COVID-shot echoes: I had a most odd experience Saturday

By Selwyn Duke

In “My troubling COVID vaccine story experiences,” I wrote last year about how within a short period of time I met three men at the same recreational area who announced to me they’d had heart attacks. All three had previously taken the coronavirus genetic-therapy agents (GTAs, a.k.a. “vaccines”). Add the friend who suffered heart inflammation and the neighbor of mine who had an adverse reaction after having the shots, and it was quite a series of “anomalies.” I’ve had another similar experience now, too.

While in a supermarket checkout line Saturday, I got to talking to the fellow behind me, who was holding a pair of floral bouquets. He’d bought them for two different funerals. One was for his brother, who’d died of a heart attack — at age 24. The other was for a friend’s son who’d passed away. I asked him how old was the son was.

“He was in first grade,” the man replied.

“What happened to him?” I then queried. The fellow said he didn’t know, that the boy was found “dead in bed,” he’d died in his sleep.

Having studied COVID since the “pandemic’s” beginning and the GTAs’ secondary effects since the drugs’ introduction, you can probably guess what immediately occurred to me. But the man was glassy-eyed and obviously grieving, and I felt it would’ve been inappropriate to inquire about the departed’s GTA status, so I didn’t. But I wouldn’t want to bet they hadn’t had the shots.

Naysayers will claim I’m jumping to conclusions, but here’s the point: I’m well into middle age (very well!), and I’d never before had so many odd experiences such as those outlined above. What’s more, my anecdotal experiences accord with data showing there has been an enormous amount of increased mortality since the GTAs’ introduction.

Flashback: Just consider the Dec. 30, 2021 testimonial of Scott Davison, CEO of insurance company OneAmerica, who spoke of a spike in mortality his industry was seeing that was worse than that associated with a one-in-200-year catastrophe. Bear in mind when reading the below that Davison wasn’t making any political point when delivering his information; in fact, there’s no indication that he’s even an ideologue.

As The Center Square wrote January 1:

OneAmerica is a $100 billion insurance company that has had its headquarters in Indianapolis since 1877. The company has approximately 2,400 employees and sells life insurance, including group life insurance to employers in the state.

Davison said the increase in deaths represents “huge, huge numbers,” and that’s it’s not elderly people who are dying, but “primarily working-age people 18 to 64” who are the employees of companies that have group life insurance plans through OneAmerica.

“And what we saw just in third quarter, we’re seeing it continue into fourth quarter, is that death rates are up 40% over what they were pre-pandemic,” he said.

“Just to give you an idea of how bad that is, a three-sigma or a one-in-200-year catastrophe would be 10% increase over pre-pandemic,” he said. “So 40% is just unheard of.”

Davison was one of several business leaders who spoke during the virtual news conference on Dec. 30 that was organized by the Indiana Chamber of Commerce.

Most of the claims for deaths being filed are not classified as COVID-19 deaths, Davison said.

“What the data is showing to us is that the deaths that are being reported as COVID deaths greatly understate the actual death losses among working-age people from the pandemic. It may not all be COVID on their death certificate, but deaths are up just huge, huge numbers.”

Now, note that that this “third quarter,” 2021 age-18-to-64 death increase generally coincides with when the GTAs were pushed on people under 65.

It was once vanishingly rare to hear about a young 20-something dying of a coronary or an apparently healthy seven-year-old passing away in his sleep. But such incidents occur with regularity now (related example here).

Unfortunately, establishment institutions have no interest in investigating this mortality, not any more than mainstream media have a desire to cover it. Too many powerful people are implicated. After all, it isn’t just Dr. Anthony Fauci, one of our time’s true villains, who has dirty hands. Politicians, bureaucrats, media figures and other influential figures all conspired to strong-arm Americans into taking the GTAs while censoring, demeaning and canceling those who dared dispute their narrative. The hole they’re in is so deep, all they can do is keep digging and wait for this all to “go away.”

My only hope is that a nation with a less compromised medical establishment (perhaps Sweden or Japan?) will investigate and expose the truth about the GTAs. Regardless, there’s a reason why Rabbi Hillel Handler, Hagar Schafrir and other Holocaust survivors labeled the mass GTA inoculation scheme a “Holocaust” last year and, along with other figures, have called for the Nuremberg Code’s application: The worldwide GTA push may thus far be the crime of the century.

