UK related articles

All info related to the new biggest hoax of our time.
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rachel
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Re: UK related articles

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People in UK, under sixty, with no other morbidities, died with Covid-19 = 350

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I find it hard to put into words my utter contempt for the people playing this game as Rome burns, but this is another good article pointing out the obvious, to anyone except MSM...

The REAL meaning behind Dominic Cummings breaking lockdown
You don’t break your self-isolation early to have a barbecue with your neighbours if you truly think you have a terrible disease that could make your family sick.

If I tell you you shouldn’t eat chocolate, because it will make your head explode, then I take your chocolate off you and eat it – you wouldn’t think “You hypocrite! You fool! That could make your head explode!”, would you?

You’d be far more likely to think “Hey, he lied to me so he could steal my chocolate.”

(To fully complete the metaphor there needs to be a third person there, saying “but chocolate never made our heads explode before”, and being roundly insulted by the other two as a “Chocolate Denier”, who “just wants people’s heads to explode!”)

Whether it’s Neil Ferguson or Dom Cummings or Chris Cuomo the message is the same. They are telling us they do not really believe there is any danger.

More than that, the press covering it obviously don’t really believe it either.

A crush of reporters and cameramen swarm over Dom Cummings outside his home.
Video from this tweet: https://twitter.com/DarrenPlymouth/stat ... 3322530816

"Just a couple of questions to ask you on behalf of the nation. Did you return to Durham in April. Lots of people wanted to know this morning. Can I ask you while I'm keeping my distance, how many times have you left London during the lock-down. The nation would love to know."

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I think what the nation wants to know is when all of these people, politicians and the people who make up the media alike, will be removed from public life once and for all. Corporate manslaughter by government, aided and abetted by the media.

ONS figures, red dotted line - Italian re-examination rate of 12.5%, likely death rate FROM COVID-19 as main factor
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Aiding and abetting is a legal doctrine related to the guilt of someone who aids or abets (encourages, incites) another person in the commission of a crime (or in another's suicide). It exists in a number of different countries and generally allows a court to pronounce someone guilty for aiding and abetting in a crime even if they are not the principal offender.
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Re: UK related articles

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It just gets better and better…

All these Labour MPs take to twitter at the exact same time, all independently, coming to the exact same conclusion about Dominic Cummings…

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ELSE, LABOUR IS RUN BY BOTS.
How much do MPs get paid, and what was the £10,000 Corona bung they all got actually for?
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How is This a Thing? 25th May 2020


PS: SHUT THE NHS DOWN. IT PROPAGATES SICKNESS, NOT HEALTH.

Exclusive Bitchute Video THE EMERGING PRISON PLANET
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Covid19 – The Human Unleashed go deep – Care home deaths and censorship – Ep14.



Discussing the UK policy of imposing DNRs (DO NOT RESUSCITATE} on elderly people in care homes.

But this is only part of the story, because the elderly have also been refused admission into NHS hospitals if they have "Covid-19 symptoms" no matter what the reason for admission, whilst other Covid-19 positive elderly patients have been moved from NHS hospitals to care homes to die, spreading the virus to the very at-risk demographic the lockdown was stated as the aim to protect.

This all seems to have come by design as a result of the World Health Organisation institutionalising ageism in their stainable development policies.

Analysis: Institutional ageism in global health policy
BMJ 2016; 354 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i4514 (Published 31 August 2016)
Cite this as: BMJ 2016;354:i4514
Correspondence to: P G Lloyd-Sherlock p.lloyd-sherlock@uea.ac.uk

Peter G Lloyd-Sherlock and colleagues argue that a focus on premature mortality is discriminating against the needs of a growing older population

The sustainable development goals agreed in March 2016 by the United Nations General Assembly set the global development agenda for the next 15 years. They include an ambitious target to reduce premature mortality from non-communicable diseases by a third by 2030. Premature mortality, defined by the World Health Organisation as deaths occurring between the ages of 15 and 70, has gained broad acceptance in health research and policy over the past decade. We argue that it is explicitly ageist, reflecting institutional ageism in global health policy. Its inclusion in the sustainable development goals sends a strong signal in favour of discriminating against older people in the allocation of health resources and the collection of data. We consider the emergence of ageist approaches in global health policy and the potential effects of ageism in the sustainable development goals. We propose a less discriminatory approach.

