified them according to the number of vaccines they had… and what we found was actually even mind-boggling for myself.””

Thursday [13 to 16]

(1420) Was sorting out Christmas shopping for the limited number involved, time got away. (1452)

 

16. When you’ve made yourself obnoxious to all and sundry

… money and destructiveness may remain …


15. Well it’s one view


14. Aixelsyd can be a problem


13. Lord T reports from the BBC

Cash use in the shops rose for a second year in a row after a decade of falls, according to retailers.

Notes and coins were used in a fifth of transactions last year, the British Retail Consortium (BRC) said, as shoppers found cash helped them to budget better.

The amount spent per purchase also dropped slightly from £22.43 in 2022, to £22.03 last year, it said.

The findings were published after charities told a committee of MPs that numerous groups were excluded from essential services and community venues that had started to refuse cash.

Thursday [2 to 7]

(0657) Greetings humans, this dark morning as we hurtle towards the shortest day. (0749)

 

7. Badenoch



6. It would make a MAGA blanche


5. Rare earth


That’s according to TGP … problem for me is the map, leaving out Oz uranium and bauxite. The map is clipped at the bottom … not my doing … which is as annoying as I sometimes get to be 😎. However, as the story is that China is banning certain key elements, this might affect the USA’s warmaking ability … or else it’s a giant Pentagon ruse. 🍿🍿🍿

4. Rolf’s Now and Next

HERE

“One of the PM’s stock phrases is ‘fixing the foundations.’ Is he the one to do it?

‘Starmer is already in a flat spin from which he will not recover,’ Dominic Cummings said last week (47:46). ‘He has no idea how to do the job… He will just thrash around failing.’”

JH (0713): Nor have any of them except Putin and Trump it seems.

”Another fundamental weakness is the electoral system that has given Labour such wildly disproportionate representation in Westminster. The notorious petition started a fortnight ago asking for a fresh GE will be debated in Westminster Hall on 6 January, and has already prompted the formation of an all-party Parliamentary group on fair voting; yesterday (Lib Dem) Sarah Olney’s Ten-Minute Rule Bill urging the introduction of Single Transferable Voting was passed, despite Conservative opposition.”

3. Steve dropped his overnight at 898

Four: SpaceX Wins Contract To ‘Destroy’ NASA’s International Space Station, Cicago resident upset, Eric Adams acting interestingly just now, plenty more.

Three: Navarro, Hegseth, Newsome, plenty more.

Two: Alex C you saw below, Russian army, war situation, more.

One: German lab has started to offer tests for spike proteins and plasmid DNA, Arla’s drug, Trump news, more.

2. DAD has his time-war at 899

z) Thursday [I think, since yesterday was Wednesday. But the day before yesterday was also Wednesday; so, it may be it’s Friday. I leave it to you to decide]

a) The French National Assembly brought down Michel Barnier’s government. An unprecedented move since 1962, which plunges the country into a period of great political and financial uncertainty, six months after the dissolution.

b) French President Emmanuel Macron has vowed that he will not resign no matter the result of Wednesday’s no confidence vote in Prime Minister Michel Barnier, which is likely to collapse the second Macronist government this year.

c) I am pleased to announce that Peter Navarro, a man who was treated horribly by the Deep State, or whatever else you would like to call it, will serve as my Senior Counselor for Trade and Manufacturing.

d) d) It would appear that the BBC, like Sir Kneeler, does not know what a woman is.