Forwarded from The Jolly Reiver
Came across the Neolithic Drumskinny Stone Circle in County Fermanagh. (from Irish: Droim Scine meaning “knife ridge”)
The site lies in upland bog and was drained after excavation in 1962.
Only found this because I took a wrong turn. Sometimes getting lost brings nice surprises.
The site lies in upland bog and was drained after excavation in 1962.
Only found this because I took a wrong turn. Sometimes getting lost brings nice surprises.
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The National Theatre, rich on almost £17m in funding by the Arts Council (us, via the government via the DCMS). This is the third play by them. The first focused on White 'racism' with a White man (Rafe Spall), the second, TDOE: Delroy, on how "you can't be black and apolitical", now this.
Funding: https://www.statista.com/statistics/510623/most-subsidized-theaters-by-funding-amount-in-england-uk/
Funding: https://www.statista.com/statistics/510623/most-subsidized-theaters-by-funding-amount-in-england-uk/
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Forwarded from The Watchtower
Brussels is “crystal clear” that there will be no renegotiation on the strict limits placed on Irish farmers over nitrogen emissions, Charlie McConalogue said - despite protests from farmers who say it will force them to cull their livestock.
There’s “absolutely no prospect” of the EU budging on the issue, he said, because Brussels is concerned about Ireland’s water quality.
The decision comes after it was revealed that nitrates actually cause very little harm, and that the caps are essentially pointless.
@ResistorNewswireEUR
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Forwarded from Enjoy the Decline
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Homogenous, high-trust community moment
@EnjoyTheD
@EnjoyTheD
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Media is too big
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Amusing. Ghanaian territory for so long a slavery hell under the Ashanti. Saved by the British after several wars and made safe and prosperous. Poor again after we left, now with begging bowl out. We could oversee again if you wish, if we can resettle some people?
In some foolish group on Telegram. We all have a responsibility to steer young right-wing men away from these self-destructive and idiotic acts.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-66882302
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-66882302
BBC News
Ex-RAF cadet behind Nazi graffiti named as Aristedes Haynes
The 17-year-old who defaced a mural celebrating the Caribbean community can now be identified.
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Can't help feeling sceptical about these gentlemen, but as they've interviewed Tom..
Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
NEW INTERVIEW: I discuss the fake history pushed by the BBC and others who appropriate our past and what is to be done about it along with Harrison Pitt and Evan Riggs of the New Culture Forum
https://youtu.be/DMtFWbuDNo0?feature=shared
https://youtu.be/DMtFWbuDNo0?feature=shared
YouTube
Britain's Black History Hoax (e.g. Stonehenge was NOT Built by Black People)
"Brilliant Black British History" is the name of a new children's book which claims, amongst other things, that Stonehenge was built by black people and that Britain was a black country for a lot longer than it was white. This book is the latest in a long…
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Legislation was passed giving the police a duty to ensure equality of opportunity to all races as part of the race relations act². In a practical sense this meant that the police could not police certain communities in line with crime committed. Over policing is often defined as policing that leads to disproportionate outcomes for groups.
https://reactionaryreadinglaw.substack.com/p/rape-culture
https://reactionaryreadinglaw.substack.com/p/rape-culture
ReactionaryReadingLaw’s Newsletter
Rape Culture!
The policies that have allowed one to be imported?
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Forwarded from Lawyers of Light
⚠️⚠️ Urgent action and attention to the following
Whilst The Online Safety Bill is bad enough you should be aware of something more nefarious coming down the line.
The government is looking to update the Investigatory Powers Act 2016 (unaffectionately called the snoopers’ charter).
On 5 June 2023, the Home Office opened an eight-week consultation as regards this.
The act in its current form gives the government the ability to ‘snoop’ on our emails, calls, texts, internet history, and location data – whether or not we are suspected of any wrongdoing.
It also requires web and phone companies to retain customers’ information for 12 months – and provide security services, official agencies, and the police with unprecedented access to this data.
Further, it enables government agencies to hack into the British public’s personal devices – their phones, computers, and tablets – without any criminal intent suspected. On top of this, the hacking is not necessarily performed in a targeted way that singles out specific offenders, but in bulk – applied to huge numbers of UK residents, at any given time.
The consultation is now closed but sought comments on bringing the Acts powers in line with technology advancements. In short the proposed updates are a bid to extend the Acts already far-reaching remit because the intention is to demand that companies offering messaging services seek government approval around the messaging tools’ security features.
The proposed updates would come into force immediately, if approved, and would allow the Home Office to block or disable messaging apps’ security features – without having to let us know. Once a messaging app receives a demand from the Home Office, it would need to be actioned immediately, without allowing time for review or appeal.
The proposed changes would also enable Ofcom to force messaging companies to scan messages.
The consultation ended on 31 July 2023 and we cannot find any update - yet. But we believe it's coming and we should therefore gear up to oppose the changes that the government are attempting to bring in.
These changes, along with The Online Safety Bill represent a massive threat and encroachment to our right to privacy, and march us ever closer to a digital gulag.
For further info you may wish to read this consultation response from the Internet Society of England.
https://isoc-e.org/the-revised-ipa-2016-consultation-response/
Whilst The Online Safety Bill is bad enough you should be aware of something more nefarious coming down the line.
The government is looking to update the Investigatory Powers Act 2016 (unaffectionately called the snoopers’ charter).
On 5 June 2023, the Home Office opened an eight-week consultation as regards this.
The act in its current form gives the government the ability to ‘snoop’ on our emails, calls, texts, internet history, and location data – whether or not we are suspected of any wrongdoing.
It also requires web and phone companies to retain customers’ information for 12 months – and provide security services, official agencies, and the police with unprecedented access to this data.
Further, it enables government agencies to hack into the British public’s personal devices – their phones, computers, and tablets – without any criminal intent suspected. On top of this, the hacking is not necessarily performed in a targeted way that singles out specific offenders, but in bulk – applied to huge numbers of UK residents, at any given time.
The consultation is now closed but sought comments on bringing the Acts powers in line with technology advancements. In short the proposed updates are a bid to extend the Acts already far-reaching remit because the intention is to demand that companies offering messaging services seek government approval around the messaging tools’ security features.
The proposed updates would come into force immediately, if approved, and would allow the Home Office to block or disable messaging apps’ security features – without having to let us know. Once a messaging app receives a demand from the Home Office, it would need to be actioned immediately, without allowing time for review or appeal.
The proposed changes would also enable Ofcom to force messaging companies to scan messages.
The consultation ended on 31 July 2023 and we cannot find any update - yet. But we believe it's coming and we should therefore gear up to oppose the changes that the government are attempting to bring in.
These changes, along with The Online Safety Bill represent a massive threat and encroachment to our right to privacy, and march us ever closer to a digital gulag.
For further info you may wish to read this consultation response from the Internet Society of England.
https://isoc-e.org/the-revised-ipa-2016-consultation-response/
GOV.UK
Revised Investigatory Powers Act notices regimes consultation
Consultation on possible outcomes for revised Investigatory Powers Act (IPA) notices regimes intended to improve the effectiveness of the current regimes.
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Forwarded from Red Ice TV (app banned)
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