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  • Protests & the Supreme Court

    It’s not easy believing that your Supreme Court has been infiltrated.

    London, however, tends to exceed expectations these days.

    The plot to plant someone on the inside is a daring plot against the nation’s highest court, but sat on a front desk and it doesn’t seem so.

    The justification is written in protest lore. It makes sense to place someone behind a desk and in a position where questions are asked and answers given.

    This is where it’s at for protests these days.

    The plotters live in different parts of the UK. It’s definite one lives in Reading.

    The aim is to disrupt politics in the UK, in particular the UK’s foreign policy.

    A long-running protest camp in Whitehall for example is just one case of such an agenda.

    It must stop, and it will.

    These methods are dangerous and only serve to disrupt UK policy at home and abroad.

    As usual it’s undemocratic. It interrupts our normal way of life.

  • Thugs located

    In a massive sting operation lasting years, finally group members of “Justice Thugs” can begin to be exposed.

    They are responsible for forceful raids on residences dating back decades primarily over political issues.

    These individuals can be passive at times but are aggressive if they engage our neighbourhoods in turf wars.

  • London’s high hopes

    London’s skyline continues to rise up particularly in the Vauxhall area.

    It’s unfinished business for developers but the ground is crowded with blocks of apartments and office space.

    A look in particular around the Nine Elms development is eye-opening, literally.

    A new American embassy sticks out as a centrepiece in a landscaped public area. It stands opposite a sky pool bridging two smart apartment blocks.

    There are also restaurants on the ground level plus businesses such as a dentist.

  • Profile: Rupert Murdoch

    Rupert Murdoch holds a vast empire in his grip. His company News Corp. is responsible for many major news outlets across the world. His business activities span publishing, television, and digital media.

    His politics has been under suspicion for some time.

    It’s due in part to his journalistic outfits such as The Sun in the UK which is a frequent feature of general elections. In times past it’s been credited with a make-or-break role over political parties and leaders are said to court Murdoch for his support.

    Around the world he also operates numerous newspapers and television channels.

    It’s clear his business operations are liked by conservatives more than liberals. In particular outlets like Fox News confirm a defence of a conservative worldview while maintaining a bias toward broadcasting and not politicking.

    In fact in a heightened time of rhetoric and indecision it’s channels like these and Sky News in the UK that are looked to for decisive analysis leading to decisions.

    It’s often a concern of left-leaning commentators that Murdoch’s empire is responsible for the success of conservative political movements. It’s not clear if this is true but apart from public service broadcasters it’s hard to tell who else there is.

    Murdoch was born in Australia but is an American citizen and his headquarters is in New York City.

    His immediate family are set to inherit his business interests and it leaves the question open as to what shape they will take in the future as they do.

  • Prince of nowhere

    The saga around Harry of Windsor’s life makes a few headlines but little sense.

    Since his grand departure from the UK following muted nuptials with an American actress he’s made a few ripples here and there.

    He’s turned up at his sports day cum veterans event and also put out ideas about mental health and climate change to name a few issues.

    It isn’t much to go on since he doesn’t do a lot else.

    He wrote a tell-all memoir but it did next to nothing to help us appreciate him more.

    The Royal Family as it stands does fairly well here. It makes it to key junctures and leaves a legacy behind that is changing the face of monarchy in the UK. There are also rumours of changing roles.

    The dynamism of King Charles and Queen Camilla is hardly replicated in the “spare” who describes himself so.

  • Profile: Margaret Thatcher

    Margaret Thatcher began her political career in 1959 as an MP for Finchley in Barnet, London. It was twenty years later when she became Prime Minister aged 53 and served in two subsequent terms until 1990.

    In her lifetime she was lauded as the first female Prime Minister and yet her tenure took on a genderless tone as she battled foes at home and abroad.

    The key features of her time as Prime Minister included The Falklands War, the Poll Tax Riots, and miner’s strikes. These were startling times of uncertainty.

