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  • Team GB Olympics success

    Team GB finished a noble 7th in the Paris Olympics.

    This year it was held in France among the sights and sounds of the nation’s capital city, in face of vigorous competition from other national teams.

    The medal haul included 14 golds, 22 silvers, and 29 bronzes. Their performance was particularly strong in rowing and athletics.

    In fact Team GB won medals across 24 disciplines.

    The haul fell short of first place USA who ended their campaign with a total of 126 medals, tying China with 40 golds in total.

  • Exclusive: MI5 dropout caught

    In a stunning turn of events, ConservativeNewsSite.com can reveal a traitor behind a large scale attempt at fraud against MI5 has now been located.

    The suspect is guilty of leaving her duties to serve overseas clients. She stayed in the UK to carry out her operations.

  • Is Churchill our hero?

    Anti-Churchillian sentiment in the Conservative Party exists, but what is its opposite form? It’s a sense of things needing to be put right.

    Is there nothing wrong at our southern coastline? Is the footage real or fake? It’s not “fake news” that counts here but a mentality that doesn’t accept facts as they are.

    The facts are used by politicians and we deal in our feelings, surely?

    The feeling the Left has a monopoly over speaking leaves conservatives to feel it’s only Parliament that’s left to solve problems. It’s a false feeling, of course.

    The fact is only Parliament leading to government can solve a problem that is in its remit. The fact is also leftist groups oppose the normal functioning of a government. They are sometimes vociferous about it.

    Those on the Conservative right feel a need to challenge such a shift in emotion as unrepresentative and a distraction from a real work of a democratic state.

    These are the tugs of war – tussles in the halls of power – we see today. It plays out in neighbourhoods and it shows itself in public squares. It’s a challenge and a need for representation that’s felt.

    The notion of having a Churchillian response is for a Tory government to juggle. It’s not a remedy but it’s a patch on an issue at times. The fact of a Labour government makes life more difficult for us.

    It’s time to leave feeling behind and rely on our understanding, or we’ll get left behind.

  • A period of reflection

    The magazines are out. Their covers speak truth to power, and replay the recent scenario of a UK under threat from rioters.

    A Stand In WHSmith

    It’s an uneasy situation.

    The answer is not found in this feeling alone, but in concerted activity. So soon after an election, it’s as relevant as ever who we vote for. Their answers bring out the solutions we need.

    That’s the idea, at least.

  • Exposed: A media insurgency

    A group called “Highway” is exposed today as part of a pre-planned operation to disrupt a network of nefarious actors in the UK.

    A key member who is known to travel widely in the UK is now able to be identified. His nickname is “Highland” and he travels often.

    This is the type of activity that disrupts our national way of life. Its intended aim is to disrupt public opinion due to contortions of facts, information, and media.

  • Exposed: Fake news operation

    In a stunning capture, a participant in a suspected fake news operation which stretches Europe has been located to a leafy suburb in Reading, Berkshire. The white car pictured was occupied by a suspect who is considered to be a participant but not a senior partner in such a media-related crime.

    The point is suspects involved are alleged to be guilty of both ruining journalistic careers and also peddling fake news stories to outlets in a pan-European style. It means news is suppressed, altered, or completely fabricated to meet the aims of paying clients. This is attained in part by carrying fake press credentials.

    In context it’s counted as serious fraud. The ramifications of it is not understood fully and it does not extend to political forums at all. However such low-level criminality exists to profit off legitimate work but also to further criminal ends. There may be vendetta’s involved in this sort of crime.

  • Stories of our time

    There’s a lot involved in reporting crime.

    I found this out the hard way. It takes a lot of hours walking and talking to people to get a story started. It usually begins having tracked a strange occurrence. It forks off into the distance and at a particular time life reappears and it begins to return to normal. In a short space of time the story is ready.

    It’s just how it is.

    I remember meeting a gentleman in London during the early days of covering the trafficking story in the UK. I was hanging around near the Natural History Museum. He came up and tripped off talking to me about my story and saying different things about it. I was surprised he knew I was working on it.

    I hadn’t told anybody. It was still new in my teeth, so to speak, and I was prepping myself to be predator-like on whoever it was who was involved. I wanted to sap the life out of the issue that I saw evolving in front of my eyes. I was grateful for the chance to hear someone say the same about it as I had done.

    It was kind of him to stop by.

    As our conversation ended, he touched me gently and said, “I live where loyalty counts for a lot”. It was a gesture of goodwill in a short space of time where we shared our grievance over the soon-to-be trafficking crisis hitting our shores hard. It was this quip that helped me to see what lay underneath a basic job in hand.