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2022/11/covidshot_echoes_i_had_a_most_odd_experience_saturday.html

Iranian brothers allegedly spied on Sweden

From the police preliminary investigation: Discs confiscated. Right: Peyman Kia. Photo: Private

Two Iranian-born brothers have been indicted for selling vast amounts of classified information – of an extremely sensitive nature – to the Russian intelligence agency GRU. For the Armed Forces and the Security Police, it will be extra embarrassing because the brothers held several important positions in the most secret parts of the Swedish security apparatus.

The two Iranian-born brothers Peyman Kia, 42, and Payam Kia, 35, have been in custody for a year after they were suspected of sharing large amounts of top secret information from the Security Police and the Armed Forces with Russia.

The two brothers, who were hired as a result of a “diversity investment”, are now charged with gross espionage after potentially making millions of kroner by selling out Sweden.

According to the indictment, the buyer of the classified information, the scope of which is described as almost catastrophic for Sweden according to sources, is Russia and more specifically the Russian intelligence service GRU.

Worked with Sweden’s security, spied for Russia

According to information from Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter, older brother Peyman Kia was working as a security chief at a government agency when he was arrested in a dawn raid in September 2021. At that time, he had already worked at the Security Police and the Military Intelligence and Security Service (MUST), and it is during this time period that he became a suspect.

He had worked at the most secret Swedish intelligence organization in Sweden, the Office for Special Collection (KSI), which works with extremely important and classified information, including abroad with agents.

After the elder brother Peyman was arrested, his younger brother, Payam Kia, was also arrested and detained in November 2021 on suspicion of aggravated espionage. According to sources to SVT, Payam had started police training, but never completed it. Despite this, he got a job at the Security Police (SÄPO) for unclear reasons.

According to steering documents drawn up in 2009 after the then moderate-led Reinfeldt government gave the Armed Forces orders to “increase diversity”, more immigrants got important positions within the country’s defence structures. Whether the two Iranian brothers received their respective jobs due to “diversity” quotas or preferential treatment, has not been established.

What could be established, however, is that they lacked loyalty to the country that received them and gave them sanctuary.

Sold out the country that welcomed them

According to the indictment, the two Iranian-born brothers, who came to Sweden as children from Iran together with their parents, “jointly and in consultation, during the period 28 September 2011 – 20 September 2021 within the kingdom, including in the Stockholm area, went to Russia and the Russian intelligence service GRU with the unauthorized acquisition, promotion and disclosure of information even as this leak to a foreign power could result in harm to Sweden’s security”.

The older brother acted as a so-called mole and infiltrated the security service. After that, the younger brother, according to the prosecutors, helped plan the crimes, but was also responsible for handling contacts with Russia and the GRU. It is Payam who is suspected of having handed over the information and received compensation and, according to the indictment, made extensive monetary transactions involving cash and gold.

Between September 2016 and July 2017, he handled at least SEK 380 000 in the form of dollar bills which, according to the indictment, come from a foreign power for information that the older brother stole from the authorities where he was employed.

However, much of the information in the preliminary investigation is secret, said the Public Prosecutor’s Office in a press release.

“It has been a complex investigation into a very difficult crime and the suspicion relates to a very serious crime directed against Sweden’s intelligence and security system. The crime is serious because it concerns conditions that are of great importance,” said chief prosecutor Per Lindqvist in a press release.

Comprehensive evidence

According to the indictment, the prosecutor invoked, among other things, several very serious security breaches against the two brothers, and they have been able to secure evidence in the form of computers, hard drives, mobile phones, phone lists, notes, USB sticks and large sums of money which, according to the indictment, they received from Russia to spy in Sweden.

Both brothers are now charged with aggravated espionage. Peyman Kia is also charged with being in possession of highly unauthorized information. The penalty includes life imprisonment. According to Expressen’s sources, the brothers’ suspected espionage has been described as “very serious, almost catastrophic in some respects”.

Both brothers denied the crimes.