    In the politics of this era and later a notable characteristic is a high expectation that leads to a huge disappointment, and the UK went through many of these periods.

    Margaret Thatcher lead by her voice but in spite of her speeches found herself in the midst of serious disagreements with journalists and members of the public. Her press was often negative at the time and it weighed on her and broke her Premiership.

    In the event of her resignation in 1990 she felt bitter because she had to leave her party behind. Afterwards she said it felt like it was the end of a “relationship” with a party she had served for so long.

    Her mainstay was Denis Thatcher, her husband, who was a sort of companion and advisor to her personally.

  • Abduction group exposed

    Two people suspected of being part of a group called “Hot Like Heaven” have been spotted.

    They’re under suspicion of plotting kidnappings in places they identify as being likely targets.

    The surveillance photos illustrate their capacity to fit into an external environment.

    People like these are under constant investigation and justice is served in cases where it’s possible.

  • How to deal with traffickers

    In dealing with trafficking at close quarters a lot of things occur.

    There’s a reaction by those who do it that’s vile and also violent at times. The fact is police and law enforcement deal with this threat daily.

    The other reality is the disaster they cause.

    A trafficker is not a flight attendant for a nice journey or an air traffic controller who makes it ordered. He or she is a criminal who only knows the worst methods of how to do something bad.

    He or she is not friendly.

    They are an aggressor against society and our civilised way of life.

    The threat at our shores – particularly first at Dover but also the length of it later on – is a tale that fits our history as an island nation. It doesn’t make sense because it isn’t France, German Nazi’s, or Spanish galleons this time.

    It’s more akin to a transatlantic slave trade and yet it’s here – right there on our coast. It has to be fought off by our Border Force because its methods are medieval and its perpetrator’s are bad people.

  • Paedophile sighted

    A pervert was caught loitering in central London this afternoon.

    He may also have been trying to arrange a meeting with a minor.

  • Starmer gets tough on rioters

    Sir Keir Starmer has promised action after riots in the North of the country. The Prime Minister reacted to disturbances in Southport by announcing a National Violent Disorder Program for the UK.

    It will mean greater sharing of intelligence and resources between police forces. The use of facial recognition technology may also spread to further locations.

  • Caught: Political activist

    In a stunning capture today, a notorious political activist has been located in a library in central London.

    He isn’t easy to pin down, is extremely polemical, and has a high attention to detail.

  • Channel crossings: The stats

    In a simple graph it’s possible to asses where we are in terms of the Channel crossings. This unprecedented event on our South coast isn’t able to be ignored and it transcends security concerns too.

    In recent months the rate of illegal migration has overall declined. It means intense work to secure our coasts and make human and people traffickers give up has worked to an extent.

    The point is by these events political groups with few affiliations or without legitimacy here try to change government policy so we live in a situation we didn’t plan for. It’s undemocratic and leaves us in a precarious situation.

  • Caught: Group leader

    This individual is suspected of leading a group called “Love To Hate” and was spotted in Reading today.

    Her movements are difficult to track because she has a high level of activity at times.

  • People trafficking: The facts

    The fact of people trafficking is undeniable: numerous police reports, evidence of busts, and perpetrators locked up. It’s a weekly if not daily reality in the UK for the foreseeable future.

    The facts of the matter are more startling however because they’re so personal and that is where it counts.

    The self-importance human traffickers and people traffickers feel must be a real high. It’s also a feat of researching and logistical knowhow to get it off the ground and running in such an effective way.

    It’s stumped us at times and left our best political minds nonplussed.

    The reality is that neither human traffickers nor people traffickers are important people or clever at all. The sort of work they do ruins any community and all our lives by its serious interruption to our daily living.

  • Caught: Talent agent

    In another sighting in London, a suspected talent agent has been caught.

    These are nefarious individuals who create halls of power in media in fictitious ways to fix outcomes for clients.