  • Exposed: UK trafficking group

    A group called “Play To Win” have been exposed this evening in a rude awakening for people and human traffickers across the world. The surveillance footage taken is of the upmost importance because it demonstrates the closeness by which traffickers operate in our midst.

    It’s not proof of trafficking operations. The intelligence needed to establish who such people are has already been put in place. It’s further evidence of the fact they try to live and work in the UK acting against our interests as a sovereign island territory.

  • A Berkshire type of story

    The royal county of Berkshire is a complex story. It has its ups and its downs like any other place in the country. It also has a variety of interesting corners and spaces to enjoy and be outdoors in too.

    The trouble is it’s not a dark place it just has secrets hidden in darkness.

    This is the sentiment I picked up as I spoke to a few individuals who knew the area well. They love it and care for it as far as any other resident does, but they had something else to say that most residents could not. They could voice concerns and hope it was dealt with because it was said.

    At a particular point not even this seemed true. It’s down to a few factors that were far out of most people’s control, but there was a secret force guiding some events that made it appear unsolvable.

    I don’t mean powers like witchcraft and spells.

    I mean a belief that to quell any sort of enquiry of or dissent from a particular worldview or view of things that is established and set in concrete as a fixed way of doing things is a wrong thing to do. I met a few of these people in Berkshire and my assessment is I don’t want to meet any such again.

    The types of issues that affected Reading mostly but also a few areas further beyond are difficult to contextualise, or to put down into prose. It’s on record and people know their own experience like the back of their hand so it’s not such a set of records that’s needed.

    My task as a non-native was to find out what was going on rather than try to understand what it was people meant in everything they did. It entailed finding a location or two. It didn’t mean searching the web or trawling crowds to meet people to take tipoffs based on hearsay to find out further.

    Eventually I found out two locations in central London.

    I wasn’t sure of one and I was put off by the other. It was an office used by researchers but it was an address the other people I met didn’t want to look too far into without official guidance there. It’s difficult to pick up on people who do difficult things and the facts associated with these people are tricky to hear at times.

    The second office was more of an old-style data centre. It was a place that felt reminiscent of wartime Bletchley Park but it had the look of a modern data facility that is involved in emails and web search. In this instance its purpose was to take the results of the researchers and make use out of it.

    The way Reading is wired into it is that many of the staff lived and emerged from the town and its surrounding area. The type of the research they did was scientific in nature. It’s too shady an area to expose because of the ifs and buts of things that aren’t really clear.

    I spoke to one lady of seniority in the company which owned the operation.

    She was particularly interested in quantum physics as well as human behaviour. Her background is “test tubes, and stuff”, she told me. It’s an admission that carries a feeling of nostalgia. It was as if her work at the time wasn’t satisfying her enough for it to be worth it.

    She carried on as “it’s research, after all”, she concluded.

    The trouble is the work was insecure at times. It was under attack by those who wanted to steal it and it was unclear what use it had so others surveilled the labs. It meant staff members had to be careful in how they lived. It was a case of security measures inside buildings, and safety features at home.

    The less careful were tapped on the shoulder and offered incentives to betray information to sources. It meant other staff were put under threat and had their work taken. It also meant potential employees were tracked early on, and it led to misunderstandings which resulted in horrific incidents in Berkshire at the time.

  • Scotland’s dilemma

    Scotland has a problem. Its ambitions are taking a backseat while political shifts happen elsewhere. The UK is largely left untouched by Scottish politics. The situation is different elsewhere. If a political choice is set to the Scottish people it usually trends in Scotland only. The rest of the union is assumed to be disinterested.

    It’s a roadblock to making a case for a truly independent Scotland. This is because a separation needs to happen between parts and not in isolation. A fight for sovereignty is a different matter. These don’t happen in isolation either but it’s a different set of circumstances. There are differences to the outcomes of either.

    Leaders of Scotland since 1999

    As it happens Scotland has been a devolved region since a referendum in 1997 in which just shy of 75% consented to it. The total number in favour came to over 1.7 million, against just over 600,000 who said no to it. In 2014 a similar but far more wide-ranging referendum was held begging the question of actual independence, but over 2 million voted against such a proposal compared to over 1.6 million in favour.

    The difficulties in going forward are evident. The strength of feeling against further separate of state and powers is evident by the last result in 2014. The feelings against such a move surged from below 1 million people to just over 2 million people. In contrast, feelings in favour reduced by over a hundred thousand votes. It isn’t a significant drop in support, but the gap is reversed and it’s those in support who are on the back foot now.

  • Exclusive: A truth to be told

    The right to live overseas is a modern way to increase life chances for some people.