Espionage

The crimes of espionage and unauthorized position with a secret mission fall under what is known as a crime against Sweden’s security. Espionage, according to the law, is the intentional transfer, transmission or disclosure of secrets – such as defense matters – to a foreign power. The information does not have to be true.

The penalty for espionage of the normal degree is a maximum of six years in prison, while aggravated espionage carries a prison term of between four and eighteen years or life.

If there is no intention to help a foreign power, the crime is instead an unauthorized position with a secret mission. The penalty scale for such unauthorized acts range from fines to imprisonment for a maximum of two years. For serious crimes, the maximum sentence is four years.

One can also be sentenced for negligence with secret information, if the crime has been committed through gross negligence, according to TT, § 5–9, ch. 9 Criminal Code, Swedish Constitution.

https://freewestmedia.com/2022/11/15/iranian-brothers-spied-on-sweden/

Italy: Meloni’s party above 30% in new poll

Premier Giorgia Meloni’s rightwing Brothers of Italy (FdI) party has risen 0.7% over the last week to 30.1% in the latest SWG poll.
    FdI got 26% when it led the rightwing coalition to victory in the September 25 general election.
    The populist 5-Star Movement (M5S) is the top opposition party with 17%, up 0.2% on last week and compared to 16% (steady) for the centre-left Democratic Party (PD), the big losers in the general election where they scored 17% and were a couple of points ahead of the M5S.
    The second rightwing alliance party, the League, is 0.4% up at 8.1% and the third, ex-premier and media mogul Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia (FI) is 0.5% up on 6.8%.
    The third pole of Azione-Italia Viva are 0.4% down on 8%.
    The PD’s partners in the Green and Left Alliance are 0.2% down at 3.8%.

https://www.ansa.it/english/news/2022/11/15/melonis-party-above-30-in-new-poll_f8421b85-0c91-48ff-abb2-6d233500b965.html

India: Hindu victim broke relations with her parents when they objected to her ‘interfaith’ relationship with her Muslim killer

On November 10, Shraddha Walker’s father, Vikas Madan Walker, filed a missing person report at Mehrauli Police Station, South Delhi district. Based on his complaint, an FIR was registered by the police and an investigation was initiated to find Shraddha. During the investigation, the police found that Aftab Amin Poonawala, with whom Shraddha was in a live-in relationship, allegedly killed her in May. He reportedly chopped her into 35 pieces and disposed of them one by one.

Details of the FIR

In the FIR, Vikas said in 2018, Shraddha used to work at a call centre in Malad, Mumbai. Aftab was her colleague at the office. After eight or nine months, Shraddha’s parents came to know that she was in a relationship with Aftab.

In 2019, Shraddha told her mother that she wanted to have a live-in relationship with Aftab. As Vikas’s family is Hindu and Aftab is Muslim, they refused to allow her to get into a live-in relationship with him. Vikas said in the complaint that inter-caste or inter-religion marriages did not happen in his community.

However, Shraddha was adamant about her decision. The FIR noted after her parents announced their disapproval of the relationship with Aftab, she said, “I am 25 years old. I have full right to take my own decisions. I want to have a live-in relationship with Aftab. From today, you can think you never had a daughter.” She packed her belongings and left the house. Vikas and his wife late, Suman Madan Walker, tried to stop her, but she did not listen.

Shraddha’s friends informed the parents about her whereabouts from time to time. The FIR noted that her parents came to know that the duo had shifted to Naya Gaon and later to Vasai. Meanwhile, Shraddha started calling her mother and informed her that Aftab often fought with her and physically assaulted her as well.

On January 1, 2020, Shraddha’s mother Suman passed away. Around 20 days after her death, Shraddha called her father a couple of times. She informed him that Aftab had physically assaulted her. A month later, she met Vikas and said the same about Aftab. He requested her to leave Aftab and come back home. However, Aftab apologised to her, and she went back.

Later, her father contacted two of her friends, Shivani and Laxman, who informed him that the relationship between Shraddha and Aftab was not healthy, and he used to physically assault her. Vikas was not in contact with her daughter since she refused to return.