Institutional ageism
Ageism is defined as: “a process of systematic stereotyping and discrimination against people because they are old.”1 Institutional ageism differs from, but is related to, interpersonal ageism. It involves the inclusion of ageist principles in formal rules and procedures and in wider institutional cultures. It is characterised by language consistently depicting older people in negative terms.2

Less research has been done on ageism than on other forms of discrimination, such as racism and sexism. Studies of institutional ageism have mainly explored discrimination in employment and the workplace,3 and few studies explicitly examine its role in health. Most of the health studies focus on specific groups, such as older people who are lesbian, gay, or bisexual or racial minorities.4
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The UK lockdown worked so well...

FT: UK suffers highest death rate from coronavirus | Free to read
The UK has suffered the highest rate of deaths from the coronavirus pandemic among countries that produce comparable data, according to excess mortality figures.

The UK has registered 59,537 more deaths than usual since the week ending March 20, indicating that the virus has directly or indirectly killed 891 people per million.

At this stage of the pandemic, that is a higher rate of death than in any country for which high-quality data exist. The absolute number of excess deaths in the UK is also the highest in Europe, and second only to the US in global terms, according to data collected by the Financial Times.

The country fares no better on another measure: the percentage increase in deaths compared with normal levels, where the UK once again is the worst hit in Europe and behind only Peru internationally.

The data were compiled from national statistical agencies for 19 countries for which sufficient information exists to make robust comparisons. The figures include all of the European countries hit hard by coronavirus. The periods for comparison are from when death rates in individual countries climbed above five-year averages.

It's an apologist's piece, blaming high death rates in the UK on the delay in lockdown, rather than the actual lockdown policy of denial of NHS treatment to certain demographics and the cancellation of all other NHS services. Below is a more interesting graph from UK Column, using ONS data up to week 20. It overlays the calculated Italian 12.5% death rate (red dotted line) of actual respiratory deaths due to covid-19, as opposed to died 'with' catch all. It also highlights when lockdown was imposed, confirming death rates exploded after lockdown, not before. And now we have a new rise and everything is still closed.

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SAGE knew the virus was no longer spreading / the epidemic was declining, after only the first week of Lockdown.
With an average lag of approx 5 days to symptoms, this clearly shows #COVID19 declined BEFORE Lockdown started (MAR 23).


Addendum to twenty-first SAGE meeting on Covid-19, 31st March 2020: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.u ... ID-19_.pdf

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Re: UK related articles

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@xileffilex, this is an interesting graph published by COBR. It shows the daily death rates from Covid-19. Note the patten of the drops, that's weekend figures, the last three bar being the bank holiday weekend. So why are less than half the usual cases dying at weekends?

Could the lower weekend death rate be...
  1. Less people are actually dying when senior consultants are on leave? (the opposite of usual NHS stats)
  2. Less people are being converted into 'died with' covid-19 when senior consultants are on leave?
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'Professor Lockdown' Ferguson, UK's Covid-19 czar, admits crippling restrictions MADE NO DIFFERENCE – where’s the outrage?
During his evidence to the House of Lords Science and Technology Committee on Tuesday, he said: “They [Swedish scientists] came to a different policy conclusion based really on quite similar science. I don’t agree with it but scientifically they’re not far from scientists in any part of the world.”

He then acknowledged that the Swedish authorities had “got a long way to the same effect” without a full lockdown.

In other words, in the type of roundabout waffling way you’d expect from a bumbling boffin, the scientist – dubbed ‘Professor Lockdown’ after he cajoled Boris Johnson into bringing the British economy to a screeching halt – reckons Sweden has essentially coped very well without being forced into any draconian lockdown, thank you very much.

So where was the indignation about how his recommendations f**ked up the economy and made people prisoners in their own homes? It certainly wasn’t to be seen splashed across any British front pages. Indeed, it was hard enough to find much, if any, coverage of this very significant news story on Wednesday.

It was buried inside the Daily Telegraph on page seven, running across a third of a page or less, with a very accurate subheading stating in clear black and white: “Professor admits radical Scandinavian policy worked as well as British policy of shutting down.”

The evidence from the two countries’ differing approaches has left the professor with little escape route. UK (full lockdown/businesses shut down): 579 Covid-19 deaths per million of population. Sweden (softer restrictions/businesses kept open): 442 deaths per million.
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Prof David Miller Media Lies that cost lives 3.6.20


Prof David Miller is an investigative researcher interested in concentrations of power in society and how they might be democratised and made accountable. He works on corporate and state power and how they are (re)produced in particular through policy and expert processes and via social movements from both above and below. Recent work has focused on terrorism and counter terrorism, the sociology of expertise, lobbying, public relations and propaganda.

His feed gets cut just as Prof Miller starts talking about the British Army 77th Brigade "now targeting British public opinion, a no no for any democracy".
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