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  • Westminster Week: On trial

    Tuesday

    “Jury trials are a cornerstone of our democracy, and Justice system,” so says Imran Hussain MP (Bradford East/Labour), passionate in his appeal to the Secretary of State for Justice. He hopes it stays, while others hope it goes.

    Jim Shannon MP (Strangford/DUP) says the quality of the law is now paramount, saying “speed cannot come at the expense of fundamental rights” and jury trials must stay for the sake of it.

    Wednesday

    The Prime Minister says the Leader of the Opposition “totally abandoned her position” on the idea of the UK joining the US to fight Iran, calling it a “mother of all u-turns” on “one of the most important [-] decisions” a leader like him will face. The other, of course, is the one about staying or going.

  • Exclusive: YCL leader

    In an exclusive for Conservative News Site, a leader of Young Communist League – a violent, radical movement tied to crimes in the UK – has now been spotted.

    A suspect
    A suspect in radical, organised violent crime seen here in Reading Station, in Reading, Berkshire.

    He’s alleged of taking part in raids on agricultural land, occupations of schools, and attacks on business premises. It’s also believed red paint attacks on public buildings in London are due to this group.

    Violent ideology

    The YCL is known to have deep roots, but also a complicated set of ideological positions. It makes their meetings a cause for public concern, and for this reason they’re covertly monitored for public safety.

    This group is the reason many experts believe radical ideology is a real source of trouble. It’s no longer thought it’s purely a medical condition that predisposes someone to act out violent tendencies.

    *A change was made to correct a spelling error.

  • Putin sees the weakness in his own countrymen

    President Putin of Russia is a formidable leader because he has it all worked out. His predecessors did not, and Russia suffered periodic bouts of a loss of services because of it. He has offered continuity, but this is why his war confused his own people at first.

    A war now is seen as a break in transmission. It’s a skirmish, no matter the size of it. Therefore, the people of Russia at high levels question the need for any type of war, but this is his trick also. Putin knows that decisive movements create mystique.

    The current Ukraine-Russia war is a rebuke on the weaknesses Putin sees in his own military arrangements. This is a big theme in Russian life at the moment. The scrutiny of one’s own willingness to fight creates a fulcrum in itself. It’s hard to resist a desire to prove it now.

    The reluctance to war and to secure the State in other ways is believed to have led Putin to declare this outbreak. Ukraine suffers the assault of a nation trying to work out its own differences, and such fallout has led to the selfish combat that casts confusion over Russian affairs because Ukraine was at peace with itself before it.

    The loss of life is now stacking up on the Russian side, though, and Russians have to reckon with a demand to be more serious. The intellectual impasse is only broken by clever work. This is the political machinery that upholds Moscow’s control over everything. It’s this effort that signals the end, or a return of the region to peace.

  • Call for information: Berkshire protection racket

    In a stunning exclusive for Conservative News Site, a protection racket “Holder” alleged of manipulating residents across Berkshire has now been spotted in Reading town centre.

    He’s alleged of holding secrets against people in high position to leverage for security gains in the Royal county, an act counted as illegal in UK law by Court system experts.

    Any information relating to this individual must be passed to a relevant public body. It will be used to build an accurate case, if one exists.

  • Iran’s new Supreme Leader is a thorn among the brambles

    Mojtaba Khamenei has come out warring following the death of his late father, reiterating the Islamic world’s problem with much of the English speaking world, and further afield. Besides calling for revenge on the annihilation of Ali Khamenei, he says that Iranians will feel the warmth of his new rule.

    It’s unlikely. He sits in place, so far from the ordinary concerns of Iranians, who are less likely to be combative with the rest of the wider world over such matters that mean so much to Islamic scholars, such as Western media or attention to academic matters that vary from the doctrinal dogma of the ruling elite that they’ve got to love.

  • Revealed: The Manchester bomber & the master planner

    The issue of bombers in jackets is a long held fear of UK citizens, arising out the time of Irish terror and continuing as a relevant point of interest during conflict periods in more recent history. The conceptual outgrowth – of backpacks, suitcases, and even coffee cups – is a natural development in the way of terror investigations.

    The busyness of UK society inspired one woman to build on this fear as part of a nefarious attempt to destabilise our Intelligence understanding here. Her biography is difficult to pin down, but secret information suggests she’s an Australian born Journalist who is a naturalised European activist in many different realms.