On September 14, Laxman called Vikas’s son Shreejay and informed her that he could not contact Shraddha for two months. On September 15, Vikas called Laxman. He told Shraddha’s father that he was in regular contact with Shraddha, but her phone had been switched off for the last two months. Vikas tried her phone, but it did not connect. He decided to file a complaint at Manikpur Police Station.

Manikpur Police transferred the case to Mehrauli Police Station and informed her father that the duo had shifted to Delhi. Vikas mentioned in his complaint that he tried finding his daughter but could not trace her. In his complaint, Vikas said, “The relationship between my daughter and Aftab was not good. I am confident that he is behind her disappearance. Either he has hidden her somewhere or has done something wrong.”

Police arrested Aftab for Shraddha’s murder

After filing FIR under Section 365 of the Indian Penal Code, the Delhi Police initiated an investigation. During the probe, they found out that Aftab had killed Shraddha in May this year. Reports suggest Aftab kept on changing his statements during questioning.

Aftab told police that the duo got into an argument, and he strangulated her. Later, he chopped her dead body into 35 pieces. He brought a new fridge to store the pieces. Aftab left his apartment with one piece of the dead body wrapped in plastic daily and disposed of it off in a forest area.

Reports suggest after murdering Shraddha, he installed a dating app and dated another woman. While Shraddha’s dead body pieces were in the fridge and kitchen, Aftab brought another woman to the apartment a few times on the date.

https://www.opindia.com/2022/11/shraddhas-parents-were-against-interfaith-relationship-she-had-complained-about-aftab-being-abusive-details-of-her-fathers-fir/

Pfizer and Moderna Launch Studies on Their COVID Vaccines to Investigate Any Long-Term Side Effects

Socialized Medicine Is No Cure: Britain’s Broken Benefit System

“Since the general civilisation of mankind, I believe there are more instances of the abridgement of the freedom of the people by silent & gradual encroachment of power than by violence & sudden usurpations.” — James Madison

“One of the traditional methods of imposing statism or socialism on a people has been by way of medicine.” — Ronald Reagan

Winning the hearts and minds of society is arguably easier to achieve by promising hand-outs. Also, especially in the age of rapid communication, emotion sells — a handy method for sneaking political takeovers through the back door. So, when it comes to something as fraught with emotion as medicine, it is difficult to argue the downsides for fear of appearing heartless.

This may be a least one reason that socialists seem to think they have the monopoly on altruism. Claiming that conservatives are less compassionate because many basic needs are not offered for free can miss the point. Too often what is offered are words; what is actually ends up being delivered may be sorely lacking — as disillusioned citizens in places such as Venezuela and Cuba have found out the hard way.

However, this type of Santa-Clausian virtue-signalling — of providing everything for everyone for free — can be an effective strategy not only to get votes but also to protect the welfare system from the overhaul it so desperately needs but will never get. As often with ostensible compassion, posturing has come to depend on the ignorance or gullibility of the citizenry. Of course, one does not become a “better person” by voting for giveaways that are all too often fraudulent or semi-fraudulent — a bait-and-switch in which what is delivered ends up being far from what has been promised, if delivered at all. For many people, however, it might satisfy a need to be perceived as being on the side of the “good” — which social promises always are; why else would a public buy into them?

Even giveaways, however, cannot endlessly provide a stable solution to the problems of our societies. Who, after all, is ultimately paying for them to be given away? In the United States, for instance, a plan to forgive a sizeable portion of student-loan debts looked as if it is coming a-cropper when it became clear that welders and truck drivers would ultimately be paying the college tuition of others when they themselves had never gone to college. That conclusion arrived even before throwing in that their hard work would be funding someone else’s studies in fields regarded by some as basically unserious.

For a while, the teacher’s union appeared to be lobbying to be on a permanent vacation, and almost entirely to have given up trying to teach reading, writing and arithmetic in favour of racist indoctrination. Good luck trying to go out in the world with an “education” such as that.

Long before state welfare was introduced in the UK or USA, approximately a hundred years ago, it was the domain of church-based charitable organisations that ensured basic necessities were made available to those in need. Religious and philosophical guidelines that have shaped our culture throughout history have since led people to contemplate the emergence of a “fairer” society. Financial aid, hospitals, alms houses, and providing food for the elderly and the poor existed long before state benefits, government funded housing projects or healthcare were introduced.

