There have been 12,517 excess non-Covid deaths registered in England
and Wales in the 14 weeks since April 23rd, according to the latest official data from the Office for National Statistics, released on Tuesday.
In the week ending July 29th, the most recent week for which data are
available, 11,013 deaths were registered in England and Wales, which is
1,678 (18%) above the five-year average for the week. Of these, 810
mentioned COVID-19 on the death certificate as a contributory cause and
531 mentioned COVID-19 as underlying cause, leaving 1,147 deaths from a
different underlying cause. Note that this was the week following the
brief but intense heatwave (with recorded temperatures topping 40°C for
the first time in some areas), so some of these will be heatwave deaths,
as will many of the additional Covid deaths (being people who happened
to have Covid at the time). ... Continue reading >>>
The mainstream media are currently
constantly reminding you of the spiralling cost of fuel to get you from A
to B, the hideous cost of gas and electricity to heat and light your
home, and the chaotic experience involved with travelling abroad.
Alongside doomsday weather reports every 30 minutes because the sun is
shining in the middle of Summer.
Whilst on the face of it, some of
these things may seem like unfortunate events occurring at random, the
truth is they are actually all occurring by design, and official
government reports alongside historical data prove it.
Reports suggest it’s all to do with
meeting ‘zero carbon targets’. But that is another charade in itself, so
the real reason has something to do with advancing the fourth
industrial revolution, where you will own nothing and apparently be
happy about it. An agenda that Klaus Schwab, the founder of the World
Economic Forum likes to call ‘The Great Reset’.
In the UK, the cost to fill up an average
family car with petrol has now surpassed £100. The public is being told
this is being driven by war in Ukraine and moves to reduce Europe’s
dependence on Russian oil. But if this were true, how do you explain
this? –
As of August 2022, the price of crude oil per barrel is $89.10, and the average price per litre of petrol in the UK is £1.77p.
But back in June 2008, the price of crude
oil per barrel was $187.04, and the average price per litre of petrol in
the UK was £1.04p (source).
So as things stand, the price per barrel of
crude oil is 52.3% down from the price in 2008, but the price per litre
of petrol is 70% up from 2008.
Can you see now how you are being lied to
when the Government and mainstream media tell you that these rising
costs are due to the war in Ukraine? ... Continue reading >>>
German Health Minister Karl Lauterbach has announced that the
nation’s digital contact tracing and vaccine passport app,
Corona-Warn-App (CWA), will start assigning different colors to citizens
based on whether they received a COVID-19 vaccine within the last three
months.
The CWA will assign one color to citizens who add proof that they
received a vaccine within the last three months and a different color to
citizens who add proof of vaccination that’s more than three months
old. Only those with the color showing that they’re “freshly vaccinated”
(have received a vaccine within the last three months) will be exempt
from Germany’s mask requirement in public indoor spaces.
Other citizens, including those who received multiple vaccines but
had their last vaccine more than three months ago, will have to show
proof of recent recovery from COVID or a current negative test to get an
exemption from this mask requirement.
Germany’s Berliner Zeitung noted that
the colors codes in the vaccine passport app would “give different
rights in the future” and said the system would put citizens who are
already quadruple vaccinated on the same legal footing as those who are
unvaccinated. ... Continue reading >>>
The World Economic Forum (WEF) has been pushing hard for a
‘cashless society’ in a post-pandemic world, though physical money has
made a comeback in at least one European country as consumers
increasingly use notes and coins to help them balance household budgets
amid an inflationary storm.
Britain’s Post Office released a report Monday that revealed even
though the recent accelerated use of cards and digital payments on
smartphones, demand for cash surged this summer, according to The Guardian.
It said branches handled £801mln in personal cash withdrawals in July,
an increase of 8% over June. The yearly change on last month’s figures
was up 20% versus the July 2021 figure of £665mln.
Across the Post Office’s 11,500 branches, £3.31bln in cash was
deposited and withdrawn in July — a record high for any month dating
back over three centuries of operations.
The report pointed out that increasing physical cash demand was
primarily due to more people managing their budgets via notes and coins
on a “day-by-day basis.” It said some withdrawals were from vacationers
needing cash for “staycations” in the UK. About 600,000 cash payouts
totaling £90mln were from people who received power bill support from
the government, the Post Office noted.
Britain is “anything but a cashless society,” according to the Post Office’s banking director Martin Kearsley. ... Continue reading >>>
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Is The US Preparing To Throw Zelensky Under The Bus?
In a display of support, the US has protected Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky
from any criticism ever since Russia attacked Ukraine in February. As
it becomes evident the war has been lost, someone will have to take the
fall, and it appears that Washington is preparing to throw the leader in
Kiev to the wolves.
The US proxy war against Russia was beneficial for Washington as long as
there was a stalemate that was draining Moscow’s military, economic and
human resources, even threatening to demote Russia from the rank of a
great power. For example, Congressman Dan Crenshaw justified his support
for the process by arguing that “investing in the destruction of our
adversary’s military without losing a single American troop strikes me
as a good idea.”
After more than five months of grinding down the Ukrainian military,
the entire frontline is cracking. By punching through the heavily
fortified defenses in Maryinka, Peski, Avdeevka, it appears that Moscow
has sealed the fate of Donbass. As the fighting moves out of heavily
populated industrial areas to a more open landscape, the territorial
advancements of Russia will likely intensify. Furthermore, sanctions
have backfired terribly on the West, causing a political crisis.
Meanwhile, a new security crisis has emerged in East Asia that is
more deserving of US focus and resources. The US and UK built a
narrative of victory when they convinced Zelensky to abandon peace talks
with Russia in March, but now Washington needs to adapt the narrative
for Kiev’s pending loss.
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