    “She’s clever,” an Oxfam staff member told me on approach, saying he didn’t want to reveal his name but divulging she worked for its key staff at different times. It’s a pattern of behaviour I came to pick up on as I researched her movements, particularly in London, as it happens. The long stretch to Manchester occurs in her mind – her thinking being the primary point in this debacle.

    The sad ramifications of her activity are now clear to see, having been plainly written on the mourning faces of Manchester locals that regretted the attack in its aftermath in their own backyard. It’s also in the lives lost, gaps in family records now because of fatalities. The bomber, Salman Abedi, is rightly hated in hindsight, a bastard criminal in UK crime.

    He should never have been allowed near that building, to enter the Manchester Arena, but control orders failed that evening, and the rest is history. The Police staff that overlooked his need for arrest are a caution for the rest – never ignore the simple request. These incidents happen because of a poor routine or failures in planning. It’s the level of his threat that should have ended his aim, not his name.

  • Long Report: Life is shaping up, not moving on

    The pace of life is picking up across many broad sectors, showing that investment is working. As a result of this, life is shaping up into many different forms, and in-between these, the familiar cultural attributes of the UK are regaining their position. This is good news for all of us.

    While this is in line with some of our expectations, it changes the outlook of those involved in the early planning stages of a resurgence in development here. They thought most people would have moved on into new types of developments where new facilities provide their ‘old’ services.

    It didn’t happen, and so a different form of evolution has taken place. This is a changeover of responsibilities to those who form a new class of decision-maker, as well as a refreshed type of care and oversight in society. The belief is that things can stay the same, so the purpose is to adapt in stasis here. It’s what many have come to believe is our core strength.

    Smaller plans

    The centre of this sort of thinking is the local church. I’ve met many secular planners who don’t have a religious faith – but they’ve got one in community. The church is the liveliest example of this, so they’ve said to me. Much of their practical insight has come from being in these places, seeing things happen that produce results, and taking lessons from it.

    It’s small-scale living, an activity that involves interaction with others, which is a difficult field to explore, but the UK offers plenty of opportunities for it. There are stories of huge changes taking place in many people’s lifestyles as a result of concentrating on these such small places. The hyped up “future factor” of past planning meetings has given way to a simpler, sweeter form and version of seeing things as they should be.

    Open communities

    It’s a hybrid of progressive living and planning, and it’s proving to suit most tastes. The public at large are understanding things more, and believe their lives are better for it. Even democracy is broadening out, although it has a long way to go yet. The feelings are that life has to snap back together for it to derive benefit out of this groundswell of renewed resolve.

    The public services that define so much of the modern character of the UK are keeping up pace, and their challenge is laid out in more practical terms, too. The involvement of the right helps and supports will make that endeavour more worthwhile in the long-term. It will offer an enlightened set of results in time to come, showing – or proving – that we’re on a mission to prosper the best of our collective endeavours here.

  • Space is precious, but purpose is always more important

    Our use of space is becoming a hot topic in the modern era, and it’s defining how we talk about a lot of things. It’s the use of official space to do business; office space to make money; and space to create recreational activities.

    The identifying process is long, bureaucratic, and arduous for those involved. It matters because it has to make sense to everyone else while fulfilling a purpose for just some of the population here.

    A shot of a man
    A shot of a man kneeling to pray on a busy day outside Charing Cross Station in central London.

    The needs of worshipping communities are considered against the wishes of others. The lust for sporting endeavour is balanced against the need for serious undertakings. The desire for community spaces is weighted on prosaic administrative duties.

    Those who do it have a hard job to make sure their decisions are right for the time. It’s not the moment that fulfils the criteria, but the long term good of everyone. This makes a country. It saves communities. It prospers many lives.

  • Dover Crossings: Rape crisis in London

    The unpopularity of unrestricted illegal entry at Dover has reached its peak. It’s now believed that 726 rapes in London are linked to the large crime event along our coastline. The result is increasing anger and a deep-seated resentment in the population in general.

    The way forward is uncertain but some government sources believe a national emergency is needed for essential resources to be convened to plug the gap in maritime and immigration law. Those exploiting legal loopholes need to be challenged, some say.

  • Spain wants to analyse – not ban – hate speech. Will it work?