Over time, as governments began to separate themselves from religion, many responsibilities of the church became transferred to the state. The gradual progression of socialist and Marxist thought, meanwhile, further increased the divide, while at the same time expanding the remit of governmental reach into people’s daily lives.

Ever since being rolled out universally in 1945 (1938 in the U.S.), the UK’s welfare system, as it has sought to keep up with its burgeoning population, has kept expanding. Now, however, immigration, changes in the workplace, a massive increase in disability payments (along with what constitutes “disability”), the length of time people remain unemployed and an increasingly bloated bureaucracy have all contributed to breaking the back of an outdated system.

The fairly simple premise that instigated the need for welfare — keeping jobless workers and their families from being tipped into poverty — has grown out of all proportion, as the volume of its beneficiaries has long since overwhelmed the system. Put bluntly, in the eyes of many, it is an experiment that has failed. It is time to re-evaluate it and perhaps consider whether or not we would be better off with a return to other, more productive, forms of distributing welfare, as well as a revitalised look at work initiative programmes.

Former US President Ronald Reagan, who famously said that “the top 9 most terrifying words in the English language” were, “I’m from the government and I’m here to help”, once suggested, regarding free healthcare and other forms of “socialised medicine”, that it is easy to disguise a totalitarian programme as a “humanitarian exercise”, because people are reluctant to dismiss a project that seems to help those in need of practical compassion.

Reagan also noted that “One of the traditional methods of imposing statism or socialism on a people has been by way of medicine.” His observation might explain why the concept of “socialised medicine” has become a key attribute of so many political causes whose ideology draws so heavily from Marxist and neo-Marxist lines of thought. It would also explain the virtuous posturing of both Democrats in the US, and the Labour Party in the UK, who like to promise the moon when it comes to pushing their agenda or career.

First, the myth that socialised medicine is “free” in the United Kingdom is just that — a myth. Although it is true that you do not have to pay directly to see an NHS doctor, if it is anything urgent, you will have to wait — sometimes weeks or months — for an appointment. Even before Covid-19, arranging to see a doctor was fraught with problems caused by ever-growing waiting lists. If your needs are immediate, the struggle for medical care is even more uphill: the NHS is now advising patients to consider private healthcare.

Since March 2020, when face-to-face appointments with doctors were suspended, it has become an increasingly hopeless task even to secure a “phone appointment”. Meanwhile, the cost of each item on a prescription has been rising year upon year. From 2010-2019, the cost of a prescription has risen by 26% to £8.80. Since April 2021, the price has risen to £9.35 per item. If you are on a variety of permanent medications, it can be a costly business.

Taking into account the average number of items on a prescription being at £18.7 per head (in 2012) — and with 2.7 million items dispensed every day (more than 1,900 per minute) — this “free” healthcare becomes quite expensive.

Then there is dental care. As long ago as 1952, the British state’s initial offer of “free” dental work (and visits to the optician) had to be dramatically reined-in: the reality of the economics was not adding up.

Dental practices may offer subsidised treatment “on the NHS”, but the reality is that an increasing number of citizens have been “going private“, despite their apparent legal right to the supposed “free dental care”. The fact is, if you are in pain and cannot wait months to be seen — which quite often happens — and because you will anyway be paying out-of-pocket for at least a part of that treatment (such as basic x-rays) — it often makes more sense to use private dental care than to wait.

The high rate of taxation in Britain, with a top income tax rate of 45% (for those who earn more than £150,000) and an “ordinary” rate of 20%, has many wondering if their “national insurance” deductions could not be better spent on private care when needed. As things stand, the majority of people — those without chronic medical conditions — appear to be paying for the few — the same business model as for private insurance companies.

Adding to the growing consternation are increasingly bad optics. These indicate that the only real “winners”, when it comes to welfare, are newcomers to the UK — refugees or migrants — and the long term “generationally” unemployed. These are the needy individuals who have never paid into the system. The situation unfortunately does not spread joy and happiness throughout the British Isles. Quite the opposite. Indeed, if ever one desired a plan to stoke societal discontent, Britain’s welfare system might be it.