    At times it’s taken up in droves because an inexpensive, slower pace of life in an idyll is found and it’s much more appealing than doing it here. Often it’s not possible to find either qualities in the UK.

    The reality of it is much different than television shows depict.

    The chances of life working out anywhere are dependant on a few factors other than a change of lifestyle. In one instance the odds were low. It didn’t deter this group of expats from pushing ahead regardless and what emerged is a tale too sordid to tell in some respects.

    The bare facts are necessary to tell because it’s a life lesson in itself.

    Today there are expats all over Europe.

    There are places that increase in their appeal to our former neighbours and coworkers for reasons which come and go. In this story the destination is Spain although the exact location is kept a secret. This is because of acrimony resulting from events which took place there.

    The optimism which couples and families arrived with quickly gave way to a sense things were not going to go so well. As an onward flow of expats showed no signs of abating, it became clear prospects were going to have to be forced rather than earned.

    In other words, normal efforts made to earn respect by working hard were refused.

    The “get rich quick” mentality seeped in. It wasn’t spreading in the UK but for a few reasons it began to be picked up in expat communities and in particular this one in Spain. It seems the tap isn’t switched off as people leave but some ideas still get through and old bonds continue.

    The “motivational speakers” arrived to help the new communities – bearing in mind Spanish locals still lived in these areas, too – but their schemes didn’t work out at all. In fact, debts began to pile up and run ins with law enforcement only increased, turning more acrimonious as time went on.

    The paradise in the sun concept didn’t work out at all.

    The supposed gains of moving overseas didn’t materialise. It led to fractures in relationship between those who’d only just begun to get to know each other. The sadness is relations didn’t have a chance to spark and so there were no warm feelings between each other.

    It’s not a good situation if forgiveness is also in short supply.

  • Exposed: Media executive

    In a further catch for ConservativeNewsSite.com, a media executive was spotted in central London this afternoon. She’s suspected of being embedded in media across the world. Amongst other claims she is suspected of making false accusations and falsely promoting media figures in different industries.

    The nature of the suspect’s work is also a concern. She is said to usually work remotely and therefore any involvement in hiring or firing has taken place without being present, or even noted. It’s incurred career losses as well as confusion in media companies across the world where she’s been active.

  • Review: Fortnum & Mason, Piccadilly

    It’s not something I do at all, but a treat here and there is worth it at Fortnum & Mason in Piccadilly, London.

    So a further look at its offering is an eye-opener for someone who doesn’t stop to look but grabs and goes, as it were.

    I decided to head downstairs this time, below ground level to take a look at its groceries.

    The space is wide, open, and roomy enough to move around in with others.

    The shelves are clearly laid out. The fresh food counters look inviting. The fresh food on offer is appealing to the eye.

    Fortnum & Mason put on a show when it comes to food and drink, and there is plenty to fill a basket with.

    I saw dairy, vegetables, bakery and stock cupboard items to pick out. There’s loads of different tastes as well and staple favourites on offer.

    The counters are manned and ready to serve up prepped meals and single items.

    The lunch ideas include pasta, bagels, and salad. There’s a coffee hut if you’re interested.

    In a far corner a selection of cheeses, fish and meats, and pies are available. It’s properly sourced and looks tasty.

    In the rear are the drinks. There’s a spirits corner tucked away for a shopper with expensive tastes. If not, try the win, gin, and beer on offer.

  • Crime in the capital

    A walk around London is revealing.

    It’s a nice place of expensive properties and public, open parks mostly. A leisurely walk is frequently a way for Londoner’s to spend their time around work, relationships, and more formal functions.

    It breaks up the monotony of the day.

    The reality of it today however is not so clear-cut. The danger that exists on the streets which line it is a more murky story to be told. It isn’t uncommon to pass suspicious individuals or smaller groups of people on a bright day.

    It’s also not unusual to sit beside a shifty figure on public transport.

    This is suggested to be a part of city life. They say we have to get on with our lives and ignore it. The fact is London has ebbed and flowed in recent years. There are crimes which happens with such force it leaves shock for days if not weeks to come.

    The other point is that some days much of the footfall further out is under suspicion.

    In a previous short investigation I uncovered “Space”, a group self-formed for such a purpose. I won’t say where they came from, but they chose London as a target before they arrived. They had a “mix” of crimes they would commit in relative cover so they weren’t detected, they claimed.

    The group members were clearly criminals even by the looks of it and a few seemed buoyant at the opportunities they saw in the city. This group is an isolated case in a growing, burgeoning city that also has its own prospects in view.

    Yet it’s a disturbing reality we face day in day out.