    Spain has a reputation for the written word, but the digital space is a trying time for most people. Right now, hate is able to be spread by anyone, about anyone, to anyone. This makes it dangerous, according to the nations Prime Minister, Pedro Sánchez. He intends to clamp down on it, and has launched a tool – ‘HODIO: Footprint of Hate and Polarization’ – to do it with. It rolls out across Spain’s digital usership in the hope of clearing it up and making the Internet a safe space for all.

    It works by researching the pros and cons of what people post, write, and say, and returns it as information that can be analysed by lawmakers – and anyone else – to work out how it can be done better. This is a risky effort because not all government office workers or academic experts work by absolutes. They follow subjective thoughts and opinions to honour feelings, and not facts. This results in policies that aim at mastering political expression for control purposes.

    The other point is that editorial control – which this is – is a difficult exercise. It’s not yet clear if anyone can truly exercise regulatory effect over such a large number of people – and with immediacy, which the Internet now demands. The government of Spain, or any other, isn’t just a big institution for big things. These endeavours always take time, not pronouncements, and effect, not cause. Sanchez may have a way forward, but some still see it as a way back.

  • Exclusive: Media antagonist

    In an exclusive for Conservative News Site, a media antagonist alleged to interfere with the recruitment of media professionals in the UK has now been spotted in Reading, Berkshire.

    A suspect
    A suspect alleged of deep interference in media matters, particularly in relation to recruitment, seen here in Reading, Berkshire.

    He’s believed to have stolen money, assets, and equipment, and is said to have deep networks of contacts in subterranean criminal activity in the UK, and Europe as well.

  • Digital export is the backbone of a creative industry

    Digital export is now a peaceful middle ground worldwide for the sharing and dissemination of creative culture. It isn’t a matter of fact that popular films and music is the reason for it. It also inspires creativity at every level. It makes engaging online fun, and it enriches the lives of discussion groups and collective communities based on shared interests.

    It feeds new concepts and ideas into the future formats that customers come to love. The era of character design is giving way to obsession over the minutia of in-game development, for example. This is now key to understanding a market, out-selling rivals, and covering broad areas of ground. It’s freeing, original, and adventurous for the average consumer.

    Digital Export: Creative Industries

    The UK’s position has to be strong or our ideas from our perspective will lose out. It cannot be that a place rich in heritage misses the mark in making a difference to the way things are done. The detail is often the main reason why people follow an interest in the first place. It enlivens intellectual experience, and deepens the learning process. It also gives purpose to it.

    The innovation of platforms is one guarantee of prosperity. The engagement with overseas markets is another. It presents both a challenge and an opportunity for us in equal measure. The investment of time by Political leaders helps to open up prospects here, but it’s the energy of staff that makes it go places. These tools are what we need to continue the growth of creative industries in digital export.

  • Corbyn speaks power to truth for the massive

    Jeremy Corbyn MP (Islington North/Your Party) has become the Parliamentary Leader for his own party, Your Party. After a labyrinthine process of selection and election in the new remit ‘Left’ activists have in UK politics, he ascends to the same position he had before. It could never be no other, we hear them say, and it may last for a long time, too, we hear others say.

  • The EU seeks a new social network to hide its own

    The European problem is best described as an issue of hiddenness and what it does. It’s occurred before that concealing intents and concerns in countries in numerous ways has caused a huge lot of trouble. It’s unhelpful for those stuck as pawns in a great game of protection rackets and pretenders to royalty, as much as for those that don’t look for trouble but get it in spades anyway.

    The new idea by the European Commission to start up a social media network for EU users is just the same way of doing it as before, and of expecting a different result. It lacks a sophistication because Facebook, Instagram, and X have already shown the way it’s done, and it’s worth joining in. The ‘invention’ of a secure, almost secretive version of these to satisfy a need to be different is a shadowy way to govern.


    “The organisers of the initiative consider that the ‘process should integrate appropriate entities like companies or universities in creating and functioning of the platform’ and ‘make Europe strategically independent in the area of online communication’.”

    European Commission/Online


    The risky lack of outside contact is not a dearth the European Commission should want to create. It may be founded on an idea that talking to each other is great, even online, but the idea of an EU-only content network is a fast-track to dystopian nightmares of authorised politics, something George Orwell has warned us about already, and a lesson we need to heed.