Taking into consideration the challenge of rampant illegal immigration, the divisive nature of “woke” ideology that pits citizens against one another, the criminalisation of speech that constitutes “hate crimes” law, the softly-softly approach to fundamentalist terrorism, as well “transgender” infiltration into women’s sports, locker rooms and restrooms, media race-baiting and so on, it seems we have a bit of a problem on our hands.

Muddying the waters still further are the rise of “in work” benefits, which , since the turn of the century, have become a fixture. The availability of “working tax credits”, “child tax credits”, travel vouchers, and other such schemes, is another cause for scepticism.

Many question whether it is the role of government to subsidise low wages when it could be focussing on why the minimum wage bears no relation to the cost of living in the twenty-first century. It has become almost impossible for most working-class families to avoid being unable to survive on low wages withoutgovernment aid.

For many claimants, the process of “signing on” and joining the ranks of the unemployed, seems anything but benevolent or charitable. In the UK, they must agree to a set of Orwellian demands that are foisted upon them when claiming benefits, despite the understandable need to prevent fraud. (See Appendix.)

To help keep the state informed, members of the public, including mail carriers and neighbours, are invited to “report” suspicious activity. Every day, it feels less like the UK and more like China or North Korea.

Inevitably, this creates its own problems. Personal disputes or biases, and administrative mistakes will often result in erroneous “reporting” of potential “fraudsters”. Thus, perfectly innocent — and often highly vulnerable — claimants can spend weeks or months worrying, due to malicious or mistaken “information”.

Taking all of the above into account, it is not at all surprising that the suicide rateamongst disability benefit claimants has doubled, along with a monumental increase of mental health issues.

By accepting such restrictions and invasions of privacy for a privilege that falls well short of keeping you afloat, does not aid one’s mental health.

With the UK population having grown by almost eight million (13.8%) since 1980, the welfare system has had to expand well beyond the bounds of its original remit.

Of course, a major contribution to population growth has been the influx of immigrants to the British Isles. After the Second World War, fewer than one-in-25 of the population were born outside the country. Today that figure is almost one-in-seven. With my father having been an immigrant, I am in no way against immigration, but you do not have to be a whiz in mathematics to notice how overcrowded the UK’s towns and cities have become and who ends up paying for that.

” You cannot simultaneously have free immigration and a welfare state,” the economist Milton Friedman famously noted.

Tempted by an “El Dorado” of jobs and welfare benefits, new arrivals are showing up daily on our shores, often courtesy of enriched people-smugglers, despite recent tragedies en route from across the Channel or the US government’s crime statisticsfor “non-citizen” immigration there. So far in attempting to reach the US, “At least 4,000 migrants from Central America trying to reach the U.S. through Mexico in the last four years have gone missing or have died, according to an AP investigation”.

That number includes a “record high of 853 over the past 12 months, making fiscal year 2022 the deadliest year for migrants ever”, according to CBS News.

report from the UN’s International Organization for Migration notes that “at least 29,000 have died trying to reach Europe since 2014.”

That Western governments appear to have lost the will to tackle the problem, means we can only expect more of the same.

Meanwhile, the bitterness brought about by the “bad optics” of an out-of-control immigration system, with all the entitlements that go with it, also appears damaging to society. Competing for finite resources, jostling for position in the housing queue, and even at food-banks, creates an unedifying spectacle. The overloading of the NHS, which would be alarming enough on its own, is merely the icing on a hugely unappetising-looking cake. Indeed, the total cost of providing healthcare to visitors and immigrants alone was estimated at two billion pounds per year — as far back as 2013.

To compound matters, when exceptions to the rules are made for certain residents – such as allowing men in polygamous marriages to claim for wives that do not even reside in the UK, the bitterness can only grow. To blame the inevitable backlash on “racism” or “xenophobia” might seem to many a ruse to silence dissent.

Year after year, as the population has grown, the inevitable demand for state aid has risen, stretching resources, while breeding bitter rivalry amongst those vying for help — be it healthcare, social housing or state benefits. The dynamic between altruism and gratitude, has been replaced it with an increasingly authoritarian-looking bureaucracy on the state’s part, coupled with what many might regard as a cynical sense of entitlement in those expecting help.

The outcome has become an over-burdened bureaucracy that has not only lost sight of its purpose, but is unable to function adequately. It is a system that has so consistently been abused and taken advantage of as it has grown, that far from seeming like a comforting “safety net”, welfare now feels more like a soul crushing method of enslavement by the state. It is no wonder this has led to accusations of “failure” being levelled at successive governments for neglecting to address the situation.

There may well be little doubt that the state has good cause to implement anti-social measures to counteract the anti-social behaviour of some of its dependents, but inevitably such action creates a hostile, suspicious landscape entirely lacking in empathy. In turn, many of its recipients, not at all grateful for the help they receive, might view their benefits with an air of entitlement and believe that they should be getting still more.

The ironic result is that this well-meaning concept has been irreparably degraded by both claimant and provider to such an extent that both sides appear to resent each other’s existence. The separate problem of the “generational” long-term claimants — where claiming benefits has become a lifestyle choice for entire generations of families, often without having paid anything into the system — can only aggravate an already fraught situation.

Perhaps, that is why there are so many of us who are in need, but who simply do not wish to engage with the benefits system.

While for many the welfare system undoubtedly is better than being left to die on the street, it increasingly feels a lot more like a faceless machine scooping up social need with Big Brother-like measures and pushing it into a corner. With “compliance officers”, the perceived “shame of claiming” and a variety of hoops to jump through, it seems like an extremely odd “right”.

Sadly, the “safety net” we have in the UK today bears little resemblance to what its benevolent pioneers envisioned.

Perhaps suggestions could be offered how constructively to improve it.

https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/19089/socialized-medicine

UK is too welcoming to migrants, Calais mayor claims

The British government must introduce measures to make the U.K. less appealing for asylum seekers and economic migrants if it is to stem the flow of record illegal immigration currently being experienced via the English Channel, Calais Mayor Natacha Bouchart said.

The mayor of the French port town, now infamously known as a base camp for those waiting to cross the Channel in small boats to reach Britain, told Sky News that her town was being used to do “the dirty work” of Britain; she warned that while Britain remains an appealing destination for economic migrants, the core problem of illegal immigration will continue to exist.

Britain and France signed another agreement on Monday in an attempt to curb the record-level number of migrantscrossing from the European mainland to Britain this year.

The British government will pay France £63 million a year to increase its surveillance on French beaches and allow British police officers to observe patrols on French territory.

However, Bouchart is skeptical as to whether this will have any effect.

“There will be more and more agreements in the future, but if the root of the problem is not dealt with, it will not change,” she told the British broadcaster.

“To prevent the flow of migrants, the U.K. must become less welcoming, and it just won’t do that,” she added.

One area in which the Calais mayor suggested Britain could legislate to tackle the ever-growing issue is with ID cards.

She told the broadcaster that the lack of identity cards in Britain enables illegal immigrants to slip under the radar and enjoy freedoms they simply do not have in many European nations.

It is too easy for migrants to slip into the “black economy,” she added.

Calais has become notorious as a town of purgatory for migrants over the past decade. Despite the infamous Calais jungle being dismantled in 2016, it has remained a desirable destination for scores of migrants traveling across the European mainland intent on reaching Britain.

The agreement signed between Britain and France will see a 40 percent increase in the number of police officers patrolling beaches in Calais and the surrounding area; however, it is unclear how the terms of Monday’s deal between the British and French government will alleviate the issues facing the town and its local residents who have had to accept the presence of thousands of illegal migrants now for many years.

Bouchart added that while she would be happy to discuss the ongoing problems with the British government, policy-makers such as U.K. Home Secretary Suella Braverman “never come to talk to the mayor of Calais, who is actually in charge here, day and night.”

https://rmx.news/uk/uk-is-too-welcoming-to-migrants-calais-mayor-claims/

Amazon has lost a record $1 trillion in value

In just over a year, Amazon has lost more than half its market value. Microsoft is also in trouble.

Amazon has become the first publicly traded company in the world to lose $1 trillion in valuation. Even more impressive is that this fall was achieved in an extremely short period of time: less than 18 months.

Amazon is now valued at $879 billion, a far cry from the $1 880 billion it was worth in July 2021. The company had benefited greatly from the health crisis in 2020 and 2021, but is currently experiencing a much more troubled period.

Amazon is experiencing a sharp slowdown in e-commerce growth as consumers return to their pre-pandemic habits. In addition, inflation is depressing demand, while the costs of storing, packing and transporting products are rising, hence the new price of the Amazon Prime subscription. Rising interest rates also do not bode well for a strong recovery in economic activity in the short term.

All of these factors have led to investor distrust, and to Amazon’s plummeting stock price over the past few months. According to Bloomberg, Jeff Bezos has lost at least $83 billion since the beginning of 2022.

Microsoft is also in the red

Amazon is already expecting to have a difficult last quarter of the year, which is normally a time of record-breaking numbers with the holiday season. And the company is far from being the only one to suffer from the current situation.

The top five US technology companies by revenue saw $4 trillion in value evaporate in 2022.

In addition to Amazon, Microsoft has also suffered a huge loss. The Windows company lost $889 billion from its all-time high in November 2021. The fear of a coming recession will certainly compound its problems.

https://freewestmedia.com/2022/11/15/amazon-has-lost-a-record-1-trillion-in-value/

France: Communist leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon assures that if there is another march against Islamophobia, he would attend again despite the shouts of “Allah Akbar!” shouted last time

In an interview with the magazine La Revue des deux mondes, Jean-Luc Mélenchon assures that he would attend again if a new march against Islamophobia were organised.

However, his participation, as well as that of his members, was heavily criticised at the time, including by a section of the left because of the “Allah Akbar!” slogans chanted by demonstrators in the Paris march, which was also joined by the controversial “Collective Against Islamophobia” (CCIF). An association that was later accused of “Islamist propaganda” by Gérald Darmanin, who had since been appointed Minister of the Interior, and finally dissolved by the executive in 2020.

“I refuse to let the Islamists control the Muslims,” Jean-Luc Mélenchon defends himself. “So when there is a demonstration where they sing the Marseillaise, when we come with the blue-white-red flag alongside the CGT, the FSU and Attac, and when they say that Mélenchon took part in an Islamist demonstration because a madman shouted, it is upsetting… On the contrary, at the end of this demonstration, thousands of people sang the Marseillaise!”

“Those who don’t come are defending hatred, the right to publicly hate Muslims and insult them. I will never be a part of it. Those who are against this demonstration are making a statement. They think: yes, it is allowed to shoot Muslims when they leave the mosque.” Jean Marc Morandini

https://www.fdesouche.com/2022/11/15/jean-luc-melenchon-assure-que-si-une-nouvelle-marche-contre-lislamophobie-etait-organisee-il-irait-de-nouveau-malgre-les-allah-akbar-scandes-la-derniere-fois/

Talking About the Nazis Behind Woke Books – Foreign companies would control 77% of the American hardcover book market

Last week, I was honored to talk to Ed Martin of the Phyllis Schlafly Eagles about the role that Bertelsmann, an ex-Nazi Germany company, is playing in pushing wokeness in America, including into American schools. You can listen to it up above.

Ibram X. Kendi’s “How to Be an Antiracist”, Robin DiAngelo’s “White Fragility”, and Ta-Nehisi Coates’s “Between the World and Me” all have one publisher in common.

Bertelsmann, the German giant, which formerly used to put out “The Christmas Book of the Hitler Youth”, has become the leading publisher and distributor of some of the most famous and influential racist woke books.

Americans are unaware of the role that the Ex-Nazi company plays in poisoning our discourse with racism and wokeness because it operates under the cover of the names of the American and English book publishers that it gobbled up.

Bertelsmann is trying to dominate book publishing in this country to an unprecedented and frightening degree. And the disappearing role of American book publishers.

Foreign companies would control 77% of the American hardcover book market and between 50% to 73% of our paperback market. In an environment where the big publishers only keep getting bigger, those numbers will get worse, not better.

That’s something worth talking about. But no one is.

https://www.frontpagemag.com/talking-about-the-nazis-behind-woke-books/